The Weather Lower Michigan: Cloudy today, probably with light snow by afternoon. Y tA6F 't l aug Editorials Senate Filibusteringd,. False Issues Raised About Japan VOL. XLVIII. No. 109 ANr4 ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS Dr. Mann AsKs Chemistry May Provide Answer Social Reform To The Modern Cancer Plague To Ward Off; 1 i - - Fascist Threat Democracies Must Begin Work Of Rejuvenation, Renowned Author Feels Assails Oppression By Dictator States The necessity of social reform by democratic nations in order to realize their moral superiority over the fascist states was the message Thomas Mann, greatest living Ger- man author, brought to a capacity audience at Hill Auditorium last night. Dr. Mann was introduced by President Ruthven.' The "golden hope" which fascism offers to youth in its ideology of force Dr. Mann characterized as "a snare and a delusion." "Fascism represents democracy as stale, effete, decrepit and boring," he said, "and itself as lusty and successful. It has the charm of novelty." Democracy's Ideals Timeless Democracy must stop taking itself for granted, the author declared, and must begin the work of rejuvenating itself, which it can do because of the timeless nature of its ideals as con- trasted to the passing character of those of fascism. "Fascism believes in force," he pointed out, and prac- tices and glorifies it. both in physical and mental form. Truth, freedom and justice, the three great symbols of democracy, he described as a complex but in- divisible whole-the absolute in hu- man understanding. "Any defini- tion we make of democracy is inade- quate if it remains within the bounds of technical politics," he said. "We must aim higher; we must define de- mocracy as that form of society which permits the realization of the intellectual and emotional dignity of man." Terror corrupts men and turns them into hypocrites and cow- ards, he explained, adding, "that is why those who hate mankind love terror." Quotes Bergson's Dictum Instead of the regimentation by propaganda of the fascist states, Dr. Mann urged as the democratic credo the dictum of Henri Bergson: "Act as men of thought, think as men of' action." The sole consideration of' dictatorships in connection with the question of peace or war is which condition will best serve to maintain the regime, he said. Since an avowed foreign war would bring in its wake an almost immediate civil war, the fascist dictator keeps his people in a constant hybrid state between the two, a state which is fascism's "own image." Referring to the title of the National Socialist Party of Germany, D. Mann reminded his audience that, (Continued on Page 3) Navy Bill Goes To .Heise Floor, Committee Votes, 20-3. To Increase Arms WASHINGTON, March 3.-- The Administration's "Big Navy Bill" won the overwhelming approval of the House Naval Committee today. Only three of 23 voting members opposed the legislation, which Presi- dent Roosevelt requested "specifically and solely because of the piling uI of additional land and sea armame: v. in other countries." As finally approved, the bill would authorize construction of 46 men-of- war, 22 auxiliary vessels and 950 air- planes. Chairman Vinson (Dem.- Ga.) estimated these new weapons would cost $1,083,546.00. The new warships recommended include three battleships, two air- craft carriers, nine cruisers, 23 de- stroyers and nine submarines. Naval officials estimated they could be con- structed in from four to six years, provided Congress appropriated the necessary funds and authorized addi- tional facilities and equipment at Navy yards. The committee wrote into the legislation a declaration of Naval policy. It declared the fleet should not be used for aggression but should be Pig enough to protect both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts at the same time. The committee said that The Swiss mouse (above), injected with a hydrocarbon, developed the large head-like cancerous growth on the left and died six monthsf after the injection. The size of the cancer can be appreciated by com- parison with the eye of the animal, which appears in the upper left center. * * * * Dr. James T. Bradbury Works With Hydrocarbons Here As Possible Clue To 3,000-Year-Old Mystery Of Freakish Malignant Growth By ROBERT I. FITZHENRY A drastic harvester of human life, cancer now reaps in this country alone more than 144,000 victims a year, rates second only to heart disease in fatalities and is, without doubt, the most mysterious ailment at present plaguing the human race. Yet - -------------- Senators Put LobbyCharge On Industries Find Manufacturers Spent $750,000 To Forward Their Viewpoint In 1937 Liberties Committee M~'akes Accusations WASHINGTON, March 3.