Weather Generally fair today and L . A6F 410, aitj Editorial Russia Keeps Her Promises . . Disagreeing With The Technic .p VOL. XLIX. No. 124 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS I- - - - ..-.1.- I m .F'. Student Senate Demands State Defeat Kipke For Regency All-Campus Representative Body O Goes Ex-Coach For Administrative Post Petitions Still Taken For 16 Senate Seats A demand that voters of the state unconditionally repudiate" the can- didacy of former head football coach Harry G. Kipke, for the Board of Regents in the April election last night received the unanimous ap- proval. of the Student Senate. Notified of the action, Kipke seemed' little perturbed. "I regard the resolu- tion as a thoughtless, not to say in- discreet student action," he declared. "I am quite sure that if given the opportunity of talking with the boys, I could quickly change their minds." When informed of Mr. Kipke's statment, Robert Perlman, '39, intro- ducer of the resolution said: "I shall introduce a resolution next week asking that Mr. Kipke be given the opportunity to change the Senate's mind. But I'm quite sure that if given the opportunity he'll have to do a lot of talking to convince the boys that he is fitted either by train- ing or by political affiliations to help decide educational questions at the University of Michigan." Twenty-Two Present Twenty-two o1 the 22 Senators were represented at the meeting. The statement declared: "Whereas: It has come to the at- tention of the Student Senate that many statements have been made on behalf. of Mr. Harry Kipke's candi- dacy for the Board of Regents which claim the support of the students and other University groups. We hereby go on record as opposing these un- warranted representations. "Whereas: Mr. Kipke's background as discharged football coach does not indicate the necessary qualifications for a Regentof the University. "Whereas: The candidacy of Mr. Harry Kipke is detrimental to the best interest of the general student body, faculty and administration of the University of Michiga-, we, representing the student body of the University, call upon the voters of the state to repudiate unconditional- ly Mr. Kipke's candidacy at the polls." Myers Opposes Kipke Kipke is one of the two Republican candidates nominated at the recent Flint convention of the party. His running mate is Joseph Herbert of the Upper Peninsula. Opposing the former head football coach whose connection with the University was severed by the Board for which he is now running is Dr. Dean W. My- ers of Ann Arbor, former faculty member. Charles Lockwood of De- troit is the other Democratic can- didate. The Senate's action had been pre- saged by student comment for some time. At the same meeting the Senate tabled a resolution demanding in- vestigation of subsidization of ath- letes. A measure amending the rules to limit the number of permissible proxies was adopted. Meanwhile the list of candidates for the March 31 Senate election, continued to grow, Edward Magdol, '39, director of elections, announced. Petitions, he said, are accepted from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. each day this week at Lane Hall. Applications must include the fol- lowing material: signatures of five student backers, a short political designation for the ballot, a -Univer- sity certificate of scholastic eligibility and a .50 cent filng fee. Platform Deadline Set Would-be candidates have also been reminded fhat platforms will also be received a the Lane Hall Sen- ate office' or 'at the Student Publica- tions Building for The Daily "Senate Battle Page"' which will appear two days before the election. The dead- line on all platform copy has been set at 1 p.m. Monday, March 27 by Magdol and The Daily Battle Page Editor. An explanation of the voting and counting system of proportionalrep- resentation systems to be used will also be included on the special page. A. E. Miller To Discuss Editorial Page Of Future JGP Spectacle, Pig In Poke,' Opens Tonight Job Parleys To Consider New Field To speak Today s DOROTHY SHIPMAN Charlie Zwick Will Play For Performances Of Gay Musical "Pig In A Poke," the 1939 Junior Girls Play, will open a four-day run with its first performance at 8:15 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Dorothy Shipman is general chairman, and Richard McKelvey, Grad., is author and director. Music will be furnished by Charlie Zwick and his orchestra. The story concerns the fortunes of an aristocratic but poor southern family that travels north in search of a wealthy husband for a supposed- ly younger daughter. The young and irresponsible son loses the family's meager resources in a card game en route and the family's resulting problems