The Weather Mostly cloudy, possibly local rain or snow; somewhat colder; Saturday generally fair. Sir it'gan VOL. XLIV No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1933 I I Series Begins With Address. Gargoyle Gardenia Awarded To Sally Pierce For 'Eliza' O Astronomy Curtis Points Out Newest Developments In Science Made In Recent Years Classifies Infinity As Very Important Lecturer Deser i b e s Our Sun, Stars As Average Among Others In Sky In the first of a series of Univer- sity lectures Prof. Heber D. Curtis of the astronomy department yester- day spoke on "Modern Aspects of Astronomy." Astronomy is unique among the sci- ences in the sheer vastness of its sub- ject matter and the tremendous dis- tances of the objects studied, he in- dicated. No other subject is concerned so intimately with the seemingly lim- itless forces and conditions of the universe and in no other is the object studied so distant from or so un- controllable by the observer. Professor Curtis pointed out that, contrary to public opinion, there is much in the technique of astronomy which is humdrum and uninterest- ing. It is in the larger theories and facts of the science, particularly the modern variety, that so much fas- cination is found and satisfaction derived. Old Astronomy 'Visual' The old astronomy was almost en- tirely visual and was concerned with the "where" and "how many" of the planets. Now the astronomers make photographs and even motion pic- tures of the stars and are interested in their composition. The lecturer spoke of the wave length phenomena of the 92 elements and told how each may be identified through spectrum analysis. Speaking of the characteristics of stars he said, "Our sun is a re- spectable, middle-aged, conservative celestial citizen." He pointed out that our sun is an average sun and that our Milky Way is only an average among some thirty-million other Milky Ways. Numerous slides were shown which illustrated the bewilder- ing clusters of stars in the more im- portant galaxies. Tells of New Instruments Professor Curtis told of some of the recent developments in instruments used in astronomy, the stereometer used in determining the size of stars and the spectroheliokinetimograph with which the sun may be accurately studied. He spoke also of the great 100-inch reflecting telescope at Mt. Wilson with which stars at a distance of 10 to the 22nd power light years away can be seen. Some of the explanatory theories such as those advanced by Newton, and Einstein were touched upon in the lecture and their applications and implications explained. In closing, Professor Curtis re- marked that philosophers, religious1 believers and astronomers are the only ones who talk soberly and more or less authoritatively on the sub- ject of infinity, and this, in his opin- ion is the most significant single contribution of astronomy. Professor Curtis was introduced by, Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant to the President, who prefaced the for- mer's remarks by a short resume of the history of astronomy here. Trade Balance For September IS Favorable WASHINGTON, Oct. 26. - (A') - Higher domestic prices and better in- ternational dollar exchange rates, plus normal seasonal changes, were credited today by officials with help ing the United States to turn an un- favorable $24,000,000 trade balance in August into a favorable balance of $13,000,000 last month. In announcing today that Sep- tember imports were $147,000,000 against exports of $160,000,000, E. A. Tupper, of the Commerce Depart- ment's division of economic research, said that it was natural for last month's exports to rise about 14 per cent above August because of seasonal factors. Sally Pierce, '35, last night re- ceived the first of the Gargoyle Gar- denias after the second performance of Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin" in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Miss Pierce was awarded the gar- denia for her work as Eliza and Em- meline, in Play Production's premiere dramatic effort of the season which opened Wednesday eight. The final decision was made after a conference of the dramatic staff of the Gargoyle yesterday. The presentation of the first gar- denia marks the appearance of a new institution on the campus which will honor one of the dramatic genii from each play. The award will be made during each play, following the sec- ond performance. Former County Clerk Is Found Dead In Auto Funeral Services Will Be Held Sunday Afternoon For Claramon Pray Funeral services for Claramon Pray, former clerk of Washtenaw County who committed suicide in the garage of his home yesterday morn- ing, will be held at 2:30 p. m. Sun- day, at the Muehlig Chapel and bu- rial will follow in Fairview Ceme- tery, it was announced yesterday. Pallbearers will be John S. Com- mings, Frank