The Weather Generally fair withi rising temperature today followed by rain and snow tomorrow. L 01k igai VOL. XLIV No. 130 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1934 f A , Assembly Of League Is To Gather Here All-Michigan Group Plans Convention Weekend Of April 20 Group Held Second Meeting On Campus Michigan Body Claims To Be Second Oldest In The Country Twenty-four colleges and junior colleges in the state will participate in the seventh annual All-Michigan Model League Assembly to be held here the week-end of April 20. Once before the group convened here, six years ago, during its second year of existence. The Michigan group is the second oldest in the country, having been or- ganized a year later than the Mid- dle-Atlantic intercollegiate assembly, which meets at Bucknell this year. The New England Assembly, which is also in its seventh year, meets at Harvard this spring. Such model as- semblies, participated in by students all over the country, afford the stu- dents an excellent opportunity 'to study for themselves this new method of conducting world affairs, and solv- ing world problems. Fifty-nine different countries will be represented at the All-Michigan Assembly, with the University repre- senting China, the Dominican Repub- lic, and Haiti. Following is a list of the other col- leges participating and the countries which they are responsible for: Adrian: India and Portugal; Albion: Chili, New Zealand, and Japan (the latter as an observer); Alma: Jugo- slovia, Greece, and Germany (also as an observer); Battle Creek: Hungary and Guaetmala. Bay City Junior College: Irish Free State and Spain; Calvin College: Fin- land and the Union of South Africa; Central State Teachers' College: the Netherlands and Paraguay; Emmnan- uel Missionary College: Switzerland and Liberia; Flint Junior College: Abyssinia and Czechoslovakia; Grand Rapids Junior College: Argentina, Roumania, and Albania; and High- land Park: Honduras and Lithuania. Other institutions which are taking part in the assembly and their rep- resentations are: Hillsdale College: Italy, Venezuela, and the United States (as an observer); Hope Col- lege: Bulgaria and Norway; Jackson Junior College: Salvador and Estho- nia; Kalamazoo College: Cuba and Nicaragua; Michigan State Normal College: Austria and Belgium; Michi- gan State College: Canada, Uruguay, and France. Muskegon Junior College: Persia and Siam; Nazareth College: Latvia' and Luxemburg; Olivet College: Peru (Continued on Page 2) + Britain's Policy Of Armaments To Be Decided Will Take Extreme Steps In Order To Satisfy The French Government LONDON, March 27-()-The extent to which Britain is willing to commit herself in taking extreme measures to enforce disarmament so as to satisfy France is expected to be decided at least tentatively tomorrow at a meeting of the whole British cabinet. France has replied to London in- quiries for further particulars regard- ing what she desires in the nature of security guarantees and the subject was discussed at length late today by Sir John Simon, British foreign sec- retary, and Charles Corbin,French ambassador. It was understood, that, as the next step, Britain is seeking to ascertain the German viewpoint, having deter- mined that the French want guaran- tees from London for the fulfillment of a disarmament pact and not the old general guarantees against an aggressor. Great Britain was expected to seek the advice of the United States and the dominions, but has not communi- cated with them thus far, it was stated officially tonight. It was learned, meanwhile, that the British government is receptive "to - - ~ ~ -. 4, C Winter's Parting Thrust Taxes Residents; Sol Saves The Day By F. WARNER NEAL Old Man Winter's parting thrust, the heaviest March snowfall in 25 years, brought Ann Arbor people out yesterday morning with all conceiv- able types of "wading" clothes which could be hastily assembled. Early-risers who were out ahead of the city plows found even walk- ing, always the last resort, somewhat of a problem and took to the roads. Appearance of the sun, however, began melting the "blanket" and transportation was relieved. The average depth of snowfall in the city was 11.2 Inches as recorded by the University Observatory, while nearly two feet was reported in the nearby country. Roads were impas- sible, traffic stalled, rural mail de- livery tied up, and many commuting students marooned. Busses were also far off schedule, and railroads ap- peared to be the only mode of trans- portation out of Ann Arbor unim- peded. In spite of the fact that, where clear, the roads were icy, there were no accidents. However, several stu- dents were injured by falling. Communication was kept intact around Ann Arbor, but the Michigan Bell Telephone Company reported 1~ poles down outside Monroe, due to heavy sleet in that region. Large crews of men were employed by both the city and the University to shovel the snow, and while the CWA itself did not aid in clearing the heavy drifts, many CWA men werehem- ployed by such institutions as the public schools and by privatesindi- viduals for that purpose. The city of Ann Arbor employed 50 men and many trucks, and estimated that such snows as this cost $350 a day. The city men made strenuous efforts to clear the streets yesterday afternoon, as it was hoped that the snow would soon melt. Monday's storm was the heaviest this year, the observatory stated, and the fifth deepest recorded in Ann Arbor since 1910. The deepest snow ever registered at the University Ob- servatory was 14 inches in January of 1918. One ingenious merchant on South University avenue hung a sign on a tree in front of his establishment, reading, "Free Snow - Help Your- self." No acceptances of the offer were reported. Labor Board To Carry Out Motor Codes New