_I The Weather A6PF Aw t r4 t a It ~~ait Editorials The Answer To The Latest 'Jig Of The Week'; Is Michigan Training Too-Many Teachers. Rain turning to snow Friday; Saturday cloudy and colder. VOL. XLIII No. 91 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JAN. 27, 1933 PRICE FIVE CENTS Boarding Club ForWomenTo Be Organized Governing Board Gives League Permission To Sponsor Eating Club Membership Drive To Commence Soon Meals To Cost $3.50 Per Week; Agreement Must Last For 30 Days Aid will be given women students who are experiencing financial diffi- clties. through the medium of an eating club to be organized at the League, according to a statement is- sued last night by Alta B. Atkinson, manager. The Board of Governors granted the League permission to sponsor the eating club yesterday, after a group of students asked to use the League facilities for a co-operative boarding club. The student committee stated that a number of women would be forced to leave school unless they received a reduction in their board. Meals will be served at a cost of $3.50 per week (20 meals) payable in advance, on the condition that the agreement is to last for a minimum period of 30 days, according to pres- ent plans. Approximately 100 women must signify their intention of join- ing the club before meals will be served. Sarah A. Bloom, '34, chairman of the student committee, said that de- tails of the plan would be worked out tomorrow when the committee meets. The club will be for women only at the bginning but Miss loom stated last night that the plans ay be changed at a future date to take care of men students also. The membership in the club will be composed largely of women stu- dents who do not live in sororities or dormitories, it was learned last night. A drive will begin within the next few daxys to get the hundred students necessary to take advantage of the League's offer. A statement from League officials follows: "Provided that approximately 100 women students signify their desire for board at the League at $3.50 a week, payable in advance, the League will undertake to serve twenty meals a week at this price, with the under- standing that the arrangement con- tinue for a minimum period of thirty days." Britislh Pianist Is Solo artist On Program Myra Hess Recital Will Cover Works Of Chopin, Beethoven, Mozart Ann Arbor music lovers will hear Myra Hess, celebrated English pian- ist, for the second time when she plays tomorrow night in Hill Audi- torium in the sixth Choral Union concert of the season. Miss Hess is one of the foremost pianists of the day, according to Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the School of usic, who said that she was enthusiastically received by an Ann Arbor audience when she ap- peared here two years ago. The concert tomorrow night will be one of the first of this season's tour, it was announced. Miss Hess will play the following numbers: Fantasia and Fugue in C major (Mozart); Sonata, Opus 110 (Beethoven); Opus 119 (Brahms); Preludes (Chopin): Opus 28 in C major, E minor, F sharp minor, B flat major, F major, D minor; Opus 45 in C sharp minor. Goldstein To Plead For World Peace Dr. Sidney E. Goldstein, chairman of the executive committee of the War Resister's League of the United States, and prominent sociologist, will speak on the "Menace of Mili- tarismn-A Plea for War Resistance" University Invest Small Drop "That University investments have stood well the tests of the great de- pression was shown in the compari- son of incomes on them during the years of 1931 and 1932, in the re- cently issued President's Report," declared Shirley W. Smith, vice- president and secretary of the Uni- versity, in an interview yesterday. In what investment channels the money has been placed, along with the total book value at Dec. 31, 1932, of the investments, was shown in a special report to The Daily by Vice- President Smith. Of the present grand total of $5,- 608,749.18 drawing income for the University, $2,770,474.58 is in bonds; $1,563,325.22 is in mortgages; $600,- 377.11 is in real estate; and $193,- 200.49 is held in stocks. The report showed further that the remainder of the total is made up of money in- vested in contracts and notes, along with $114,453.01 in cash. Of the cash $110,973.67 is on de- posit in Ann Arbor banks and with only very few exceptions all interests in real estate are in properties with- in the state of Michigan. "An important fact which is not always remembered," said Vice-Pres- ident Smith, in speaking of the in- vestments in general, "is that there Iments Show From Last Year are trust funds largely devoted to specific purposes by the terms of the bequest or gifts. Thus almost none of the income or expendable prin- ciple, and none at all of the endow- ments, can be used for any of the miscellaneous operating expenses of the University." Public utilities comprise 40.48 per cent of the University bond invest- ment, the report revealed. 