Y LirPignn t t t Editora IUneraplwy me it Survey Needed . VOL. L. No. 124 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS Biased Speech By Cromwell Draws Capital Denunciations House Ponders Resolution To Recall Rich Envoy From Post In Canada Secretary Hull To Begin Probe WASHINGTON, March 20. -(')-- With a view to determining whether disciplinary measures should be ap- plied, Secretary of State Hull today called for an official copy of a speech in which James H. R. Cromwell, mil- lionaire minister to Canada, sided with the Allies against Germany. Meantime the new diplomat, hus- band of the former Doris Duke, "world's richest girl," was the target for sharp criticism from Capitol Hill. Introducing a resolution calling for a Congressional inquiry to determine whether Cromwell was correctly quoted in criticizing "American isola- tionists," Rep. Sweeney (Dem.-O.) said: Sweeney Speaks "If our playboy minister to Canada wants to fight for the British Em- pire I respectfully suggest that he join the ranks of such distinguished American expatriates as Lady Astor and Kermit Roosevelt, so that he, may 'carry on' for the Empire. "We should have the courage to tell Cromwell and his lawfully-wed-, ded fortune, Doris Duke, to get the hell out of this republic." Under Sweeney's resolution, the House foreign affairs committee would be directed to recommend the recall of Cromwell, if reports of the speech were found to be true. Sena- tor Clark (Dem.-Mo.) had previously said that Cromwell should be recalled because of his "outrageous" speech. Financial Support Rep. Barry (Dem.-NY,) called; Cromwell a "garrulous young man"J and said his "chief, if not sole, quali- fication for the positionhe holds is his ability to contribute to the finan- cial support of a political party."I Some members of the Senate For-f eign Relations Committee said a diplomat from a neutral couitry should not have made such an ad- dress. However, Senator Pepper (Dem.-Fla.) said he was "very glad"1 the speech was made, even though he had some doubts as to whether it was the correct thing for a diplomat to do. The speech, made yesterday at Tor- onto, strongly indicted Germany and expressed an emphatic desire for an Allied victory as beneficial to the world. Modern Marco Polo Will Give Oratorical T al k Not since the days of Marco Polor has a young traveler packed so many thrills and adventures into a few brief years as has Nicol Smith, sciont of a California oil family, who willI deliver the final Oratorical Series lecture at 8:30 p.m. today in HillI Auditorium.t Nicol Smith swam the Hellespont' at 17and, on the same trip, paddled the entire length of the Danube.} Later he was kidnapped by a 300-1 pound daughter of a South Sea is- land chieftain. In Russia he was married and divorced within an hour. He has also sailed up the South American "River of Death," visited the penal colony on Devil's Island and has been officially adopted by the Arawak tribe in Dutch Guiana. Mr. Smith is one of the few whitef men ever to penetrate the mysterious island of Hainan. He will speak on Hainan tonight and show 3,000 feetf of color film, the first motion pic- tures ever to come out of the island.r Herman Discusses Polities In France Rapid development of French po- litical parties following the adoption of the French constitution of 1875,l was due to the disinterest in foreign affairs by all classes of society, said Dr. Abraham Herman in his lecture on the French party system here yes-i I To Officiate At Inter fraternity Function Rech f £From ToFc Ousts American Consulate Poland; Reynaud Attempts rm French 'War Cabinet' (~. - Daily Photo by Bogle. Tom Adams, (left) head of the Interfraaternity Council, and Dean Walter B. Rea, confer on details for the Greek Week program which is to start tomorrow. The program will include forums and discussions on fraternity problems. k I I Hockett's Talk Will Highlight WGreek Week' Noted Fraternity Leader Will Speak Tomorrow At Banquet For Initiates High spot of the Interfraternity Council's Greek Week program will be the Initiation Banquet at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow, where Norman Hock- ett, nationally-known fraternity leader, will talk fraternity problems in general, Assistant Dean Walter B. Rea will present the Interfrater- nity Scholarship cup to the frater- nity having the highest collective scholarship standing for the past year. Tom Adams, '40, president of the Council, will act as toastmaster at the Banquet, at which more than 700 are expected to attend. Group singing will be led by Prof. Dave Mattern of the music school, accord- ing to Dick Peckinpaugh, '41, of the Council. Preceding the Banquet, in the after- noon, will be a general meeting .of all fraternity men and initiates to- gether with any others interested, at which Dr. Fred T. Mitchell, dean of men at Michigan State College, will speak on college-fraternity rela- tions. Following the general session will be a 'series of panels on :various fraternity problems, each led by members of the local chapters. New Graduates' Council Convenes Plans for representation of the var- ious departments of the University and proposed activities in the future formed the topics for discussion at last night's meeting of the reorgan- ized Graduate Student Council, Abe Rosenzweig, Grad., Chairman of the Central Committee, announced last night. As a first step toward making the Council representative of all grad- uates, Rosenzweig explained, letters were sent to each department head, asking that he see that student re- presentatives be elected by the grad- uate students of that department. it Gargoyle, Out Today, Avoids Beauty Contest I !. 