i The Weather L Sir igan i~at Editorials Commencement Speaker Education For Citizenship Somewhat warmer; cloudy tonight; showers probable for today. VOL. XLV. No. 154 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Auto Strikers Await Action ByMeGrady To Confer With Dillon, A.F. Of L. Organizer, On Demands Of Workers Labor Leaders To Hol. Meeting'T oay Four Additional Chevrolet Plants Are Shut Down, 20;000 Men Idle DETROIT, May 1. - (P)- With nearly 20,000 automobile workers idle through strikes and shutdowns in the General Motors Chevrolet plants of Ohio, Wisconsin and Georgia, Ed- ward F. McGrady, first assistant sec- retary of labor, marked time here to- night waiting to confer with labor leaders Thursday on their proposals for peace in the motor car industry. "The situation is serious," said Mc- Grady, who was sent here by Secre- tary Perkins to direct the govern- ment's effort to settle troubles in the Toledo plant of the Chevrolet Motor Co., where the strike has been in progress for more than a week. "I can't do anything until I have a chance to talk to Francis J. Dillon and learn what labor organizations want. I expect to see Dillon Thurs- day morning." Dillon is an American Federation of Labor organizer. He is reported to have been in Washington several days conferring with William Green, pres- ident of the federation. McGrady said that his opinion that the situation in the auto field "was serious" was based on reports of General Motors subsidiary plants closing down for lack of Chevrolet transmission units, which were man- ufactured in the Toledo plant. Four more plants announced clos- ing tonight. The Fisher Body Co., and Chevrolet plants in Atlanta were shut down, affecting about 2,000 men. The Fisher and Chevrolet plants in Janesville Wis. were also closed by the management for lack of trans- missions. The Janesville closing af- fected 2,600 workers. Great Britain Will Increase Arms Budget Extra $25,000,000 To Be Spent To Keep Up With German Air Program LONDON, May 1. -(P) -Great Britain, an authoritative source re- vealed tonight, will spend an extra $25,000,000 this year to keep abreast of Germany in Europe's headlong air armaments race. That amount will be expended in addition to the $105,000,000 already provided in air estimates for the cur- rent fiscal year, the informed course disclosed. The proposal, regarded in informed quarters as an answer to Adolf Hit- ler's boast that the Reich now is as strong in the air as Great Britain, is expected to be the highlight of Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald's "im- portant announcement" opening the House of Commons debate on foreign affairs tomorrow. Earlier today, the Prime Minister, speaking in the Commons, said the British government stood behind an article he wrote last week assailing Germany's swift rearmament as per- ilous to the continent's peace. His statementrserved further to increase the interest, already tremen- dous, in tomorrow's session of the Commons at which members will be given the first opportunity to air their views since Hitler ripped another page out of the Versailles treaty by resum- ing submarine construction. GETS OXFORD POSITION SWARTHMORE, Pa., May 1-4)- Election of Dr. Herbert Spencer Jen- nings, zoology" professor at Johns Hopkins University, as Eastman pro- fessor at the University of Oxford, England, for the academic year 1935- 36, was announced today. Dr. Jennings, a specialist in the physiology of mirco organisms, ani- mal behavior and eugenics, was trained at the University of Michigan, Harvard and Jena. Inadequate L i g hIt Systems Found frin 7 Reading Rooms Seven out of eight regularly used University reading rooms were found to be inadequately lighted in tests re- cently conducted by means of a "sight-light meter," an instrument invented for the purpose of deter- mining the efficiency of lighting sys- tems. Two of the most used reading rooms, Angell Hall study hall and Angell Hall mathematics and eco- nomics reading room, were rated as "very dangerous" by the instrument. Both the periodical room and the study hall of the main library, and the reading room of the Union were also in this class. Lights in the Law Library and in the large room of the main library were found "insufficient" except in a few spots directly under the main sources of light, where they were "satisfactory for large print." Four rooms, Natural Science Audi- torium, Lecture Room 110 of the Main Library, and Rooms 231 and 3217 Angell Hall were selected at random as representatives of the class that are used often, but not reg- ularly at night. All proved to be "very dangerous" for reading of any kind. The only reading room with correct and adequate lighting for all normal print and reading positions was grad- uate reading room 2 of the Main Li- brary. Other