Tichnor, Chester Dunn, Judge Jay Pray and Rembert Jones, of Ann Arbor; and Ernest Van Allen, of Ypsilanti. a t l Constitutional Test Of NRA Ford And Steel Companies Face Government Action Within Next Few Weeks Coal Mine Workers Petition President Court Cases Will Result Only If Steel Men Fight Roosevelt's Demands Permission Needed To Drive To Chicago Game Students desiring to drive auto- mobiles to the Chicago game have been reminded by:Walter B. Rea, assistant to the dean of students, that permission will be granted to drive their cars ory in case there is an older memb r of the fam- ily of one of the 4tudents accom- panying them during the drive. Such permission does not accrue automatically, Mr. Rea said, but must be granted lky the office of the dean. These provisions apply to students who drive from their home towns as well as to students who drive directly from Ann Ar- bor, he said. Band Will Give Concert At The Pray's body was found in his car at 6:45 a. m. yesterday. Police said that a hose had been attached from the exhaust to the inside of the car. He was taken to St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital, where the official pro- nouncement of death by carbon mon- oxide poisoning was made. Dr. Edwin Ganzhorn, coroner, said it was an obvious case of suicide and no in- quest would be held.. Pray was well-known in county po- liticalrcircles, having served asrcourt officer, deputy clerk, and clerk of the county. He was the only Repub- lican on the ticket defeated when he ran for re-election to thetcounty clerk's office in 1932. After this de- feat, he entered the Republican pri- mary fight for city clerk and again was beaten. Friends believe that de- spondency over these two defeats was the cause of his suicide. Born June 2, 1866 in Chestnut Hill,; Conn., Pray came to Ann Arbor in 1883. He worked in the grocery busi- ness at first and received his initial political position in 1914 when he was appointed court officer. He became county clerk in 1925. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. George Eberle, of Ann Arbor; four grandchildren; a brother, Albert Pray, of Providence, R. I.; two sisters, Mrs. Clara Drew, of Barrington, Conn.; and Mrs. Marian Spaulding, of Rhode Island, Abbott Elected Head Of Senior Architect Class John Abbott was elected president of the senior, class in the College of Architecture at a special campus election held yesterdby under the auspices of the Undergraduate Coun- cil. The class had petitioned the Council for a special election. Other offices filled by the ballot- ing were : Don McGugan, vice-pres- ident; Don Anderson, secretary; War- ren Wheelright, treasurer; Don Lyon, senior ball committeeman; and Gor- don Belson and Noborn Kobayski, councillors., Any petitions from junior classes desiring special elections must be turned in to some member of the Undergraduate Council within the current week, according to Gilbert E. Bursley, '34. president of the Council.3 WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.-(A')-De- cisive government steps affecting Henry Ford and the big steel com- panies, on issues capable of bring- ing a Constitutional test of the NRA program today were brought into im- mediate prospect. Within the next few weeks Ford either must satisfy the government that he is complying with the auto- mobile code or have bids on impor- tant contracts discarded. The steel men have failed to come to terms with the workers of their subsidiary coal mines as required by President Roosevelt and have been summoned to be at the White House next Monday. At that time the Pres- ident expects either to receive as- surance that the agreement will be forthcoming immediately or to lay down his own prescription of work- ing arrangements in these shafts, which, unlike commercial mines, send their whole output to the steel mills that control them. Union Asks Action ,A petition for Mr. Roosevelt to act was left at the White House today by a delegation of union leaders. It said: "These captive coal-producing com- panies have refused to recognize the United Mine Workers of America and to bargain collectively with the chosen representatives of their em- ployees. We are demanding recogni- tion of our union and the same con- tract and conditions as prevail in the commercial mines of this territory." Except for the phrase "recogntion of our union," this was what the President had required of the steel men. The workers, however, had been requested by him to go back to work inmediately, pending negotiations of a contract. This they failed to do. The same delegation was escorted into the office of Industrial Admin- istrator Hugh S. Johnson by John L. Lewis, the union president, to leave an identical petition. At NRA, meantime, the entire staff had word passed down the line from Johnson to "step on the gas" and get the collection of about 700 in- dustrial codes through the mill by Dec. 31, when the voluntary Blue Eagle agreements expire. 