Weather A modicum of precipitation de- cendinug from nrhera stappes Y 4hp Aol an attig Editorial Deportation Delirium i VOL. XLIX. No. 153 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS Reorganization Assured By Ho Bill Huge To L use; To Parade ead Way Vichiigras Arms Act Is Signed Booths And Modernistic Democrats Kill Resolution For Rejection Of Plan With Some GOP Aid Army And Navy Get $153,000,000 WASHINGTON, May 3. -(/P)-- House Democrats, with some Republi- can help, gave President Roosevelt a virtual guarantee today that his first plan for reorganization of the Gov- ernment would become effective June 24. They killed, 264 to 128, a resolu- tion by Representative Taber (Rep.- N.Y.) to reject the plan, which pro- vides for mnerging a score of govern- ment agencies into three new bureaus handling welfare, works and lending activities. Under the Reorganization Act, a presidential reorganization proposal becomes effective 60 days after the President submits it to Congress, un- less both houses disapprove. Rep. Warren (Dem.-N.C.), sponsor of the Act, said that today's vote clinched victory for the President's first plan, unless Congress adjourned before June 24, the date the 60-day period expires. If adjournment occurred before that date, he said, the President would be forced to submit the plan all over again next year, and both chambers of Congress would have a new chance to. vote on it. However, Congress is generally expected to remain in ses- sion for some time after June 24. Today's fight in the House was one of the most unusual of the year, because Democrats were so confident of the results. Republican speakers sliouted long and loudly against the reorganization programs. Ordinarily the Democrats would have barked back at every opportunity, but today they had agreed in advance to let the Republicans-as Representative Warren put it-"shell the woods" as long as they wanted to. They declined to reply to most of the arguments, then showed their power on the final vote. Roosevelt Signs Bill WASHINGTON, May 3. -(p)- A $153,000,000 bill to provide miscellan- eous fighting equipment for the Army and to add new ships to the Navy was signed into law by President Roose- velt today. In addition to this, the House Naval Committee approved an expenditure of $6,660,000, with which the Navy would overhaul five old battleships- the Tennessee, California, Colorado, Maryland, and West Virginia-and make modern fighting craft of them. At the same time, the Navy, with an eye to an eventual increase in the efficiency of its enlisted personnel, increased the term of enlistment from four to six years. The order is to be- come effective on July 1, when the Navy expects to have completed the enlistment of 5,000 new recruits with which to man its expanded fleet. The appropriation approved by the President would permit the Army to buy or contract for the purchase of $110,000,000 worth of what it terms critical items-tanks, anti-tank guns, rifles, gas masks, artillery, ammuni- tion,-and other equipment. A total of $36,500,000 was for the Navy's fleet expansion program, and $6,539,000 was earmarked for strengthening coastal defenses in the continental United States, the Canal Zone and insular possessions. Vienna Judge Talks Sunday Former Justice To Speak On JewishProblems A former presiding justice of the Vienna Supreme Court, Dr. Manfred Arie, will speak on "Austria under Hitler" at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre. The lec- ture is open to the public and is be- ing sponsored by the Hillel Founda- tion. __________________- Third Annual Carnival Judd To Speak Cup To Be Given oday On u.s. Outstanding Float Role h-Heralded by various and sundry ublicity efforts and a parade more an a half-mile in length, the third annual Michigras will fqrmally open its doors at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Yost Field House. The carnival, the proceeds of which will benefit funds for the Women's Athletic Association, the Band, the lee Club and the Dean's discretion- ary fund, will feature entertainments and booths planned by more than. 50 fraternities, sororities and inde- pendent organizations.rSuch peren- nially popular enterprises as Beta Theta Pi's "Follies Berserk" and Lambda Chi Alpha's "O'Shaugh- nessy's Saloon" will head the list of booths appearing on the Michigras midway. In keeping with the carnival's theme of "The'World of Today and 'omorrow" decorations will lean to- ward the futuristic, it was announced yesterday by Donald Belden, '39E, general chairman of the fair. An added feature will be provided by Delta Tau Delta's "Sky Ride," which Medical Missionary Hopes will convey passengers high in the air from one side of the huge field To Persuade Country Not house to the other. To Give Japan Aid The parade which will presage the opening of the gala carnival tomor- Dr. Walter H. Judd, recently re- row afternoon will have more than turned to the United States after 10 50 units, principally floats entered years as a missionary doctor in China, by fraternities, sororities and vari- will speak on "The Significance for ous Ann Arbor organizations. The America of the Japanese Invasion of most ingenious and