graduate reading rooms have the same lighting facilities. Hitler Declares Germany Wants Peace Abroad Appeal For National Unity Is Heard By Gathering Of Million Nazi BERLIN, May 1--()- Adolf Hit- ler told the world again today that Germany wants only peace. A million Nazis who braved high winds and thunderstorms to gather at the great Tempehof Airdrome to attend the capital's May Day cele- bration, heard Der Fuehrer, bare- headed and speaking hoarsely, in- terrupted his eulogy of the Nazi movement to say: "Our strength lies not in tanks, cannons and marching battalions, but in the unity of our people and its idealistic state. * * * "What we want is not war, not un- rest. Just as we restored peace with- in Germany, we want peace abroad, because only then can our domestic works be a success. * * *" The Fuehrer's 1,500 word extempo- raneous address, shouted over the winds' roar, drew from the chilled, wet throng below his rostrum less ap- plause than usually greets his ad- dresses., With his theme the assertion Ger- mans "are one people as ordained by God" and his conclusion the declara- tion that "my will must be your con- fession," the Fuehrer gave the major part of tis address over to an appeal for national unity, touching not at all upon armaments and international relations. COUZENS ASKS RELIEF PROBE WASHINGTON, May 1- (P) - A sensational investigation of the dis- tribution of funds by the Federal Re- lief Administration was ordered to- day when the Senate adopted a reso- lution by Senator Couzens, of Mich- igan, calling on its Appropriations Committee to inquire about the dis- tribution of the funds allotted to the relief administration. Roosevelt Is Facing Major NRADefeat New Senate Opposition To. Extension Of Act In 1936 Is Seen Chances Of Wagner Bill AreImpaired Sentiment Holds Promise For Shortened Session Of Congress WASHINGTON, May 1. - () - A sudden crystalization of Senate senti- ment for clipping the wings of NRA and extending its lease of life only until next April, today pointed to the possibility of a major legislative de- feat for President Roosevelt. At the same time, this sentiment held promise of a much quicker ad- journment of Congress and consti- tuted a serious blow to the chances of the Wagner Labor Disputes Bill. Over the objections of the Chief Executive, the Senate finance com- mittee voted today to report a resolu- tion for the brief. extension of the recovery law with modifications. Party chieftains immediately lined up their forces to put the resolution through quickly and without change. May Shorten Session If successful, such a move would not only shorten the session of Con- gress by weeks, but would prevent adoption of the disputed Wagner Bill as an amendment. Friends of the labor disputes measure had counted heavily on the prospect of forcing its consideration as an amendment to the NRA bill. Under the program approved by the finance committee, the present recovery law would be extended by a simple resolution merely continuing the present law until April 1, 1936 with price fixing and regulation of intrastate business eliminated. Government Prepares Case Meanwhile, government attorneys - Stanley Reed of the justice depart- Tnent and Donald Richberg of NRA -prepared for the opening of crucial arguments before the Supreme Court tomorrow on the constitutionality of NRA. They filed a bulky brief with the court just before it closed this afternoon. Cognizant of these moves, Senate proponents of the extension-until- April plan argued that Congress would have the first three months of next session to revise the recovery law more permanently on the basis of court decisions on its constitution- ality. Meanwhile, the Administration would be free to reorganize and revise the code structure to meet the crit- icisms which have been raised. Despite President Roosevelt's rec- ommendation for a two-year exten- sion of the law, the finance commit- tee voted 16 to 3. for the substitute plan advanced by NRA foes. Senior Society Taps Nine Junior Women In recognition of scholastic achievement and participation in campus activities, Senior Society last night tapped for membership the following junior women: Clare Gorman, Betty Green, Betty Greve, Eleanor Johnson, Maureen Kavanaugh, Eileen McManus, Brenda Parkinson, Audrey Tals- ma, and Virginia York. Three-Day Session Of MIPA Opens High School Journalists Will Be Welcomed By Ruthven Tonight Wuyskens To Speak At Meeting Friday Delegates Will Be Housed By Campus Sororities And Fraternities With the opening today of the leventh annual meeting of the Mich- gan Interscholastic Press Associa- ion, more than 250 editors and staff nembers of scholastic publications throughout the state are expected to ttend the three-day session of the1 ssociation here, sponsored each year >y the