Partly cloudy today and to- orrow; possibly showers in uth portion, warmer. Ll r e Piri gTahu Official Publication Of The Summer Session , XV No. 45 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1934 r----- ac a , rai waw 2 . .UI a U - rh I A- - III 4 *. rectorate Is Visioned For, NRA's Future Johnson Sees Blue Eagle Board To Succeed Him In ,Charge Says That He Would Take Chairmanship States That Blending Of Anti - Trust Laws With Codes Is Essential WASHINGTON, Aug. 15. - (P) A Blue Eagle board of directors sup-a planting one-man control, and a spe- cial agency for harmonizing code- rule with antitrust laws, were en- visioned by Hugh S. Johnson today as essential for the NRA of tomorrow. In this picture, his own colorful bossdom of coded industry would di- minish, if not vanish altogether. "If the President wants me to," Johnson said, "I might act as chair- man of this board if it was part time, but I couldn't give full time." Dr. Beebe Exceeds Own Diving Mark; Reaches 3,028 Ft. HAMILTON, Bermuda, Aug. 15.- (A) - Dr. William Beebe set a new record for deep-sea diving today by taking his "bathysphere" 3,028 feet below the surface of the ocean, ex- ceeding his depth of last Saturday by 518 feet. Dr. Beebe and Otis Barton, Ameri- can scientists, used their two-ton diving contrivance for studies of ma- rine life at great depths. After their dive last Saturday took them down 2,510 feet, Dr. Beebe planned today's effort with a goal of exactly half a mile. Today's dive was Dr. Beebe's last deep-sea dive of the year, although he plans later to make some contour dives at the coastline. Drought This Year Is Most Serious Of All Agricultural Department States Damage Exceeds Expectations Nation's Food Is Ample,_Is Claim Grain Production Is Less Throughout N o r t h e r n Hemisphere Indian Runners Deliver Message To Roosevelt WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.- (if) - Fourteen sun-browned Indian braves in bright red and blue loin cloth today filed into the Blue Room of the White House and pre- sented President Roosevelt with three grains of white corn, invi- tation to the Four Nations Cele- bration at old Fort Niagara, start- ing Sept. 3. They had run in relays all the way from Upper New York State. One of their number, called Ly- ing Down, was perspiring the most freely, for he had brought the corn in its pouch the last lap of the 450-mile relay, in which one In- dian was always trotting down the road, the rest riding in a bus. Following the conference with the President, the Indians trooped down to the South Grounds. "He greeted us very personally," said Sitting Beaver, the youngest of the Indians, 14 years old, and by far the chattiest of the group. "He said he'd be out to the cele- bration, if possible, if business isn't extraordinary." Dr. H. C. Koch Is Named For Position HereI Hindenburg's Will Praises Nazi Regime Brands Nazism As Stride Toward fnner National Unity In Document Expresses Hopes For Reich's Future To Raise Price Of Tickets For Football Games All End Zone Seats To Be Reserved, According To Athletic Association But, he added with a chuckle, "I'm not trying to save a place for myself." DiscussesNRA Problems Johnson was in good spirits as he discussed NRA problems with the press for the first time since his West- ern trip. He saw the new organization as possible. of fulfillment "within two or three months," and said that the plan then would be recommended to Con- gress for permanent enactment. The law which created NRA expires next Just now, the subject of NRA's fu- ture is being worked out by Johnson and Donald Richberg, Emergency Council director, for presentation to the President.' Richberg is giving particular at- tention to reconciling NRA with anti- trust laws. A return to anti-trust principles has figured prominently in demand of NRA critics, including Senators William E. Borah, Idaho Republican, and Gerald P. Nye, North Dakota Republican. "There is a conflict between the anti-trust acts at the Federal Trade Commnission and this organization," Johnson said. "I delegated to Rich- berg that he straighten it out and he will straighten it out. It is not very difficu y. Waits Competition Controlled "We at NRA think control of com- petition is the answer. The anti- trust acts say there shall be only un- controlled competition. "I think I see some sort of institu- tion which will reconcile the differ- ences.~ -t is not clearly worked out. I think two or three people might pass on that point." Johnson believes an administrative institution could be set up to act as a buffer between NRA and the Fed- eral Trade Commission without a new law. He hinted that the NRA Advisory Council might do the job. To illustrate the kind of board he would put over NRA, Johnson cited the board of directors of an industrial corporation on which every member, except possibly the chairman, would give his full time. There would be a' single administrative head. "I am more than ever convinced it is no longer a one-man job," Johnson said. "In the minutia of code ad- ministration I find I can't attend to the details. I feel I can't act efficient- ly any more because it is getting too big. We want to reduce more than 500 codes to 250 by coalescence - that's a good word - but even then no one person can keep in touch with the details." 