20.72 per cent of this group is in railroad bonds, 18.77 per cent in government and municipals, 9.06 per cent in Ca- nadian government and municipals, and 9.24 per cent in real estate bonds. The remaining 1.73 per cent of bonds is in the industrials and foreign group. Singularly the total bond principal defaults as of June, 1932,, amounted to $4,467.57 which is only 17-100 of one per cent of the total bond in- vestments. Of the mortgages held by the Uni- versity $971,964.94 of a total holding of $1,563,325.22 are on Ann Arbor properties. $185,539.94 is held in De- troit property mortgages, and Grand Rapids and Lansing property claims held amount to $108,605. Because of loans made to stu- (Continued on Page 6) I _ Dke Valera Party Failing To Get Clear_,Majority Lead Race When Joined By Allied Labor Group ; Returns Incomplete DUBLIN, Irish Free State, Jan. 27. -(Friday) - (i/P- Election returns from 101 contests for the 153 seats in the Dail Eireann showed early to- day that President Eamon de Val- era's party was running short of an independent majority. In combina- tion with the Allied Labor party, however, the de Valera supporters were ahead of the opposition. With 52 seats still undecided, the panty standing was:' Sianna Fall (de Valera party) 49; Cumann na Ngaedheal (the party of former President William T. Cosgrave) 32; Labor 6; Center 6; Independent 7; and Independent Labor 1. At this stage of the tabulation Mr. de Valera and his labor supporters had a lead of nine over the opposi- tion parties. DUBLIN, Irish Free State, Jan. 26. -(JP)-Incomplete returns indicated today that President Eamon de Va- lera's party, the Fianna Fail, won a decisive victory in Tuesday's elec- tion of a new Dail Eireann. He may be assured of election to the presidency without needing the votes of any other parties. The Fianna Fail-the party which has fought for complete independence of Ireland-has never had a clear ma- jority in the dail in the ten-year his- tory of the Free State. The Dail elected de Valera presi- dent for the first time last March 9 as the result of a Fianna Fail-Labor party combine. The returns today showed the Fianna Fail has won 25 seats to 10 for the Cumann na Ngaedheal, the party of William T. Cosgrave, the Free State's president since its or- ganization until his defeat last year. Independents were assured of four seats, Labor one, and the new Center party, one, to be filled. Plan To. Print Course Bulletin For Two Years Rich Proposes Economy Measure In Literary Col- lege For 1933-34 As an economy measure literary college announcements to be printed this summer will be used for two years if plans now under way in the classification offices are completed. This two-year plan is now being used in four other schools and colleges of the University. "After a very careful estimate," Daniel L. Rich, director of classifica- tion, said yesterday, "it has been shown that $1,700 can be saved if announcements are issued for two years instead of one." Acting upon thistinformation let- ters have been sent to the head of all departments in the literary col- lege asking their opinions concern- ing the feasibility of the plan. Thus far replies have been received from three-quarters of the men asked and these without exception have ben in favor of the plan. According to Director Rich, the replies show that the two-year plan will go through "without a doubt." Announcements for a single year cost $27,000, and if the necessary amount of them was to be issued in one printing to last for two years, the cost would be $34,000. To the latter amount $300 would have to be added to pay for a supplementary announcement to be printed in the fall of 1934. In saying that the zoology depart- ment could co-operate with the two- year announcement plan Prof. Peter 0. Okkelberg, secretary, said that the plan is desirable under present conditions. "A supplementary an- nouncement could well take care of any necessary changes that might be made," Professor Okkelberg added. The schools and colleges with the two-year announcement plan now in use are the engineering and pharm- acy colleges and the forestry and ed- ucation schools. 