THE MICHIGAN DAILY !T T jo pecial Rates Permitted For HugePageant ickets For 'Romance Of People' Discounted For Students And Faculty Rioting Drivers Smash Cabs In New York Strike Arrangements for allowing stu- dents and faculty members to attend at special rates a presentation of the huge pageant, "The Romance of a People," on Saturday, April 23, in Detroit, were made at a luncheon held yesterday in the Russian Tea Room of the League. The luncheon was attended by PresidentnAlexander G. Ruthven, Mayor Robert A. Campbell, Isaac Van Grove, former director of the Chicago Civic Opera Co., and director of the pageant, and Kurt Peiser, ex- ecutive director of the Jewish Wel- fare Federation, which is sponsoring the entire undertaking. A block of seats, regularly priced at $3 each, has been set aside for the occasion and will be available to students at $1 and to faculty members at $2. Low rates for trans- portation to and from Detroit will also be arranged. President Ruthven, Edward W. Blakeman, counselor of religious edu- cation, Rabbi Bernard Heller, head of IHillel Foundation, and !Gilbert Bursley, '34, are sponsoring the send- ing of the Ann Arbor delegation. The pageant is being presented mainly to raise funds for the relief of impoverished German Jewry. However, 25 per cent of the proceeds of the production will be given to local organizations. Most of this amount will be devoted to furthering religious education on campus. "The Romance of a People," a vast, panoramic presentation of the his- tory of Judaism, has already received enthusiastic acclamation inhNew York, Chicago, and Philadelphia. A stage .larger than any Detroit has ever seen before will be set up in the Olympia to accommodate the cast of 4,000 people. The pageant will be presented there April 16 to 22, inclusive. New Orleans Storm Levels Many Homes, k E a r Coordinator Is Likely To Give Up Mediation Is Probable That Eastman Will Turn Labor Issue Over To Federal Board WASHINGTON, March 26.-(P) -As Joseph B. Eastman, the arbi- trator, held his fourth conference with heads of railroad labor unions today in an effort to settle the rail- road wage dispute, it appeared likely that he would turn the negotiations over to the Federal Board of Media- tion. The present agreement between the unions and the railroads has three and one-half months to run. Federal officials are understood to feel that all purposes would be served by allowing the dispute to go through the orderly process prescribed by the Railway Labor Act. Eastman yesterday conferred with President Roosevelt. Labor firmly in- sists that it receive at least a full restoration of basic pay rates on July 1 and this appeared likely to result with Eastman withdrawing from the situation for the present. Should the matter be turned over to the Board of Mediation, that or- ganization would attempt to perform the same function Eastman under- took last week at the request of the President. Should the board fail, there would remain the possibility of arbitration. If either side refused to arbitrate, the President would appoint a special committee to look into the situation and report. l M i BERKELEY, Calif., March 26. - Hazing of freshmen wil be restored on the campus of the University of California if the efforts of the men's junior activities honorary society are successful. Declaring that the omission of the traditional customs in connection with the first year on the campus have led to a decline in "class spirit" and a corresponding decrease in in- terest in activities, the members of the honorary group have pledged themselves to attempt their restora- tion. Leaders of the freshman class have stated that they also are in favor of reviving the old tradition, whereas faculty members are almost unani- mous in opposing its restoration, con- tending that the lack of class spirit should be remedied in another man- ner. 'CHOO-CHOO' FEELS BAD CHICAGO, March 25-- (A) -Mrs. Marie Field filed suit for $1,000 for damage to the health of her dog, "Choo-Choo." She alleged Hyman Cohen "dog- naped" Choo-Choo, sending the ani- mal to St. Louis. She produced Choo- Choo in court with his head ban- daged, coat matted and eyes weak as alleged evidence of mistreatment. I hope To Restore Freshman Hazing At California U. War Veterans In France Ask Drastic Reform Group Rallies To Support Of Premier Doumergue As Violence Breaks Out PARIS, March 26.