Trhe Mostly ell rain today4 snows; torn Weather oudy. Possible local or tonight and local orrow colder. LY r Sir1 ait I Editor )rials I Inland Review Also A Bi- ness .. . ; Of Immortality .* . . VOL. XLIV No. 117 41 li ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1934 PRICE FIVE . m B onus Bill Is Passed By House Forces Of Administration Lose As Congressmen See Elections Ahead Cady And Mapes Of Michigan Vote 'No' 'No Additional Cost,' Says Vinson; 'Beginning Of Inflation,' Gifford Says My Beliefs About Immortality: No. 1: Reverend Lewis' Views, i EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of a series of six articles on "Immortality" to be written by prominent Ann Arbor clergymen. The next article will be by Father Alen J. Babcock of St. Mary's Student Chapel. By THE REV. HENRY LEWIS (Of St. Andrews Episcopal Church) I have been asked to express what I believe about Immortality. In the first place, let me state that I do not care greatly whether or not I perish after death, and I doubt if it is a matter of concern to the universe. I do not feel any theological or emo- tional necessity for survival, and the question has no relationship, as far as I can see, to the matter of morals - such standards as I have are not connected with future rewards and punishments. At the same time, in spite of this indifference to it, I believe thoroughly in personal immortality as a fact. I believe in it first because it seems to me logically and reasonably to fol- low from what we know of personal-: ity. It is true that most of the com- munication we have with each other is through the senses, but there are occasions when we attain mutual awareness independently of such physical media; and it is this latter which leads me to believe that per- sonality exists independently of the physical body, and merely uses the latter as a vehicle of expression. A man may be terribly injured in an automobile accident, losing, let us say, his arms and his eyesight, but he is just as much of a person as ever; and I believe the same is true even when death takes away the whole body. Furthermore, I believe in the sur- vival of human personality, because I believe that the universe is suffi- ciently intelligent to preserve its highest values. Truth, beauty, love, goodness - these are values which everyone of us would say ought to be conserved - even if we are willing to have our own lives go out like a candle. And yet, where do these supreme values reside? In persons and in per- sonal relationships; and if persons themselves should be blotted out and personal relationships be discontinued what would become of truth and beauty and love and goodness? As a friend of mine once put it: "In 'Alice in Wonderland," he said, "the grin of the Cheshire cat lingers on after the cat has gone. But would love linger on after every lover had gone?" I do not think so, and there- fore, I believe the only way the uni- verse can preserve its supreme values is to preserve human personality. Naturally, we cannot prove that and it is perfectly futile in my opin- ion to speculate on whether or not the universe will and does preserve its highest values; but to live by the fact that it has done so and will con- tinue to do so, through the survival of human personality, seems to me to be both reasonable and intelligent. i WASHINGTON, March12. -(P) - House Democrats dared a promised veto late today to pass a bonus bill, then quietly agreed in caucus to sup- port a pan to send the $354,000,000 of veterans and pay increases to con- ference with the Senate to seek a compromise acceptable to the Presi- dent. The bonus bill goes to the Senate which so liberally amended the inde- pendent offices supplies bill with vet- erans' benefits as to bring upon it too the threat of a veto s it were not changed. boh 5tq 25--slightly a h tw thds necessary vid aeto. \lIe Mich an roll call: Democrats for-Brown, Foukles, Hart, Lehr, Lesinski, Musselwhite, Sadowski and Weideman; Democrats against-Cady. Republicans for-Dondero, Mc- Leod, James, Wollcott and Wood- ruff;: Republicansagainst-Mapes. Nt voting-Dingell. Much of the debate circled about the manner in which the bonus would be paid. It calls for issuance of United States notes of small de- nominations which would be circu- lated as currency. "This bill does not cost the tax- payer an additional cent.it doesn't- unbalance the budget," argued Rep. Carl Vinson, (Dem., Ga.) a member of the Ways and Means Committee. "It is only the beginning of that great scheme for printed money," replied Rep. Charles Gifford (Rep., Mass.) Byrns' Last Appeal Rep. Joseph Byrns of Tennessee, the Democratic leader, in a final appeal against the bill said it would upset the President's recovery plans. If it should survive the Senate, President Roosevelt in a letter to Speaker Henry T. Rainey has defi- nitely promised to veto the bill. There were sufficient votes for the bonus in the House today to over- ride a veto there, but whether they would line up in the same manner in combatting a veto was highly doubtful. The vote to take the measure away fron the Ways and Means Committee was 313 to 104, or 35 more than necessary to override a veto. The collapse of administration Democrats on the issue surprised even Rep. Wright Patman, Texas Democrat leader of the bonus bloc. Not one Democratic leader spoke against the Texan's motion to dis- charge the Ways and Means Com- mittee, and Speaker Rainey, who usually votes on administration is- sues, did not have his name called. Doughton Joins Parade Even Chairman Robert L. Dough- ton, of the Ways and Means Com- mittee, voted to have his committee discharged from consideration. The vote on the motion to dis- charge showed 246 Democrats, 62 Republicans andisve Farmer-Labor- ites for; 55 Democrats and 49 Repub- licans against. Carl E. Mapes, (Rep., Mich.) was the only Michigan member to oppose this motion. In his final appeal against the bill Byrns said "In voting for this bill we are just making an idle political gesture. I do not feel that I can consistently vote for a measure which the President and his advisers feel strikes at the very heart of the recov- ery program. The whole question is whether or not, with the President using every means at his command to bring order out of chaos, we are going to do anything that in his judgment may have a tendency to interfere with his recovery program. I shall not vote to do that." 1Puppy'Disappears After 25-Foot Fall; Chi Phi's Perplexed What happens when a 150-pound dog falls 25 feet? That is the prob- lem which members of Chi Phi fra- ternity are endeavoring to solve. They bought a St. Bernard pup- py the other day to keep the brothers company - a little one, only 150 pounds. At first he didn't seem to appreciate his new abode, and he was placed in the third fioor dor- mitory for what they thought was safe-keeping.- - :e .- -. Yesterday afternoon the Royal High Keeper of the Pound ventured upstairs to take a look at Saint. Saint wasn't there, and one of the win- dows was suspiciously open. Looking down, the brother saw where Saint had hit the back porch roof and skidded over, 25 feet to the ground. Surprisingly, there was no dead dog in the back yard. Right now, Chi Phi is wondering, and, incidentally, is offering a good- sized reward for Saint's return. At least they have one pledge who could stand a man-sized Hell Week. AlphaNu Wll Hold Humorous Drill Tomorrow. To Revive Tradition Of Parliamentary Meeting; Athena Invited Reviving one of the organization's traditions, members of Alpha Nu, national speech fraternity, will con- duct a humorous parliamentary drill at their weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Alpha Nu Room,. Angell Hall. The meeting will be conducted ac- cording to Robert's "Rules of Order," with the introduction of motions, amendments to motions, and similar procedure. Charles Rogers, '34, will be chairman of the occasion, and sat- irical bills in parliamentary order will be introduced. "This is the first time the old cus- tom of holding occasional humorous drills in correct procedure has been revived since 1931," said William Groening, '34-'36L, president. "It should be amusing as well as in- structive." Members of Athena Literary So- ciety, from whom Alpha Nu won a "charm" debate last week, have been invited to the meeting. Speakers of the men's society are preparing for the annual freshman debate with Adephi House of Rep- resentatives March 21. The two freshman teams will discuss the ques- tion, "Resolved, That the public works program of the present admin- istration should be abandoned." A debate with Zeta Phi Eta on the Pay Cuts Cause Strikes Among CWA Workers Emergency Police Called As 600 March To Office Of Utica Works Director UTICA, N. Y., March 12. -(VP)- Angered over pay cuts, CWA workers struck today and 600 of their num- ber marched to City Director Howard Graburn's office to "demand a square deal." Police-Chief Timothy D. McCarthy meanwhile had been told that "a bunch of CWA men are planning to march to the director's office and tear the building down." He sent an emergency police squad under Capt. Dennis Jankiewicz