-(P) - Senate investigators received evidence today that the National Association of Manufacturers raised $750,000 last year to lay the viewpoint of American industrialists before the public. Chairman La Follette (Prog., Wis.), of the Civil Liberties Committee. brought out that the Association had used newspaper space, the radio, mo- tion pictures, public speeches, the mails, billboard advertising, contacts with employes and literature for schools and colleges. Walter B. Weisenburger, executive vice-president of the Association, denied in response to a question that pamphlets sent to schools and col- leges were "propaganda." Charges One-Sidedness La Follette charged that the man- ufacturers had sent out "onesided" information concerning the Wagner Labor Act, but Weisenburger disputed this. The committee heard Charles R. Hook, president of the Association and president of the American Roll- ing Mill Co., denounce as "ridiculous nonsense" the charge that "industry deliberately provoked the present business slump." The Committee's session ended with a brisk clash between John C. Gall, counsel for the Association, and La Follette, in the course of which Gall accused the committee itself of violating civil liberties. Recess Till Tomorrow La Follette, announcing a recess until tomorrow, said that Hook and another witness, Ernest T. Weir of Weirton Steel, were excused from fur- ther attendance, but that their sub- poenas would continue "in full force and effect," and that they would be notified if further testimony were desired. Gall was on his feet at once. "We feel that calling witnesses and keeping them under subpoena for months, and then continuing the subpoena after they have testified is in itself a violation of civil liberties," he said. "As a matter of fact, Mr. Attorney," La Follette replied, "I was trying to accommodate Mr. Weir and Mr. Hook so they could leave today." He said the committee would have preferred to have them present throughout the hearing but had re- leased them at their own request. Loyalists Announce New Rebel Rebuff HENDAYE, France-(At the Span- ish Frontier)-March 3.-- (lP) - A communique from the Spanish Gov- ernment front today said a day and night of uninterrupted artillery fire had smashed Insurgent attempts to mass troops in the northern part of Guadalajara Province. The Insurgent troop movements northeast of Madrid were believed attempted with the view of making a new push toward the Government- held former capital. Sweeps Los Angeles Area; 20,000 Feared Homeless Italian, British Treaty Is Called P Service Is Crippled, Radio Stations Are Silent Record Hope For Mediterranean Peace Professor Carr Of Wales Sees. EdnnChamberlain throughout the nation yearly expen- ditures for cancer research would hardly erect a building the size of Angell Hall. Three thousand years ago the Ath- enians observed with horror this pulpy malignant mass which seldom released its victims until death. And from Pericles to Roosevelt the un- heckedtumorous growth of cancer :ells, generally appearing after the fourth decade, has challenged the' resources of the whole medical pro- fession. Some Pseudo-Elixirs Surgery, X-ray, and radium have, each in their turn, been hailed as the elixir. Each has cured some but not all. Rated by many the world's No. 1 cancer authority, Dr. James Ewing of Manhattan's Memorial Hospital pre- dicted last summer that the establish- ment throughout the country of six endowments of 10 million dollars apiece, would virtually insure the 3apture of cancer by science. As yet the six endowments have not appear- :d. Cancer research, meanwhile forges ahead with what monies it commands., Bradbury And Hydrocarbons In a small laboratory down in the zorner of the University Maternity Hospital, ,Dr. James T. Bradbury works with a new approach, in collab- oration with Prof. W. E. Bachmann of the chemistry department. They may have the needed key. Dr. Bradbury injects hydrocarbons under the skin of pure strain (inbred) mice. And the mice develop cancer! Since one of these hydrocarbons - methylcholan- threne-can be derived from the hu- man bile it is now under suspicion as. a possible cancer-producing agent of the bcdy. But there is yet to prove that the body contains an agent or enzyme capable of converting the bile into methyleholanthrene.# The history of the hydrocarbon clue is another of science's true detective stories. Years ago it was noticed that coal tar workers suffered from an alarming incidence of "tar cancer." (Continued on Page 8) Michigan's Hamlet Bfreaks Into 'Life'- A nd W e Mean Mat t Approximately 3,000,000 persons are oing to get a look at "Michigan's riamlet," with ai all-star supporting cast today. A four-page picture-story on Matt Mann and the University's erstwhile championship swimming team is fea- tured in this week's Life, which was released this morning. Two pages are devoted to Coach Matt Mann, the other two showing team members. The Daily's swimming expert, David Zeitlin, '40, was responsible for the swimmers' nation-wide publicity. Di- rectly after the football season, Zeit- lin wrote to the magazine suggesting a swimming feature. Life answered with a request for a scenario, which New Periodical Wins Approval; Editors Named, Jones Heads Publication; Brinkman His Assistant On 7-Man Editorial Staff The Board in Control of Student Publications approved the proposed undergraduate literary magazine yes- terday when it adopted with several qualifications the report and per- sonnel submitted by a subcommittee which it appointed a month ago. F. Randall Jones, '39BAd, was named editor-in-chief; Elizabeth Brinkman, '40, managing editor; John M. Brinnin, Spec., poetry edi- tor; Frances Carney, Grad., fiction editor; James