'S. B. Conger Enters Race For Council Petitions Circulated ' For Former Daily Executive From Sixth Ward Prof. W. A. Paton Seeks Re-election R. A. Campbell Opposed As John Neelands Enters Mayoralty Running Beach Conger, Jr., local comman- der of the Crusaders, and former editorial director of The Daily, en- tered the race for the Republican council nomination in the sixth ward yesterday as petitions were being cir- culated in his name. Mr. Conger last night said that he had had no knowledge of the move but that he was willing to make the race. At the same time, Prof. William A. Paton of the economics department announced that he had consented to run again for the same post, which he now holds. Professor Paton had at first declined to run but finally consented after a committee headed by William H. Faust, other alderman from the ward, had begged him to enter the race. He will, however, make no aggressive campaign as the supporters of Mr. Conger intend to do. Mr. Conger received his bachelor of arts degree here in 1932 with a cum laude citation. He was awarded a scholarship at the University of Chicago in political science, in which he majored here, but was unable to accept the award. He is the son of Seymour B. Con- ger, who was for some years Cen- tral European correspondent for the Associated Press and was also con- nected with the Booth newspapers in Michigan. His mother, Mrs. Lucile B. Conger, is an executive of the League and is executive secretary of the Alumnae Council of the Alum- ni Association. Mr. Conger served on the executive committeee of the Wayne County Young Republican Club during the recent campaign and toured the state for Charles A. Sink in his contest for the lieutenant-governor nomina- tion. He served as one of the three editors of the Summer Daily in 1932. Robert A. Campbell encountered opposition in his campaign' for the Republican mayoralty nomination with the announcement of John Neelands, former member of the Board of Education, that he would enter the race. IKeller Brought Here To Await Retrial Of Case Ruling Of Supreme Court Gives Convicted Woman Second Chance Katherine Keller, whose conviction as an accessory in the Ypsilanti torch murders was set aside Jan. 2 by the Supreme Court, was brought to the Washtenaw County jail yester- day afternoon from the Detroit House of Correction. She will be kept at the jail until her case is retried in the same court in which she was originally convicted. Neither Judge George W. Sample nor Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp was able to say when the case would be tried last night. "It would not nor- mally come up until the March term," Sample said, "but if Miss Kel- ler requests an earlier trial, and the prosecutor agrees to it, an earlier date will be set." Prosecutor Rapp has not gone into the case as yet, he announced yes- terday, and could not say whether Fred Smith, David Blackstone, and F r a n k Oliver, confessed slayers, would be returned to Ann Arbor for testimony in the case. Miss Keller was sentenced to the Detroit House of Correction for five years as an accessory after the fact in the murder. Her conviction was based on the fact that she washec the clothes of Fred Smith after the murders had been committed, and had not divulged the knowledge of the crimes to the police. The Su- preme Court decided that she should hn p n.np w tial h~aii~tva at tfhirst~. 5 Billion Relief Fund Planned In Washington Liberal Bloc's Plan Gets Approval Of Senatorial Committee States To Receive Government Help Combines Two Former Measures Backed By Present Sponsors WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.-(A)-A broad, two-year program calling for an outlay of $5,000,000,000 to aid the unemployed is to be placed be- fore the Senate soon with the ap- proval of its manufactures commit- tee. Giving it even more weight, the measure which the committee de- cided today to report is generally looked upon by its proponents as in accordance with the views of Presi- dent-elect Roosevelt. The relief program, combining the much-talked of LaFollette-Costigan I bill and the measure of Sen. Cutting (R., N. M.) for $15,000,000 in federal funds for the states to help them care for needy transients, was agreed on by the committee after an hour's discussion and without a record vote. The legislation would be in effect for two years from date of passage. Roosevelt Approves LaFollette (R., Wis.) and Cutting, who supported President-elect Roose- velt for the presidency and confer- red with him at Warm Springs, Ga., over the week-end, declined to say what portions of the composite bill were suggested by him. After their visit with the incom- ing chief executive, they got together with Costigan (D., Colo.) to discuss a combined measure, and the pro- gram evolved differs in several meas- ure provisions from the original La- Follette-Costigan $500,000,000 relief bill on which extensive hearings were recently. One of these changes is that au- thority for issuing a half-billion in bonds for popular subscription to fi- nance relief was eliminated and a section substituted providing that the money come from the Reconstruction