to protect the building and urged Asso- ciate Director Chester Smith to s- miss the CWA clerical staff of 40 for the day and lock up the building. Mr. Smith declined. While the dissatisfied men gathered in Chancellor Park, where onlookers swelled the crowd to more than 1,000, Graburn received the grievance com- mittee of seven. They told him they could not live on $9.60 a week, the amount to be provided on the basis of an order last week from Wash- ington. Until that order came, the men had earned $15 a week. The new order cut their time from 30 to 24 hours a week and their pay from 50 to 40 cents an hour. Merit System Goes To Representatives The merit system for League elec- tions, unanimously passed last week by the Board of Directors of the League, will go before the League Board of Representatives at a meet- ing at 4 p.m. today. If passed by the Board of Rep- resentatives the measure will go to the Board of Governors, which will probably adopt it, it was said. The new system would substitute appointment of League officers from among committee heads for the all- campus vote that has prevailed in past years. The merit plan resembles to a large extent that now being used by the Union. FeySupreme I Austria As A Crisis Nears Vice-Chancellor Is On Top ,Of Heap With Dollfuss Journeying To Italy Pop ulace Wonders What's Coining Next Inner Heimwehr Circles Maintain Strict Silence; Miklas May Resign VIENNA, March 12. - P) -An- other zero hour in Austria's affairs was close at hand tonight. At 6:29 a.m. Tuesday a train carry- ing Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss to Rome is scheduled to cross the Ital- ian border - after lvhich the Heim- wehr (Fascist Home Guard) and Vice-Chancellor Emil Fey will again assume supreme authority in this country. Major Fey, a Heimwehr leader, during Dollfuss' previous absence from Austria - a two-day trip to Budapest to confer with Premier Ju- lius Goemboes - launched a drastic anti-Socialist drive which a few days later developed into a bloody civil war. Tonight, countless Austrians, in- cluding some close to the Chancellor himself, wondered what Fey would do this time, while Dollfuss is conferrin with Premier Mussolini and Goem- boes. Only Major Fey seemed to know, and he maintained a strict silence. Various politicians among the Chancellor's own following, however, remembered the, recent broad Heim- wehr hint, "that those who sat in the arm chairs while we risked our lives must make way for useful forces." They figuratively held their breath. On the other hand, remarks dropped in circles close to the Vice- Chancellor encouraged the rumors 4that Fey- who alr4dy ,c mmazds the police and gendarmerie as Minis- ter of Public Security - will issue a decree to put all armed patriotic or- ganizations under a single control, which will be the control of the Heimwehr. There also were whispers that Pres- ident Miklas will resign and that Prince Rudiger von Starhemberg, Heimwehr commander, will take the presidency. Authorities in Heimwehr head- quarters, however, suggested that if this would occur it would be later, possibly just before the proclamation of a new constitution vastly increas- ing the president's powers. Ultra-radical individuals in the Home Guard camp declared that Chancellor Dollfuss already is oc- cupying the same practical relation to the Heimwehr as Fuvio Suvich, Italian undersecretary for foreign af- fairs,'occupies in relation to Premier Mussolini. Amendment Group Will Meet Tonight A meeting of the Citizens' Charter Amendment Repeal League will be held at 8 p.m. today at the offices of The Daily. Members of the Common Council who favor the sale of beer East of Division Street will meet with the group. All persons interested in the issue are invited. Today is the last day for registra- tion and any citizen who wants to vote on the beer question April 2 must register today. Any person over 21 who has been a resident of Mich- igan for six months and of Ann Ar- bor for 20 days is eligible to Register, with the exception of students. Definition Of University Would Determine Rights Of Campus Restaurants Churches, Schools Stop Sale Of Beer No State Street Store Could Sell Beverage Under The Proposed Amendment With almost every campus restau- rant located within 300 feet of a school or church, little change would be effected in the east side beer situa- tion by a proposed amendment to the city liquor ordinance which would reduce the present restriction of 500 feet to 300 feet. The amendment, which has passed its first and second readings unani- mously, would