best executed China" at 8:15 p.m. today in the floats will be judged by Mayor Wal- Rackham Auditorium. ter C. Sadler, Dean Joseph A. Bursley Dr. Judd served as a medical mis- and Dean Alice Lloyd, and the win- sionary in South China for six years iers presented with gold cups. and in North China for four. His , mission hospital in Fenchow, Shansi Adult Education province, was in the territory taken over last'year by the Japanese armies, ea and he has observed first-hand the nstitute Q r s horrors of modern totalitarian war- fare. Pr f On a year's furlough from his works oc in China, Dr. Judd has carried on, since coming to the United States late Paul McNutt Is Seeking last year, extensive activities, includ- ing lectures, appearances before Con- Democratic Nomination, gressional committees and an audi- Prof. Cuneannon Says ence with President Roosevelt, press- ing for the cession of the United Declaring emphatically that "de- States' economic participation in the mocracy and efficiency are not incom- Chinese-Japanese conflict. patible," Prof. James K. Pollock of Dr. Judd appeared here Jan. 11 the political science department told when he was sponsored by a student the third day's meeting of the Adult committee and Dr. Edward W. Blake- Education Institute yesterday that it man, counselor in religious education, is the duty of present-day democra- Since that time he has toured the cies to adjust their ideals and institu- country lecturing before every type of tions - to the needs of a more com- group in behalf of the American plex international scene. Committee for Non-Participation in Professor Pollock, giving the third Japanese aggression. olof+,T"nnin nIn- Students Begin Press Meeting Here Tonight, 700 High School Delegates Are ExpectedTo Gather For MIPA Convention Discussion Groups Will Be Featured High school journalists f r o m throughout the state will open the 18th annual convention of the Michi- gan Interscholastic Press Association with a reception tonight at the Union. More than 700 students repre- senting approximately 200 high schools are expected to attend the three-day conference sponsored by the journalism department. Follow- ing the reception the students will be conducted through the Publications Building to see how a daily neWspa- per is run and, if time permits, will also visit the Ann Arbor News. 'Clinics' Featured Among the special features of the convention are the various "clinics" or discussion sections on the particu- lar problems of high school journal- ism. These clinics, which will be led by experts, begin tomorrow morning. Among those scheduled to speak are Herbert O. Crisler, H.C.L. Jack- son of the Detroit News, Helen Bower of the Detroit Free Press, Arthur W. Stace of the Ann Arbor News, Prof. John Shepard of the psychology de- partment, Prof. Bennett Weaver of the English department, Prof. Milo Ryan of the journalism department of Wayne University and Prof. John L. Brumm, Prof. Wesley Maurer and Prof. Donald Haines of the journal- ism department. Scholarships To Be Given Two annual scholarships named in honor of Professor Brumm will be offered at the convention. These scholarships will be offered to junior and senior journalism departments1 to be chosen by the department with high scholastic rating as the main" basis for judgment. The awards. are being presented by the Council of Ad- visers of high school publications from funds available to the MIPA. Theta Sigma Phi and Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism societies are cooperating with the journalism department in managing the con- vention. Housing of delegates is in the hands of a University committee' headed by Wilfred B. Shaw, director of the Bureau of Alumni Relations. Ruthven's Father Dies Suddenly President Leaves Today To Attend Ceremonies' John Ruthven, 94, father of Presi- dent Ruthven and a pioneer railroad man in the West, died yesterday of heart failure in the Iowa community which he founded more than a half- century ago and which bore his name. President Ruthven planned to leave this morning to attend funeral cere- monies. John Ruthven actively participat- ed in the building of the West. Born in Shotts, Scotland, he came to the United States at the age of 35. He lived in Chicago for a period, serving as a railroad contractor for Mil- waukee, Chicago and St. Paul. He was a member of the group which ac- complished one of the famous histori- cal acts of the region when they built a railroad from Chicago into Mil- waukee and then on to South Dakota. For many years a railroad con- tractor, John Ruthven served in his later years as superintendent of laud holdings he had acquired. He had been in retirement recently. John Ruthven was married to Katherine Rombough, who died in 1929, the year President Ruthven took office. Co-incidently, it was on the 10th anniversary of his assuming the presidency that his father died. President Iuthven had visited his father only last fall and described him as being in good health at the time. Death came soon after he passed his 94th birthday. Danish Physiologist Talks Here Today On Posture Dr. August Krogh, Nobel Prize win- ner from the University of Copen- hagen, Denmark, will