journalism department. Registration of delegates will take >lace during the afternoon, and ar- angements will be made for the iousing of the members in fraternity3 nd sorority houses. The first meet- ng of the group will be at an informal1 :athering tonight in the Michigan Inion, where members will be wel- ,omed by President Alexander G. ?uthven and Prof. John L. Brumm,3 lead of the journalism department, t was announced by Donal Hamilton Iaines, also of that department, who s in charge of the association's meet- ng. Informal dancing may follow. General Session Friday Friday the delegates will meet in heir first general session to hear an ddress by Prof. John H. Muyskens, rofessor of phonetics, on "The Moth- r Tongue." The meeting will be fol-7 owed by a group of two hour round- able discussions treating subjects in he field of the various publications, ed by advisers of the college and high chool newspapers, magazines, and nnuals. The general session Friday after- ioon will be addressed by Lee A White on a subject yet to be an-1 ounced, and andth'ef group of dis- ussions will follow the meeting of he association as a whole. The annual banquet of the asso- iation will be held tomorrow night, o be addressed by Dr. William P. emon of the First Presbyterian' Church, who will speak on "The Ad- venture of Tomorrow." Dr. Henderson To Speak Meetings of the group will end Sat- irday morning with a third series of liscussion groups, to be held follow- ng an address by Dr. William D. Henderson, director of the University Extension Division, on "The Power of Personality." ' The journalism department will be aided in the sponsoring of the meet- ings by Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism fraternity, and by honorary journalistic societies. Complete details of the program, including the schedule and leaders of discussion groups, will be announced after registration is completed, when the department will know who is at- tending the meetings, Mr. Haines said. Hillel Speech Contest Is Won By Zwerdling Abe Zwerdling, '35, won the Hillel Foundation oratorical contest last right. As a result of his victory, he will represent the Foundation in a. nation-wide speechcontest at the Covenant Club, in Chicago, May 15. Zwerdling's topic was "Communism and the Jew." Runnerup in the local contest was Ronald Freedman, '38, who spoke on "The Jew in Progress." At the conclusion of the speeches last night, Rabbi Bernard Heller, director of the Hillel Foundation, announced that beginning next year he would sponsor an annual oratorical contest at the Foundation, "open to all students on the campus interested in forensic activities." Prizes of $25 and $10 will be of- fered by Rabbi Heller. The subject of the speeches must be based on Jewish history, literature, or philos- ophy, he said. 130 Little Nipponese Wed To Strange Frontiersmen _Y .._ _ _ _ _ _ . , ,laa ..a . . T . - IR George Williams Elected Interfraternity Council President For Next Year i .. - .'.mil S100 Workers Meet On Steps Of Court House Europe Observes Peaceful May Day; Police Watch Capitals Against the strict orders of Mayor Robert A. Campbell, 100 workers, re- inforced by about 30 University stu- dents, last night held a May day meeting on the East steps of the Court House.' Maurice J. Wilsie, '31, opened the meeting with a speech against war. He was followed by John Franklin, a Negro, and another speaker, who con- demned the local relief agencies' handling of the unemployed. John P. Edmonds, '37, brought the greetings of the "class conscious students" to the demonstrators, and told them that the workers would be' joined by these students in their struggle. The meeting was closed by Joseph Welch, local Communist Party head, who told his audience that if, the meeting had been snmaller police would have broken it up. 'Several of the, crowd carried signs bearing. legends: Fight To Preserve Free Speech, We Demar Right To Streets, Oppose Dunckel-Baldwin Bill, Raise Relief Budgets, and United Front Against Attacks On Workers. Mayor Campbell, who earlier in the week had declared the meeting would not be allowed, last night said the demonstrators did not have a permit for the meeting and that he had turned the matter over to the police department, telling them to do what- ever they thought best. One detec- tive was the only member of the po- lice department present at the demonstration. Fifteen of the students present were members of the National Stu- dent League, which had postponed its regular Wednesday night meeting so that any of its members who wished could join the workers in their demonstration. The peaceful meeting presented a sharp contrast to last year's May Day activities, when 30 University students made a "junket" to Detroit to join workers in a United Front demonstra- tion and were run