The Weather Generally fair in south, lo- cal showers; somewhat war- rner in central portions. L E Officital Publicationt of The Summer Session Editorials Roosevelt Loses the First Round; Cutting Government Expenditures. I VOL. Xit No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1932 PRICE FIVE CENTS Flays Monroe Bonus Marchers Apply for,.Free Tickets Howe Doctrine As 'Incompatible' It Conflicts with Declara- tion of Independence, Scott Declares Doctrine Protects Private Investment Has Made America Into International Collection Agency, Is Claim The Monroe Doctrine, century old pillar of..American foreign policy, was denounced last night by Dr. James Scott Brown, secretary of the Carnegie .Endowment for Interna- tional Peace, as, "incompatible with the principles contained in the De- claration of Independence." The doct'rine Dr. Scott declared, has made the united States an in- ternational collection agency and an insurer of all speculative risks made by its citizens in various American countries. The Uited States, he as serted, would never have submitted to s zch dominance in 1776. Oppses Law of Land Quoting Aainly the Roosevelt co- rollary, Dr. &cott said the policy was in direct opposition to the law of theland, as proclaimed by Roosevelt and Taft in .the form of the Hague Peace conventions, which rovided that "the United States should not be required to depart from its tradi- tional policy of not intruding upon, interfering with....questions of pol- icy or internatibnal administration1 of any foreign state." "'What would have been the reply of the Fathers of the Republic to a statement of a foreign country which did not propose to take a p rt of the United States, but would o ly noccupytheir territory, colct their1 revenues, remitting to the govern-s ment what should be needed to car-l ry it on, and distribute the balancec among its creditors? The right claimed under the Monroe Doctrine was against the outside world; it was not and could not be the source of a right against an American re- public.- Colonies Would Have Refuseds "It is not a condition of things," Dr. Scott continued, "ithat the thi- teen colonies which had proclaimedl their independence but had as yet not acquired it, would have accept- ed. Their treaty of alliance with France, which was to procure that independence, was to be on a foot- ing of equality." - Dr. Scott also attacked phraseo- logy of the Roosevelt c o r o 11 a r y. Quoting again from the text that,. "It is not true that the United States "feels any land hunger or entertains any projects as regards the other nations of the rest of the 'Western Hemisphei'e save as are for their welfare" and that "all that this1 country desires is to see the neigh-z boring states stable, orderly andl prosperous," he asked who was to be, judge of the requisite conditions. Hubbard Will Address Educatio Parley Today, Dr. Frank Hubbard, associate di- rector of the research division of the National Education associatiop, will speak at 2 o'clockhtoday in the Uni- versity High School auditorium on "The Status of the City Superinten- dent of Schools. Dr. C. 0. Davis will address a 4 o'clock conference in the auditorium on "Trends in junior High School Development." At 6 o'clock Pi Lambda Theta will hold a supper meeting at the home of Dr. Kather- ine Greene. Bill to Abolish Oath Beaten.,71-61, in Dail DUBLIN, Irish Free State, July 12. -(AP)-Hot heads clashed in the Dail Eireann tonight when, by a vote of 71 to 61, it refused to ap- prove the Irish Free State govern- ment bill to abolish the oath of al- legiance to the British crown as am- mended by the Senate. As a result, the bill will be held up for 18 montlis unless a general election takes place in the Free State in the meantime. Associated Press Photo In this picture are shown some of the hundreds of bonus marchers at Washington applying for free transportation to their homes. Railway fare was provided for the disappointed lobbyists in the form of loans on their bonus certificates. Munro Comedy Opens Tonight; To Run 4 Days Alexander Wyckoff Is the Director of Repertory Players Third Work Another Theatre Guild success, "At Mrs. Beam's," a comedy by C. K. Munro, will be given this week by the Repertory Players, opening "to- night at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. It will be given each night through Saturday. Directed by Alexander Wyckoff, former art director of the Manhat- tan Theatre colony, of New York, andA a~tir guest director of the Players this summer, the production of this play is the third of the seven plays of the summer dramatic sea- son. First produced in 1927 by the Theatre Guild in New York, it is more a comedy of character than of .situation. It was one of the most successful comedies produced in that year. Included in the cast are Fern Barrer, who plays perhaps the most unusual part, that of Miss Shoe; Herbert Milliken, the Mr. Pim of "Mr. Pim Passes By," as James Bebb; Albert Becker as Mr. Dur- rows; Frances Johnson; who in the first play of the current season, "Mr. Pim Passes By," was Lady Marden, as Mrs. Stone; and William