'Bill' Hewitt. Gets License For Marriage William (Bill) Hewitt, who starred1 for three years, 1929, 30, and 31, as a member- of Michigan.s football team, yesterday obtained a license to marry Miss Edythe Inez Hayes of Chicago.; The license was issued at Bay City, and according to law, the couple will have to wait five days until the cere- mony can be performed. Hewitt gave his age as 24, and Miss Hayes' as 27. It will be her second marriage. Hewitt has for the past three years played in professional football with the Chicago Bears of the National Professional Football League. He has All end zone seats at 1934 Michigan fotball games will be reserved and will be priced slightly above 1933 prices, it was announced yesterday at the athletic offices. Season tickets at $10 which will enable the holder to occupy the same seat at all five home games also will be offered, it was announced. The end zone seats, thrown open to general admission ticket holders at $1.10 for the past few seasons, will be priced at approximately $1 less than sideline seats for all games. Tickets for the Michigan State and Georgia Tech games will be priced at $2.20 for sideline seats and $1.10 for the end zones. For the Wisconsin, Il- linois and Northwestern games prices will be $2.75 and $1.65. More than 80,000 blank applications for football tickets are being mailed out to alumni and patrons. Thirty- five thousand of the applications were mailed to prospective ticket purchas- ers in Michigan and 6,000 of the re- mainder went to Ohio. Thirty-five hundred applications went to bond holders and "M" Club members. Applications for games away from home will also be received at the athletic offices. Tickets for the Ohio State game are $3, and for the Min- nesota and Chicago games $2.20.. All applications returned- to the offices after Sept. 1 will be filled in order of receipt, but all received1 before that date will be filled without discrimination. Yankees Snap Fourteen Game Detroit St r e a k WASHINGTON, Aug. 15. -- () - The Department of Agriculture re- viewed the drought and its results to- day and this is what it said: 1. That damage up to Aug. 15 ex- ceeded expectations and is much worse than in any previous year on record. 2. Food supplies for the nation as a whole are ample. 3. Stocks of bread, grains and other food products are large. 4. Production of most canning crops will be about normal. 5. Fruits and vegetables are fairly abundant outside the drought area. 6. The supply of meat, dairy and poultry.products will be adequate for the remainder of this year. 7. Local supplies of certain food crops will be decidedly short in many areas, requiring more than usual shipments from other localities. 8. Damage to feed, forage, and other pasture will cause sharp reduc- tions in market supplies of feeds and other livestock products in 1935, even if the growing season next year should be normal. The report said the drought had not, been limited to the United States but was "widespread throughout the northern hemisphere, having reduced grain production materially, and hav- ing caused serious feed shortage in central and southeastern Europe. Damage also has occurred in Russia, Canada, northern Mexico, the Yang-, tze valley of China, and in Australia. Helen Jacobs Wins Over Mrs. Harris FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Aug. 15. - Helen Jacobs, battling for her third straight national title, came from be- hind today to defeat Mrs. Mary Greef Harris, former first 10 luminary, 5-7, 6-2, 6-3, and gained the quarter-final round of the forty-seventh Women's United States tennis championship. Freda James, one of the two remain- ing British players out of a starting group of three, advanced to the quar- ter-final round at the expense of Ma- rianne Hunt, of Los Angeles, 6-2, 6-4. Miss James, winner of the doubles title here last year with Betty Nut- hall, who was eliminated in singles yesterday, played effectively at the net and completely mystified the Cali- fornia girl with her cross-court vol- leys. NEWPORT, R. I., Aug. 15.-(P) - A bombshell in the form of the default of the defending champion, Francis X. Shields, today stunned the Newport Casino tennis field into comparative idleness. News of the withdrawal of the coun- try's first-ranking player had such a blight on the program that only three singles matches and 12 other doubles competitions were decided. Shield's default was due to a leg1 injury suffered in England and ag-1 gravated on shipboard. 1 2 3 r S T Is Appointed To Succeed Dr. Congdon At Opening Of School Year Announcement of the appointment of Dr. Harlan C. Koch, of the Uni- versity of Nebraska, to the position of assistant to the director of the bur- eau of co-operation with educational institutions at the University, was is- sued yesterday from the office of President Alexander G. Ruthven. Dr. Koch's appointment is effec- tive at the beginning of the new aca- demic year next month. He is to suc-, ceed Dr. Wray H. Congdon, who resigned from the University faculty to accept a position in the registering' department of Lehigh University. The new appointee is recognized as- one of the better known educators ofi the middle-west, and is at present head of the department of secondary education at the University of Ne- braska at Lincoln. He is also chair- man of the committee on graduate affairs at the teachers college there. Dr. Koch has been connected with the University of Nebraska since 1926 as a professor of secondary education, prior to which he was first a teacher in Ohio schools and also a principal of Mt.Vernon Public schools in Ohio. Later he served on the board (F edu- cational research at Ohio State Uni- versity in Columbus. He received his first degree at Ohio' State University where he took all his training. Dr. Koch also received his, master's,..? gree in 1923 and his doc- tor's letters three years later. He has been the author of several authoritative works in the field of educational research which have been] published in periodicals covering that subject.; California Man To ReplaceCopeland, Announcement was made yesterday at the University administrative of-i fices that Dr. Holbrook Working, of Leland Stanford University, will servei here next year as exchange professor of economics. Dr. Working will oc-i cupy the place left vacant by Prof. Morris A. Copeland, who is on an extended leave of absence., Message Signed In May Is Only Now Revealed To Chancellor Hitler BERLIN, Aug. 15. -(P)-Four days before the plebiscite