,TCHIGAN DAILY (1 I?'fb Tfh j ~ t J 1 A j g s ~ g T t l n t r . .v Iup..uv lt Futt - _X2. V Starts Plans For With New Rea o v e r i1n e n I (Continued from Page 1) epoch can accurately be describedl President -Elect, Stimison as fully laissez faire). " i e pertinent question today To Confer On Foreignw d* ear uti td To Cofer n Foeignwould appear to be no whether in Relations, Debts I the abstract to move farther, but! concretely what moves to make. I By FRANCIS M. STEPHENSON venture to offer some illustrative con- 1 HYDE PARK, N. Y., Jan. 7.-()- crete moves to the desirability of 1 President-elect Roosevelt, after mak- which the present depression calls at- ing it clear that he is satisfied with tention: (1) cancellation of war debts# the Democratic program for this sea- due the U. S. government, (2) un-I son of Congress, is turning again to. employment insurance on the 'Amer- the task of forming a new govern- ican Plan,' (3) accounting regulation ment. and some publicity of accounts for Foreign affairs are to receive early investment credit institutions, (4) re- attention at a meeting soon between vision of our bankruptcy law, (5) im- Mr. Roosevelt and Henry L. Stimson, proved standards in commercial President Hoover's secretary of state. banking and experiment with a mod- The date has been fixed for this con- ern form of deposit insurance." ference but has not been made pub- Professor White, in connection with lie. his own views on the subject, point-1 C.ot atuewrc."ten"crcy Whatever rowing may go on in Congress over the details of new taxes to balance the budget, the Pres- ident-elect is satisfied that as a re- sult of Thursday night's parley in New York between himself and the party pilots of Capitol Hill a deter- mined effort will be made to make government costs and income for next year meet. Expresses Surprise The news that Speaker John N. Garner, Vice-President-elect, w a s talking about "less painful" levies than the proposed income tax boost brought an expression of surprise here and a reply that the President- elect was leaving the details to Con- gress. Mr. Garner and Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas, the Demo- cratic floor leader, were the spokes- men of Thursday night's meeting who announced to newspapermen the program of raising income taxes to help wipe out the estimated $192,-1 000,000 deficit. Enactment of the 3.2 per cent, beer bill with its revenue provision is an- other part of the Democratic attack on the deficit. However, this proposi- tion is going. to be sent along to Pres- ident Hoover asa separate proposi- tion for a veto or approval. Likewise, the Democrats are determined to put up to the President their "parjw' plan" farm relief measure now be-I fore' the House and in this they have the apparent support of Mr. Roose- velt. The other Democratic piece-an additional $100,000,000 in economies{ below the Hoover budget-received renewed consideration at a confer- ence late Friday in New York City be-! tween the President-elect, Senator James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina, and Prof. Raymond Moley, economic adviser. Byrnes is a member of the special ecopomic commission of the Senate. Motors to Home Leaving the busy New York City home at 4:30 p. m. Friday Mr. Roose- velt motored up the Hudson River valley to his estate here near Hyde Park. This week-end and the next will be spent here. A visit from Gov. Gif- ford Pinchot, of Pennsylvania, Re- publican independent who -was silent on the campaign but critical of the Hoover administration before and af- ter, is on the program here. Mr Roosevelt says this meeting does not involve politics. Dr. George Kline, Noted Psychiatrist, Succumbs Dr. George Milton Kline, interna- tionally known psychiatrist, formerly senior assistant physician on the staff of the State Psychopathic Hospital, and University alumnus, died Thurs- day :at his home in Boston. Dr. Kline received the honorary master of arts degree from the Uni- versity in 1931. Funeral services will be held this afternoon in Boston. ed out that the word "technocracy" To Feature Art Appreciation In Radio Series A series of talks on art apprecia- tion intended for students in schoolsj throughout the state will be present- ed by the University Broadcasting Service, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Waldo M. Abbot, director. "Many schools have been forced to curtail theii' curricula in the fine arts," the announcement said. "and these programs are designed to aid these schools in maintaining their cultural programs." The first talk will be given 1y Prof. Bruce M. Donaldson, chairman of the Department of Fine Arts, while the other four will be presented by Miss Adelaide Adams of the Fine Arts de- partment, said Professor Abbot. Those interested in following the series of talks were advised by Pro- fessor Abbot to procure prints of the pictures which will be discussed. The titles of the pictures will be mailed. to anyone on reouest, he said. U. S. Buildin Damaged In Washington Fire WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.