Robertson, Grad., ess-, editor; and Martin Greenberg., '38, review editor. They will all serve without salary. A four-man graduate and faculty Advisory Committee, appointed by the Board in Control, will have the power to veto material not in line with the aims of the magazine. It consists of Dr. Arno Bader, Giovanni Giovaninni and Charles Peake, all of the English department, and Robert S. Warshow, Grad. A meeting of the editorial staff to- day will decide upon a name for the periodical, the date of first publica- tion and a publications manager. Jones said yesterday that he expect- ed the first issue to appear before' Spring Vacation. Under the original report drawn up by three members of the English Journal Club and a former Daily juniorneditor, announcedryesterday, the aim was expressed to print the best material available from all colleges and schools. The Board in Control statement provides that it appoint the Advisory Committee and that the editorial staff be subject to its approval. It also stipulated that no financial ob- ligation be incurred without the ap- proval of the Board in Control. The magazine which will appear at' least four times yearly will circulate gratis to Daily subscribers and will be available at a nominal charge to others. Of the editorial staff, Jones, Miss Brinkman, Miss Carney, Robertson and Greenberg have already had ex- perience with Contemporary and Brinnin was co-editor of Signatures, a national literary publication. I Chinese Reported In A 'Death Trap' SHANGHAI, March 4.-(Friday)- (P)-Japane;e army dispatches said today that a Chinese army of 100,- 000 men had been caught in a virtual "death trap" in southwest Shansi -Breaking Flood Split A Superficial One An Anglo-Italian agreement, by which Il Duce would get monetary assistance, the recognition of Ethiopia and British support in Austria in re- turn for the withdrawal of his troops from Spain, is the only basis at pres- ent for securing peace in the Medit- terranean, according to Prof. E. H.1 Carr of the University College, Abery- stwyth, Wales. Speaking before an audience of 450 in the Natural Science Auditorium yesterday, Professor Carr claimed that Great Britain wished to reestab- lish her position in the Mediterranean without resort to armed force. He went on to say that England "would prefer to get 80 per cent of her de- sires by peaceful means rather than 100 per cent by war." Although he maintained that he knew only what he had read in the Thomas Gives Peace Lecture This Afternoon Socialist Leader To Head Pacifist Program; ASU Representatives To Talk Norman Thomas will head the in- itial program of the Michigan Anti- War Committee at 2:30 p.m. today in the Congregational Church with a talk on "Students, Democracy and War." Mr. Thomas, three-time candidate of the Socialist Party for the Presi- dency, will be the first of a group of speakers for peace to be brought here by the Committee this semester. Other speakers will include George Edwards, first chairman of the Amer- ican Student Union and at present organizer for the United Automobile Workers in Detroit, and Al Hamilton, who was on the first executive board of the ASU. Petitions to "Stop American Mili- tarization" will be available at the meeting. The petitions addressed to President Roosevelt call for sharp reduction in military appropriations, immediate removal of U.S. armed forces from China as well as from all other foreign territory, abandonment of the Sheppard-Hill Industrial Mob- ilization Bill and passage of a gen- uine war referendum amendment. Members of the executive commit- tee of the Anti-War Committee are: Charles Buck, '40, chairman; Sam Weisberg, '39, Secretary; William Scott, Grad.; Robert Bessey, Grad.; S. R. Kleiman, '39E; John R. Platt, Grad.; and Jack Sessions, '40. ANTHONY EDEN papers about the recent British Par- liamentary crisis, Professor Carr did not believe that the split between Prime Minister Chamberlain and for- mer Foreign Secretary Eden, who re- signed, was any deeper than a dif- ference as to the timeliness of nego- tiations with Italy. "They both agree in principle," he said, "that an agree- ment with Mussolini should be at- tempted." The time is propitious at present for such a treaty, this former first secretary of the British Foreign Office feels. He sad that the Italian economy has been severely weakened by the war in Ethiopia and in Spain and that recent events in Austria must seem threatening to I Duce. Italy cannot afford to allow Germany to swallow Austria, he said, explain- ing that a quarter of a million Ger- man-speaking people reside in Italy in the South Tyrol, bordering on Aus- tria. But he emphasized that the key point is the internal weakness of Italy: "They can't go on lowering the standard of living indefinitely, you know. Britain, Professor Carr pointed out, is anxious for such a pact. He went on to say, however, that unless Italy agrees to withdraw its troops from Spain no agreement cangbe reached. (Continued on Page 8) New York Tops. Enrollment List For Out-Staters 1,206 Students Are Here From Empire State; 694 Are Listed From Ohio New York had the largest out-of- state representation in the University last semester with 1,206 students, ac- cording to