form the balance of the play. All roles will be played by junior women: Betty Baldwin as Sarah, the plain daughter; Jane Jewett, as Ali- cia, her flirtatious sister; Barbara Bassett as Ned, the young brother, and Mary Jordan as Warren Kirby, the dashing traveller. Colonel Cul- pepper and his wife will be June Madison and Alberta Wood respec- tively with the remaining leads as follows: Helen Ralston as Gwaldys, head of the 19th century troupe of dancers; Norma Vint as Peter Hu- ber, the country bumpkin, and Clar- issa Meloy as the conductor. Sets have been designed and built by Robert Corrigan, '39, and music arrangements are by Zwick. The lyrics as well as the music is original by students in the University. The rest of the organization and produc- tion work was done by Miss Ship- man, her central committee, and over 150 women on sub-committees. Members of the central committee are Patricia Heaslip, assistant chair- man; Zelda Davis, tickets; Jean Tib- bits, finance; Harriet Sharkey, prop- erties; Mary Minor, programs; Enora Ferris, ushers; Jean Van Raalte, make-up; Betty Stadelman, music; Maxine Nelson, dances; Jane Nuss- baum, costumes, and Katherine Mac- Ivor, publicity. McKelvey was assistant director of the 1938 Junior Girls Play and of Children's Theatre this year. Occupational Conference Sessions Today Discuss Aviation And Fashions Research Considered In TalkYesterday Students planning careers in avia- tion, fashion and industrial relations will hear authorities discuss oppor- tunities in these fields in today's sessions of the University's Guidance, and Occupational Information Con- ference. Sponsored by the Bureau of Ap- pointments and Occupational Infor- mation under Dr. T. Luther Purdom, the Conference is open to all Uni- versity students. Fashions In The Afternoon William Littlewood, vice president in charge of engineering for the American Airlines, Inc., will address students on aviation at 4:10 p.m. in the Union. A top ranking graduate of Cornell University, Mr. Littlewood is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and the In- stitute of Aeronautical Sciences and is vice president of the Society of Automotive Engineers. In 1935 he received the Wright Brothers' Medal Award for outstanding, contribution to the science of automotive engineer-, ing in the aviation field. Fashion will be the topic of the other afternoon meeting to be held at 4:10 p.m. in the League. Florence Cavanaugh, fashion adviser for the J. L. Hudson Co., of Detroit will be the speaker. Miss Cavanaugh entered the fashion field as an adviser to buyers in domestic And foreign buy- ers in Macy's in New York. Michigan Alumnus Personal and Industrial Relations in Industry will be the subject of the evening session to be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. W. P. Edmunds, Director of Industrial Relations for the Standard Oil Company of Ohio, will discuss opportunities in this field. A Michigan alumnus, Mr. Edmunds spent his first 'years out of college coaching football at the University of West Virginia, Washington Uni- versity and at the University of Ver- mont. The other meeting scheduled for tonight, Personnel in Business, to have been addressed by Shirley Wil- liams, DirectorsofsPersonnel for Fred Sanders Co., Detroit, has been post- poned until 10 a.m. Saturday. College men trained in engineer- ing schools are 10 times more likely to become presidents of large indus- tries than persons who receive their education in other schools, T. A. Boyd, Director of Fuel Research for the General Motors Co., told a meet- (Continued on Page 6) German Club Hears Talk By Islamic Arts Expert An illustrated lecture featuring the history and development of Oriental rugs and their introduction from Asia into Europe was presented yes- terday by Prof. Richard Ettinghaus- en of the history of Islamic arts de- partment at a meeting of the Deut- scher Verein. WILLIAM LITTLEWOOD C f Russel Award To Be Made At Talk Today 1{ Announcement Of Awardr Will Follow LectureI By CampbellC. Bonner Announcement of the 1939 winnere of the Henry W. Russel Award willa be made today following the annual$ Russel lecture to be delivered at 4:15e p.m. in the Graduate School amphi-r theatre by Prof. Campbell Bonner,a chairman of the Greek department. Professor Bonner will speak ona "Sophocles, Aristotle and the Tiredr Business Man."a The Russel Award, which has comec to be regarded as a local Nobel prize,f is awarded anuually to the instruc- tor or assistant professor whose workE in scholarly research seems to merit recognition. The lecture, always made at the time of the Award, is deliveredx by a faculty member selected by thet Council of the Research Club of the1 University. The Award, amounting