not change the status of any State Street or North Uni- versity Avenue establishment, an in- vestigation showed yesterday, provid- ed the University is legally defined as a "school." The Parrot, Drake's and other stores on North University Avenue are all within 300 feet of the cam- pus, while Chubb's and other State Street stores are within the limited radius with respect to either the Uni- versity, the Ann Arbor High School, or the Methodist or Congregational churches. The Tavern, on Maynard Street, is more than the required distance from the campus, but would be prevented from selling beer by its proximity to St. Mary's Student. Chapel. Consideration of the University as other than a school would allow beer to be sold by stores east of the cam- pus and on North University Avenue, but would do nothing to advance the cause of State Street beer; The amendment, proposed by Ald. Liegh J. Young, chairman of the or- dinance committee, would alter Sec- tion 12 of the city liquor ordinance to read, "No alcoholic liquor may be sold for consumption on the premises in any building which is located with- in a 300-foot radius of any church or school building used as such." Earthquakes Cause Damage In Five States New Brain-Truster Beer Ban Comstock Says East Side Was Repealed; -Associated Press Photo Prof. Jacob Viner, University of Chicago economist, has been named as a special assistant to Secretary Morgenthau of the Treasury Depart- ment. Administration Tariff Policies Are Defended Wilson's Son-In-Law Cites Discretionary Power Of Former Presidents WASTINGTON, Mach 12. - () - The constitutionality of the tariff bargaining powers for which Presi- dent Roosevelt has asked Congress was defended before the House ways and means committee today by Fran- cis B. Sayre, assistant secretary of state. The former professor of law, a son- in-law of Woodrow Wilson, turned the pages of history to show that the administration's proposed tariff legis- lation was "not such a drastic de- parture from what has been done be- fore." Sayre cited discretionary tariff powers granted to other presidents and Supreme Court decisions uphold- ing them. When Democratic members moved to bring the hearings to a close quick- ly, Rep. Treadway (Rep., Mass.) pro- tested vigorously. "Unfair," he called the Democratic attitude. Chairman Doughton (Dem., N.C.) disputed that but consent finally was given for testimony tomorrow from James A. Emery of the National As- sociation of Manufacturers, and Wed- nesday from Samuel Crowther, busi- ness writer. Precedent for the legislation was seen by Sayre in the fact that the President of the United States nego- tiated 10 reciprocal trade agreements in 1891 and 1892. Discretionary tariff powers were exercised, he said, by Presidents Adams, Jackson, Polk, Lincoln, John- son, Grant, and Hayes. Socialists Adopt Principles For Spring Election Rights Of Workers And Consumers, Representa- tion Of Trades Stressed 300-Foot Rule Is Obstacle State Liquor Ordinance Supplants Local Laws, Says Atty.-Gen. O'Brien City Council Meets; Ignores Objections Will Submit Amendment To People April 2 In Spite Of Ruling Gov. William A. Comstock vetoed yesterday the proposed amendment to the city charter which would re- peal the East of Division beer ban on the ground that the ban had already been repealed by the State Liquor Control Bill and that consequently the sale of beer in the campus area was already legal. The Ann Arbor Common Council last night over-rode the Governor's veto, deciding to submit the proposal on the April 2 ballot. Basing his veto, which was made on the advice of Atty.-Gen. Patrick H. O'Brien, on the section of the liquor law stating that "all other acts and all ordinances inconsistent with or contrary to the provisions of this act are hereby repealed," Gov- ernor Comstock said, "This, I believe, repeals any provision in a city char- ter which attempts to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquor, except as in Act No. 8 specifically provided." People To vote The Council, in a special meeting called in response to the Governor's message which was received yester- day morning, assembled a two-thirds majority to over-ride the veto. As a consequence of this action, the ques= tion of a charter amendment permit- Rocky Mountain Tremors Noticed Most In Idaho And Northern Utah SALT LAKE CITY, March 12. - (P) - The heaviest earth shocks ever re- corded here rocked cities in North Utah and Southern Idaho today, caused large buildings to sway,' cracked the walls of some structures and also jolted communities