Era Of Good Will Is Heralded By Employers And Labor, Wolman Named As Neutral On Board Plan To Before Meet In Detroit Next Wednesday Gondoliers' To Open Tonight At The League Combined Music School, Play Production Opera To Have 3-Day Run The initial performance of "The Gondoliers," Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera produced by the School of Music and Play Production, will be given at 8:30 p.m. today at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Performances will also be given Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, with a matinee on Saturday. Jean Seeley, '36, as Cassilda, and Emmet Leib, '34, as her lover, will head the cast for the performance to- night, as chosen by the directing committee, Prof. E. V. Moore, Prof. Arthur Hackett, Prof. David Mattern, Valentine B. Windt, and Bertha Bright Knapp, Grad. Miss Emily V. White has also acted on this com- mittee, as director of dancing in the opera.1 John Silberman, '34, and Bertha Bright Knapp, Grad., will play the roles of the amusing duke and duch- ess of Plaza Torro. The mock kings are to be interpreted tonight by May- nard Klein, Grad., and Henry Austin, '34, with the roles of their wives being played by Helen Haxton, '36,1 and Virginia Ward, '34SM. James V.3 Doll, as Don Al Hambra Bolero, is the grand inquisitor who causes all the trouble for the gondoliers, and Harriet Kesselman appears as Inez, the foster mother of Cassida's lover. SOther principal roles are taken by1 Kathryn Hildebrand, '35, Melzer Por- ter, '34SM, Caroline Welz, '35, Suz- anne Malve, '355M, Goddard Light, '35, Peter Stauropolus, and Carl Nel- son, '36. Much of the vitality of the play depends on the chorus of 15 couples, which forms a background of singing and dancing for the action of the principals. A special feature of the dancing in the opera is the elaborate Spanish dance, the cachuca, which is being done by Harry Pick, '34, Vir- ginia Frink, '35, Carl Ellsworth, '34A, Josephine Ball, '36, Daniel Shurz, '36, Lois Zirmerman, '35, Alton Brimmer, '34, and Virginia Chapman, '35, under the direction of Miss Emily White. The orchestra of 24 pieces, which will be under the direction of Pro- fessor Mattern, has been rehearsing for "The Gondoliers" under the di- (Continued on Page 2) Espionage Of Stratospheric Secrets Found PARIS, March 27. - () -Strato- spheric espionage was added to the curriculum of modern spying today. Investigations by Judge Andre Benon, presiding at the inquiry into the activities of an alleged interna- tional spy ring, indicated that cer- tain members of the band sought the military aviation secrets of the stratosphere. One member specialized in this sort Senior Invitations Are On Sale In Angell Hall First sale of senior invitations began yesterday afternoon and will be continued throughout the remainder of this week and the first three days of next week. They may be obtained any day within this period from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the lobby of Angell Hall. John S. Howland, '34, chairman of the invitations committee, urged all seniors to place their orders as soon as possible in order to avoid a last-minute rush. Summer School Students Asked To Report NOw Secretary Requests ThAt Students Signify Their Intention Of Enrolling In order to facilitate arrangements for their accommodation, students planning to attend the 1934 Summer Session are urged to notify the sec- retary, Prof. Louis M. Eich of the speech department, before June 13,. according to the Summer Session announcement which has just come off the press. Copies of the complete announce- ment are now available in the Sum- mer Session office in Angell Hall and may be had at the offices of all schools and colleges. Registration June 21 Registration will begin June 21 in the Graduate School, June 15 in the Law School and June 22 in the other divisions. Except for work in the Law School and at the Geology and Geography Station, which begins June 19, the session will open June 25. Requirements for admission are set by the individual schools, and in gen- eral, courses are open to all persons qualified to pursue them. Students from outside colleges and universities are required to present a statement from an administrative officer in the institution in which they wereen- rolled showing that they are in good standing. Automobile regulations will remain unchanged from last year, according to the announcement. Students may obtain permits to drive cars provided their circumstances necessitate their use, or for participation in outdoor sports. Students should make appli- cation not later than at time of reg- istration. Activities Are Listed The announcement includes the program of extra-curricular activities for which the Summer Session is re- nowned. Special lectures, a series of plays extending over seven weeks, ex- cursions to nearby points of interest, concerts by members of the School of Music faculty and by the band, social nights at the League, and other ac- tivities comprise the schedule of events. Faculties of the schools and col- leges number more than 400, some of whom are from other educational in- stitutions in this country and abroad. All work offered is equivalent in method, character, and credit value to similar work offered during the academic session. Is Announced DETROIT, March 27 -(P- Ap- pointment of the new automobile labor board and a call for its first meeting to be held here not later than 7 p.m. Wednesday was heralded Tues- day afternoon by labor and industry as the first steps in a new era of good will in Michigan's major industry. Leo Wolman, Columbia University professor, was named neutral mem- ber. Nicholas Kelley, Chrysler Corp. counsel, was selected to represent in- dustry. Richard L. Byrd, prviously an- nounced as labor's choice, was