to $250, isr made possible by bequest of Henry W. Russel, '73, late of Detroit, who leftc $10,000 to the University at the timet of his death. His will stipulated that the income from the bequest be usedt to provide additional compensation for instructors in the University. E Glacier Priest To Show Film Life Of Cliff Dwellers1 Will Be Topic Tonightz "Cliff Dwellers of the Far North," a picture depicting life among the Alaskan Eskimos, will be shown by the Rev. Fr. Bernard R. Hubbard, geologist and missionary, at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium under thet auspices of the Newman Club, Cath-t olic student organization. From 18 months' association with King Islanders, Father Hubbard is said to have found many facts which refute ideas generally accepted con-{ cerning the Eskimos. Like most primitive peoples today, the Eskimos believed the earth to be flat, the glacier priest reports. How-, ever they have more reason for as- suming the earth to be flat than had the Europeans of the middle ages, for in summer the sun does not sink be- low the horizon, but seems to revolve about the zenith, slowly sinking to the edge of what might easily be as- sumed to be a circular plate. Father Hubbard is on the teach- ing staff at Santa Clara University. Tickets for tonight's lecture are still available at principal points on campus. Engineers Feature Films About Steel Two motion pictures on steel and its alloys will highlight the meeting of the local branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers at 7:30 p.m. today in the Graduate School amphitheatre. One of the films, done in sound and technicolor, "Steel, Man's Servant," will deal with the manufacture of steel and the other, "U.S.S. Cor- mmten" will explain the manufac- ture and use of the lightweight alloy of that name widely used in trans- portation. All engineers have been in- vited to attend by John Stevens, '39E, president of the organization. Bill To Tax War Incomes Is Introduced 54 Congressmen Support Proposal To Eliminate High Wartime Profits Washington Senator Is Author Of Plan WASHINGTON, March 21.-(JP)- Legislation designed to "tax the profits out of war" by a drastic step- ip in income taxes was introduced in Congress today by 50 Senators and our Representatives. Senator Bone (Dem., Wash.) who offered the Senate the bill bearing' more than enough signatures to pass t through that chamber said the egislation would "make it impossible for any human being to profiteer in case of war." Bone explained that in case of war, evies on individual incomes would range as high as 93 per cent of net ncome in excess of $20,000, with a similar step-up in corporation in- come. Personal exemptions would be low- ered to $500 for unmarried persons and $1,000 for married couples and $100 for each dependent. Present ex- emptions are $1,000 for unmarried persons, $2,500 for married couples and $400 for each dependent. For corporations there would be a tax of 15 per cent on net incomes not in excess of 2 per cent of their adjusted declared value; 25 per cent n incomes not in excess of 6 per cent of such value and 100 per cent on net ncomes of a greater amount. The legislation has been advocat- ed for several years by the veterans of foreign wars and other civic and peace groups. The bill was entitled a measure "to tax the profits out of war by steep- ly graduated income and other taxes, in order to provide for an effective national defense, to promote peace, to encourage actual neutrality, to discourage war profiteering, to dis-' tribute the burdens of war, and to keep democracy alive." Those who signed the proposal in- cluded the two Michigan Senators, Arthur H. Vandenberg and Prentiss M. Brown. Rep. Van Zandt (Rep., Pa.), who also signed, said the measure would "avoid the necessity for any dicta- torship control" to prevent profiteer- ing. President Roosevelt, asked for his reaction to developments in Central Europe, said he was not happy over the situation, but would not com- ment further. George P. Hanson Wins Tau Beta Pi Fellowship George P. Hanson, '39E, tied for top scholastic honors in the country to win a $650 Tau Beta Pi fellowship, Prof. A. D. Moore of the engineering college announced yesterday. Hanson, whose home is in Ann Arbor, managed to win the award despite the fact that during his en- tire collegiate career he has been self-supporting. He was the only Michigan candidate to win one of the six awards in a competition which drew 141 entrants f As Nazis Threaten Seems Play Production Will Add Music To Shakespeare The keynote of Play Production's "Two Gentlemen of Verona,"-doing something new - will be carried through by musical scores and vocali- zations selected by Thor Johnson,1 