The Weather Cloudy and cool today; little change in temperature. C, . r Mi1t igau ~~Iait Editorials Going To Summer School.. VOL. XLV. No. 179 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Roosevelt Hits NRA 0 .I10 President Hints Wish For Amendment To National Constitution Says Nation Must Decide Questions Faculty Men Think Abolition Of NRA Unharmful To Nation Declares Court Has Taken Country Back 'To Days Of Horse And Buggy' WASHINGTON, May 31.-(A)- President Roosevelt today appealed the. Supreme Court's NRA decision to the people. Hinting strongly at an effort to re- vise the Constitution, he asserted, at a press conference unique in his administration, that the Nation must decide whether the Federal Govern- ment shall, or shall not, have author- ity to deal with what the administra- tion considers grave economic and social problems of national scope and import.- The Presiaent challenged directly the Supreme Court's interpretation of the fundamental law and told a hundred reporters - gathered in an atmosphere of tension - that the court has "relegated the Nation to the days of the-horse and buggy.'' Other Acts Threatened 'Surveying the wreckage of NRA, the Chief Executive declared that the Federal Alcohol Control Administra- tion, as now constituted, had been abolished and that the Agricultural Adjustment Administration and Se- curities Exchange Commissions were threatened. While stock and staples markets quickly hit a downward trend, Wash- ington interpreted Mr. Roosevelt's re- marks as indicating future Adminis- tration policy would follow one of two courses: The submission of an amendment to the Constitution giving Congress specifically .the powers it sought to wield in NRA, but which the court said were denied to the Federal Govern- ment by the fundamental law. A campaign of public education and agitation intended to find its reflec- tion in a change in the Court's philos- ophy which led it to confine inter- state commerce, as Mr. Roosevelt in- terpreted the opinion, to goods in transit. Mr. Roosevelt stopped short of say- ing definitely what he would propose to meet the situation. He expects to have a statement tomorrow after- noon on some of the aspects of the' Supreme Court decision but -in all probability he will wait until later, next week to announce his emergency action. Lengthy Conference He did say, however, that the people would have to vote on the fundamen- tal issue that had been raised -not necessarily this summer, or even next winter, but within the next four or five years; certainly within the decade. For an hour and a half, the Presi- dent talked NRA with the newspaper- men who surrounded his desk and jammed his office to the rear door. Frequently he leaned forward and waved a copy of the high court's NRA opinion to emphasize his points. So intent was he that he smoked but one cigaret in that time. His desk was littered with telegrams and let- ters on the subject, to which he re- ferred from time to time. Mrs. Roose- velt was present, calmly knitting on a nearby davenport. While the President spoke, House leaders were predicting early enact- ment of an NRA law confined to in- terstate business as defined by the Court, and supplemented by legisla- tion to encourage state legislatures to enact laws for NRA's of their own. They thought a constitutional amend- ment would run into difficulties in Congress. 20,000 Dead As Quake Shatters Frontier Cities KARACHI, India, May 31. - (P) - Three tremendous rumbling shocks shattered the northwest frontier city of Quetta early today, killing an esti- mated 20,000 Europeans and natives. It was feared the death toll would go much higher with receipt of reports from nutlving districts, especially that By FRED WARNER NEAL l Confidence that the upward swingI of business recovery will continue de- spite abolition of the NRA was voiced yesterday by economic and political authorities on the campus. In expressing approval of the Su- preme Court's invalidation of the recovery administration, Dean Clare E. Griffin of the School of Business Administration, Prof. Shorey Peter- son of the economics department, and Dr. Harold M. Dorr of the political science department saw hope out of the reported "chaos" in Washington. Dean Griffin, in declaring that "recovery will continue, regardless of the decision," said he believed the adverse ruling on the NRA "is a help- ing factor" in the business upturn. "The attempts of the government to fix prices, regulate wages and hours of work, and in general control in- dustry were bad," he stated. "The, business system should be kept flex- ible so that the natural forces will; be allowed to work." Although he admitted that the ma-a jority of business men were antag- onistic toward the