Butler as, Mr. Dermott. Others are Irma Cosgrove, Blandina Foster, Helen Robinson, Josephine Balnes, Tressa Trudeau and Leonard Stocker. The scene for this week's presen- tation is in Mrs. Beam's -drawing room in her select boarding estab- lishment in Notting Hill Gate, Lon- don. A group of unusual people, who do not seem able to patch up their differences, live at Mrs. Beam's. Their quarrels and fights provide the comedy, especially when they at- tempt to solve a murder mystery. Hart "Resigns Medical Po s t At University- Princeton Professor Is Today's Lecturer Prof. Thomas "M. Parrott, of Princeton university, will lecture at, 5 o'clock this afternoon in Natural Science auditorium on "Main Trends in Elizabethan Drama.". He has edited numerous books including "Macaulay's Essays on Milton and Addison," "Shake- spear's Macbeth," "Pope's Rape of the Lock and Other Poems," and "English Poems, from Chauce to Kipling., . He has been prfessor of Eng- lish at Princeton since 1902. Mary Mooney Makes a Plea For Son Here Capacity Audience Hears Labor Defense Man At- tak Capitalist Rule "I am here for my son. I know he is innocent. He has been in jail for 16 long years, but I know he is in- nocent." This was the simple plea voiced last night in Natural Science audi- torium by Mrs. Mary Mooney, 84- year old mother of Tom Mooney, convicted San Francisco prepared- ness day bomber. A capacity crowd of about 500 attended the lecture and lustily cheered Mrs. Mooney and the other speakers, Prof. Lowell J. Carr, of the sociology depart- ment, and Richard Moore, Negro representative of the International Labor defense. Flays Wilson "Mooney :would have died on the gallows in 1916," Moore, the main speaker of, the meeting charged, "if it had not been for a world wide protest by the workers. What moved Woodrow Wilson in commuting the sentence of Mooney was not a desire for justice but fear through the pro- test of the workers. "Wilson was elected upon a peace program but he smashed it. He tore up the votes of the workers and farmers. In order to make the war more palatable he invented the slo- gan, Make the world safe for de- mocracy.' A mass protest gave the lie to this 'slogan." Touching upon the Scottsboro Negro case, Moore declared that the conviction of the nine young neg- roes was a result of the system of debt slavery in the south. *The stor- ies about Lincoln trying to free the slaves were pure Santa Claus yarns, Moore said. The Civil war, he as- serted, was fought between two classes of oppressors: it was capi- talism against chattel slavery. The white workers, he concluded, are not free, so how could the negroes be free. 'Illogical,' Claims Carr. Professor Carr, who has made an extensive study of the facts in the Mooney case, declared that he had reached the conclusion that the case against Mooney had collapsed. The present state of Mooney is illogical, he said, for Mooney should either have been hanged or granted a new trial.I It was revealed by Moore during the meeting that Mrs. Mooney had Japan Facing Food Shortage, H all Declares Utility of Land Is Pushed To Limit, He Says; Emi- gration Not a Solution Food supply is the principal prob-, lem confronting the Japanese today, Prof. R. H. Hall, of the geography department, told Summfer Session students in a lecture yesterday. Pro- fessor Hall spent, several months in Japan and China last year. For three centuries preceding the coming of western civilization to Japan, the population remained at approximately the same figure, Pro- fessor Hall said. The land was cul- tivated to its limits with the mate- rials then used, and the population was checked by a comparatively; small birth rate and a heavy death toll. With the adoption of western ideas, fertilizers came into use, new machinery was put to work, modern transportation methods connected the various parts of the country more closely, and specialization grew up. At the same time the birth rate increased because of encouragement by the militarists and industrialists who believed that more man-power would be advantageous to them. Modern transportation methods also played a part in that it did away with famines, to a considerable de- gree, by connecting the various parts of the country. At first, the rapid increase in population was thought to be desir- able, Professor Hall continued, but today it is a serious problem which is baffling the government. By way of comparison, Professor Hall pointed out that the entire area of Japan is less than that of Cali- fornia, and with only 15.8 perf cent of the land under utiliztion, it sup- ports a population of 60,000,000 peo- ple. Agriculture has not been pushed to the limit, in the estimation of Professor Hall. A solution to the population and food supply problem must be met by emigration or birth control. In the past, emigration has proved very unsuccessful, he stated. Birth control, until recently ta- booed, could be carried out very scientifically under the highly cen- tralized Japanese government, if giyen a fair chance. Plan Faculty Wages Spread Over Full Year Association of University Professors Would