Weather Fair today; tomorrow mostly cloudy. CJr Bk it~tg an 4:3attx editorial Education In China .:. I VOL. L. No. 143 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 21, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS Spring Parley To Summarize Work In Final Session Today War, Student Government, Democracy Are Treated In Second-Day Sessions Resolution Attacks Racial Prejudices Summaries of the four panels of the Spring Parley, begun Friday and continued yesterday, will be present- ed at a general session at 3 p.m. today in the Union Ballroom. Results of the panels: "The World Scene; Chaos or Cosmos?" was led repeatedly into the discussion of the United States' chances of being drawn into the present war, and pos- sible solutions of a democratic na- ture which might avert the trend. General agreement was that a new system of prohibiting future wars must be organized. Democracy Limited In the afternoon session of the pan- el on "American Democracy: Now or Never?" it was generally agreed that a certain degree of democracy exists in the United States, but it was claimed that it is very limited by economic autocracy and pressure groups. The meeting was concluded on the note that recognition by democracy of the dignity and worthiness of each individual was the essential value of the democratic system. The evening session of this panel considered the problem of repairing the present American economy to ex- pand and produce for the benefit of the people. The final resolution originated in the student bloc and carried by a small plurality was Resolved: That the current American Youth Act should be endorsed by this panel. Negro Discrimination A resolution passed in the afternoon session of the Campus Community panel stated: "It has been asserted that the Board in Control of Athletics is responsible for discriminating prac- tices in sports as far as Negroes are concerned." In the evening session, discussion centered around the problem of anti- Jewish and anti-Negro feeling on campus. Opinions were expressed that Greek letter organizations tended to foster prejudices even among those who had no such feelings before com- ing to the University. At the panel on "University Train- ing" an extended system of student government, a series of projects con- ducted by the social science faculties inquiring into practical methods of realizing our democratic responsibili- ties in college, and an extenson of the honors program were suggested as topics for consideration. Coal Engineers To Hold Annual Conclave Here Industrial And Academic Leaders To Hold Parley On Industrial Problems Industrial and academic leaders in the study of coal utilization will dis- cuss mutual problems tomorrow at the Union when the Twenty-fifth Fuel Engineering Conference of Ap- palachian Coals Inc. meets here joint- ly with the Fourth Annual Coal Util- ization Institute sponsored by the de- partment of mechanical engineering. Engineers interested in various phases of coal power production and consumption will convene here for an intensified one-day session, headed by J. E. Tobey, manager of the Fuel Engineering division of Appalachian Coals, and terminated with a ban- quet at 6:30 p.m. at the Union at which Prof. R. S. Hawley of the mechanical engineering department will serve as toastmaster. Conference speakers from the Uni- versity will include Prof. R. C. Por- ter of the mechanical engineering de- partment, speaking on "The Design of Small Industrial Coal-Burning Plants." H anfler Is President Of Sigma Delta Chi I War Summary From World Capitals On April 20 (By the Associated Pres ) STOCKHOLM-The Norweg- ian army reported early today (Sunday) from "somewhere in Norway" that British troopsrhad penetrated to eastern Norway and had taken up the battle against the German invaders. * * 4: BERLIN-Germany declares air squadron attacked British landing operation in Norwegian fjord, sinking cruiser, wrecking big transport, "effectively" at- tacking landed troops; Reich heils Hitler on 51si birthday. LONDQN-Reporting success- ful operations on land and sea and in air, Britain declares huge Allied force sent to Norway with- out loss of single life, two mer- chant ships lost, two German transports torpedoed * * : PARIS-Reynaud government seeks "Mediterranean entente" in appeasement move toward Italy; French troops reported operating in Norway; fierce air fights re- sumed on Western Front. BUCHAREST-Rumania gets promise of German munitions and warplanes, gives Germany commercial concessions. Gaines' Talk New man Clubs Hear Babcock Open, Sessio I' Archbishop Mooney Talks Today; Ohio Selected For 1941 Convention Newman Club members from four states, gathered here for their 14th annual convention yesterday, were charged with the responsibility of furnishing a war-torn world with spiritual wisdom and leadership. John Babcock, state deputy of the Knights of Columbus and keynoting speaker of the convention, told the' Catholic college students that their most solemn duty is "to see yourselves as a means of radiating Christian culture throughout all the world." "Whether you become captain of industry or not," he declared, "mat- ters not as long as you are captain of your soul." Other speakers, tak- ing the conference platform during the day, repeated the declaration that the world today is starving for a spiritualistic rebirth. Today the convention