i Weather Fair today, rising temperature. Y Sir igrnt jDatt Editorial Jabs For NYA Students i VOL. XLIX. No. 103 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEB. 25, 1939' PRICE FIVE CENTS Hungary Smashes Large Nazi Party; Joins German Pact 4 Prime Minister Teleky Asserts Hungarists Were Dangerous To Country Anti-Communism PledgeIs Made BUDAPEST, Feb. 24.--(P)-Hun-. gary's new government today smashed the nation's largest party of Nazi sympathizers and at the same time, with seeming contradiction, allied Hungary formally with Nazi Germany in an anti-Communist pact. Premier Count Paul Teleky, who took office Feb. 16, banned the Hun- gary party as a danger to public safe- ty. In swift raids carrying out his order, police arrested more than 500 persons, ousted the party from its headcfuarters throughout the country and seized tons of documents and propaganda material. While the raids were in progress, Foreign Minister Count Stephen Csaky signed the anti-Comintern agreement whichhpledged Hungary to aid Germany, Italy and Japan in fighting Communism throughout the1 world. (Manchoukuo, Japan's protec- torate also signed the pact Thurs- day). Had Attacked Horthy Police said they had evidence thes Hungarists aimed at a change in the state by violence and that by persis- tent propaganda tried to bring the nation's head, Regent Admiral Nich- olas Horthy, into disrepute. They announced that 60 "leading personalities" in the Hungarist party had been sent to a concentration camp at Kistarcsa. There, ironically, the anti-Semitic; pro-German Hun-1 garists will be in close contact with, Jews recently confined on charges of smuggling and of violating visa regu- lations. Although the Hungarists' program was known to be pro-German, author- ities said they were unable to supply direct evidence that money to sup- port the movement was sent from Berlin. They said an investigation would be made to determine the party's sources of funds from abroad. Hundreds Of Police In Drive While hundreds of police dashed through the streets carrying out the1 government ban, Budapest remained calm though tense under martial, law, which has been in effect since Feb. 3 when the Dohany street syna- gogue was bombed in an anti-Jewish outbreak. Authorities said they found scores of prominent Hungarians listed on membership rolls seized in the raids. Party headquarters in Budapest was termed "a hotbed of seditious activity" by Interior Minister Franz KeresztesFischer. Hungarians themselves were con- fused by the apparent contradictions of Premier Teleky's policy because he has acknowledged Hungary's attach- ment to the Rome-Berlin Axis and because signature of the anti-Com- munist pact was accompanied by every manifestation of good will to- ward Berlin.1 Natators Win Easy Contest Coach Mann's Men Wallop Iowa State, 60-24 AMES, Ia., Feb. 25 (Special to The Daily)-Michigan's smoothly polished swimmers last night brought Big Ten; tank technique into Big Six territory, swamping Iowa State's Cyclones, 60-24. Iowa State's tanksters made their best bids in the 60-yard free style and the 200-yard breast events but failed to gain a first place in these or other events as Coach Matt Mann's crew left them in its wake. Big Ten and Big Six records fell# freely, two National Collegiate marks were shattered and one equaled as the Wolverine team turned in a smashing performance. Capt. Tom Haynie, paced by Iowa State's John Gibbs, sliced 14.5 seconds off the 300-yard individual medley National Collegiate mark in a special event which opened the meet. Walt Tomski, pushed hard, shaved a tenth of a second off the National Collegiate mark in the 60-yard free style. The Dodge Praises Reforms Made In Near East The friendly atmosphere in which the people of all races and nationali- ties live and study together in the Near Eastern universities shows that, present international uprisings are of political rather than racial origin, Dr. Bayard Dodge, president of the American University at Beirut, Leb- anon, said yesterday at a luncheon sponsored by the International Cen- ter. Speaking of the Near Eastern ren- aissance, Dr. Dodge pointed to Turkey as an example of the tremendous strides made in the last few years toward westernization. Of Turkey's late dictator, Kemal Attaturk, Dr. Dodge remarked, "No other dictator in history put through so many con- structive reforms in such a short time. He changed Turkey from a medieval empire to a modern Euro- Later in the afternoon, Dr. Dodge showed moving pictures in techni-J color of American campuses in the Near East, commenting on the vari- ous colleges as they were shown. He told of Robert College at Istanbul, Turkey; the American College at Sofia, Bulgaria; and the American University at Beirut. Today Dr. Dodge will devote his: time to interviews with students in-i terested in studying at the American University at Beirut during their junior year. Daladier Gets Approval Vote FromDeputies Chamber Passes Premier's Proposal To Recognize Insurgent Government PARIS, Feb. 24 -(P)- Premier Edouard Daladier won a Chamber of Deputies vote of confidence today for the government's announced inten- tion of recognizing the Spanish Na- tionalist regime. Announcing he intended to propose to the cabinet Monday that France recognize the Franco regime "in the interests of national defense," Dala- dier admitted he was following Bri- tain's lead. He staked the life of his govern- ment on the issue and