director of the Little Symphony. The1 play will be presented from March1 29 to April 1. Like Shakespeare's play, the music1 is great but comparatively unknown work. It will be integrated with the play by the Little Symphony, which will present 14 selections. Most of' the music has been taken from the; works of Mozart. ; Schubert's music to "Who Is Syl- via" has been discarded and that of Roger Quilter, contemporary EnglishE composer, taken in its place for the song that is probably among the best known lines of all of Shakespeare's works. Warren Foster, tenor, and Lorraine Tommerson, soprano, will sing the vocals. The works of Mozart were select- ed, Mr. Johnson said, because of their fine adaptability to the Italianate atmosphere of "Two Gentlemen of Verona." The overture for the play was tak- en from "Il Sogno di Scipione" and the finale is an excerpt from the bal- let "Les Petits Riens." Prof. Weaver To Address IFCBanquet Dean Bursley To Bestow Scholarshilp Award At Annual Event Tomorrow Prof. Bennett YWeaver of the Eng- lish department will -be the principal speaker at the annual fraternity ini- tiation banquet to be held at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow in the main ballroom of the Union, it was announced yes- terday by Robert Canning, '39, secre- tary of the Interfraternity Council. The banquet, which will honor re- cent fraternity initiates, will also ! eature the presentation of the pledge class scholarship cup to the fraterni- ty pledge class receiving the highest average grade during the past sem- ester. The cup was won last year by Phi Sigma Kappa. Dean Joseph A. Bursley will make the presentation. More than 500 recent initiates are expectid to attend the banquet, Can- ning said. Guests of honor will in- clude Dean Bursley, Prof. Karl Litz- enberg of the English department, recerrtly appointed director of the University's dormitories, Dean Henry C. Anderson of the College of En- gineering and Prof. Carl G. Brandt of the speech department. London Asks Aid Of Paris, Russia And Poland To Form Bloc Against Nazis U.S. Formally Hits Seizure Of Prague (By Associated Press) Germany's virtual ultimatum to ithuania demanding cession of the Vemel territory and Lithuania's ap- arently imminent acquiesence took he spotlight in the European situa- ion today as the United States' tinging "condemnation" of Hitler's atest seizure of Czechoslovakia ,howed she was lining up with Eng- land, France, Poland and Russia gainst any further moves toward acquisitions, by the bristling Rome- Berlin axis. Victor Gailius, Lithuanian Gov- rnor of the Memel territory, said ate last night that Germany had riven Lithuania a virtual ultimatum lemanding cession of the territory to the Reich. Gailus said Lithuania had been old that if disturbances occurred be- fore transfer of the Memel territory, Jerman troops would march in to restore order. U.S. Hits Seizure WASHINGTON, March 21.-(lP)- I'he United States Government has ormally communicated to Germany ts stinging "condemnation" of Hit- ler's seizure of Czecho-Slovakia as an act of "wanton lawlessness." A note to Germany, made public by the State Department today, re- fused to "recognize that any legal asis exists" for Hitler's protectorate ver Bohemia and Moravia. Enclosed with the note was acting Secretary of State Welles's public tatement of last Friday, denoun- ing Germany for the "temporary ex- inguishment" of Czech liberties. London Seeks Combine LONDON, March 21. -(P) --Great Britain called for a combination of Soviet Russia, France, Poland and herself against German aggression tonight while clamor increased for some form of conscription at home o fit the nation for new European responsibilities. Foreign Minister Viscount Halifax asked the three countries to sign a declaration with Britain announcing a common policy of resistance to aggression and binding themselves to "consult as to the action they would take "if Chancellor Hitler attempted non-Germanic conquests. Bucharest In Arms BUCHAREST, March 21.-(P)- Rumania tonight called up additional troops of the Second Army Corps and indicated they would be sent to the southen frontier where it was re- ported Bulgarian troops had been concentrated. The whole Army Corps was not be- ing called, it was explained at the War Department, but only artillery- men and engineers. Portions of three other army corps, of Rumania's sev- en, already had been summoned fol- lowing reported Hungarian troop con- centrations on the western and north- western border. Rome Is Belligerent ROME, March 22.