will hear Archbishop Edward Mooney, of De- troit; the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Michael J. Ready, of Washington, D.C., Presi- dent Ruthven, and secretary of state Harry Kelly. Ohio State University, at Colum- bus, was selected as the site of the 1941 convention, and Father Clair Berry of Ann Arbor was selected pro- vincial chaplain. Life without religion was blamed by Miss Agnes Reagan, executive scretary of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, for the crisis which is facing the world today. "Re- ligion is definitely a basis for the everyday performances of life," she said, "and our crisis today is the re- sult of an attempt to combine a material organization of the world without spiritual values." * * * Even religious conferences must (Continued from Page 6) Will Feature Convocation 800 Outstanding Students To Be Given Recognition At HonorsParley Friday Reeves To Preside; Rutiven To Speak Dr. Francis P. Gaines, president of Washington and Lee University, will be the principal speaker at the 17th annual Honors Convocation to be held at 11 a.m. Friday in Hill Audi- torium at which approximately 800 students who have gained special distinction in 1939-40 will be honored. Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the poli- tical science department, will be act- ing-chairman in place of Dean Joseph E. Bursley, who is on leave-of-ab- sence. President Alexander G. Ruth- ven will greet the students, their guests and members of the School- masters Club of Michigan which is in- cluding the Convocation on its regu- lar program. Music during the cere- monies will be provided on the audi- torium organ by Dr. Palmer Chris- tian, University organist. The Convocation honors seniors with a "B" average in the upper 10 per cent of their class; freshmen, sophomores and juniors who have maintained a half "A", half "B" aver- age; recipients of graduate fellow- ships and scholarships; graduate stu- dents elected to honor societies; and recipients of special prizes, such as Hopwood awards and special scholar- ships. Invitations which enable those selected and their parents to sit in a special section of the Auditorium have been sent out. Dr. Gaines succeeded to the presi- dency of Washington and Lee in 1930, and has been given honorary degrees by several colleges and universities. He has been president of the Co- operative Educational Association of Virginia in 1932-33, and is a trustee for the Carnegie Endowment for In- ternational Peace. Golfers Crush Spartanis, 15-3 Emery Captures Medalist Honors With 73 By LARRY ALLEN After losing all four of their matches played against State in the past two years, Michigan's golf team finally turned the tide over the wind-swept fairways of the Univer- sity course yesterday afternoon, and overwhelmed the Spartans from East Lansing, 15-3. The Wolverines had little trouble with the Michigan State team, tying only one match and winning the others. The greatest opposition came from a stiff north wind that played havoc with almost every shot, and left the players so cold that accuracy around the green was vir- tually impossible. But the cold wind didn't trouble Jack Emery,. who, playing in the number two spot for Michigan, swept all three points from his oppo- nent and copped medal honors with a sparkling 73. His game through- out the entire round was consistent, and he mixed long drives with ac- curate iron shots in carding a par Continued on Page 3) Fetish Made Of Education, Mitchell Says More Than 1,000 Parents, Teachers And Students Attend One-Day Parley Program Features Lectures, Exhibits Requiring only class attendance without regard for living conditions of the student, the public schools have made a fetish ofbeducation during the past decade, Dr. Morris Mitchell emphasized to more than 1,000 teachers, parents and educa- tion students attending the annual state convention of the Association for Childhood Education here yes- terday. Connected with the federal reset- tlement programs of the South and work camps, Dr. Mitchell cited ex- amples of children who went to school from their impoverished homes in spite of hunger, cold and dire want. Such conditions are the reflection of economic vicissitudes which will shape future education, he commented. New Trends Seen Similar to the disappearance of the Latin grammar schools and small academies, the speaker pre- dicted that the public school system in its present form will give way to new trends in line with economic developments. Educators must an- ticipate this change and be prepared for it, he stressed. Mrs. Doris D. Klaussen of Battle Creek, president of the organization, outlined the growth of the branch of the Michigan Educational Asso- ciation from 50 to 2,000 in the past 10 years, comprising a ma- jority of elementary teachers. Films Are Shown Under the direction of Dr. Charles Fisher of the University Extension Service movies were show of elemen- tary schools in action and films for use in the classroom. In the foyer of the Rackham Building Miss Frie- da Pepper of the Children's Art Cen- ter of Detroit exhib.ited children's creative art. Children's books were displayed by Miss Edith Thomas of the University Library Extension Service. Visiting Perry, Angell and the Uni- versity Elementary schools, members of the conference viewed displays of curriculum materials. Local edu- cators explained the current projects carried out in these schools. 