deliver a University lecture on "The Regula- tion of Circulation in Man in Relation By Soviets; Maxim Litvinoff Ousted Non -AggressionProposal Nazis Extend Tag Day Salesmen Take Posts As Drive Opens This Morning Germany Seeks Bilateral Treaties With Six Baltic And Scandanavian States Removal May Stall Three Power Pact I t i f t r I -Daily Photo By Bogle Among the "firsters" is Phil Westbrook (center) as he has the season's first Fresh Air Camp Tag pinned to his lapel by Jane Jewitt. Tom Adams bends an approving glance. All three are directing the tag sales drive. l i R r l a League Marks Tenth Birthday Past Presidents Attend BanquetTonight The Michigan League will mark its 10th anniversary with a birthday party dinner at 6 p.m. today, to be followed by a theatre party at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Mrs. Irene B. Johnson is general chair- man of the affair. Dean Alice C. Lloyd will preside at the banquet. The group will see a pantomine dance recital at the Mendelssohn, given by the Modern Dance Club. Special Invitations have been is- sued to former presidents of the League. Mrs. Helen Ames Diekhoff, 1922-23, Miss Helen Delbridge, 1923- 24, Mrs. Doris McDonald Coulter, 1918-19, Mrs. Katherine Koch Blunt, '31-'32; Mrs. Marguerite Clark Miller, '20-'21, and Miss Charlotte Rueger, '36-'37. Mrs. Helen Humphreys Hoke, '15-16; Mrs. Florence Burton Roth, '04-'05; Miss Gay Mayer, '33- '34; Mrs. F r i e d a Kleinschmidt Blankenburg, Mrs. Walter B. Pills- bury, '02-'03; Miss Louise Stickney, '95-'96; Mrs. Nathan S. Potter III, '27-'28; Miss Jean Seeley, '35-'36; Miss Hope Hartwig, '37-'38 and Jean Holland, '39, the retiring president will also attend. Gifts of, flowers for the dinner tables have been received from many persons in the city, Mrs. Rollin r. taik or the Internationail Reiations ; Series, ridiculed the claim that in- efficiency and slowness are inherent in a democratic system, maintaining that the trouble lies not with the sys- tem but with the people and theirj leaders.- Speaking in the third of the series on Contemporary American Figures, Prof. Paul M. Cuncannon of the po- litical science department said thatI Indiana's Paul McNutt is the frank-1 est and most aggressive Democrat; seeking the 1940 presidential nomina- tion. Excitement-loving McNutt, now, high commissioner to the Philippines,, has no false modesty, Professor Cun- cannon declared, and his boom was the first to get started. A former national commander of the Ameri- can Legion, McNutt served as gover- nor of Indiana and was head of one of the most "vicious and corrupt" politi- cal machines in the history of In- diana politics,, he added. He was a failure as a Hoosier governor, Pro- fessor Cuncannon observed, but has (Continued on Page 3) Rev. White To Speak At MeetingOf ASU Rev. Horace White of the Ply- mouth Congregational Church, De- troit, will speak on "The Negro and the New Deal," at a meeting of the American Student Union to be held in the North Lounge of the Union at 8 p.m. today. Barton Beatty, Grad., will act as chairman and will intro- duce the speaker. The position of the Negro as af- fected by New Deal legislation as well For full list of posts and Tag Day solicitors see pages two, three and eight. More than 450 students will open the annual Tag Day drive today-the largest of the eighteen campaigns, that have been conducted in support Bob Crosby's Band To Play At Senor Ball' Dance Tickets Go On Sale May 17; Band Is Rated One Of TheTop Three Two months of negotiations were climaxed yesterday when arrange- ments were completed for Bob Cros- by and his Dixieland Band to play for the Senior Ball, which will be held June 16 at the Intramural Build- ing. The band, considered in popular music circles as one of the top three in the country, had been selected by members of the Ball committee and Senior Class officers as that most desired for the dance, according to William F. Grier, '39, general chair- man. In announcing negotiations had been completed, Grier declared "We're paying one of the highest prices for any class dance in many years, but since Crosby and his band were the popular choice of the class we did not hesitate in signing him." Tickets for the dance, Grier said, will 'go on sale Wednesday, May 17, at the Union and League. Crosby, who overcame the handicap of starting out with a famous broth- er, "Bing," is rated near the top of popular musicians by musical critics. Metronome magazine, a bible of swing devotees, rated him third best as a "swingster," and third as an all-around favorite for 1938. Other members of the committee are Betty Spangler, '39, co-chairman (Continued on Page 5) Bazaar Will Open At League Today The Spring Bazaar, sponsored by many faculty members including Deany AliceLloyd, opens11 p.m. to- day at the League where Chinese articles will be offered for sale in an effort to raise funds for student and civilian relief. Many of the articles on sale at the Bazaar have been donated by Chinese students, some unobtainable in this country. The collection contains specimens of cloisonne from Peiping, obtain- of Fresh Air Camp, according to Howard Holland, Grad. "Advance returns from fraternities,1 