Rain and warmer, today; to-E l morrow colder and possibly ~ VOL. XLIV No. 124 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1934 Editorials rod Primacy ar Fascit Italy . f PRICE FIVE CENTS Roosevelt Acts To Temporarily Halt Automobile Strike Chief Executive Steps In, Requesting A 48-Hour Postponement Johnson Confers With Motor Men Conference Of Officials Of Industry And A. F. Of L. Planned For Tomorrow (By Associated Press) Acting on President Roosevelt's request, the central committee of the auto workers' union, meeting at Pontiac, Mich., speedily voted unanimously for the 48-hour truce in the proposed strike yes- terday. The action at Pontiac presaged similar agreements to withhold strikes in the -Ohio territory where Cleveland labor leaders said they expected to follow the decision of union heads in Mich- igan. WASHINGTON, March 20. - Pres- ident Roosevelt personally took charge this afternoon and averted the threatened walkout of employes of the automobile industry, scheduled for Wednesday morning. The executive wired his request for a forty-eight hour postponement to William Collins, organizer for the American Federation of Labor at De- troit, and was assured that the walk- out would be postponed. Shortly after the President acted, William Green, president of the A. F. of L., sent a message to Collins which practically instructed him to abide by the request of President Roosevelt. Others Had Failed Other officers of the National Gov- ernment having failed in efforts to avoid a strike which would have af- fected more than 200,000 employes in five states at least, the President stepped into the picture personally late in the day. His action followed receipt of messages from Ohio, Wis- consin, Missouri and California that workers in plants in these states would follow whatever action was taken in Detroit, Pontiac, Flint and Lansing. Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, adminis- trator for the NRA, has spent two days in New York in conference with Alfred P. Sloan, president of Gen- eral Motors; Walter P. Chrysler, president of Chrysler Motors, and Al- van Macauley, president of the Na- tional Automobile Chamber of Com- merce, the automobile code authority. N.A.C.C. Is Authority These three officials comprise the Executive Committee of the N.A.C.C., and as such are in reality the Code Authority. Gen. Johnson was in constant touch with the White House Monday and Tuesday and shortly afterward informed the President that a strike appeared unavoidable. He had failed in his efforts to get the N.A.C.C. to agree to deal directly with the A. F. of L. officials. President Roosevelt will confer with the officials of the industry some time Wednesday and will probably bring them into a conference on Thursday with the representatives of the A. F. of L. The White House declined to comment tonight on what plans the executive had in mind for the solu- tion of the problem faced in the automobile industry. Lient. Gray Will Address Reserve Officers Tonight Lieut. Louis G. Gray, '5E, secre- tary of the Oakland County Chapter of the Reserve Officers Association, will give an illustrated address on the Piave Campaign on the Italian-Aus- trian front during the World War at a meeting of the local chapter at 8 p.m. today in the Union. Mr. Gray, who had 'made an ex- tensive study of the Piave campaign, says that it was largely responsible for the breaking down of the Aus- trian resistance. Reserve officers, members of the Army and Navy Club, the R.O.T.C., and their friends are welcome. SHOW US -SAY SCIENTISTS Kansas University Finds Its Tonnt' Is Only , Mental Case LAWRENCE, Kas., March 20- When doctorsdiagnosed his case as physcho-neuritis, a European stu- at the University of Kansas who had been posing as a German Count fled down the fire escape. Under the title of Count Paul Gregory Herschel von Leipnitz, he claimed to be a graduate of Heidel- berg University. His father and mother, he said, were killed by Hit- lerites, but the date of their assas- sination was in the pre-Hitler era. Under a verbal third degree he abandoned his German role, and ad- mitted that he was an Austrian Jew. In fact, he claimed to be a descendant of Frederick the Great of Austria. Economist Says Russian System Similar To NRA Hugh Dalton Claims Soviet System Resembles Ours In Form, Not Manner Drawing an analogy between the Russian experiment in Communism and the American experiment under the blue eagle of the NRA, Dr. Hugh Dalton, British economist and labor leader, outlined the general purposes of economic planning in his lecture yesterday in Natural Science Audi- torium on "Economic Planning in Theory and Practice." The Russian system, declared the speaker, resembles our own, not in its form, but in the manner by which it is being put into effect. The psy- chology of the American experiment is characterized by the great vigor and the tendency toward extremes which is a part of the Russian plan in the direction of a planned