Weather y Unsettled and cooler today. L Sir kjan ~Iaihi Editorial Roosevelt To The Dictators.. VOL. XLX. No. 139 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS Local Drama Season Opens 5-Week Bill HereMay 15 Noted Actors Are Signed For 10th Anniversary; Whitford Kane Returns Five Plays Slated For Presentation By STAN M. SWINTON The Ann Arbor Dramatic Season, celebrating its 10th anniversary, has signed such English and American stage favorites as Philip Merivale, Gladys Cooper, James Bell, Dorothy Sands and Whitford Kane for the five-weeks of presentations which open here May 15, Daniel L. Quirk, Jr., chairman of the Civic Commit- tee, announced yesterday. Plays which will be presented are "No War in Troy!" "The White Steed," "American Landscape," "Here' Come the Clowns" and "Captain Brassbound's Conversion." The American premiere of Girau- doux's sophisticated "No War in Troy!" will open the season with Philip Merivale, English stage star who has been featured in such New York Productions as "Valley Forge," In the lead. He recently returned from a London appearance in "As You Like It" Dalton Appears Opposite Merivale will be Doris Dalton, a veteran of the local sea- sons. The play, which has been pro- duced in Paris and Budapest, deals with the Trojan War, treating it as If it were the precursor of the inter- national strife of today. Elmner Rice's version of how a typi- cal American family faces the po- litical and social problems confront- ing it furnishes the plot for the sec- ond week's presentation, "American Landscape." Harry Irvine and Dor- othy Sands will be co-starred in the production. Whitford Kane, who has made many Ann Arbor appearances, includ- ing some with the Summer Repor- tory Players, will play his original role of the Canon in Paul Vincent Caroll's "The White Steed" the third week of the season. Wesley Addy of the Maurice Evans Company, and Joanna Roos, who appeared here last spring, will supplement the cast of the current Broadway success. Widely Discussed One of the most discussed plays of the year, Philip Barry's "Here Come the Clowns" will be the fourth pre- sentation. James Bell, who played "Jeeter Lester" in the perennial "To- bacco Road" will be starred in the drama, which is a study of vaude- villians in a partly metaphysical set- ting. Barry's novel, "War in Heav- en," furnished the plot for the play, which.will include Ralph Bunker of the original company and Hathaway Kale in the supporting cast. Gladys Cooper, in real life Mrs. Philip Merivale, will star in George Bernard Shaw's little-known comedy "Captain Brassbound's Conversion" in the season's climax. Miss Cooper, who last summer played with Mr. Merivale in the London production of "As You Like It" is one of the best known actresses of the contemporary stage. Opposite her will appear Den- nis Hoey, who was seen with Grace George in "The Circle" and with (Continued on Page 6) Golfers Defeat Ohio State 20-4 Loar, Emery And Riess Share Medal Honors COLUMBUS, Ohio. (Special to The Daily)-The Wolverine golf team overwhelmed Ohio State yesterday at Columbus, 20-4 for its first Big Ten win of the 1939 season and fifth con- secutive victory. With but a single exception, Coach Ray Courtright's men swept every individual and best ball match. Tom Tussing furnished the exception los- ing two of the three points to Frank Bellino, third man on the Buckeye squad. Jim Loar, Jack Emery and Lynn Riess shared medal honors with 75 each. However, to Riess went the lion's share oj the glory for the Ypsilanti juni6r played two Buck- eyes as the Wolverines only carried a five man team. By virtue of his 75, Riess took three points from both Tony Montonero and Don Hauser. Stason To Succeed Bates As Dean Of Law School DEAN BATES -Courtesy of The Ann Arbor News PROFESSOR STASON FormerU niversity Provost Will Take Executive Post At End Of Current Academic Year Prof. E. Blythe Stason of the Law School, Provost of the University, has been named by the Board of Regents to succeed Henry M. Bates as Dean of the Law School. He will take office at the close of the current academic year. The action, taken at a special meeting of the Regents April 5, was announced April 8. Dean Bates auto- matically retires from active service, having reached the age of 70 on March 30. Dean Stason, a recognized author- ity on administrative and public util- ity law, has frequently been called upon by the Legislature and state officials to draft important legisla- tion. The author of case