42 Candidates Enter Student Senate Race The official list of candidates for the Student Senate elections next Friday, is as follows as announced yesterday by the directors of elec- tions, Norman Schorr, '40, and Stu- art Knox, '40. Erwin Bowers, '41, Neutrality- Progressive; Arthur J. Volz, Jr., '43, Independent Nationalist; Robert Lewis, '42; Helen Corman, '41, In- dependent Liberal; Bruce Randall, '40, Independent Progressive; Mi- chael Rodnick, '41, Independent Progressive; George F. Shepard, '41; Nick P. Chapekis, '42, Liberal. Michigan party: H. William Er- win, '42; Charles M. Boynton, '42; Samuel B. Russell, '42; Robert Krause, '42; John McCune, '41; Rob- ert Titus, '42; William C.'Langford, '42; William Comstock, '42; Robert Wallace, '42; Lee Perry, '41; Wil- liam L. Hurly, '42; Richard H. Mar- tin, '41; John A. Rookus, '42; Pat Hoeper, '42; Robert S. Reed, '42; Bill Sessions, '41; Pat Lillie, '41. Robert J. Levine, '41, Pool Room Progressive; Chester Sikawatt, '41, Pool Room Progressive; Erwin Hein- inger, '43, Conservative Nationalist; John W. Middleton, '43, Conservative Nationalist; Harvey Goodman, '42, American Student Union; Jane Sapp, '41; William Carruthers, '42, Michigan Progressive; John S. Al- drich. '43, Dormitory; E. William Muehl, '41, Progressive. Yale Forman, '42, Independent Cooperative; Charles D. Fiske, '43, Conservative Liberal; James F. Ross- man, '42; Philip Cummins, '40, Young Communist League; Gerald Nitzberg, Grad., New America; Al- lan Axelrod, '43, Dormitory; Sara Jeanne Hauke, '42, All-Campus; Al- lan T. Rickett, '41 Al1-Camnns Thinclads Assure Victory By Gaining First In Mile; Chalk Up_812/3 Points Culver Helps Team Cop Sprint Medley (Special to the Daily) BLOOMINGTON, Ind., April 20-- The characteristic balance of the Michigan track team piled up suf- ficient second and third places to add to its five firsts to enable the thinclads to take first place in the quadrangular Indiana Relays held here this afternoon. Michigan rolled up 81 2/3 points to win, with Indiana second with 70 1/10, Notre Dame third with 49 5/6, and Illinois fourth with 28 2/5 points. The Wolverines took the lead in the meet when they swept through to a victory in the mile team race, and held it through- out the rest of the events. Poor weather conditions had left the Indiana outdoor track so soft that it was found necessary to move the meet, except for the discus and javelin events, indoors to the In- diana Field House. Several events were juggled to fit them to indoor conditions. The Wolverines' star performers were their junior high-jump ace, Don Canham; George Ostroot, bril- liant sophomore weight star; pole- vaulters Charlie Decker and Dave Cushing; and the four-mile and sprint medley relays teams who ac- counted for all of the first places gathered by the Michigan team. Michigan's sprint medley team of Jim Rae, Al Smith, Carl Culver 4nd Dye Hogan came through with a nairrow victory on the basis of a brilliant anchor leg by Hogan who nipped Indiana's sensational soph- omore, Campbell Kane, at the tape (Continued on Page 3) Delgado To Speak On Race Problems Race mixture problems and ac- climatization of whites in Brazil will be discussed by Dr. Carlos Delgado de Carvalho, noted Brazilian geographer andc sociologist, in the third of his series of six lectures here,dat 415 p.m. Tuesday, in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. Doctor Delgado, accredited Visit- ing Carnegie Professor under the Car- negie Endowment for International Peace, has lectured already on the geography and the economic history of Brazil. In future lectures he will consider trends in education, and the immigration problem in that country, and will conclude with a talk on "The New Brazilian State." Roosevelt Scores Critics WARM SPRINGS, Ga., April 20.- (P)-President Roosevelt urged again tonight that his own party choose a "liberal pair of candidates" and at the same time waded into the Repub- lican opposition for "seeking to fright- en the country" by declaring the pres- ent administration "is deliberately trying to put this nation into war.'' Varsity's Mistakes Help Badger Nine Win, 5-3; M Trackmen Take Relays CARL CULVER . . . runs, jumps well, Koo To Speak For Chinese Relief Fund SRA To Sponsor Lecture Tomorrow; Production Of OperaIs Scheduled Climax of the campus drive to raise funds for the aid of Chinese students will come at 8 p.m. tomor- row in the Rackham Lecture Hall where Dr. T. Z. Koo, noted inter-1 national lecturer and secretary of the World Student Christian Fed- eration, is scheduled to present his lecture on progress in China. The lecture is sponsored by the Student Religious Association, and tickets are priced at 25 cents each. All money raised will be sent to the Far Eastern Student Service Fund, agency designed to provide relief for Chinese students whose educa- tions are in danger of being abrupt- ly stopped because of the Japanese invasion. Second high point of the Chinese relief campaign here will come May 5 and 6 when Chinese students in the University present their Chinese Concert and Opera. For the purpose of furnishing Chi- na with medical aid, Chinese stu- dents will present a program headed by famed Prof. Chung-Loh Wei, who will present a concert, playing sev- eral different instruments of Chi- nese origin. Also