the vote was 323 to 261. Shortly afterward Sen. Leon Ber- ard, who has been negotiating for France with the Nationalists, tele- graphed the foreign minister's office from Burgos, the Nationalist capital, to say he had reached an accord with the Nationalist Foreign Minister, Count Francisco Gomez Jordana. Throughout his speech preceding the vote Daladier alluded to his belief that France and Britain must send ambassadors to Burgos quickly to work against German and Italian in- fluence, although he failed to mention these countries by name. A note of urgency was injected into the discussion by an opposition deputy, Socialist Georges Izard, who spoke of the possibility of an "in- ternational crisis in March." Daladier himself flatly stated he believed "this very year peace will have to be vigilantly defended." z. - Qn- fna ha e" ac -- Bill Approved For Purchase Of Materials Committee AcceptssPlan To Purchase Goods For Use In War Emergency To Amass Goods Next Four Years WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 -(')- A program to buy and store up $100,- 000,000 worth of raw materials neces- sary in time of war was approved unanimously by the Senate Military Committee today. "World conditions make this bill very, very timely," said it sponsor, Senator Thomas (Dem.-Utah). A government board to be set up would decide just what materials would be bought, but the committee1 compiled a long list of things which might possibly be purchased. These included aluminum, rubber, silk, tin, wool, tungsten, ferrograde mangan- ese, sugar, iron and steel, copper and chlorine. The purchases would be made over the next four years. Some of the materials in the list have to be imported. The bill is not part of the Admin- istration's defense, program, but Sen- ator Thomas declared it was closely in line with the program. While the Committee was acting, Senator Walsh (Dem.-Mass.) Chair- man of the Senate Naval Commite, said he expected the controversy over the establishment of a naval air base 3,t the island of Guam to be revived on the Senate side of the capitol. He and other members of the com- mittee said the navy could be ex- pected to ask for the project again, despite in which opponents declared that Japan might consider its con- struction an act of provocation. Another development was a state- ment by Senator Clark (Dem.-Mo.), a member of the Military Committee, that he would oppose on the Senate floor an increase from 5,500 to 6,000 in the authorized airplane strength o~tie ~fl. Te icresewas voted by the Committee this week at a meeting which Clark did not attend. Weeks To Discuss Labor Problems The first of a series of talks de- signed to acquaint the student with the problems of labor will open here Wednesday, March 1 when Jack Weeks, president of the Detroit News- paper Guild will speak at the Union at 4 p.m. Weeks, an employe of the Detroit Free Press will talk on the general topic of the student and labor, and may give an insight into the strike of editorial and commercial news- paper workers on the Chicago Hearst newspaper for the last 10 weeks. The meeting, and the series of which it is a part, is sponsored by the labor committee of the American Stu- dent Union chapter at the University. RALPH SCHWARZKOPF * * * Track Team Wins 65 -30 Over Irish Sets New Record P Schwarzkopf Outdistances Capt. Rice In Two-Miler With Lead Of 65 Yards By DICK SIERK Michigan's track forces swept to a 65-30 win over Notre Dame last night at Yost Field House with Ram- blin' Ralph Schwarzkopf supplying the feature performance as he flashed home in the two-mile run 65-yards ahead of Capt. Greg Rice of the Irish in 9:15.6, establishing a new Field House record. Co-starring with Schwarzkopf in the Wolverine victory was Elmer Ged- eon, Charlie Hoyt's consistent hurd- ler, who equalled Field House records in winning both the high and low stick events. While Schwarzkopf -ran a magnifi- cent race it must be said in justice to the sturdy 5 ft. 6 in. Notre Dame cap- tain, that he had, only 35 minutes be- fore, run a 4:19.1 mile in attempting track's toughest double. Also, Rice has his eye on the IC4A two-mile in which he is entered next week, with the result that he did not extend him- self when he found Schwarzkopf had built up an apparently insurmount- able lead. Schwarzkopf, who had had exper- ience with Rice's terrific last lap kick on three previous occasions, se4 out at a pace that put him 30-yards ahead by the time they had finished the first half-mile. At the mile mark the Wolverine ace was more than a quarter of a lap ahead, being timed at that point in 4:33. Schwarzkopf's time of 9:15.8 broke the former Field House Record held Deity Fulfills Human Hopes, SheenDeclares 'Realization Of Love Truth And Life Is Found Only In An Immortal Being' Overflow Crowd Hears Priest Talk Indelibly engraved in the heart and soul of every living person is a fer- vent desire for life, truth, and love, and, since our finite world can not satisfy these desires, we seek and em- brace that which offers a solution: God, according to the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen, who last night pre- sented the orthodox and historical argument for the existence and na- ture of God to an overflow crowd in the Rackham Auditorium. This self-realization comes from the imperfect nature of the world and of man himself, he said, and we must go past the margin of eternity to find the real life-where all