books and articles on municipal corporations and administrative tribunals, he is a member of the State Bar of Michi- gan, the American Bar Association, the National Conference of Commis- sioners on Uniform State Laws and the University Lawyers Club. Born in Sioux City, Ia., in 1891, Dean Stason received the degree of Bachelor of Arts from the University of Wisconsin in 1931. In 1916 he grad- uated from the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, having special- ized in electrical engineering. In 1919 he came to Michigah as professor of electrical engineering, serving in that capacity until 1923. While carrying on his teaching duties, Dean Stason also studied law. In 1922 he received the degree J.D. from the Law School and in 1924 be- came professor of law. Last year he was made Provost of the University. Dean Bates had been connected with the University faculty for 36 years. A native of Chicago, he gradu- ater from Michigan's literary college in 1890. In 1892 he received his law degree from Northwestern. After sev- eral years in private practice in Chi- cago, he accepted a position here and in 1903 became Tappan Professor of Law. In 1910 Dean Bates succeeded Har- ry B. Hutchins as head of the Law School, Dean Hutchins becoming president of the University. Dean Bates is a specialist in con- stitutional law and has frequently contributed to law reviews and other journals. He has been active in the (Continued on Page 6) Spring Parley Panel Leaders Made Known Faculty And Student Heads To Keynote Discussion At Sections' Meetings Parley To Consider 'Youth And '40's' Student and faculty discussion leaders for the Spring Parley, to bel held Friday, Saturday and Sunday in the Union, were announced last night by Ralph Erlewine, '39BAd., general chairman. The general discussion in the Parley will center on "The Stu- dent Looks at the Forties."; In the American Foreign Policyt panel, Martin Dworkis, '40, will be student chairman; no faculty speaker has yet been secured but Tom Downs, '40L, will present the student point oft view. James Dusenberry, '39, will be stu- dent chairman of the Government and Economics panel, with Prof. I. L. Sharfman, chairman of the depart- ment of economics, as faculty speak- er and Clarence Kresin, '39, as stu- dent speaker. University Panel Frank Rideout, '41, will act as stu- dent chairman of the University Stu- dent panel with Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the education school as faculty keynoter while Ronald Freed- man, '39, and William Centner, '39BAd., will present the student at- titude on the subject. The Religion Panel will be chaired by G. Dekle Taylor, '40, while Ken Morgan, director of the Student Re- ligious Association, will represent the faculty and Daniel Suits, '40, presi- dent of the SRA, will present the student point of view. An exception will be made in the general organizational set up of the panel on American Culture, in which Elliott Maraniss, '40 and Harvey Swa- dos, '40, will act as co-chairmen. There will be no faculty speaker per se, but four student speakers will deal with various aspects of the American cultural scene. John Mal- colm Brinnin, '41, will lead the dis- cussion on poetry, Maraniss will key- note the remarks on literary criticism, Swados will discuss motion pictures and Irvin Lisagor, '39, will deal with sports. Science And Civilization Earle Luby, '39, was announced as student chairman of the Science and Civilization panel, with Prof. Harold J. Mac Farland of the engineering college presenting the faculty view- point. No student speaker has yet been selected in this panel. The general plan in the discussion panels will consist of opening re- marks by the chairman, presentation by the faculty speaker of salient as- pects of the problembeing considered, and an expression by the student speaker of the attitude of the student looking at the forties. At the general discussion section from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Friday, Erle- wine will open the Parley and three faculty men will discuss generally the topics of the Parley from the con- servative, liberal and radical points of view. The remarks of the faculty men, whose names will be announced in The Daily tomorrow, will constitute a basis for later panel discussions. Phi Kappa Phi Initiates 135 SenorsMay 2 Prof. Bernadotte Schmitt Of Chicago To Deliver Lecture After Banquet Graduate Students To Be Honored Phi Kappa Phi, national scholastic honor society, will