-(Wednesday)- (MP)-The Fascist Grand Council stood firmly today behind Adolf Hitler's newest partition of territory in Cen- tral Europe and warned the democra- cies that a retaliatory united front against the totalitarian states would be a harbinger of war. The declaration of Fascism's su- preme policy-forming organ made plain that the Rome-Berlin Axis had withstood the strain of its northern member's sudden increase of power. Berlin Studies Sanctions Hoover On Wage Board BERLIN, March 21. -(P)-The German Economics Ministry today studied the 25 per cent extra duties which the United States has imposed on most German goods, presumably with a view to taking retaliatory ac- tion. A veiled threat that retaliatory steps might be taken was made by Imm inent Memel Surrender Reorganization Bill Is No Attempt At Dictatorship, Says Prof. Benson Nazi Officials Direct Activities Of Exchange Students In U.S. By DENNIS FLANAGAN' The possibility that President Roosevelt is seeking the passage of the Cochran-Warren Reorganization Bill in order to gain dictatorial con- trol over the various government agencies and departments may be minimized, since, if he had desired, he could have already exerted this control by the appointment of per- sonal representatives to key execu- tive positions, in the opinion of Prof. George C. S. Benson of the Univer- sity's Bureau of Government. "The bill has been initiated be- cause of the existence of pressure groups which have blocked govern- mental reform by their influence in Congress," said Professor Benson, "and not because of any desire of the President to gain further powers. If passed by the Senate," he said, "it will give the President powers only to group, coordinate and consolidate agencies, or to abolish any not spe- cifically exempted." "Although Congress has always had the power of reorganization," Professor Benson said, "these pres- Compensation Bureau and Employ- ment Service. "Though both of these bureaus generally operate ins the same state departments and local offices," he said, "the Unemploy- ment Compensation Bureau has been under the authority of the Social Se- curity Board and the Employment Service under the Department of Labor. The result of this placement has been constant administrative friction." The misplacement of the Public Health Service in the treasury de- partment can also be cited as an ex-; ample of inefficiency which execu- tive reorganization could recitfy, the government expert said. A number of the states," he con- tinued "have recognized this need for. executive control of reorganization. In Indiana and Wisconsin," he said, "reorganization laws have already been passed." "In Congress, the dispute over the bill centers principally about the right of the legislative branch to pass on executive reorganization decrees," stated Professor Benson. "As the bill (Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of articles on German exchange s students in the United States. Infor- mation has been furnished by a mem- ber of the U.S. Congress.)1 By LEONARD SCHLEIDER German exchange students and vis- iting professors in colleges and uni- versities of the United States and oth- er foreign countries must report per- iodically to representatives of the. National Socialist government, ac- cording to Reich Education Ministry decree revealed recently in Congress. The decree, which was offered as evidence that German students are actively engaged in disseminating pro- Nazi propaganda, was signed by Reich Education Minister Bernard Ruse. It has been stringently enforced in coun- tries where Nazi propaganda is vital and violators are denied permission to leave Germany again. Education Minister Rust's official statement on the matter follows: "It has frequently been observed of late that Germans, especially professors and students, when traveling abroad for cultural or scientific purpose, have failed to establish contact with their office of the German Academic Ex- ch&nge, whenever possible. If this is done, a report of the reason must be furnished to me. "I take this opportunity to point out that previous decrees regarding foreign journeys are still not always obeyed by all concerned. I hereby order all controlled by my office to obey in every detail the decrees on foreign travel and lay before me, through the official channels, any applications for permission to travel abroad." A later ruling announced that Ger- man students studying in foreign countries must become members of student clubs and take an active part in the extracurricular life of the uni- versities to which they have been assigned. The role which the United States plays in, the Nazi scene is shown by the fact that the largest number of exchange students and visiting pro- fessors in this country comes from Germany. This number has steadily increased since Hitler's accession to power six years ago. New York's Institute of Interna-