sororities and dormitories are 100r per cent greater than those madeX last year," Holland said, "and there is every indication that this year'sN drive will out-class all previous ones."t Tag salesmen Will take their posts,c in groups of three, at 8 a.m. and will continue selling throughout the day. All principle campus locations will be manned by volunteer salesmen who1 have been organized under the direc- tion of Phil Westbrook, '40 and Jane1 Jewitt, '40. The success of the advance cam- paign, Holland said, is due to the excellent cooperation of all the com- mitteemen, and especially of the fivec chairmen: Tom Adams, '40, Roberta Moore, '40, Robert Hartwell, '39E, Clarence Kresin, '39, and Herbert Leake, '42E. Fraternal organizations downtowni have joined the Ann Arbor merchantsi this year in cooperating with the stu-i dent committees, and have been anc important aid in the publicity work,t Holland added.1 The Tag Day committee has set $1,500 as its goal in thendrive today, which is $500 higher than the amountIt collected in the campaign last year, according to Holland. The committee, he said, has every reason to believe that this figure will be reached. Michigan State Defeats Golfers Team Meets Its First Loss After Seven Matches , By LARRY ALLEN Led by their Captain, Roy Nelson, who shot a blazing sub-par 68 on the University Course yesterday af- ternoon, the Michigan State golf team chalked up a 10-8 win over the Wolverines to hand them their first loss of the season and halt the home team's string of successive wins at seven. Nelson birdied three holes, parred five, and went two over on an easy par three to card a 35 on the initial nine. He then shot three birdies and six pars on the back stretch to come in with a 33 to give him a 68 on the round. The sub-par shooting of the Spar- tans' number one man was too much for Jack Emery, and he lost all three points to him. He dropped seven holes to the Michigan State captain going out when he scored a 40, but managed to hold him down to only two holes on the back nine with a par 36. Capt. Bob Palmer, playing num- ber three for Coach Courtright's (Continued on Page 6) Seniors Urged To Place Announcement Orders Graduating seniors in all depart- ments were urged to place their orders ment. It was understood the French and Russian ministers had agreed to the meeting, since they will be in Ge- neva for the League of Nations council on that date. Action May Isolate Poland BERLIN, May 3.-(P)--Germany moved swiftly today to forestall'in- clusion of northern European states in the British-French bloc and at the same time sought to isolate Po- land, now anxiously considering Ger- man demands. Proposals have been sent to six Scandinavian and Baltic countries for bilateral pacts of non-aggressior which foreign office quarters indicat- ed involved pledges, either specific or implied, on the part of those coun- tries not to favor any other group of nations. Anthropologists Will Meet Here 150 Expected At Annual Convention Tomorrow More than 150 members are expect- ed to attend the annual meeting of the Central Section of the American Anthropological Association tomorrow and Saturday Prof. Leslie White of the anthropology department, presi- dent of the organization, announced yesterday. Papers will be presented by eminent anthropologists and archeologists of the middle west. Professor Fay-Coop- LONDON, May 3.-(RP)-The fate of British-French-Soviet discussions on European security measures was obscured tonight by the sudden removal of Soviet Commissar Maxim Litvinoff as Britain offered to exchange non- aggression agreements with Ger- many. The surprise Soviet move cre- ated grave doubt there would be any meeting of*the foreign minis- ters of the three powers. MOSCOW, May 3.--(,)-The So- viet government tonight disclosed Maxim Litvinoff, veteran represen- tative of Soviet Russia at Europe's council tables, had been supplanted as Commissar for Foreign Affairs. Vyacheslaff Molotoff, chairman of the Council of People's Commissars, was given the foreign affairs com- missariat to add to his previous duties An official radio broadcast said Litvinoff had been "released at his own request." The veteran diplomat, who had been in virtual charge of the com- missariat since 1921, made his last public appearance as foreign affairs chieftain Monday when he appeared with other leaders on top'of Lenin's tomb to review a giant May Day demonstration. Litvinoff's "release" produeed a sensation among foreign diplomats in Moscow as well as the Soviet Re- public. Envoysm were reluctant to give' a hasty opinion of what it portends but they agreed a vital turn in Russian foreign policy appeared to have come. The Soviet foreign office made no comment, however. British Offer Cooperation LONDON, May 3.-()P)-The Brit- ish government offered to exchange non-aggression assurances with Ger- many today and tried to break the deadlock in British-French attempts to get Soviet Russia into a triple al- liance with them. Foreign Secretary Viscount Hali- fax ' was said to havensuggested a meeting with the French and Rus- sian foreign ministers, Georges Bon- net and Maxim Litvinoff, at Geneva May 15 in an effort to reach agree-