initiate 135 senior and graduate students from all schools and colleges in the University at a dinner May 2 in the League. Prof. Bernadotte E. Schmitt of the University of Chicago will deliver a public lecture in Rackham Auditori- um following the initiation banquet. Students to be honored are: Henry H. Adams, Gilbert Ander- son, Dean O. Bowman, Irving J. Can- trall, Elinore E. Clark, Carl R. Dut- ton, Clarence Fielstra, Philip D. Gor- dy, Joseph A. Groesbeck, Dale T. Harroun, Mary L. Hart, and Emma M. Hirsch.. Howard K. Holland, Myrtle F. Holt- by, Gerhard B. Naeseth, John R. Platt, Carl H. Schachtsiek; Ruth M. Schorling, Franklin B. Shull, Anna C. Smith, George R. Staebler, Betty Warwick, John H. Wurster, John G. Young and Robert S. Young. Marcia Connell, Donald M. Rich- ardson, Lynne L. Merritt, Jr., Albert P. Mayio, Robert L. Kahn, Nathaniel M. Holtzman, Alfred Hower, Virginia Hunt, Samuel J. Fauman, Zivia S. Seltzer, Helen I. Tucker, Sanders A. Goodstein, Charles H. Altshuler, Francis W. McDonald and Mary E. Vanden-Bossche. Vincent L. Peterson, Virginia R. Allan, Robert F. Thomson, Jerome B. Wiesner, L. DeForrest Abbot, Jr., Joseph J. Worzniak, Katherine G. Harris, Mary C. Dell, Charles H. Mann, Paul V. Ponitz, Frederick E. Wigen, Nelson A. Lindenfeld, Rich- ard E. Chaddock. William Spoelhof, Hugh Baker, John Wynstra, Frederick J. Van Sloo- ten, William J. Morrow, Lee H. Mac- Donald, James M. Lafferty, Donald R. Cooper, John C. Sheehan, William H. Davis, John R. Alden, Lewis C. Pinney. Ola B. Hiller, James Merry, John H. Stibbs, Donald J. Vink, Paul D. (Continued on Page 6) Two Lectures GivenToday Heller And Marshall Speak On University Series Dr. Otto Heller, Dean Emeritus of the Graduate School of Washington' University, St. Louis, and Prof. T. H. Marshall, of the University of Lon- don and member of the faculty of the London School of Economics, will give University lectures today under the auspices of the German and so- ciology departments respectively. Dr. Heller, one time literary editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and former head of the German depart- ment at Washington University, will open a two-lecture series at 8:15 p.m. today in the Graduate School Amphi- theatre with a talk on the meaning of Goethe in the modern world. Pro- fessor Marshall will speak on "Social Inequality and Class Conflict" at 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Science Au- ditorium. Professor Marshall is the author of several articles on English economic history, population problems and so- cial classes. He is also a member of the Council of the Institute of So- ciology, London, and a part organizer of the Conference on the Social Sci- ences. Surprise Reichstag Session Summoned For'Reply ToF.D.R. Lec't15res Tndn IHitler Speech To Be Given I JUVIou/ Gal JL VuuJ' April 28 Will Be Answer To U.S. Peace Offers Nazi Press Hits ,L i Peace Group Meets Tomight To Plan Rally More Than 100 Campus Organizations Invited To Meeting In Union Final arrangements for the all- campus peace rally to be held at 4 p.m. Thursday on the Library steps will be made at a meeting at 8 p.m. today in the Union. Representatives of more than 100 campus organiza- tions have been invited to attend and all interested persons are welcome. Nationally known speakers includ- ing Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Dr. Edouard Benes have been asked to speak and messages supporting the rally have been received from several prominent persons, In a telegram Erika and Klaus Mann, co-authors of "A School for Barbarians," wrote: "Please give our keenest regards and wishes to your audience and express our firm conviction that the idea' of universal indivisible peace will emerge victorious, but only after the fall of dictators who are threatening the world and humiliating their own peoples." Campus peace demonstrations have been held annually since 1934. Court Modifies Ruling Allowing Red Deportation Action Seen Far-Reaching In Its Effect On Status Of Labor Leader Bridges WASHINGTON, April 17.