NRA, he pointed, out that the antagonism "was not1 wholly rational." He said that the codes have helped eliminate unfairj competition and child labor, "and although the child labor problem has not been serious since the depression, it will be in the future." The gains in elimination of sweat shops achieved by the NRA may con-, tinue in many instances even though the codes are gone, Dean Griffin pre- dicted. Another permanent gain of the National Recovery Administra- tion, he said, is that business men have learned to think in terms of an industry rather than a company. The danger of excessive price cutting is now greatly diminished, he advised, because there is no longer a great over-supply of goods. In discussing the possibility of in- dustry formulating voluntary codes, Dean Griffin pointed out that with the invalidation of the NRA the anti- trust laws, which the code making provisions suspended, are now back in force. It is his opinion that bus- iness men will find it necessary to, maintain some kind of organization which allows for the exchange of statistics and determination of stand- ard methods of determining costs and still be within the Sherman Act. "One of the biggest problems in price cutting," he declared, "is that many industries do not know their own costs." He warned that any such# business agreements would be inside the anti-trust laws "by a very fine line." He pointed out that enforcement (Continued on Page 6) wo , w ® Church Groups End Activities For Semester Student Organizations To Hold Final Programs This Sunday With final examinations and the close of the current semester, the majority of the student religious or- ganizations have discontinued many of their activities until the openingJ of summer school. Dr. W. C. Brashares, pastor of the, First Methodist Episcopal church, has chosen the topic "Christ's Alterna- tive to Communism" for the 10:45 a.m. worship period. An informal discussion has been arranged for the Wesleyan Guild hour at 6 p.m. "A Heartening Display of God's, Power" will be the subject of the Rev. E. C. Stellhorn at the 10:30 a.m. services of the Zion Lutheran church. The Rev. Herman A. Brauser, of St. Steven's church, Detroit, will act as guest pastor at the confirmation re- union services of St. Paul's Lutheran church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. The 10:45 a.m. worship period will be in charge of the Rev. C. A. Brauer, whose topic will be "Take Thou My Hands And Lead Me" for the confirmation; service.1 The Rev. Allison R. Heaps will dis- cuss the topic "Religion and Social1 Action" at 10:30 a.m. toniorrow. The morning worship topic will also in- clude the program now being set up by the Congregational denomination in an effort to integrate more closely the activities of the church with the social problems of the hour. Ohio Students Join Strikers In Disturbance' COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 31-(A')- With Ohio State University students in the front ranks, Columbus Pack- ing Co. strikers and their sympathi- zers clashed in a 30-minute pitched battle with 200 policemen and detec- tives today. Four policement were injured, doz- ens of strikers suffered bruises and cuts, and 22 strike sympathizers were arrested. The riot brought an ultimatum from Safety Director W. S. Pealer for university students to stay "in their own end of town" and a point- blank order from Mayor Henry W. Worley against mass picketing at the plant torn by strike disturbances for nearly two months. Four hundred union electrical workers at Toledo held a strike threat in abeyance until Monday pending negotiations for a 20 per cent wage increase. Police Sergeant Charles Fritz fa- tally shot William Williams, 30 years old, at Cincinnati, as the aftermath of a recent strike in the Norwood Chevrolet-Fisher Body plant. Rescue Three Men From Huron River Three young men claiming to be University students were rescued, Thursday from the Huron river near Whitmore Lake by Charles Sylvester, 14 year old son of Herbert Sylvester, district manager of the Detroit Edison company. The three students, who gave false names to the police after their rescue, had been swimming and diving from a canoe in the river when it drifted a w a y from them downstream.