1 A I Smarting somewhat under the ac- tion of the university in prohibiting its much talked of all campus beau- ty contest, the Gargoyle, under the guidance of Ellis Wunsch, editor, will appear on campus today. However, Wunsch pointed out the fact that the Gargoyle, of hardy Stock, was not one to take such a blow lying down. The magazine, he said, will be as completely devoid of any suggestion of a beauty contest as possible. Dr. LuigiVillari Will Speak Here On Italian Stand, Staff Of On Member Of League Nations Will Speak Foreign Situation Member of the staff of the League of Nations and formerly of the Ital- ian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Dr. Luigi Villari, will discuss "Italy and the International Situation" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. The talk, a University lecture spon- sored by the political science depart- ment, is open to the public. Born in Italy and educated at Ox- ford, in England, Dr. Villari has car- ried on the tradition set by h:.s fi- ther, a prominent historian c.2 mcd- ern Europe. Dr. Villari, too, has es- pecially centered his writings and research upon contemporary Euro- pean history, especially the history of Italy. In the role of statesman, Dr. Villari has been prominent in the political affairs, both internal and external, of his native country. He attained further prominence by his work as a member of the staff of the League of Nations. In the role of historian, he is one of the most important contributors to the Italian Encyclopedia and has written several books on modern European history. He has lectured in the United States previous to his present trip. Especially noted are his lectures, delivered a few years ago, at Williamstown, Mass. Former Finance Minister Seeks Group To Replace Daladier's Government Fallen 'Strong Man' Ponders New Post By JOHN LLOYD PARIS, March 21 (Thursday).-() -Persons close to Paul Reynaud said early this morning that he hoped before the day was out to complete a new "push the war" cabinet for France and end the government cri- sis precipitated yesterday by the resignation of the cabinet of Edouard Daladier. The new government, these sour- ces said, likely will go before the Chamber of Deputies Friday for a vote of confidence. The foriation planned by Rey- naud includes virtually all political parties, but its final makeup depends on the decision of the executive com- mittee of the Socialist group, called for late this morning to consider an offer to join the cabinet. Much depends on Daladier, who was offered the war ministry but whose acceptance is not yet official. Reynaud concluded his first night's consultations about 2 a.m. (8 p.m. EST) after seeing Daladier; Edouard' Herriot, president of the Chamber; Jules Jeanneney, president of the Senate; Louis Rollin, former commerce minister; Georges Man- del, minister of colonies in the Dala- dier cabinet; Henri Queuille, minis- ter of agriculture in the Daladier. cabinet; Camille Chautemps, Dala- dier's vice-premier and Lucien La- moureux, former finance minister. The vigorous Reynaud, mountain- eer. world tra'eler and skilled doc- tor of F ich fiance, said he would give his definite reply about noon today to President Albert LeBrun's request that he form a cabinet. Residence Halls Issue Explained By Litzenberg Dorm Director Addresses. Interfraternity CouncilI On Life Of Freshnien Prof. Karl Litzenberg, University director of Residence Halls, told members of the Interfraternity Council last night that there is a "need for simplifying the already; complicated life of first semester; freshmen on the Michigan campus." One of the chief functions of the; new West Quadrangle and the most important reason for converting Jor-; dan Hall into a residence for fresh- man women, he said, is to assist students in adaptingthemselves to college life and academic work. "No important conclusions can be drawn from the results of the first semester's operation of the freshman houses," Professor Litzenberg added, "but in terms of scholastic achieve- rnent statistics show that in spite of the newness of the Jordan plan and in spite of the disturbed physical conditions in the West Quadrangle, the Quadrangle men maintained the best academic average of all fresh- men during the past 10 years, and the Jordan women improved slightly upon it." Professor Litzenberg also said that fraternity pledges living in the West Quadrangle made "much better aca- demic records" than did the fresh- man pledges of two years ago, even though the fraternity pledge aver- ages are still below those of the fresh- man class as a whole. "This conclusion is based on figures provided by Marion Williams, Stat- istician in the Registrar's Office, and W. D. Knight, in charge of Resi- dence Halls Scholarship records," he explained. "We need to study seriously and (Continued on Page 5) Student Senate To Discuss T71 . " 1 'I 1 ..