-(P)-In a 6 to 2 decision of far-reaching im- plications, the Supreme Court ruled today that an alien could not be de- ported solely because he once held membership in the Communist Party. The opinion, delivered by Associ- ate Justice Roberts, upheld a ruling by the fifth circuit court of appeals in the case of Joseph G. Strecker, an Austrian-born restaurateur of Hot Springs, Ark. Its immediate effect was to order Strecker released from custody, but by wiping out a construction of the deportation statutes followed by the Labor Department for many years the ruling will affect many other cases. One may be that of Harry Bridges, Australian-born leader of the CIO on the Pacific Coast--a case which has stirred controversy in Congress (Bridges has been accused of be- ing a Communist, a charge which he denied. DR. RALPH W. SOCKMAN * * * First Martin Loud Lecture GivenToday Dr. Sockman Will Discuss 'The American Way' In Three Talks Here Opening the Martin Loud Lecture series on the general topic, "The American Way," Dr. Ralph W. Sock- man of Christ Church, " New York' City, will discuss "What Is The American Way?" at 7:30 p.m. today in the First Methodist Church. Dr. Sockman is at present minister of Christ Church in New York City. He attended Ohio Wesleyan and Co- lumbia Universities where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho and Phi Delta Theta. The Loud Lectureship, endowed in 1897, has as its stated purpose the discussion of "the evidences, the his- tory, the development and the rea- sonableness of the Christian reli- gion," and has become an annual feature under the sponsorship of the Martin Loud Committee and the Stu- dent Religious Association. Dr. Sockman's topic for the lecture on Wednesday will be "The Ameri- can Way Presents Problems" and on Thursday, "The American Way- New Horizons." He will give a sup- plementary talk at 4:15 p.m. Thurs- day in the Union on "Is There An American Way To Preserve Peace?" Announce Final Increase In Michiganensian Price The price of the 'Ensian will go up from $4.50 to $5 Saturday, it was an- nounced yesterday by Charles L. Ket- tier, business manager. The book will be on sale on campus at the lower price until Saturday. All down payments must be com- pleted by 5 p.m. Friday at which time all incomplete sales will be forfeited. Payments may be made at the 'Ensian office in the Student Publications Building. Roosevelt's Tactic BERLIN, April 17.-(1P)-Reichs- fuehrer Hitler, in a public reply to President Roosevelt's peace proposals, was expected tonight to defend his policies before the Reichstag April 28, coupling them with a sharp de- nunciation of methods used by others in acquiring territory. The Fuehrer's sudden summons to the Reichstag started a corps of foreign office workers delving into historical data for what, it was be- lieved, will be a lengthy "no," citing historical arguments supporting past and future Nazi policies. He was believed to be planning to call the United States, Britain and France to account for their methods )f acquiring territory in an attempt o show how empires have developed. The summoning of the legislature was followed by an increase in bitter press attacks on President Roosevelt who asked Hitler and Italian Premier Wussolini Satuday to pledge at least 10 years of non-aggression to 31 na- tions and participate in world con- ferences looking to peace, disarma- ment and better trade relations. Hitler was represented as displeased that the President's appeal was pub- lished before he had read it and his call to the Reichstag-so sudden that even high officials were caught by surprise-was interpreted as a sign that his Reichstag speech would be his only answer to Washington. German diplomatic sources said the Fuehrer refused to treat Roosevelt's communication as a "direct message to him because it was published in Paris, London and Moscow before it reached him." "That is why he chose to call the Reichstag and give a public reply rather than go about it diplomatical- ly," a Wilhelmstrasse informant said. "It was not a diplomatic document, but a piece of public advertising." The supreme summons to the legis- lators was issued while Hitler was at St. Poelten and Krems, in Austrian Germany, inspecting garrisons of his army. Congress Receives Wave Of Anti-War Demands WASHINGTON, April 17r,-()-A swelling tide of demands that Ameri- ca steer clear of war regardless of what happens in Europe swept over Congress today in the aftermath of President Roosevelt's appeal to Hitler and Mussolini to pledge themselves to peace for at least 10 years. Coincidentally, the Administration reported with expressions of pleasure that the President's message t the dictators was developing a world pub- lic opinion for peace, and word came from Berlin that the Reichschancellor would state on April 28 his attitude toward the appeal. With the arrival in Washington of additional replies from Latin Ameri- can governments, the