- Charles, who was fishing nearby from a rowboat, heard their cries and rowed to the spot where the three, men were floundering in the water. Several people who had seen the occurrence from the shore telephoned, the sheriff's office, Deputy Sherifff John Osborn taking charge. Catch Burdar elSuspects Afte r 3 Mile Pursuit Patrolmen Ehnis And Ier1 Stop Fleeing Car; Find Short Wave Radio1 Ann Arbor Patrolmen Julius Ehnis and Edward Iler overtook and cap- tured two burglary suspects after a three mile chase yesterday afternoon through the streets of the city and out into the country on Plymouth1 road. With both cars traveling in excess of 80 miles an hour a bullet from one of the policemen's guns went through the back window and penetrated the windshield inches from the driver's head, bringing the fleeing car to a standstill and the chase to an end, Searching the car after the capture, local police found a small radio set tuned to the short wave frequency3 on which the police radio broadcasts. Scattered along the road and in the car police found 12 suits of clothes which the men claimed to have pur- chased in Chicago. Hidden under the rear seat was a heavy iron crowbar. The car was first picked up en- tering the city on the Dexter road. The police car gave chase through the city and two miles out on the Plymouth road. The men in the car were unable to give any excuse for not stopping when the first shots were fired. They were taken to the sta- tion for fingerprinting and question- ing. Adrian police planned to bring the proprietor of a Hudson clothing store which was robbed Thursday! night of a large amount of men's clothing to Ann Arbor in an effort to identify the 12 suits found in the captured car. Chicago Students MayFace Action~ CHICAGO, May 31. -(WP) -Twen- ty-five University of Chicago stu- dents who participated in a Memorial' Day parade of, communists and paci- fists tonight faced possible disciplin- ary action for a breach of the school's regulations.I Recognition was withdrawn from the Chicago chapters of the two or- Regents Hold' Last Meeting Of Semester Goddard's Resignation Is Accepted; 15 Donations For Research Received Prof. Chapin Given Leave Of Absence Alexander Will Administer $5,000 Gift For Work In ThoracicSurgery The Board of Regents held their last meeting of the current semester yesterday and accepted the resigna- tion of Prof. Edwin C. Goddard, mem- ber of the Law School faculty since 1895. Gifts of money from indi- viduals and foundations to aid in carrying on fifteen research projects were also received by the Regents. From the Earhart foundation $3,- 800 was given to support research in psychiatry under the direction of Dr. Theophile Raphael during the aca- demic year 1935-36. Prof. John Alex- ander was also named administrator of an anonymous gift of $5,000 for work in thoracic surgery. The Board also received from an anonymous donor $2,000 for dental re- search, $7,000 for child study, $15,- 000 for support of the institute of health and social sciences center for graduate study in Detroit, $10,000 for research in the field of Michigan ar- chaeology under the direction of Pro- fessor-Emeritus W. B. Hinsdale, $5,- 000 to support the program in the teaching of post graduate medicine under the direction of Vice-President James D. Bruce, $3,800 for research in surgery under Prof. Frederick A. Coller, $1,500 for research in rickets under Dr. C. A. Lilly, $20,000 for as- tronomical research at Lake Angelus observatory near Pontiac, and $18,000 for work in connection with the Uni- versity Fresh Air Camp which is lo- cated on Patterson Lake. Foundation Gifts Two gifts were received from the Rockefeller foundation. One provid- ed for $8,200 in 1935-36 and $5,800 for 1936-37 for research in the ap- plication of spectrographic methods to biological and medicinal problems. The second grant from the Rockefeller foundation provided $5,000 a year over a five-year period for special re- search in the physiology of respira- tion under the direction of Prof. Rob- ert Gesell. The Geological Society of America gave the Regents $2,000 to assist Prof. L. B. Kellum of the geology depart- ment in continuing cooperative geo- logical investigations in Northern Mexico. Change Dental Curriculum The curriculum of the dental school was changed from the optional three or four year curriculum to a com- pulsory four-year curriculum. The combinedliterary and dental curricu- lum program was lengthened from six to seven years. The resignation of Prof. George Ulenbeck of the physics department was accepted. Professor Ulenbeck will go to the University of Utrecht in Holland to accept a position as pro- fessor of theoretical physics. . Sabbatical leave for the academic year 1935-36 was given Prof. Myron B. Chapin of the College of Architecture and leave for the first semester was given Prof. C. O. Carey of the geodesy survey department. Prof. James H. Cissel of the civil engineering depart- ment was granted an extension of leave. He is at present working in the State Highway Department. Il l u s t r i o u s New Yorker Pleads For Criticism Of Literature Without Bias Capacity Crowd Is Present At Speech Writer Urges Objectivity Of Critic When Judging Works Of Authors By