-(/P)-Vir- tually every piece of fire fighting ap- paratus in downtown Washington, was called out last night to combat a blaze in the new Postoffice Depart- ment Building under construction at Twelfth St~. and Constitution Ave., N. W. The flames were sweeping through the wooden safety flooring of the structure, of which only the steel skeleton yet had been constructed. The fire was concentrated at the safety flooring on two floors of one wing. onstruction Plan is a "good wo-d" which means Rule of Science. "Everyone knows," he said, "that the amount of labor necessary to make a unit of work has been de- creased. Therefore, there iz4echno- 1 o g i c a1 unemployment--everyone realizes that. "The Technocrats have made no proposal that can be called definite. They propose to measure costs -in terms of power, but I am not clear whether they are going to consider merely human power-the operations, for instance, of planting, reaping, threshing wheat-or t h e natural power also, such as that furnished by the sun. "They aie a little in error when they concentrate to so great an ex- tent on power," Professor White com- mented. "That is easy to measure, but technological advancement is due to other factors. An example is the introduction of alloy steel, which makes possible a lighter metal with- out much change in the amount oft power employed in its production. 'What Has Been Done?' "As to the remedy for the present condition, I don't see that the Tech- nocrats have done much. I can't see the connection in their proposal of the introduction, example, of the electric kilowatt dollar. "This country ought to be rich. We have wonderful raw materials, such as coal, iron ore, oil, wonderful soil for agriculture. So. we really ought to be prosperous as soon as we get over our economic indigestion. "We must, however, cut down our hours of work. I think we can get along with 30 hours of work a week- but if we don't cut down, there is im- mediate great danger df permanent unemployment." t Journalists Plan House For President-Elect ATLANTA, Ga., Jan. 7. --( P)- Georgia newspaper men want to build a real "Georgia White House" for President - elect Franklin D. Roosevelt. Jack Wilhams, president of the Georgia Press Association and edi-_ nor of the Waycross Journal-Herald, ,Announced today that a movement was being sponsored by newspaper men to erect such a structure at Warm Springs, Mr. Roosevelt's part- time home. Williams said such a building Mould be an "expression of love and esteem held for the President-elect" by the newspaper men of the state ' and would be built for his use for the next four years "with the hope x that there will be a demand for its 1 use for the next eight years." The movement, Williams said, is to be sponsored by the state press asso- ciation and the fund proposed is $100,000. -titanotheriurn Skull, Jaw Are Put In Museum A complete lower hawvand a skull show.ing the palate and teeth of the great Titanotherium, which lived during the middle Tertiary, Oligo- cene period, have just been installed in the Hall of Evolution by the Mu- seum of Paleontology, it has been learned from Dr. E. C. Case, director of the museum. The specimens were collected last summer by an expedition from the museum which was located a few miles south of Kadoka, S. D.. while working in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, the eastern end of the Big Bad Lands of South Dakota. These two specimens forn a val- uable addition to the collections, Dr. Case said, in that they show the comYlete dentition of the Titano- theres, which was a browsing animal only slightly smaller than the ele- phant of today. Another recent installation at the musucm is a skull of the Permian reptile Kannemeyeria. This skull was found by H. F. Donner, a for- mer student of the University and now an observer in the Hussey-La- mont Observatory at Bloemfontein, near Burghersdorp in the Orange Free State. The second skull is nearly two feet long and is toothless except for a single pair of great dog-like teeth. Dr. Case called this one of the finest specimens of the long-extinct Per- mian reptiles that has yet been found. Dana Gives Radio Talk On Reforestation Plan Wild lands which no longer have any other natural resources can be best put to work by planting trees on them, was the statement of Prof. Samuel T. Dana, dean of the School of Forestry and Consetvation, who delivered a talk yesterday over the facilities of the University Broadcast- ing Service. "So important is the forest in wild land regions as a builder of stable communities," said Dean Dana, "that its production would be worth while to public investment even if little or no net return were obtained from the istandingtimber." Dean Dana said that the project I of reforestation was of such a na- ture that it could not be carried out rsuccessfully with private funds, but that government aid is necessary, and appealed for the undertaking of a F reconstruction program. T'YP EWRITZNG N I )lEO GRAPH1NG 7m'- ourovmsho by contu 6,A.MORRI LL, rts -i 314 ~. StS., r7~'o. I Of Special Interest to STUDENTS, OF" MEDICINE We Carry the Publications of Charles C. Thomas Which Include: MAJOR - Classic Descriptions of Disease.......................... 4.50 STRAUB - Surgery of the Chest . ......... 10.50 HOMAN - Textbook of Surgery, new edition......................... 8.00 THOMS -Chapters in American Obstetrics......................... 2.00 PUSEY - History of Dermatology................................... 3.00 FULTON - Readings in History of Physiology... .................... 5.00 HARVEY -Motion of the Heart and Blood .. ....... . ...................90 WALZER - Asthma and Hay Fever. ... ........ ..... . ... ... 8.50 A Complete Stock of Medical Text Books at WAHRisS UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE State Street Main Street ition. .N~o-mn-xazie tuie priso nvx sie - were re I a naa bileA--will-,LL1t Yj I i-lnf wok hee narsef-sustaining. outnnd "shall" inserted in its place. I '1! ,oviUILIg wor . I wii,* x~v a-'as uwx.-. .vu ~x, ?.+. - .+. ..+ .- ,-- - - - - -__- -__ NOW 11 30c AND 45c LUNCHEONS DAILY THE MICHIGAN UNION TAPROOM TEAl WEDNESDAY AND SUNDAY NIGHTS l NNE I 50e .0A ii .: -- ' ' s -~ ', a __ ,+' ''YYY 3" ,. . ' _. , e 1 ' 7'7!\T T /'110'7 Alex will be seem'