out of the city by police. POLICE KEEP EUROPE QUIET LONDON, May 1 -(P)- Stern po- lice surveillance in the capitals of Europe held the international labor day observance to comparatively peaceful demonstrations today. Four sporadic bombings and scrim- mages between police and crowds took four lives, but for the most part the meetings and demonstrations which labor stages on the once pastoral Maytime festival passed off quietly. Moscow displayed her military might before Joseph Stalin, Russia's "man of steel," and Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler exhorted to peace nearly a million of his people gathered in L a gigantic demonstration at the Tempelhof Airdrome, Berlin. Elsewhere, the day for the most part was one of festivities - free goulash in Vienna, quiet meetings in Paris, uneventful dances and concerts in Italy, a "fashion parade" of well- dressed working men in Stockholm and jubilee preparations in England. One-Man Governing Body Holds Meeting With Itself A t Union The decadent, almost defunct Uni- versity student governing body, the Undergraduate Council, met yester- day in the Union as scheduled. Only one member was present, but he de- cided to "carry on" regardless of the lack of a quorum. The president pro tempore called the meeting to order and took up the first matter on the order of business. "We have to decide when to hold the elections for members to next year's Men's Student Council. Is there any discussion?" Resigning the chair and moving to another for the moment, the sole councilman spoke: "Well," he de- clared, his tones ringing hollowly in the hushed silence of the room, "I don't know. How about next Wed- nesday?" "No?" he declared, switching to an- other chair and answered quickly. "That's too soon. Let's make it Tues- day, May 20, because that is after appointments, and then we won't elect some guy who'd be an ex-officio member anyway." Resuming the chair, he put the question. "Anybody opposed to this?" There was no one. "Unanimously carried," he cried, and adjourned without a motion. 'Anti-Red' Bill Plan For Modification Of Hell Week Passed By Vote Of 19-14 Proposal Conceived On Spur Of Moment Hearing To Be Held Toniohtl Dunckel-Baldwin Proposal Open Discussion Will Be Attended By Students (Special to The Daily) LANSING, May 1. - A public hear-i ing on the Dunckel-Baldwin bill willi be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the House of Representatives, it was an-; nounced today. The bill, already passed by the Sen-i ate, was reported favorably last week1 by the House committee on state af- fairs. In substance, the bill makes it unlawful to advocate overthrow of the government, to aid anyone advocating overthrow, or to possess literature, advocating overthrow of the govern- ment. The bill defines overthrow spe- cifically as meaning "violent over- throw." It was pointed out that Senator Miller Dunckel, (Rep., Three Rivers), who with Senator Joseph A. Baldwin, (Rep., Albion), is sponsoring the bill, withdrew from the Senate last week a bill of his own, designed to outlaw the Communist party in Michigan. He has given no indication of a desire to withdraw the Dunckel-Baldwin bill. An undetermined number of stu- dents. from the University, it was learned here tonight, plan to be pres- ent at the hearing tomorrow. MISSOURI BACK ON RELIEF JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Mayl -- (UP)- Quick legislative action restored Missouri to the Federal relief rolls within 12 hours after being cut off for delay in complying with the Fed- eral Emergency Relief Administra- tion's demands that the state carry a "fair share" of the load. Will Sponsor All-Campus Sing On Library Steps Wednesday,_May 8 By THOMAS E. GROEHN George Williams, '36, of Rochester, '.Y., was elected president of the nterfraternity Council for the com- ig year at its meeting in the Union ist night as a general plan of Hell Veek modification was passed by a s-14 vote. Williams is a member'of Sigma Phi raternity and has been a tryout on he Council for two years. He will ucceed Philip A. Singleton, '35E, Phi :appa Psi. In a hectic session that at times ad the appearance of a national residential nomination rally, the presentatives of fraternities com- letely reversed their original stand n Hell Week, as expressed by a 38-1 ote for modification at their last meeting, and voted through a plan onceived on the spur of the moment y a small group of fraternity leaders. Neither of the definite rules of mod- ication proposed by a Council com- aittee and a freshman committee ame to a vote. Hell Week Plan Outlined The plan finally accepted by the raternities was proposed by Lau- ence D. Smith, '37L, and includes the ollowing regulations: Resolved: 1. That Hell Week shall be lim- ted to a maximum duration of one veek. 2. That the Hell Week activities f each fraternity shall not be so ar- anged as to result in any inconven- ence to persons not affiliated with the raternity either by destruction of >roperty or creation of public disturb- nce. 3. On any report of any pledge or vitiate who feels his initiation has )en unfair and unreasonable, the executive committee of the Council ;hall investigate. 