is pure. This pure life, pure love and pure truth is God. Father Sheen approached the ques- tion of the existence of God from two viewpoints: moral and meta- physical. Explaining that the moral argument appeals to conscience, he stated that the function of con- science is to lay down laws of be- havior, the application of these laws to action, and to act asa fudge of right and wrong. Since we as individ- uals or society as a whole have no control over these functions, declared Father Sheen, there must be a supreme being, God, who directs andl manipulates them.; Referring to the anatomical struc- ture of the human heart, he declared that it was incomplete and thust acted as a symbol of man's inability to ever embrace anything in thisI world with a whole heart. God kept a sample, Father Sheen said, and sent the remainder into the world to await self-realization. And because we dot not have a whole heart, he continued, we must go back to God to recover the piece he has been keeping forl us. Board Approves Health Plan;, Gives Contracta Regents Also Make Grant To Honor Prof. Strauss, Late EnglishChairman. Permission granted the University Hospital to participate in a state- wide group medicine plan and letting of a $647,817 contract in the dormi- tory expansion program highlighted the monthly meeting of the Board of Regents yesterday. The health plan, which provides a form of health "insurance" for a low-, income group, was given public atten- tion sometime ago but had not been acted upon previously by the Regents. The dormitory contract went to Bryant and Detwiler Co. of Detroit and will provide for general construc- tion costs on the southeast unit of the Union group. Gifts totaling $1,277 to be used to create a Louis A. Strauss profes- sorship in English in honor of the popular member of the faculty 'who died recently, were accepted. Profes- sor Strauss, a member of the Board in Control of Student Publications, had served on the faculty for 42 years. A total of $2,835 was accepted for the Mary B. Henderson memorial fund. The Regents also received $1,558 for a F. M. Gaige fund to promote scholarly publications. A donation of $3,300 from the Kellogg fund of Battle Creek to be used in a three- year program of in-service training of rural teachers was announced. The program, operated under the School of Education, will begin March 31 and provide training in elementary science and health. Eight hundred dollars was received from the Standard Oil Co. of Cali- fornia for a graduate fellowship in petroleum products engineering. An anonymous donation of $350 for an expedition to Mexico was accepted. Regents also received $670 from the U. of M. Club of Detroit plus mis- cellaneous gifts totaling $172. Prof. G. M. McConkey of the Archi- tecture College was appointed to a vacancy on the executive committee SECRETARY HOPKINS Childless Couples i And Bachelors Hit' By New Nazi Tax. BERLIN, Feb. 24.--()-Nazi Ger- many imposed new income tax regu- lations today on her bachelors, spin- sters and childless married couples. The new measures raised the levies of the unmarried by 12%/2 per cent and created a new tax group of couples who are childless after five years of marriage.t The new taxes were estimated to( bring in from $80,000,000 to $160,000,- 000 annually. An announcement said the new regulations stem from neces- sities of population and political as- t pirations of the nation. The new regulations excited con- sternation among many of those af- fected. Especially since no exact1 method was given for determining in- dividual taxes. In the case of unmarried men and women, the regulations provided that the 12/2 per cent raise could not be applied if it brought total tax pay- ments of an individual to more than 55 per cent of his income. That ceiling was established apparently for unusual cases where citizenship, church and other taxes might absorb more than that amount. Cellist Plays Concert Here Monday Niht Piatigorsky Will Appear In Ninth Performance In Choral Union Series An attempt to prove that the violin- cello can be just as sensitive and ton- ally beautiful as a violin will be wit- nessed Monday in Hill Auditorium when Gregor Piatigorsky performs in the ninth Choral Union concert. This famous Russian artist is recognized as the greatest violin- cellist of the day and has taken the lead in bringing from the instrument beauties which were never thought to have existed there. Piatigorsky has made two previous appearances here and each time was received with much enthusiasm. Born in 1903, he was first violin- cellist with the Imperial Opera in Moscow at 15. After the revolution he was forced to go to Berlin where he secured a similar post with the Berlin Philharmonic under Furt- waengler. From that time, his rise was rapid and extensive international tours followed. Piatigorsky recently remarked that he has a special fondness for Ann Arbor. On his last visit here an inter- esting romance culminated in his marriage with the well-known Jacque- linde Rothchild of Paris. Daily Tryouts Tryouts for the editorial, sports and women's staffs of The Daily will meet at 4 p.m. Monday in rooms 316-320 of the Union in- Appeases Business Hopkins Promises U.S. Co-operation With Big Business New Cabinet Member Maps Program To Encourage Investment Of Capital Promises No New Federal Taxation DES MOINES, Feb. 24.