THE MICHIGAN DAILY __________________________________________________________________ I -AGE FIVE Wages Go Up In Anticipation Of Delegates To Nations 1 Farm Holiday Convention Better Business Raises Of From 5 To 2C Per Cent' Announce: By Eastern Concerns Bread Price Rises Steel Mills In Cleveland Put Thousands of Em. ploycs Back To Work (By The Associated Press) Thousands of employees went to work today with lighter step and a brighter outlook as a number of manufacturers, encouraged by busi- ness upturns, announced wage in- creases ranging from 5 to 20 per cent. The raises were in keeping with President Roosevelt's appeal to em- ployers to keep wages up and fol- lowed the trend established by other employers earlier this week. In Pennsylvania 10 per cent pay boosts were announced by the Su- preme Shirt Co. of Philadelphia and the flour and feed brokerage firm of George E. Rogers & Co., of Pitts- burgh, while the Berkowitz Shirt Co. of 'Uniontown added 5 per cent to its weekly wages envelopes. In Akron, O., the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. announced that addi- tional working hours would result in an increase of 12/2 per cent. The largest single wage boost-20 per cent-was announced by the Planters Nut & Chocolate Co., of Suffolk, Va. Steel Mills Busy From Cleveland came reports that steel mills of that district had re- called from 10,000 to 20,000 men to work and provided employment for 5,000 more. Similar announcements were made by other leaders in vari- ous industries in different sections of the country. At Cleveland also, 10 member com- ,panies of the Independent Ice Cream Manufacturers' A s s o i a t i o n an- nounced a 10 per cent wage increase for 400 men and women employes Whose aggregate weekly pay is $7,500. A 5 per cent wage increase was instituted by the Ford dealers both of Cleveland and Summit County (Akron), for their 475 employes. In order to reduce working hours to :a straight 8-hour day, a group of independent Cleveland bakers an- neounced a 1-cent-a-loaf increase in the price of bread. They said bakers would suffer no loss in weekly pay but that additional help would be hired for the rush periods on week- enms wh1wemIep1oy fdtmerly worked as, much as 15 hours a day. Sigma Rho Taii Will Postpone Speech Contest Preliminaries for the Sigma Rho Tau special project speaking contest on welding have been postponed from May 10 to some date in the near future not yet determined, Prof. Robert D. Brackett of the engineer- ing college said yesterday. The postponement followed the decision of the Detroit section of the American Welding Society that more time should be allowed for research. The finals will be postponed from May 15 until October, Professor Brackett said. Speeches to be given in the contest should be concerned with new appli- cations of welding in industrial or scientific processes, and should fol- low the general rules for project speaking contests. Money prizes amounting to $50 will be offered for tle best speeches. The following men have submitted speeches at this time: R. E. Wood- hams, '34E, W. E. Eldred, '34E, Mar-I vin Michael, '34E, Horace McBride, Spec.E, R. L. Price, '33E, O. M. Gaunt, '36E, W. W. Dallee, '36E, and S. Shel- ley, '35E' Illinois Students To Protest Against Fee URBANA, Ill., May 10-Students of the University of Illinois will hold a mass meeting'Tuesday night to pro- test the $10 diploma fee which the graduating seniors are. required to' pay, according to plans made by aI group of students at Theta Kappa Phi fraternity. Opinion is that the $10 fee, the regular amount which has been charged for several years, is too high and more than covers the cost of commencement. GUEST OF UNIVERSITY ALUMNI Prof. Philip Bursley of the French department will be entertained at luncheon today by the Universitya of Michigan Alumni Club of Phila- delphia.I -Associated Press Photo Hundreds of members of the Farm Holiday Asociation gathered in Des Moines, Ia., for the organ- ization's first national convention. Milo Reno, president, is shown addressing delegates in a pavilion at the Iowa state fair grounds. - - -.