-(A')--War vet- erans, three million strong, stepped into France's troubled politics today with a program to modernize the government. The Veterans' National Federation abandoned its traditional policy of neutrality Sunday and by the unani- mous vote of its council decided to take an active part in the nation's political life. As this powerful group rallied to the support of Premier Doumergue in his drive to restore calm, extrem- ists battled in several cities, notably Tours and Toulon. Today, fearing new outbreaks, authorities took spe- cial precaution at Tours to maintain order. Gendarmes said shots were fired there Saturday in violent street fighting between rightist and leftist factions. The anti-Fascist front at Tours called a demonstration for tonight as a counter manifestation against one by the right organization, Solidarite Francaise. -Associated Press Photo Rioting New York taxi drivers smashed the windows of this cab and then beat the driver during their wild march on City Hall. Mayor La Guardia issued sharp instructions to police that rioting "must stop." Roberts Describes Michigan In Saturday Eve ning Post Article "Judging from the low growls of resentment that are rising from the more enlightened undergraduates of Michigan's Lit. College, education hasn't failed in America, and is by no means entirely on the rocks. "It is merely waiting for the fash- ions to change - though this is small consolation to those who stand most in need of altered fashions." This is the conclusion of Kenneth Roberts, writing on "Murmuring Michigan" in the current issue of the Saturday evening Post. Intending to make a study of "the American undergraduate in his na- tive haunts," Mr. Roberts offers sev- eral reasons why he selected Mich- igan as his background. In a hu- morous allusion to the title, "Har- vard of the West," he explains that Michigan has, or is supposed to have, the attributes of several institutions in addition to its own. "I could find nobody in Michigan who knew the reason for that ap- pelation," Mr. Roberts adds. "Mich- igan, like Harvard, is a great uni- versity for football, but the Mich- igan Stadium holds more than twice as many.persohs as the Harvard Sta- dium does, so that in this respect Michigan might be said to be a double Harvard of the West." Other qualifications for Michigan's being selected as Exhibit A are, Mr. Roberts ;says, its enrollment from all over the world, its remarkable educational facilities, its roster of widely known professors in almost every field, and, this last being most important to Mr. Roberts, the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, familiarly styled by him, the Lit. College. After this, Mr. Roberts delves into the entertainment tendencies of the undergraduate. He discourses on the Hut, the Parrot, the "Hairpin" method of dancing, the "magnifi- cence" of the dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, and the Union and the League. He says that "hav- ing the run of the Michigan Union is not unlike having the run of the Biltmore Hotel." Having dispensed such concom- mitants of a modern college educa- ation, Mr. Roberts voices the theory that the Michigan system is all wrong, not so much in the promi- nence given society events, as in the method of dispensation of education. In his conversation with various members of the Lit. College student body, he finds that "there are a sur- prising number who know theirI minds are not being properly trained, and who resent it. They freely admit that they have neither interest nor confidence in the scrappy bits of in- formation that are poured into their heads." So he works back to the thesis ad- vanced at the beginning of the ar- ticle: that which is termed the "trained mind" is not a product of the American educational system. And finishes with the hope and pre- diction that undergraduates are now in a murmuring rebellion against the results of that method. Thus, "Murmuring Michigan." Jamboree Will1 Be Presented To Aid Camp (Continued from Page 1) Michigan songs which has been neg- lected for several years. President Alexander G. Ruthven is- sued the following statement regard- ing the project: "In the 13 years that the University Fresh Air Camp has been maintained the University has become very proud:. of this student enterprise. Some day it may be pos- sible to write its history adequately, but for the time being, it is record- ed chiefly in the memories of time and effort freely given to turn young lives in the direction of physical, mental, and spiritual health, and in the confidence of our entire com- munity that the camp is a useful, wholesome institution. "It is to be hoped that the- desire to be of service, so earnestly shown by Michigan men in the past, may continue to find such a practical means of expression and that those who cannot actively participate in the camp's work may give financial aid toward the perpetuation of this wholly commendable undertaking which bears the name of this Uni- versity." ALL-CAMPUS JAMBOREE VARSITY BAND HillAud. 50c Mar.27 I' t7 t -. ___1I A SUNDAE that's DIFFERENT! Melted Milk-Chocolate and roasted meat nuts covering a scoop of tasty ice cream- 15c :. 