eco- nomy. Experiments Are Valuable Experiments in planning, such as are going on both in America and Russia, whether they are in the right direction or not, are stimulating to' the economist in that they show whether the laissez faire economic system should be discarded or mod- ified, he declared. Experiments of this type were called vital, as a sub- stitute for the anarchy of rugged in- dividualism. Dr. Dalton pointed out the differ- ence between economic planning and dictatorship. True, he declared, dictatorship might involve the question of plan- ning, which is the case in Italy and Russia, but one does not go with the other necessarily. The NRA experi- ment in America clearly is not a dic- tatorship, for the rights of the vote and freedom of speech and press are maintained in this country, giving the people the power to recall their political leaders, and to substitute a new policy if they are dissatisfied with the present one. "No Socialism in America" The speaker characterized the American experiment as one of "much planning and much socialism." The NRA, he said, occupied the posi- tion of semi-public control of busi- ness, in which there is a division of powers and responsibilities between government and private enterprise. The general purposes of a planned economy, he declared, will come when the information of the results of planning in many countries will be- come clear, continuing by saying that a clear formulation of the purpose of planning and a means to achieve this purpose will then be possible. The purposes of economic plan- ning, are, according to Dr. Dalton: first, the stabilization of the price level to prevent the business cycle; second, scientific direction of invest- ment to production where socialcre- turns are greatest; and third, decen- tralization of light industry to less thickly populated areas. SQUIRRELS ATTACK HUMANS BATTLE CREEK, March 20. - HARVARD COLLEGE DEAN'S OFFICE 4 UNIVERSITY HALL March 14, 1934 Mr. Thomas K. Connellan, The Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor, Michigan My Dear Mr. Connellan: You are correct in your understanding that beer is sold in restaurants, taverns, and other places around Harvard Square in Cambridge. The only restriction is that beer as well as wines and hard liquor may not be served to persons under twenty-one. In. accord- ance with the provisions of the state law, beer is now being served to students over twenty-one in the din- ing halls of our residential Houses. Under the provi- sions of the law, such persons have to be served at tables reserved especially for those of twenty-one years of age or over. So far, there has been a com- paratively light sale of malt beverages in the Houses. To answer your specific question, I have had no evidence that the easy access to beer has in any way increased disorderly conduct either in the day time or at night. If anything, it has perhaps decreased somewhat the demand for hard liquor. Very sincerely yours, (Signed) A. C. Hanford The above is a copy of a letter to the editors of The Michigan Daily from A. C. Hanford, dean of the college at Harvard University. Farley Defends Cancellation Of Air Contraetsl Claims C e r t a i n Interests Are Seeking To Reap All Benefits Of Recovery WILMINGTON, Del., March 20. -()-In a speech that sounded a keynote for the coming congressional campaign, Chairman Farley of the Deniocratic national committee to- night defended cancellation of the airmail contracts and assailed inter- ests he said were seeking to take all the benefits of recovery and "let the rest of us revert to the misery of a year ago.,, "If you look deep enough," he said, "you will find behind every attack on the President and his policies a special interest which seeks to re- establish the advantage it held so long by controlling the government. His speech was delivered at a Jackson Day dinner,events which have come to mark the opening of Democratic campaigns. Construction Of Engine Testing Shop Proposed Lay Suggests Replacing Of Old R.O.T.C. Building With New Laboratory Tearing down the old building used by the University Reserve Officers Trainin'g Corps and the construction on the site of a testing laboratory for motors was recommended as a CWA project yesterday by Prof. Wal- ter E. Lay of the College of Engi- neering. "At the present time," he said, "there are no facilities available for the use of automobile and airplane engines as a partof engineering in- struction. We have an over-supply of equipment and power plants, but their operating noises prevent us from using them." A sub-basement might be con- structed under the proposed labora- tory and so completely eliminate any noise. The strenuous objections to motor testing lodged a few weeks ago by residents of the Lawyers Club were pointed to as indications of the need for such a laboratory. "Besides providing an excellent op- portunity for students in the me- chanical engineering department, the Rev. Fisher To Talk On Lenten HooverAides Accused In Air Scandal Cabinet Of Ex-President Is Charged With Serving Air Mail Combines Aviatrix Advocates Changes In Air Bill Andrew Mellon Is Attacked By Senator Robinson In Mail Controversy WASHINGTON, March 20.