western hemis- phere stood solidly behind the Presi- dent's appeal. Favorable replies came also from dozens of other capitals in Europe and Asia, including many of the 31 governments for whom Presi- dent Roosevelt requsted assurances of safety from the European dicta- tors. Officials hoped that this demon- stration of international opinion would induce Hitler and Mussolini to heed an appeal which they might reject if it can solely from the United States. Final Plans Made By Anti-War Group Final arrangements for the anti- war strike to be held Thursday, at 11 a.m. were made at a meeting of the Michigan Anti-War Committee last night at which Judah Drob, of the national Council of the Youth Com- mittee against War spoke. Mr. Drob, who is touring for the Youth Committee to help local groups plan. strikes, spoke of the necessity of militant strike action to combat the present war threat. He suggested such student activity as necessary to help halt the pro-war forces in the United States in their drift toward Professor Bachmann Produces First Synthetic Sex Hormone By KARL KESSLER Synthetic production of a sex hor- mone was announced here last week by Prof. Werner E. Bachmann of the chemistry department. The hormone equilenin was arti- ficially produced in the laboratory for the first time in the history of chemistry by a process developed by Professor Bachmann with the assist- ance of Dr. J. Wayne Cole, Du Pont postdoctoral fellow, and Alfred L. Wilds, teaching fellow. Professor Bachmann's p r o c e s s starts with naphthalene, an inex- pensive coal tar product. The naph- thalene is chemically treated, and by a series of complicated reactions, it is converted to equilenin, which in um~n maov addyht- ha bnan innn e- ical production of the hormone, on the other hand, is easier to control, and the exact composition of the material is definitely known. The exact function of oesfrone, a hormone similar to equilenin which is present in the human body, has not been precisely determined but is believed to take part in controlling the functions of the female sexual organs. Equilenin is produced natur- ally in the body by small duct-less glands. Equilenin. as well as the better known compounds adrenaline and in- sulin, belong to a large series of chemical substances produced by glands. The exact function of many of thesae uantC nnun ac h.nr.- Mann To Take Squad Abroad Ont Swim Tour A squad of picked University swim- sers will embark Sept. 6 on the Queen Mary to give a series of educa- tional exhibitions in England, it was announced yesterday by Matt Mann, swimming coach. The group will be the first squad of athletes representing the Univer- sity to go abroad since the baseball teame toured Japan in 1932. The invitation, extended by the Hove Swimming Club of Sussex under the auspices of the Amateur Swim- ming Association of England, is the first ever made to a college or univer- sity. Heretofore, all-star groups of swimmers have made trips abroad but never has any particular team been so designated. Coach Mann intends to take either seven or eight swimmers on the trip, the men to be announced early next week. He plans to take two distance swimmers, a pair of back strokers, one diver, one all-around swimmer and either one or two breast strokers. 1 I! 2 f r t i i Tornadoes And Floods Ravage South; Ohio River Is Swelling CINCINNATI, April 17. -(P)- A record April rainfall drove lowland- ers from their homes along the middle< reaches of the Ohio River tonight,1 with a crest of 60 feet-eight above flood level-officially forecast for Cincinnati. Tributaries boiled with the runoff7 along the Ohio, Kentucky and West+ Virginia borders, where precipitation+ for the last three days exceeded four' and one-half inches. Skies cleared during the afternoon in Ohio, but light showers were predicted for. Tuesday. The Cincinnati Red Cross removed rnnP +hon 70families frm the vicir- LITTLE ROCK, Ark., April 17.-(P) -Flood warnings stirred fresh anxi- ety today on the heels of tornadoes that killed at least 45 and injured 336 in six southern states. Arkansas, hardest hit area in the storm belt, received notice from the U.S. Weather Bureau that hundreds of lowland families might have to be evacuated before the rapidly rising waters of six major streams. The weekend series of rapid-fire twisters left 24 dead and 223 hurt in Arkansas, seven dead and 33 in- jured in Oklahoma, seven dead and 24 other casualties in Louisiana, six fatalities and 36 injuries in Texas, one