in south- western Wyoming, Nevada, and Cali- fornia. At Ogden, Utah, a young woman died, evidently of fright. The Home Economics Building of the Utah State Agricultural College at Logan, Utah, was damaged so badly that it was said it would be abandoned. Schools here and at Logan and Pocatello, Idaho, were closed pend- ing an examination of all buildings for possible weaknesses. The City and County Building here also was va- cated. Reports here said the Preston (Idaho) High School Building was cracked, the west wall being forced nearly six inches away from the side walls. School officials expressed the belief that the building would have to be abandoned. Dumond To Address Men's Speech Club Prof. Dwight L. Dumond of the history department will speak to members of Adelphi House of Repre- sentatives, men's speech club, on "The New Progressive Era" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Adelphi Room, An- gell Hall. A short business meeting of the or- sion Street Will De submtted to the people despite the veto. Ann Arbor's recent Blue Law is also invalidated by the State Liquor Control Act, if the Governor's inter- pretation is correct, according to City Attorney William M. Laird. The right of the Governor to rule on charter amendments was also a controversial issue last night. Ac- cording to members of the political science department, the council lacks the power to overrule the Governor's objection. On the other hand, Ar- nold Kirch, of the Michigan Muni- cipal League, said that according to the Home Rule Act the Common Council has the sole and supreme power in charter amendments. Mr. Laird stated that proposed charter amendments must be sub- ject to executive approval, although a two-thirds majority of the Council can act in case such approval is withheld. May Appeal Case It was the opinion of the Council that despite the legal rulings the wishes ofrthebpeople with respect to State Street beer ought to be con- sulted. It is expected, though, that should the beer ban be retained by the vote, it is possible that some local restaurateur might appeal the case to the State Supreme Court, basing his appeal on the ruling of Atty.-Gen. O'Brien. Reference was made, in the execu- tive's message, to last year's case of Monk vs. the Common Council of Ann Arbor, in which Wilfred Monk appealed to the State Supreme Court to force the Council to grant a beer license to the New Granada Cafe. The court refused the license on the grounds that the beer law did not repeal the local legislation. Since that time the Legislature has enacted a law creating 'a Liquor Con- trol Commission, which has the "sole right, power, and duty to control the alcoholic beverage traffic. . . . in- cluding the manufacture, importa- tion, possession, transportation, and sale thereof." Whether Atty.-Gen. O'Brien is cor- rect in ruling that local councils have no right to restrict the sale of liquor, or whether the Common Council is right in holding that the Liquor Con- trol Act does not affect the local legislation, probably will be decided by the State Supreme Court in an anticipated test case. Ohio Assumes Wholesale Control Of State Liquor 'With Banners Flying' Chosen As Title Of This Year's Opera "With Banners Flying," the 24th annual Union Opera will be given April 24 at the Whitney Theatre and continue through April 28. Final announcement of the name for this year's show came after con- sideration of over 100 suggestions. Milton Peterson, director, explained that the aim in selecting a title was to find one that would symbolize the revival of the opera after its having been discontinued for the past few years. Those in charge emphasized formances of the opera will be given in the evening, no arrangements having been made for matinees as students would be unable to attend while classes are being held in the University. However, the possibility of a Saturday afternoon show has been mentioned by some as a special presentation for local school children. Officials in charge of the opera stated that the title would have been announced earlier but for the un- usual nature of the book and the difficulty in finding a name to meet A tripartite p r o g r a m involving workers' rights, consumers' rights, and political recognition of workers was adopted last night by the Social- ist Party of Ann Arbor for the April 2 election. The Party advocates, for workers' rights, the designation of a special assistant to the city attorney to in- vestigate violations of NRA codes and to defend the rights of labor and la- bor organizations. The establish-