Elim- inate Summer Salary Session Now Runs On Speeial Budget Plan Would Require Allo- cation of Teachers for Summer Term A plan whereby salaries of faculty men would be spread over a 12- months' period rather than over the nine-months' academic year as at present, thereby eliminating Sum- mer Session salaries, was discussed lost night at a meeting of the Uni- versity of Michigan chapter of the American Association of University Professors. The plan, presumably submitted by t h e Universty administration, was drawn with a view to effecting further economies. It would require reorganization of the Summer Ses- sion as this session is now operated on a separate budget, faculty mem- bers teaching in it'being paid salar- ies for the work in addition to the salaries paid during the academic year. The new arrangement would re- quire allocation of a certain number of facutysmento teaching in the Summer Session each year. While] theoretically each man would 'teach every third year, d e m a n d s for1 courses in certain departments are such now that the men in these de- partments would probably have to teach every other summer. The plan was first presented to the chapter of the university pro- fessors' organization as that associa- tion is one of the largest embracing] faculty men on the campus.. Wants Tolan To Get Share 0 f Breaks' Brennan to Demand Fair Deal for Michigan Olym- pie Candidate DETROIT, July 12.-(AP) -If thereiare to be any "breaks" for American 01ly mp ic candidates; Charles H. Brennan, Michigan A. A. U. secretary, is going to see that Eddie Tolan, former University of Michigan "midnight express," gets. his share. Now en route to California, Bren- nan said before he left that if Ben Eastman, Stanford's middle distance runner, or Frank Wyckoff, Southern California's sprinter, is seeded, he would demand the same recognition for Tolan in the 200-meter event. "Tolan has held the 200 meters title for three years," he said, "and at the Ann Arbor trials he cracked the Olympic records in both the 100 and 200 meters events. If there are any breaks given, he's going to share in them." Nearly 100 Students Will Go on Ford Tour Nearly 100 students will leave at noon today for an inspectionr of the Ford Motor company's many indus- trial enterprises at River Rouge. The excursion is the fifth to be given and is similar to the one given Wednesday, July 6. Denies 'Agreement' Labor Leader Scores Critics re In Parliamento * WacDonald Denies Secret t Anglo-American D e b tpr Cut AgreementH 5 LONDON, July 12.-(AP)-With s n eye to the storm of criticismi roused in Washington, the British t .'overnment today denied that the Lausanne agreement, which virtu-w illy ends German reparations, waso ased on any secret Anglo-Ameri- an understanding that the United States would cut or cancel war lebts, q This denial, uihich almost flatly i ontradicted a declaration made be-. s fore the House of Commons yester- a lay by Chancellor of the Exchequer a Neville Chamberlain, was followed t y a statement from Prime Minis- c ter Ramsay MacDonald that no- mI )ody could blame the United States 'or its war debt polcy. s The Prime Minister was in fight- v ng mood so far as his British crit- h ics were concerned, but was deli- k ately diplomatic when touching on e ontroversial issues affecting Ameri- ca. He hit back hard at criticism voiced yesterday by Winston Chur- t chill, who said Europe had endang- t ered her case with America by sign-,i ng the "gentleman's agreement," under which the lightening of Ger- t many's reparations burden does notN become effective unless the United States cuts war debts. rm , T h e "gentleman's agreement,' f which has never been published of- ficially, played such an importants part in the debate following Mr.b MacDonald's speech t h a tI finallyt steps were taken t make it avail- f le to everyone. The Prime Minister intervened ing the debate to announce the Govern- ment had no objection \to publish- ing all the Lausanne documents, in- cluding the "gentleman's agree-a ment." Michigan Unit Of Crusaders DeniesPledgea Will Not Support EitherF Candidate in Elections,c Committee Declares ' LANSING, July 12.-(Special)- The Michigan unit of the Crusaders, national Prohibition reform organi- zation, will not endorse either of the national tickets in the election this fall. The decision was announced here yesterday by the state executive committee, meeting in a special ses- sion. Beach Conger, Jr., University of Michigan battallion commander,' and Nathan P o t t e r, Washtenawt county commander, both of Ann Ar- bor, attended the session.1 The stand taken by the state or-l ganization is in direct opposition to that of the Women's Organization for Prohibition Reform, which en-, dorsed Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Democratic nominee, for the No- vember election.- The state body of the Crusaders will concentrate on the passage of its anti-Prohibition amendment to the Michigan constitution and on the election of a n t i-Prohibition members to Congress and the state Revised Relief Bill Approved In Senate Poll; Sent to House Vlodified to Meet Some Of Hoover's Objections, New Measure Is Passed In Record Time Path Is Cleared For Adj ournment )mission of Iiidividual Loan Clause Is Major Change in Provisions; House to Act Today WASHINGTON, July, 12.