62 Codes in Force The codes have been going through the hearing process at a rate of 30 a week, but they have been made ready for promulgation by the Pres- ident at so slow a rate that only 62 are in force while 150 are being re- vised for his attention. The office re- organization just effected is expected by Johnson to produce speed. Court tests on either steel or Ford cases could result only if, in the first case, the President ordered the steel men to take his terms on a mine contract and they decide to fight; and in the second, if Ford low bids were submitted and rejected and he decided to go to court for redress. In the Ford case word got about that the War Department already had decided to eliminate the Ford Motor Co. from consideration, but closer study led officials to point out that the company would not have to make a showing of compliance with the code, which it has not1 signed, until it puts in bids. BRAWLS CLOSE UNIVERSITY BERLIN, Oct. 26.-()-A Wolff News Agency dispatch from Warsaw said today that the university there has been closed indefinitely because of continued brawls between pro- government and oppositionist groups. The first concert by a college band to be played at the entury of Prog- ress Exposition will 'be given by the Varsity Band at 2:30;p. m. Sunday in the court of the Hall; of Science. The band will give the six-number concert in connectio~n with its trip for the Chicago-Michigan football game tomorrow afternoon at Stagg field. For the program Prof. Nich- olas D. Falcone has chosen a num- ber of classic and semi-classic selec- tions which have made themselves popular in Ann Arbor concerts of the band. A special train carrying the band and some students who plan to at- tend the game will leave at 7 a. m. tomorrow from the Michigan Central station, arriving in Clhicago at noon. The marching program at the game and a brief concert of Michigan songs on the fair grounds are tomorrow's features, and bandsmen will be dis- missed for Saturday eight and Sun- day morning to permit them to see the fair or to visit in Chicago. Following Sunday afternoon's con- cert the band will 'entrain at the Twelfth Street statioin-and will arrive in Ann Arbor at midnight. The complete program for the Hall of Science concert follows: Von Weber: overture to "Oberon"; Mendelssohn: Second movement from the "Italian Symphony"; German: Three Dances from "Henry VIII"; Wagner: "Isoldes Liebestod" fron "Tristan und Isolde"; Tschaikowsky: Marche Slave; Balfe-Gayley The Yellow and Blue. The local chapter of Scabbard and Blade is today observing National Scabbard and Blade Day along with chapters in 78 universities and col- leges throughout the country, accord- ing to Fred Kohl, '34. It is the an- niversary of the birth of the late President Theodore Roosevelt. The chapter at Washington, D. C., will commemorate the day by deco- rating the tomb of the Unknown Sol- dier in honor of the three-thousand members of the organization who took part in the World War. Scabbard and Blade was founded nearly thirty years ago at the Uni- versity o'f Wisconsin. It now has 78 chapters in 45 states with a total membership of approximately 20,000. Active membership in the society, the purpose of which is to promote the interests of R.O.T.C. training and to spread intelligent information con- cerning the military requirements of the country, is limited to outstand- ing cadet officers of the R.O.T.C. units in universities throughout the country chosen not only for their proficiency in military science but for good academic standing, charac- ter and other attributes. While the local chapter will not have a special meeting today, all members are requested to wear their uniforms. Museum Party Returns From Southern Missouri A number of unusual blind sala- manders, without any color at all and eyes covered over by a layer of skin, were brought back to the Museum of Zoology from caves in the Ozark Mountains by Dr. Edwin P. Creaser, curator of the crustacean division; and Wesley Clanton, graduate stu- Date Set For Sociological Trip To Study Conditions In Chicago G1- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Graf Zeppelin Sails Over The Campus And Disrupts Classes The Graf Zeppelin, its silver body shining in the sun and its symbols of the Nazi German government plainly visible on the lower and upper rudder, sailed over the city and the University campus at 11:45 a. m. yesterday. having remained in Chicago for an official city ceremony of welcome. The zeppelin disrupted most of the classes in session at the time it tra- versed the campus. In Prof. Joseph Hayden's class in world politics the students forgot all about the com- plex problems of the Far East and,