figures released yesterday by Miss Marian Williams, Registrar's office statistician. Every state in the Union and 30 foreign countries were represented. Ohio, with 694 students, and Illin- ois, with 491, were second and third respectively among the states, while Nevada sent one student to take home the consolation prize. There was a total of 4,508 out-of-state American students enrolled. Detroit students totaled 1,243, and Ann Arbor was second among Michi- gan cities with 1,172 students. En- rollment from the remainder of Mich- igan came to 3,417, exclusive of grad- uate students. Chinese students in the University totaled 136, and Canada was second with 72. The Philippine Islands sent 14, and other countries brought the total foreign enrollment to 302, some of which came from as far away as India and Turkey. The total first semester enrollment was 10,962. Complete figures for the second semester are not yet available. Lawyer Asks Repeal Of Railway Clause in Unprecedented Storm Death List Mounts To More Than 100 LOS ANGELES, March 3.-()- Flood waters virtually isolated Los Angeles from the rest of the world to- day and raged on through the metro- politan lowlands to add more death and havoc to the record'of an un- precedented storm. More rain fell during the morning, and snow added its potential menace in the mountains to the East, but skies began clearing shortly before noon, giving air lines a limited op- portunity to function.s- City All But Paralyzed The metropolis of more than 2,000,- 000 population was all but paralyzed. Power service was crippled. Large radio stations were silent. Telephones were dead and transportation was. blocked in many places. The death list stood tentatively at 124, with 16 identified, 41 unidenti- fled and 67 missing and believed to have perished. The number of home- less was estimated at 20,000. Those arriving in San Francisco told vivid stories of flood rescues and of houses tumbling down hills. The flood-torn area lay roughly from Ventura on the north to San Juan Capistrano on the south and from the Pacfic ocean on the west to the San Bernardino Mountains on the east. SMountains Create Drainage Torrential rains fell for more than four days in the city and in the mountains alike. The abrupt rise of the mountains behind the city creat- ed a tremendous drainage. The rain- fall in Los Angeles alone exceeded 10 inches. Nearby dry arroyos be- came raging streams. An undetermined number of storm spectators were washed into the ocean near Long Beach when the bridge on which they stood collapsed, The number lost was generally esti- mated at 10, but an appeal to ships at sea to watch for survivors . or bodies said 45 were on the bridge at the time. John Roberts, air lines pilot who flew from Los Angeles to San Fran- cisco with the first to get away, said: "There literally is water every- where." Danger Past, Mayor says Mayor Frank Shaw issued a state- ment tonight declaring all danger in the Los Angeles area appeared past. "We are at work on a preliminary estimate of damage to public and private property," he said, adding the work of rehabilitation already was under way "with every resource of the city government cooperating 100 per cent." Mrs. Esther Chadburn, field repre- sentative for the American Red Cross, said reprts from stricken areas where communication was possible showed 1,500 homes were uninhabit- able. The Red Cross was caring for more than 3,000 homeless in Los Angeles County alone. Golem Legend Told By Heller Current Film Has Basis In Medieval Belief "The Golem," French film appear- ing tonight and tomorrow at the Lydia Mendelssohn, picturesquely tells the medieval Jewish legend of a clay figure brought to life to protect. the Jews of Prague and finally re- turned to dust before it could de- stroy its creators, Dr. Bernard Heller, Hillel Director, explained yesterday in an interview. Tickets for the 3:15 p.m. showing tomorrow are available at the League box office. A few seats .are still left for the 8:15 p.m. performances today and tomorrow. Taking its name from the Hebrew word for "embryo" or "incomplete," the Golem and the legend woven around it were traced by Dr. Heller Collective Action Is Necessary To Avert Fascism, Mann Thinks By JOSEPH GIES Thomas Mann believes collective action on the part of the democracies of the world "absolutely necessary" to halt the advance of fascism, he said in an interview yesterday after- noon .America in particular he con- siders "the strongest bulwark against fascism." He regards France and the Soviet Union likewise as powerful forces for peace. Questioned concerning the relation of the fascist movement and univer- sities, Dr. Mann related the story of the infiltration of National Socialist ideology on the campuses of German universities in the period just prior to the accession of Hitler. "The Nazi movement was con- sidered fashionable in German uni- versities before the students became aware of the anti-intellectual char- acter of fascism," he explained. At present, however, the students are ment developing among American students is foreseen by the author of "The Magic Mountain," because stu- dents here, he believes, are not spir- itually isolated from the events of the I. - ~.. I