-- (A') - Members of President Hoover's cab- inet were charged in the Senate to- day with having given "their services to an unlawful and fraudulent" air mail combination. Senator Robinson of Arkansas, the najority leader, made the charge during another warm exchange on cancellation of private contracts which brought Senator Fess, (Rep., O.) to his feet with a quick de- fense. This latest outburst of the mail controversy on the Senate floor came a short while after Amelia Earhart Putnam, transatlantic aviatrix, had appeared before Congressional com- mittees to advocate changes in the administration's air mail bill, saying that the aviation industry "is still young and it should not be killed be- fore it develops." Senator Robinson, who has stoutly asserted the administration did its duty in cancelling the mail contracts, began the tilt with Fess by announc- ing on the floor that Andrew W. Mel- lon "took exception to a statement in my address of last Thursday." He quoted from a letter he had re- ceived from the former secretary of the treasury: "In your sp ech you referred to the Pittsburgh Aviation Industries, Inc., as a 'strong political factor in Pennsylvania' and stated that 'the Mellons were prominent stockholders and officers in that company.'" Mellon said his family owned only inconsequential amounts of stock in the Pittsburgh Aviation Co. Byrd Flies To Aid Of Stricken Air Companions Encounters Difficulty In Achieving Rescue Of 2 Expedition Members LrlTLE AMERICA, Antarctica, (Via Mackay Radio) - (-') - Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd flew today to the rescue of two members of his second Antarctic expedition whose plane was forced down during a heavy fog Saturday, but encountered difficulties himself. Pilot William C. Bowlin and wire- less operator Clay Bailey, who had to come down 15 miles from Little America on their return trip from a supply base, were found asleep in their fur bags in a small tent near their monoplane. Only when Byrd and his compan- ion, Pilot William McCormick, pushed open the tent flap did the two ma- rooned flyers awake. Admiral Byrd and McCormick took off at 6 a.m. to guide a ground party travelling with dog teams. Byrd's plane was subsequently grounded by engine trouble and the Admiral had to return to the main base by dog team to direct plans both for the rescue of the relief plane and for the machine it set out to help. Series Tonight In the fourth of his Lenten Preach-' ing Mission Services at 7:30 p.m. to- day at the First Methodist Church, the Rev. Frederick B.4Fisher will dis- cuss the question "Is Forgiveness Necessary?" The Lenten Preaching Mission, conceived by Dr. Fisher, is being backed by an inter-church movement in which the Rev. John H. Shilling, pastor of the West Side Methodist Episcopal Church, is co-operating. "Our Preaching Mission," said Dr. Fisher, "is a modernized revival or evangelistic effort." The purpose of these meetings is to give, to those per- sons who feel the need, a deep re- ligious experience. Albert E. Buss of Detroit, distin- guished cornet soloist and baritone who is leading the musical sections of the programs in using the old gos- pel hymns for the mission services. At each service Mr. Buss offers one of the great church hymns as a bari- tone solo and another as a cornet solo. The services are given each night with the exception of Saturdays. These sermons are designed to give spiritual answers to vital questions. College Entrance Exams Will Be Held For the first time, college en- trance examinations will be given in Ann Arbor from June 18 to 23 in ad- dition to the other centers in Mich- igan, located at Detroit, Grand Rap- ids, and Cranbrook School, Dr. Ira M. Smith, registrar, announced yes- terday. Dr. Smith explained that these ex- aminations are accepted in any col- lege or university, and are not just local admittance tests. "The regis- trar's office is now receiving appli- cations for next year's freshman class through the regular channels. Adelphi And Alpha Nu To Hold Traditional Freshman Debate No one seems to know just when Adelphi-Alpha Nu debates first be- gan. It was probably not a great many years after the founding of the organizations in 1857and1843 re- spectively. At any rate great rivalry attends each inter-society meet. Tonight for approximately the twventieth time, freshman represen- tatives of Alpha Nu, national men's debating club, and Adelphi House of Representatives, local speech club for phi are: Eugene Wilhelm, Robert Brown, and Robert Boynton, with Victor Weipert as alternate, while Alpha Nu will be represented by Frank Aldrich, Herbert Witke and Karl Nelson. The Oratorical Association pre- sented a cup in 1929 to be retained by the team winning three consecu- tive debates. Alpha Nu won from its