on Adolf Hitler's assumption of Presidential powers, the German people today were given the political testament of Paul von Hindenburg, which described Hit- lerism as "a decisive stride" toward inner national unity. For months the document, which was signed by von Hindenburg on May 11, 1934, but only now was delivered to Hitler, has been a matter of mys- tery. There had been speculation as to whether the aged president had defi- nitely named Hitler or Vice Chancel- lor Franz von Papen as his successor or had perhaps offered possible solu- tions for Germany's many problems. Document Still Mystery The document remained something of a mystery even after it had been published. At the time it was signed questions involving the church, finances and foreign policy were troubling the Third Reich. The query arose today as to why the testament was given out just at this time when the Nazis are asking the people for another expression of approval. While the inspired press seized upon the statement as proof of the assertion made by Hitler's campaigning lieu- tenants -- that Hitler is von Hinden- burg's logical successor -others re- garded the clos ng sentence; 'Which looked into the fu ure, as significant. After praising hitler and his Na- tional Socialist movement for taking a decisive stride "of historical import- ance toward the goal of leading the 1 German people to inner unity," von Hindenberg expresses hopes for the future. 'Much To Be Done' "I know that much remains to be done," he wrote, "and from the bot- tom of my heart wish the act- of na- tional regeneration and unification may be followed by an act of recon- ciliation to embrace the whole Ger- man Fatherland." By some neutral observers this was taken to mean .that von Hindenburg hoped for reconciliation of the troublesome Church situation; per- haps for restoration of the monarchy, or again for a greater effort to achieve . international peace than the Nazis so far have put forth. All three projects are known to have been close to von Hindenburg's heart. t "The last period of my life has seen the development of the internal 1 unity of the people and their con- sciousness of their best characteris- tics," he wrote. "I was nevertheless aware that the basic law of the State and the form of government which the nation gave itself in the hour of great distress and internal weakness did not correspond with the real needs and characteris- tics of the people. "The hour was yet to arrive when this knowledge became public prop- erty." The testament then reviewed the difficulties confronting Germany dur- ing post-war days and referred to the maintenance of the Reichswehr (reg- ular army) as the "symbol and solid basis" of the old German virtues. New Yorkers Beat By 8 To 2 Score Bridges Fails Tigers When NEW YORK, Aug. 15. --(P) -The New York Yankees got up off the floor today, after their double knock down, and broke the winning streak of the pennant-mad Detroit Tigers in thq third game of their fight for Aierican League baseball supremacy. Delivering a succession of counter- blows that blasted Tommy Bridges off the pitching peak in five innings, the Yankees rallied behind the effec- tive pitching of the young Yale grad- uate, Johnny Broaca, to score an 8-2 decision and serve notice that they are not to be counted entirely out of the pennant battle. The Tigers were stopped after win- ning 14 consecutive games. They had equalled the best mark for successive triumphs ever made by a Detroit team, the 1909 champions of Hughey Jen- nings. The Yankees did a thorough and workmanlike job of halting the Tiger rush for the time being under circum- stances that were altogether unin- spiring by comparison with yesterday. Where the stands had been jammed the day before with a howling crowd of nearly 80,000, barely 12,000 braved the cloudy weather after a morning's downpour. Bridges quickly contributed to his own undoing by wildness. He walked three Yankees in the first two innings and two of them scored, one on Ben Chapman's single in the first frame Defensive Or Offensive Plans To Determine Kipke's Backfield By WILLIAM R. REED In 1933 when Coach Harry Kipke began to assemble his grid machine he had to search about for a man to replace Harry Newman, the country's outstanding gridder in 1932. Kipke uncovered that man in Bill Renner, a slender junior whose pass- ing abilities had earned him con- siderable repute as a sophomore, and Renner was used at quarterback and constituted one of the greatest po- tential threats in Big Ten football. last year. At the same time, Kipke uncov- ered a running attack, something un- familiar to Michigan football in re- cent years, in the person of Herm Everhardus, who turned out to be the best ground-gainer in the Big T'n. This year, however, if Kipke is to capitalize upon Renner's reputation as a passer, he must uncover a suit- able Successor to Everhardus, who with Stan Fay, the 1933 captain, and Jack Heston was graduated from last year's backfield. Further than that, Kipke must prove Renner's abilities not only as a passer, but as a field general, for Renner last season was given little chance to prove his real abilities in that department in his "threat" role. Kipke may have further worries on that score should it develop that Ren- ner has failed to recover from an appendicitis operation which he un- derwent early last spring. Although I Renner renorted himse1f a in exre1 MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS American League W L Pct. Detroit . ...............73 38 .658 New York .............67 43 .609 Cleveland ............5.58 49 .542 Boston ................60 53 .531 Washington..........49 59 .454 St. Louis.............47 59 .443 Philadelphia ..........44 61 .419 Chicago ...............38 74 .339 Yesterday's Results New York 8, Detroit 2. Cleveland-Washington, rain. Boston 6, St. Louis 2. Philadelphia 7-2, Chicago 4-1. National League Ur T . M-