4. Any rumor of physical injury or inreasonable practices by any fra- ;ernity may be investigated and if nalpractices be discovered the usual penalties shall be meted out. 5. The same persons who are now ield responsible to the University for he adherence of each individual fra- ernity to social and financial regula- ions shall be held responsible for the trict observance of these rules by heir fraternities. 6. Any violations of these precepts shall fall within the jurisdiction of he executive committee of the Inter- fraternity Council and shall be pun- ishable by imposition of social pro- bation, or the forfeiture of rushing privileges, or both. The duration of such penalties in each case shall be at the discretion of the aforemen- tioned executive committee. To Sponsor All-Campus Sing In another action taken, the Coun- cil almost unanimously voted to sponsor, in conjunction with the Var- sity Glee Club and the Varsity-R.O.- T.C. Band, an All-Campus Mass Sing, which will be held on the steps of the General Library at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 8. The program for the sing, which Council members hope will be carried on as a tradition, will be announced tomorrow by George Duffy, '35, chair- man of the committee. New members of the executive com- mittee were also elected. They are Russel Coward, '36, Theta Chi, Robert Merrill, '36, Phi Gamma Delta, Wil- liam Onderdonk, '36, Psi Upsilon, Frederick Olsen, '36, Sigma Phi Epsi- lon, and Williams, who, as president, automatically represents his district, on the committee. New Secretary To Be Named The secretary of the Council for the coming year will be appointed sometime this week by the outgoing executive committee, according to Al- vin H. Schleifer, '35, retiring secre- 'tary. Frederick Jones, '35, presented a Cudgel To Cane And Back; The Story Of A Delightful Atavism By MARSHALL D. SHULMAN y Urbanity, driving before it the play- ful wants of a virile student *body, robbed the campus of many a colorful tradition, among which none has a more exciting history than "Cane Sunday." It wasn't so long ago - about the time that those who were advocating nine instead of eight pillars for the front of the proposed Angell Hall were meeting in secret sessions - that students found it necessary to rip out the individual pieces of the cam- pus picket fence to carry about in sheer self-defense. With this liturgy of violence behind it, the "Cane Sunday" tradition, now to be revived again, emerges a de- lightfully genteel pastime. Thus when members of the class of '35 an affectation for both men and women; decorated with streamers and flowers, and embellished with gold, silver and precious stones, the' stick became a symbol of worldli- ness. By a whimsical atavism, the stick became again a cudgel to Michigan men of old, who cracked each other's skulls with them with much glee and good spirits. Refined again is thet popular walking stick fashion decrees for this season; cream in color, cat- alin tipped, and if marked at all, banded with a substantial ring of sterling silver. Collectors of sticks prize genuine and expensive malacca, which comes from the stem of the palm, calemus scipionem, and is marketed without the bark removed. Forty years ago, the fad in walking sticks ran to slen- Medical School Faculty Taken For A Ride At Annual Smoker By BERNARD H. FRIED The old order was reversed last night at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater when a packed house of medical students saw their respected instructors unmercifully parodied in the annual Medical School Smoker. Pet prejudices and outstanding idio- syncracies of many of the prominent; men on the faculty from Dean-emeri- tus Novy and Dean Furstenburg to Doctors Badgley and Eglazius were paraded before the enthusiastic audi- ence in a series of six skits staged and charactered largely by the Galens An ability to "take it" must be ar leading qualification for faculty men,Z and, judging by the roars of laugh-1 ter emanating from the section of the auditorium reserved for them, they possess it in no small amounts. As an added attraction a "sheet" entitled the "Thymico-Lymphatic Constitution," containing articles supposed to have been written by men associated with the Medical School and dealing with subjects of their re- search, was printed and distributed for the occassion. The purpose of the smoker according to the editors of AI110 "T"Yjic T~aopblo 11