-l---l-- Rivera, Mural Artist, Fired y Rockefeller For Communist Art In Radio City Building Health Service COLLEGIATE Says Measles OBSERVE R Has Increased MASON HALL A student at Haverford offers this Students Are In Excellent definition of a kiss: "A kiss is a noun, though generally used as an Condition Otherwise, interjection. It is never declined; it Report States is more common than proper; used in the plural and agrees with all gen- ders." The monthly report of the Univer- drs." sity Health Service, issued yester- The Carnegie Tartan published this day by Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, di- poem: rector, records a "normal" condition !"We laugh at all professors' jokes of student health except for increas- No matter what they be; ed measles. Contagious diseases re- Not because they're funny ones Just because it's policy." ported at the health service for April were 38 in number this year, three Add these to your list of college last year, and only one the year be- slanguage: fore. Hung a pin-because engaged. Dispensary calls decreased from Professional-athlete who has a 7,212 for April of last year to 7,171 job on the campus. for that month of this year, but that Rushing-pursuing in a social way. is an increase of 572 over April of SoftieL'-one who is unable to take 1931. The 715 physiotherapy treat- it. ment for last month shows an in- Struggle- -a dance. crease of about 100 over the corre- Took a powder-disappeared from sponding months of 1931 and 1932. a delicate situation. Each of the last three years shows Went down winging-tried hard a death in the month of April. but missed. A graphic idea of the use of the de- partment is given by the followingThe enterprising students at St. data for seven month periods. The Thomas College take out insurance rates are based on groups of 1 000 policies against being called on in students each. From September to class. For a down payment of 25 May of the school year 1930-1931, cents they may collect five dollars there were 7,277 dispensary calls, 934 if the professor calls their name. Health Service patients, 741 hospital Also students at the University of and infirmary days, 21.5 surgical Missouri can insure themselves operations, 256 x-ray evaminations, against flunking. If a student flunks 2,111 attentions of specialists, 4.9 a course, the company will pay his acute appendicitis cases, and 4.5 con- way through summer school. tagions. From Lake Forest College we hear For the same period of this school that 69 per cent of the Syracuse year there have been 8,972 dispensary co-eds talk over their love affairs calls, 841 health service patients (the with their mothers. Thirty-one per only decrease), 919 hospital and in- cent said that they had no love af- firmary days, 31.9 surgical opera- fairs and that makes 100 per cent tions, 366 x-ray examinations, 2,816 lars. attentions of specialists, 8.2 acute appendicitis cases, and 10.9 conta- An ad in the Purdue Exponent gions. runs as follows: "Stolen kisses are the sweetest, but the best way to KARPINSKI SHOWS SLIDES reach the student body of Purdue Original lantern slides, made for is through the Purdue Exponent." the Century of Progress Exposition The editor of the ad apparently at Chicago, were shown Tuesday night speaks with experience. by Prof. L. C. Karpinski of the mathematics department to illustrate Walking home must be out of date his talk on "History of Algebra," de- with college girls, according to the livered before the Mathematics Club Michigan State News, which reports at Angell Hall. that in a recent walking marathon NEW YORK, May 10.-(4')-Diego Rivera, artist who painted red flags nd a picture of Nicolai Lenin on he great hall of Rockefeller Centre's >iggest building, found himself fired oday. Mounted police guarded the RCA building, 70-story structure, against iemonstrators when Rivera was dis- nissed Tuesday night. Managing tgents, on behalf of John D. Roke- eller, Jr., called Rivera down from is scaffold, paid him $14,000-the >alance of a contract price for three anfinished frescoes-and told him his work was terminated. Outside 75 or 100 Rivera sym- pathizers paraded, shouting:; "Save Rivera's art!" Rivera is a celebrated Mexcan mural painter whose Communist leanings have previously involved him in controversy. The fresco on which he was engaged was covered p. Whether it would be destroyed .as not known today. Rockefeller Center officials said chat "neither in general treatment, nor in detail, will it fit into the uni- fied decorative scheme planned for the great hall. In other words, ir- respective of its merits as a paint- ing, it is artistically and thematically incongruous." They added that the artist had declined to make certain changes. Rivera said objection was made to Hundreds Form INISecond B.