-- By HOWARD A. GOLDMAN A vague, unformulated discontent among the French people-rather than a specific and definite issue, probably caused the fall of Daladier from the premiership of France. Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department, approached late yesterday, ventured this comment on the sudden turn of events in French war politics. France is really governed by moods of public opinion, he explained, and as that mood shifts, French cabinets change. Professor Slosson offered several possibilities as causes for the discontent. Inaction on the Western Front, failure to aid Finland effec- tively and the recent Hitler-Musso- lini Brennero conference all may have contributed to bring about the dissatisfaction, he said. Professor Slosson also pointed out that the resignation "explodes all the nonsense about Daladier being a dictator." It is plain proof, he re- marked, that a prime minister falls easily in a truly parliamentary gov- ernment, even in the most stringent circumstances. He made special comment on the circumstances immediately leading to the resignation. Daladier fell from power, he noted, even though he re- ceived a Parliamentary.vote of con- fidence technically almost unani- mous; thus he could have carried on Untermeyer's fLatest Topic Is 'A rchitecture' "Changing Lines in Architecture" will be the topic upon which Louis Untermeyer, distinguished poet and anthologist, will base the fourth lec- ture of his series on "New Frontiers in American Culture" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. Mr. Untermeyer will illustrate his talk with a collection of slides. He will conduct a discussion of the ma- terial covered in the lecture at 4:15 p.m. Saturday in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Al- though the series is under the aus- pices of the engineering English de- partment, the lectures are open to all students and faculty members. In tomorrow's talk, Mr. Unter- meyer will for the first time, turn away from literature in order to con- sider trends in other forms of art. His earlier talks have related how a growing consciousness of the Amer- ican idiom has influenced literature. Subsequent lectures will trace this development in the fields of archi- tecture. painting and music. Slosson Says Vague Popular Discontent Caused Resignation without violating either the letter or the spirit of the French constitu- tion. (The vote in the Chamber of Deputies was favorable to the Prime Minister by 239 to 1, but more than 300 deputies abstained from voting.) Referring to the possibility of for- mer finance minister Paul Reynaud accepting President LeBrun's bid to form a "war cabinet," Professor Slos- son discounted any expectations that the new man's policies will differ greatly from those of the fallen Daladier. Reynaud, he explained, represents nothing too different from Daladier. In fact, he added, although both men are substantially moderate, the pros- pective premier is possibly one degree more conservative than Daladier. The ex-premier's Radical Socialist party, he said, is neither radical nor socialist, but is a left wing moderate group sitting almost in the center of the Chamber of Deputies. Reynaud's Left Republican party, lie noted, sits a little to the right of the center. Reich Planes Attack Convoy Near Scotland British Warships And Air Squadrons Battle Fierce German Revenge Move LONDON, March 20. -(JP)--Ger- many's air force hit back last night in revenge for the tremendous pound- ing which British planes dealt out to Sylt, swarming down on a convoy off the Scottish coast, fighting a harsh battle with British warships and naval planes and damaging three neutral ships. Revising its first estimate of the casualties early today, the British Ad- miralty said three neutral ships in the convoy suffered damage and that one of them was abandoned by its crew. The German radio broadcast claims that "several" convoyed ships were sunk or badly damaged. The abandoned ship was the Nor- wegian Svinta, of 1,267 tons. Her crew was picked up by another Nor- wegian vessel. The Swedish Utklippan, 1,599 tons, was hit by an incendiary bomb and the Norwegian Tora Elise, 721 tons, likewise was damaged. Antiaircraft fire f4om escorting warships damaged one attacking Heinkel bomber, the Admiralty said. Planes of the fleet air arm, Britain's naval air force, hit two other Heink- els and on one occasion two of the British planes scattered 10 Heinkels. State Department Accedes To German Demands; 'All RightsReserved' Sudden Step Affects Other Governments WASHINGTON, March 20.-(P)- Germany forced the United States today to withdraw its consulate gen- eral from Poland, where 532 Amer- ican citizens live. The State Department announced that it had acceded to the German demand but "reserves all of its rights in the matter." No reason was given for Germany's action, which affected other coun- tries as well. It was understood that Germany was dissatisfied with the activities of some other consulates and ousted them all. Leave For Berlin The three Americans comprising the staff of the consulate general left today for Berlin. All matters in connection with American citi- zens in Poland will be handled through the American Embassy in Berlin. The State Department said that "representations were made to the German government stressing the difficulty of rehdering assistance and