Corporation, which was empowered to expand its security issues that much. Another eliminates the chief of the childrens bureau as executive officer. Emergency Board The bill sets up a federal emer- gency relief board of three, to be ap- pointed by the President but receive no pay other than expenses and $25 per diem while at work, which would allocate relief funds, the Reconstruc- tion Corporation acting only as a fiscal agent for the board. Forty per cent of the funds would be given to the states on a basis of population, the balance, except for the transient relief sum and $350,- 000 for, administrative costs, to be held as a reserve for allocation on the basis of needs. Grants on the basis of population would be limited to two-thirds of the state's public and private relief expenditures. ' Hawley Case Hearing Is Deferred For One Week Hearing of a petition asking that Ransom Hawley, jr., son of Prof. Ransom Hawley of the engineering college, be placed declared mentally incompetent and committed to the Ypsilanti State Hospital as a private patient, has been deferred for one week by Probate Judge Jay G. Pray. Wars, Depression Curtail Fetes On Chinese New Year Yesterday was New Year's Day in China, for those who still go by the old lunar calendar, but there was no New Year's celebration a m o n g China's sons and daughters on the Michigan campus. Depression and westernization have taken their toll in such traditions and yesterday was just Jan. 26, 1933 to the Chinese stu- dents. Nobody has much money for cele- brations, commented Robert K. Suez, '33E, recently-elected president of Alpha chapter of Alpha Lambda, in- ternational Chinese student frater- nity. Suez, whose home is in Peiping, said that two years ago the Nation- alist government at home abolished the old lunar New Year's Day in favor of the Jan. 1 date observed by most of the rest of the world. "Since that 'time, practically no- body but the older ones observes the old holiday," Suez mused. Chinese students on this side of the Pacific tend to become more and more west- ernized and to forget their fore- fathers' customs, he declared. The Detroit colony, Michigan's only important Chinese commercial center, has also left the business de- pression here and the war across the Pacific. Membership in the On Leong Merchants Association has so decreased, primarily because of the return of many members to China, that New Year's Day was celebrated very quietly. Instead of the huge feasts of former times, quiet, simple. dinners will be served during the holiday period-cut from a week to' three days-and a free meal is to be distributed daily to the colony's in- digent. Appropriation Bills Discussed By Legislators WASHINGTON, Jan. 26-AP)-Ap- propriation bills were before both houses today for action, but they served merely as vehicles for extend- ed debate and oratory on economy and expenditures. Sen. Tydings (D., Md.) moved to send the treasury postoffice supply measure, carrymng almost $1,000,000,- 000 back to committee to be paired. The motion was still pending when the Senate quit and the Democratic leader, Robinson of Arkansas, indi- cated party members would hold a conference on policy before the vote. Many senators joined in the talk about economy. Democrats and some Republicans conceded it might be a wise thing to give the incoming President broad powers of govern- ment reorganization of there is to be any lifting of the burden of ex- penditures which is making an un- balanced budget a habitual matter. Ford Plants Shut Throughout U. S.; 100,000 Jobless Walkouts In Body Plants Force Motor Factories To Close Indefinitely; Fear Other Shutdowns Strikers Parade; Police On Guard Expect Supplies Of Bodies Will Be Exhausted By Monday; Briggs Firm Has Virtual Control DETROIT, Jan. 26.-(P)-A recent walkout of a number of body plant workers resulted today in announce- ment by the Ford Motor Company that its factories throughout the United States, employing an aggre- gate of approximately 100,000 men, would be shut down indefinitely. The walkout occurred early this week in the two plants of the Brigg Manufacturing Company, finallyre- sulting in the shutting down ofthe plant, where about 6,000 men were employed. Although Briggs officials said there was no disorder, police were ordered to guard the plants, where demonstrators paraded in the streets. Ford officials explained that they could not continue operation of their plants without bodies furnished by the Briggs company. 