on the program will be a Chinese fashion parade, showing the oldest and latest styles in oriental garb. Helps Win Medley Sloppy Base Work Loses Michigan's First Inning Three Run Advantage Dobson Is Relieved Ini Fourth Frame By MEL FINEBERG A decided proclivity toward running bases at the wrong time and a dis- inclination toward running them at the right times cost Michigan a ball game yesterday afternoon as it dropped its first 'Conference game, 5-3, to Wisconsin at Ferry Field. The varsity slipped to a .500 percentage as a result of the defeat. The Wolverines jumped off to a three run lead in the first inning and appeared to have Badger hurler Johnny Saxer well on the "road to ruin" until sloppy work on the bases lent a helping hand to the reeling Badger hurler. And after that the Wolverines were unable to collect an- other run. Dobson Is Relieved In the meantime the persistent invaders were pecking away at Russ Dobson and finally, at one and the same time in the fourth inning, they overtook the Wolverines and sent Dobson to the mythical showers. They picked up single tallies in the second and third innings, two in the fourth and added another in the ninth for good luck. Michigan got off to a flying start in the very first inning when Capt. Charley Pink drew a walk. Don Hol- man sacrificedhim to second and he continued to third a moment later on a passed ball. Saxer still had trpuble settling down and handed Mike Sofiak a free ticket to first base, and the little Wolverine shortstop was so pleased with this generosity that he stole second a -minute later. Steppon Triples It all proved to be unnecessary ex- ercise as Willie Steppon poled a long triple to center to score both his mates. This helped Saxer's frayed nerves not a whit and he proceeded to hit Freddie Trosko on the shoulder with his fast bal. Then Frances Chamberlain cracked a skimmer to right, Steppon scoring and Trosko scampering around to third. It looked like an early end for Saxer but Chamberlain, undecided as to whether or not he had hit a double or a single, was trapped between first and second. Trosko tried to break for the plate to help him out and was caught. So instead of one out. and men on first and third, there were two gone and a man on first. George Ruehle ended the inning by forcing Chamberlain at second. The Badgers got one of those runs (continued on Page 3) Train Wreck's Rescue Crew Pushes Work Death Toll Mounts To 25 After Limited Crashes In Central New York Sink Announces Program Change: Basso Kipnis To Replace Tibbett In May Festival Performance Fifty Schools Submit Data On Placement; Educators Say 1940 Graduates Have Better Chance For Jobs Alexander Kipnis, distinguished Russian-American basso whom critics have likened to the late Feodor Chaliapin, has been signed to sing the opening program May 8 of the an- nual four-day May Festival, replac- ing Lawrence Tibbett, baritone, who was forced to cancel his engagement because of a tonsil ailment, it was announced yesterday by Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the University Musical Society. Final negotiations for Kipnis' ap- pearance were completed early yes- terday morning after Dr. Sink had received a wire from Tibbett's man- agers informing him that the bari- tone was taking a three-weeks' vaca- tion on doctors' orders. With the co- operation of Dr. Eugene Ormandy, Next June's Michigan graduates will have a far better chance to land jobs than those of last year, although 1939's placements were better than average, Dr. T. Luther Purdom, di- rector of the Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion,stated in a report for a survey by the Associated Press. More than 50 schools of higher learning situated in all sections of the nation contributed data. Their spokesmen were almost unanimous in the opinion that the gap between academic assembly lines and jobs is going to be shorter-and smoother- than it was a year ago. Their re- ports ranged from better prospects actual placement of seniors is about the same. I have a feeling--not yet strongly confirmed-that the aver- age senior with no special training twill have a harder time getting placed than he did last year." Most of the other placement offi- cials, however, were highly hopeful. Dwight F. Bracken, director of Ford- ham University's placement service, reported.: "The attitude of recruiting officers and the number of them contacting us for personnel indicates that em- ployment will be 10 to 15 percent over what it was a year ago. This may be due not only to general business conditions but to the fact that we have been actively in touch , LITTLE FALLS, N.Y., April 20.- (P)-Rescue workers pried tonight in- to tons of twisted sleet-covered steel, once the New York Central's proud Lake Shore Limited, seeking possible additions to a known wreck death toll of 25 persons. Traveling 59 miles an hour, the New York-Chicago passenger train last night jumped the track at a 6-degree curve, the most abrupt on the system, and crashed with terrific and death- dealing force into a massive stone em- bankment. Three hundred passengers, most of whom were asleep in pullmans on the 16-car train, werke hurled from their beds into an inferno of shrieks, hissing steam and the groans of the dying. So badly mangled were the victims that only 18 had been identified, one tentatively, as dusk fell over this pic- I I