protection to American citizens with- out consular representation in War- saw." Secretary Hull said he was mak- ing distinct progress in Berln, how- ever, toward obtaining permission for a number of American relief workers to enter German-occupied Poland to supervise relief distribution. Germany, according to dispatches received here, is refusing to permit American and other foreign news- papermen to go to Poland. Consular Officers The consular officers who left were George J. Haering, consul, who was born in New York City; Carl Birkeland, vice consul, who was born in Norway and became naturalized; and William R. Morton, vice consul, who was born at New Ulm, Minn. It is understood they will remain in the American embassy in Berlin. When the German armies invaded Poland in September, 1939, the Po- lish government retired from War- saw and finally crossed the border into Rumania. The American em- bassy, headed by Ambassador An- thony J. Drexel-Biddle, accompanied the government. When the Polish government tra- veled to France and set up a provi- sional capital at Angers, the Amer- ican embassy was established here provisionally, and is still in charge of Ambassador Drexel-Biddle. Labor Leader Lectures Here Tucker Smith Reproaches New Deal Rule "The New Deal was doomed to fail- ure," Tucker Smith, noted labor lead- er, maintainedIn a talk last night before the League for Liberal Action at the Natural Science Building. That failure was inevitable because of the internal inconsistencies of the New Deal and the outside hostility toward it, he emphasized. Smith then listed what he termed fundamental facts that must be real- ized: "you cannot retain democracy and retain widespread unemploy- ment; you cannot rid the nation of unemployment without investment, and large scale investment is impos- sible under the present system of priv- ate initiative; the nation is farther away 'from doing the right thing' to- day than it was eight years ago." Labor must realize, Smith stressed, that "Roosevelt is not the social en- gineer who is going to save the capi- talist system." -L State Loses Millions In Taxes: Pamphlet Points Out Deficiencies In Michigan Tax Administration Britain Risks Mighty Merchantmen: Mauretania Leaves Manhattan On Potentiall Perilous Voyage! By DAVE LACHENBRUCH Michigan's present decentralized and uncoordinated tax administra- tion has meant the loss to the state, of millions of dollars in uncollected taxes and has brought unnecessary and costly inconvenience to taxpay- ers, according to a pamphlet, "State Tax Administration," issued yester- day by the University Bureau of Government. Under the existing system, twelve state and two local agencies partici- pate in Michigan's tax administra- tiori, while in the majority of the other states, a single bureau is in charge of administering state taxes, Dr. Robert S. Ford, director of the Bureau, and Frank M. Landers, re- search assistant, claims. This inade- quate system, the study maintains, is responsible for losses to the state senate confirmation, for a ten-year term. "Regardless of whether the com- mission or single-headed type of agency is finally adopted," the bulle- tin, sixth in the Michigan govern- ment series, concludes, "the central- ization of responsibility and author- ity will make its tax administration on a sound, efficient and economical basis." German Contests To Be Held Today Twenty-two students of the Ger- man department will compete today for the Kothe-Hildner prizes estab- lished by Herman Kothe, '10L, in honor of Jonathan A. C. Hildner, NEW YORK, March 20.-(/P)-The 35,739-ton Mauretania, fifth largest liner in the British merchant marine, entered a new and dangerous role as a troop transport tonight. At 8:01 p.m. (EST), the big gray- painted ship pulled away from the Cunard White Star Line pier at 14th Street, Manhattan. Few lights showed on her decks. The Queen Mary, holder of the Atlantic speed record, was expected to leave at dawn tomorrow although some sources said she might wait to pick up more crew members from the British Lancastria, arriving in mid-morning from Canada. All seamen had been ordered to report back to the ship by midnight, however, and instructions were is- sued to cut the water lines between the ship and its pier at 5 a.m. (EST). Longshoremen worked under flood- lights tonight loading final supplies. (By Daily Staff Writer) As Great Britain places the two huge liners Queen Mary and Maure- tania in official war service, she N actually betting more than $25,000,- 000 and about 116,000 tons of ship- ping on the strength of the British navy and on the fanciful forces of luck. The Queen Mary and Mauretania must face a record of more than 1,600,000 tons of shipping lost by Great Britain during 1918, the clos- ing year of the World War, in spite of the relatively effective British convoy system and armed shipping. Although their classification as troop ships places the two vessels in a somewhat different category, nevertheless some parallel can be drawn between them and certain merchant ships sunk during the last war. Examples are the unarmed Fa- laba, the Arabic and the Hesperian. But probably the two most well- known disasters to British merchant- Mimes Initiates 26 Of_'Opera' Cast Grease paint masks worn all day yesterday by undergraduates tapped