75 Houses In Section Of Southern City Are Blown Down By Wind NEW ORLEANS, March 26. - (A:) - A thunder squall of great inten- sity blew down at least 75 houses in a five-block area in the Edgewood sec- tion of New Orleans shortly after 8 p.m. today. At least a dozen injured persons had been brought out of the wreckage but an hour after the ca- tastrophe but no dead had been re- ported. A baby was reported impris- oned, dead or alive under a house. The wind struck suddenly with terrific force, residents said. All of a sudden it turned as dark as midnight, lights went out and roaring, whis- tling crashing noises followed. The blow had come and gone in two minutes but left destruction, turmoilt and terror in its wake. The wind followed the Almonaster canal and blew out on Lake Pont- chartrain. As the wind struck, the screams of horrified men, women and children were heard and when the policemen and firemen arrived, fam- ilies, dazed with fright, were wander- ing about the debris in a heavy downpour of rain. Live wires and bursted gas mains offered another menace as the police herded the families out of the strick- en area into other homes. Many small children became separated from their panic-stricken parents. The five-block area presented a mass of twisted and torn houses, felled telegraph poles, smashed auto- mobiles andgarages. Roofs were blown into the streets and houses were turned on end. The wind first struck a garage on St. Cloud Ave., wrecked the building and crushed about 20 automobiles. It then skipped two blocks and lev- eled a filling station. It rose for an- other block and then settled down on the five-block area of dwellings where it turned the neighborhood into wreckage and pandemonium. The section consisted mainly of one-story frame dwellings and sheds and was occupied by approximately 400 persons, mostly persons of mod- erate means. I L II Services For Passover To Be Held At Hillel Plans for the observance of the annual Jewish holiday of Passover have been announced by Rabbi Ber- nard Heller, head of the campus Hillel Foundation. Services will be conducted by Rabbi Heller on Friday and Saturday, March 30 and 31. A caterer has been engaged to serve students with special Passover meals at 605 Forest Ave. The rate for all meals including those at the services, during the entire eight-day period of the holiday will be $10. Reservations may be made by ap- plying at the Foundation. This must be done early to assure accommoda- tion. Schedule Of Plays And Artists Given (Continued from Page it and screen player Bert Lytell, sup- ported by Miss Cooper and Jessie Busley. Miss Busley appeared with Katherine Cornell in "Alien Corn" last year, and has just returned from London where she played in "Nymph Errant" with Gertrude Lawrence. The production will open May 25. In the nature of a novelty, Louis Verneuill's "Meet My Sister" will be the fourth production. Walter Sle- zak, the German star of "Music in the Air," will play the leading role which he created in both Berlin and New York. He will be supported by1 Margaret Adams as the prima donna, and by Olive Olsen, the dancing comedienne, who ;vas featured in "Good News" and "Follow Thru" re- cently. The incidental music for "Meet My Sister" has been written by Ralph Benatsky, composer of the continental success, "The White Horse Inn." Following "Macbeth" as the fifth play, the season will close with 10 performances during Commencement Week with Howard Lindsay's comedy ofolcr lf 1h Tn-n ra cff_ - 4,, A Parade of EASTER VALUES I U-. .or the Man Wo Will Be Well-Dressed Easter Sunday Remember Greene's "PRESS ONLY" service if your clothes are wrinkled or out of shape. Your suit is sponged, small spots removed, then it is pressed exactly the same as after being Microclean'ed -onmodern machines, by expert finishers who know how to shape your coat and vest to fit correctly. "Hanger Creases" are prevented too, with Greene's exclusive Hanger Guards. ECONOMY NOTE EconomyPrices 20% Discount All This Week Quality merchandise bought right and specially priced to make it an object for you to buy at SLATER'S this week. Included are: * Fiction and Non-Fiction (including a fine selection of new Spring Books.) FINE BINDINGS for Easter Gifts. BIBLES for Easter Gifts. * A fine selection of beautiful WRITING PAPERS. FOUNTAIN PENS and PENCILS. *LEATHER NOTEBOOKS (including the new zipper books). CHILDREN'S BOOKS (an Easter gift the kiddies will heartily enjoy). * A fresh shipment of appropriate BOOK ENDS. * And many other items. Trade at the Store that saves you money on QUALITY merchandise SLATER' S LEATH ER JACKETS can be Microcleaned perfect- ly because the 100% soluble Microclean fluid passes back and forth through the leath- er, removing all traces of soil. Yet Microcleaning is so gentle it does not affect the natural oils in the leather. 10% Discount for Cash Called For and Delivered diana Students Look For Pawnshop In Vain LOOMINGTON, Ind., March 23. tudents at the University of In- na are searching for a big-hearted tleman, who must be a judge of ues of guitars, watches, suits, s, typewriters, trap drums and er miscellany. For it has been dis- ered that Bloomington is a city bnot a n sn ahann All Work Guaranteed GREEN E'S OT1CLEANERS E - V,~o c