-'F31tF. At Washington' Bonus Army Leaders Say 10,000 Will Arrive At Fort Hunter This Week WASHINGTON, May 10.- ()-A city of tents was being erected today at Fort Hunter, an old army post ten miles from the capital, to house the second encampment of bonus-seek- ing war veterans. Some two hunared already have been registered. Approximately 200 more were marching from Baltimore. Veterans' leaders say 10,000 will be here by the epd of the week, when a week-long conclave is to open with the approval of the Roosevelt ad- ministration. An infantry company from Fort Meade, Maryland, is setting up the tents for 8,000 at Fort Hunter. Field kitchens will feed the bonus march- ers. Bus service into the city, it was reported, has been arranged. ORDER TO EVACUATE WASHINGTON, May 10.-(IP)-Po- lice acted swiftly tonight to prevent a repetition of last year's spectacular riot within the shadow of the Capital dome by ordering evacuation of the first 1933 bonus army camp. Sharp words passed between the bluecoats and leaders of the march- ers headed by Harold F. Oulkrod, when they were told to leave a va- cant lot behind the House office building. THE RELIABLE WINDOW CLEANING COMPANY Ceilings and Walls Washed Awnings - Floor Waxing Service and Courtesy A. G. Marchese Phone 9'-3 a figure of Lenin joining the hands in the most recent portion of the of a soldier, a worker and a Negro, Mural a portrait of the bolshevik which was to have surmounted the leader was included. painting. In the background were "This piece is beautifully painted," crewds of unemployed waving red the letter said, "but it seems to me flags. Rivera said he was told that that this portrait, appearing in this Rockefeller and advisers did not find mural, might very seriously offend the mural as "highly imaginative" as a great many people. expected. They objected to its effect "'If it were in a private house it as unpleasant, he said, and to the would be one thing, but this mural brilliant color of the flags, is in a public building and the sit- Rivera, a huge, shaggy man, who uation is Iherfore quite different.sAs was expelled from the Mexican much as I dislike to do so I am branch of the Communist party but afraid we must ask you to substitute who acknowledges that his sympa- the face of some unknown man thies are red, is conferring with law- where Lenin's face now appears." yers to see what can be done. Rivera declined but suggested that The principal objections to the he would paint in another part of mural was the likeness of Lenin, it the fresco "a figure of some great was disclosed today. On May 4 Nel- American historical leader, such as son A. Rockefeller, son of John D. Lincoln, who symbolizes the unifi- Rockefeller, jr., wrote a letter to cation of the country and the aboli- Rivera saying he had noticed that tion of slavery." :s> .:V. : ...... .: ::::::"ra'.Y'::" :::::::r "..r . " ::::. ........ rY :'... " ":r:r.....r.r..."r.""".r... r".".. ""."r....rr"".. "r""."".r. "......s". r^.... r"r.."""r. rr.. "."::.::: :^. ::rti': ':1i .. r..."Y.:. "f1': rY.: 7 '"1.' ..1. .n. X:ys; ". a, r.....r.._ s........" .........................._.... _...... ;....".........."..... r. r"... r.."........_. _.._. a. _r, ..._. . w_.r" . ...: :ti': :':Y'.._........ __. _. __: ._... ar ........ ..... ;.. ." __ .. «". r..titi :'.".".."..J I ,----= I I EVER TBEEN INTEREST- ED IN MAGIC? I FUNNY YOU SHOULD MEN- TION IT. I SAW A WONDERFUL ~LAST NIGflT. )J FACT IS, I TOO K PART 4N IT. 4- THff r PHE LOO. / \ V~' h/T //( TS'.O " MAC/IC/44' SHOkSf: f/ANV EMPTY.. ° _._L/TllHAS SI,4ZALLLOOP Or wROPE CONCEALED BE/ND F/RSTAND SECOND f/NERS OF LEFT HAMO.. 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