2,000 More Out At the same time, Clarence W. Avery, president of the Murray Cor- poration of America, manufacturers of automobile bodies, said that be- cause of the Ford shutdown from :1,- 200 to 2,000 men, half the comp&=y's roster, would be laid off. The men, Avery said, have been ergaged in production for the Ford company. Employes of the Briggs company declared the walkout was due, not to a reduction in wages, but to re- ductions made by the company for "deadtime," when wokers mve from one part of the ;plant to an- other, or when breakdowns in ma- chinery occur. This, they said, re- duced their earnings. The minimum wage for non-productive workers, company officials said, is 25 cent an hour, and from 60 cents to one dol- lar an.hour in the expert trades. Fear Other Shutdowns Some workers in the automobile plants said they feared other shut- downs if the walkout should con- tinue. The Briggs Company, they said, manufactures bodies for several other automobile companies. Most of these companies, however, report- ed a surplus on hand, although some reported the supply would be ex- hausted by Monday. Most of the 40,000 men employed locally at the Ford plant have been working three days a week, while officials said .that the time of em- ployment in the body plants varied with the amount of orders on hand. Practically all the automotive labor is unorganized. 1,200 Return to Work Nearly 1,200 employes of the Motor Products Corporation, who walked out last Friday following a similar wage dispute, returned to work to- day after officials reported an ad- justment had been made. In Grand Rapids, officials of the Hayes Body Corporation said that about 100 em- ployes had walked out in protest against a readjustment of the base rate on which wages are figured. They said they werehopeful of an. early settlement. Police and deputy sheriffs guard- ing the Briggs plant reported little trouble today. They said two or three employes had been beaten in disputes among the men who walked out, and that groups of men were parading in front of the plants. Groups of men, they said, attempted to discourage any workers seeking to return, Huston's Billiard Parlor, Old Student Resort, Closes Doors YEGGS LOOT BANK DOBSON, N. C.,. Jan. 26.-(A)- Yeggmen blew the vault at Bank of Dobson early today and escaped with the institution's entire supply of cash, estimated at between $9,000 ad$10,000. Huston Brothers billiard parlor on State street, once the most popular student resort in Ann Arbor and for more than 35 years a landmark of the campus, was closed yesterday and. two huge trucks took away the ven- erable tables. Started by "Rosy" Rosenberg be- fore the turn of the century, Hus- ton's was flourishing in the hey-day of Joe's and the Orient. The pool hall was first situated on the site now occupied by a grocery store across the street from its re- cent position and was bought by "Bert" Reynolds from Rosenberg a few years after its inception. There is a story about "Bert" Reynolds. In 1902 the rumor became current around the campus that he had offered "Willie" Heston, all-time theatre that Reynolds had opened downtown. They did. They tore it brick from brick. Since then Reyn- olds has never been heard of around Ann Arbor. After Hustons took over the place they moved it across the street and soon made it so popular that tables for a game of billiards had to be en- gaged a day in advance and more tables wNere set up on the second floor. The Hustons found the business so profitable that they left the business here in other hands and went into Detroit ta open, the Recreation Building. Some years ago Roscoe sold his share in the Recreation Building to Irvin and bought his brothers' share of the local estab- lishment, so that it is Roscoe who Remer Hopes For Inter-Allied Agreement Before Conference By JOHN W. PRITCHARD 1 Although confident that the war1 debts situation is moving forward toward a reasonable arrangement,1 Prof. Charles F. Remer of the eco- nomics department believes that a generalized inter-allied agreement should be effected before the opening of the March international economic conference at Washington, the eco- nomist stated yesterday in an inter- view. It is a favorable sign, said Profes- S o r Remer, that President-Elect statement, he pointed out the advisa- bility of payment by the European nations in a lump sum, which would be raised from securities floated in the United States. "This lump sum settlement is of the greatest import- ance," it was stated, "in order that the entire matter of payment may be taken out of politics. Putting pay- ment on a private basis will deflate everyone's ideas at once. A final. settlement won't mean that all pri- vate debts to American citizens must be paid, but the legal aspect of' the r l J 1 Two Children Confess To Burglary Charges DETROIT, Jan. 26.-(P)-Standing on tip-toe before the McClellan sta- tion police desk at 2 a. m. today, two small boys, one 7 and the other 9, admitted to Lieut. James R. Miller that they had broken into a gasoline