-(iP)-Sec- retary of Commerce Harry L. Hopkins tonight mapped a federal program for business based on "a desire to create an environment in which private capital will be encouraged to invest." In a speech prepared for delivery before the Economic Club here, Hop- kins asserted such environment "can become a reality without compromis- ing the great reforms which stand as hall-marks of this administration's enlightened program." The Hopkins pronouncements on business-his first "policy" declara- tions since leaving the social welfare field of WPA--recommended: Hopkins' Program 1. No "general rise" in federal taxes this year and amendment of levies which "tend to freeze the necessary flow of capital." 2. Breaking the "log-jam of private investment in the field of utilities, railroads and housing." 3. "Tolerance and fairness" fromt labor in dealing with employers. 4. An increased national income to provide jobs for the unemployed and to balance the budget. 5. Assistance for small business. 6. A larger share of the national in- come for the farmer. The former national WPA adminis- trator, a native Iowan, recognized lack of business confidence as a "hard stubborn fact." "It may be as real a deterrent to re- stored business health as any we have to deal with," he said. "I do not propose to ignore it." Railroadsr Important In his brief reference to the tax- ing structure, the Secretary suggest- ed that levies which retard business could be replaced "by increasing oth- er taxes which do not have the same deterring effect." He indicated his concern over con- dition of the railroads by suggesting the carrier situation be explored im- mediately "in the interest of Labor, the investor, management and the public." Until the rail pfoblem is solved, he said, "it is difficult to hope for any- thing like a complete recovery in America." He reminded Labor that the gov- ernment has strengthened the work- ing man's position with new laws on wages, hours and collective bargain- ing. He termed a reconciliation of AFL and CIO differences "as much in the interest of business as it is to the workers themselves." Once the guiding genius in the vast WPA disbursement program, Hopkins defended government spending as necessary for the "proper sustaining" of business in periods when "self- nourishment is insufficient." Knight To Give TalkTuesday Noted Naturalist To Speak On South African.Trip Capt. C. W. R. Knight, noted natur- ),list, will give a motion-picture lec- ture entitled "The Leopard of the Air," a. pictorial record of the Na- tional Geographic Society South African Expedition of 1937-38, as the next in the Oratorical Association's series. Captain Knight's talk is sched- uled for Tuesday at Hill Auditorium. The primary purpose of the recent expedition was the filming of the most ferocious of the African eagles, the crowned hawk eagle. According to Captain Knight, the young Crowned Eagle, "the leopard of the air," is a bird of personality, one of the showi- est eagles he has ever possessed. But Captain Knight is not only known as the "eagle man." His new film includes exciting and amusing shots of a great variety of animals and birds, including lionesses, giant sand-moles, the hammer-headed stork, and a murderous black and white crow. Student Criticism Boxes by Benner of Ohio State, by (Continuaed on Pagre 3) fourI Four Speakers Advocate Lifting Spanish Embargo Fight For Democracy Can Still Be Won, Students Are Told At ASU Rally The fight for world democracy be ing fought in Spain can still be won if the United States Government will aid in the fight to check fascism by lifting the arms embargo. This was the message of a Spanish author, two veterans of the International Brigade and a Spanish consul before more than a hundred persons at a rally held yesterday afternoon at the Union under the auspices of the American Student Union. Speaking as an ordinary citizen of Spain, Antonio Villaplana, a former chief justice in nationalist Spain and author of "Burgos Justice," corrected "two common misconceptions held by many Americans, firstly that Franco is fighting to check Communism and secondly that the Loyalist govern- ment is persecuting the Catholic church. The fact that only 16 of more than 500 representatives in Spanish parlia- ment were Communists and the fact that before the war the government had no relation with Soviet Russia ch.lld a c.-mffiri+nf toi +di+n a h by Mitchell Webb who spent six; months in such a camp at San Pedro. At this prison camp at which 53 na- tionalities were represented he saw; seven of his comrades die during thei first week.I Spain is the front trench of de-; mocracy, stated Senor L. Bartolome, consul for Spain; stopping fascism1 there means stopping it all over the world. Feeling we should have the aid that Belgium for example had in the World War, he said, we expected that{ the United States would lead the world in sending food to help us re- sist in our fight against Franco. In his reference to Franco, Senor Bar- tolome used these words: "Franco3 sticks in my throat; it can't be pro- nounced, it should be spit out." The fight in Spain is far from lost, declared John Baker, a member of the International Brigade. The gov- ernment, which was supported by 85 per cent of the people, still has half a million soldiers, still is holding ter- ritory equivalent to three-fourths of Michigan, he explained. The war can be won in less than a year if the embargo is lifted, he reiterated. The fascist threat to South America and therefore to the United States is