con- firmed as employees' representaitve. To Launch "New Deal" Responsible to President Roosevelt, the board will launch the new deal in industrial relations. Its members will pass on all questions of representa- tion, discharge and discrimination in accordance with the principles which were laid down Sunday night by the President to solve labor disputes in the automotive industry. Edward F. McGrady, assistant to Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, NRA admin- istrator, and Col. Robert Lee, the ad- ministrator's personal representative, are slated to arrive in Detroit early Professor Wolman, who holds the degree of doctor of philoso- phy, was an instructor in eco- nomics at the University of Mich- igan in1916-17. Wednesday and set the scene for the new board._ There was ample evidnce of good will between labor and industry at the Union Depot when delegates re- turned from Washington. There were Alvan Macauley, president of the Na- tional Automobile Chamber of Com- merce; Roy D. Chapin, president of the Hudson Motor Car Co.; William Collins, representative of the Ameri- can Federation of Labor, and Richard L. Byrd, secretary of a local union at Pontiac. Have Informal Talk Chapin met Collins and Byrd for the first time and introduced them to Macauley. All chatted informally while waiting for photographers to set their cameras. Discussing the program advocated by the President, Macauley stated: "I think it is quite an important step, calculated to have far-reaching and constructive effects and in line with the principles for which we contend- ed. It seems to assure more peaceful prospects for the future." "Our agreement was that we would fill a fairarrangement arrived at," stated Chapin. "Industry intends to go through with it, and wil make ar- rangements to carry out the agree- ment." Arthur E. Greer, president of Hud- son Local,immediately called a mass meeting of workers to be held at 8 pm. Wednesday in Amity Hall, at which principles of the agreement will be explained. SENTENCE O'CONNELL KIDNAPER ALBANY, March 27- ( P) - Man- ny Strewl, convicted of kidnaping John J. O'Connell, Jr., for $40,000 ransom last July, was given a man- datory sentence of 50 years in prison today. Roosevelt To Permit Lines To Fly Mail Action To Be Followed By Permanent Legislation For Air Mail Control Plans For Bidding Will Be Announced Conditions Under Which Bids Will Be Accepted Not Revealed WASHINGTON, March 27. - () - President Roosevelt arranged today to return the airmail to private com- panies, pending enactment of perma- nent legislation. Plans for bidding and the routes to be opened to commercial carriers will be announced tomorrow. Government officials, including Postmaster General James A. Far- ley and Attorney General Homer S. Cummings, were called to the White House this afternoon just before the President left for a fishing trip in the south. Conditions under which new bids will be accepted were not disclosed and whether those companies whose contracts were cancelled would be permitted to enter the bidding was not entirely clear. Cummings said that he did not be- lieve a statute of 1872, which bars firms whose mail contracts have been annulled on the grounds of fraud from bidding again within five years, would be an obstacle in letting the temporary awards. Several measures have been in- troduced in Congress, since the Army took over flying the mails on Feb. 19, to authorize the Postmaster Gen- eral to make temporary awards. It was indicated that the Postoffice and Justice Departments felt that power now existed to enter temporary con- tracts without additional legislation. Meanwhile, private companies which held old contracts wondered if they would be forced to undergo reorganization to be eligible for new routes. 20 Engineers Are Accepted By Tau Beta Pi Scholastic Society Hears Prof. Handman At An- nual Spring Banquet Twenty students of the College of Engineering were initiated into Gam- ma Chapter of Tau Beta Pi, national honorary scholastic engineering so- ciety, at the spring initiation banquet held last night in the Union. The initiates, chosen from the up- per eighth of their class, were Archie Easton, H. D. Ritter, R. E. Blackwell, and Henry VanWelde, all seniors; John Schmidt, Albert Conviser, Ls- ter Colwell, Allen Knuusi, James Loughman, Martin Mortenson, Wil- bert Budd, John Moore, Philip Sin- gleton, Kenneth Cogger, Delbert Hes- ler, George Servis, Richard Rice, Al- bert Marshall, Philip Stefanowski, and Eric Sommer, Juniors. Prof. Arthur D. Moore officiated as toastmaster of the banquet. A wel- coming address was given by I. H. Culver, '34E, and the response was delivered by Eric Sommer, '35E. The principal speaker for the eve- ning was Prof. Max S. Handman of the economics department. Sororities Consider Abolition Or Modification Of Hell-Week By ELEANOR BLUM With the general sentiment for either modification or absolute aboli- tion of hell-week prevalent on cam- pus, sororities are considering the matter now, and will finally take ac- tion for or against it in their sep- arate houses. In a survey of the sororities, two reported that they have national rul- ings against the custom; two have what they term a "courtesy week" for the pledges; and still another names it,"ideal week." Several claim that their probation week has undergone, it in Theta Phi Alpha, the president' of that house reported. Zeta Tau Alpha, according to Myrtle Cooper, '34, president, abolished the custom last year. Chi Omega and Alpha Delta Pi are the two houses with national rules against hell-week. These houses report that satisfactory pledge re- lationships are obtained through training in sorority history and cus- toms. Helen Bernthal, '34, Delta Delta Delta president, stated yester- day that in their "ideal week" the