-(AP)- "he new $2,100,000,000 unemployed elief bill, modified to meet some of resident Hoover's obections, was >assed tonight by the Senate.' The bill was passed amid a chorus f "Ayes" without a record vote. Riding the crest of strong bi-par- isan support, the dramatic bill was gushed through with extra-ordinry ;peed. It is to be considered by the louse tomorrow. It carries the. same general provi- ions as the bill vetoed by President loover yesterday, with the excep- ion of the clause providing for loans o individuals. Adoption of the bill by the House ill clear the way for adjournment f the long session of Congress. Two Quorum Calls Passage was preceeded by two - uorum calls to round up a major- ty of the Senators, and before the econd was completed the sergeant t arms had been instructed to find bsentees. The order, taken on mo- ion of Senator Robinson, Demo- ratic leader, was vacated as the nembers poured in. Senator Connally (D., Tex.,) then ought to eliminate the major pro- isions for loans from the bill, but is plan, which virtually would have illed the measure, vas over-whelm- *d in a shout of "No." That signalled the finish. Would Shorten Debate The House Rules Committee au- horized a rule to be presented first hing tomorrow to the House, allow- ng only 40 minutes of debate and rohibiting all amendments except hose offered by the . Ways and Means Committee. The bill brought before the House arried the $300,000,000 provision or relief loans to states, and the $322,000,000 fund for public pon- ;truction which was in the vetoed bill. It also added $11,500,000,000 to the Reconstruction Corporation's funds for loans, as recommended by he President, for construction of self-liquidating projects. Add Fund for Air Corps The Ways and Means Committee added an authorization of $7,000,- 000, for air corps technical construc- ion work.. Both House and Senate Commit- ees amended the bill to recognize the Reconstruction C o r p o r a t i on along the lines recommended by the President yesterday in a special message to Congress.. The reorganization would elimin- ate as ex-officio members of the board of directors, Eugene Meyer, governor of the Federal Reserve - Board, and Paul Bestor, farm loan commissioner. It would also in- crease the board from seven to eight members. Senate Drops Bill For Resubmission Of Liquor Issue WASHINGTON, July 12.-(AP)- An effort to bring up immediately' a resolution submitting repeal of the 18th amendment to the states 'was dropped today- by Senator Bingham (R., Conn.,) because of objections by both Democratic and Republican leaders. Bingham's move followed a chal- lenge by Senator Ashurst '(D., Ariz.,) to seek immediate action on the re- pealer. He voiced the challenge af- ter criticizing the Connecticut sen- ator for not having sought from the public health service a determina.- tion of what constitutes intoxicating liquor abefore yesterday's vote send- ing back to committee a proposal for legalizing beer of higher alco- hoh content. Surgery Professor To Head Dayton Now in Europe Picked Clinic; A report that the resignation of Prof. Vernon C. Hart, of the surgery department of the Medical school, has been given to the executive com- mittee of the School was confirmed last night by Dr. Frederick G. Novy, chairman of the committee. The resignation has not yet been sent to the President's office. Although Professor Hart and his wife are in Europe at the present time, it is understood that he has received an offer to head the Miami clinic at Dayton, Ohio. There he will continue his work with correc- tive surgery for crippled children, a field in which he has won outstand- ing recognition since he joined the University faculty in 1926.! Professor Hart is a graduate of the literary college of the University Says Hitler Victory in Coming Reich Elections Is Impossible No possibility that Hitler and his Nazis will gain control of the Ger- man government in the coming Reich election is seen by Prof. Roger Wells, visiting political scientist from Bryn Mawr university. "Despite the phenomenal gains made by the Hitlerites in the recent state elections, they Pere still short of the necessary majority," Pro- fessor Wells pointed out. An alternative, however, may be a combination of the Hugenburg Nationalists with the Nazis, and there is a distinct possibility that ing may form a Center-Right coali7. tion. The Center has shown, great adaptability in this respect and the campaign slurs have not yet shut the door upon such a combination." Unless, however, one of these three conditions occurs, the present cab- inet must continue in office without any organized support, as is virtually the case at the present time, Pro- fessor Wells said. In connection with the recent agreement on reparations, Professor Wells said that much of the'tall was chiefly for camnaign purposes. I Swimmers ;to Compete In Olympic Test Today