BERNARD WEISSMAN A plea for literary criticism free from the social and economic bias of the critic was voiced yesterday after- noon by Henry Hazlitt, distinguished New York writer and editor in the fourth annual Hopwood lecture. Hazlitt's talk, on the subject "Lit- erature vs. Opinion," was delivered before a capacity crowd in the Union Ballroom. Hazlitt charged Marxist critics in particular with basing their criticism mainly on the writer's treatment of the class struggle. According to most Marxist critics, he declared, a "writer must align himself either with the proletariat or with the bourgoisie, either with the forces of light, or with the forces of darkness." Necessary To Make Estimate "We must correctly estimate the skill and ability of our opponents," he asserted. "This correct estimate is one of the primary functions of lit-. erary criticism. The important ques- tion for such criticism is not which side a writer is on, but how able he is in the service of that side." Indicating a course for contempo- rary "creative writers," Hazlitt said, "There is only one rule: The writer should write about what most inter- ests him, and in the way that he prefers to do it." "This is what counts, in the end, in literature-the quality and nobility of the author's mind-and not either mere techincal excellence, or the au-1 thor's social and political sym- pathies." Hazlitt urged an attitude of com-; plete objectivity on the part of the critic. "The cardinal business of literary criticism is not to declare that side A is right and side B wrong;' it is to distinguish, on whichever side, the brilliant and original writers from the empty ones." Function of Critic 1 "In. brief, it is the paradoxical function of the literary critic, as; critic, to detach himself as completely as possible from the actual merits of the controversies of his own time." The speaker employed a quotation from William. Hazlitt, writing on Ed-, mund Burke, as the text for his lec-j ture. The excerpt said, in part: "I conceived too that he might be1 wyrong in his main argument, and yet deliver fifty truths in arriving at a false conclusion." Pointing out the disadvantages of both propagandistic and non-prop- agandistic writing, Hazlitt concluded, "But what in any case finally saves a work of literature, and makes it worth reading, is not the specific doctrines held by its author, but the whole qual- ity and texture of the thought and imagination that go into it." Heads Men's Council Hazlitt Delivers Major Skidmore, Elder Given Hopwood Prizes, Lecture 'Unfinished P i c t u r e' By By Cohen Wins Award In Drama Field Essays Of Scholten And Heitman Best Kesselman's Play Chosen For Special Recognition, Author Given $500 A total of $7,850 was awarded yes- terday to 13 University students as prizes in the Avery Hopwood and Jule Hopwood Awards Contest for 1935. Hubert S. Skidmore, '35, Ann Ar- bor, and Donald B. Elder, '35, Miles, were each awarded $1,500 in the major fiction contest. Their stories were entitled "They Shall Inspire," and "Nothing But Time," respect- fully. The one major prize of $1,000 in drama was given to Theodore Kane Cohen, '35, Dorchester, Mass., for his play "Unfinished Picture," which was produced in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater earlier this semester. Martin E. Scholten, Muscatine, Ia., and Edward K. Heitman, '35, Royal Oak, won $800 prizes in the essay field. Their essays were entitled "Critical Essays" and "Woodrow Wil- son." The only special award, of $500, was given to Harriet Kesselman, '35, Milwaukeee, for her play "Apartment for Rent." William R. Dixon, '36, (above), of Midland, was elected president of the new Men's Council at its first meeting. He is past president of Sphinx, a member of the Student-Faculty Relations Commit- tee, and is affiliated with Kappa Sigma fraternity. Romney Brent Added To Cast Of 'Ut) To Stars' -- r ., Ann Arbor Aud See Hun In N( Skits For Firs Romney Brent, who tured this week with been added to the cas Stars" which ojens b Mendelssohn theater, nounced last night b derson, director of the son. This will give Ann A the opportunity of seei of the Noel Coward ski in the, original Londoi "Words and Music." This revue featur sketches by Noel Co the Americans, Norm Brothers Shore and Ju starring Walter Sleza Ilka Chase, the Ame Brent, the Mexican, Rocky, the Continents sova, the Russian, P the English actress, ar Landis, Imogene Coca Demetrios Vilan, Heler producer-star, Leonar The material for thi, selected from "Word "New Faces" and "F with many new numbe program. Walter Slezak will including "Double Bed Interlude," an adapta famous "Stooge" num Faces" with Imogene rassing Moment" with distinguished New "The Gangster Influe Coca; and Noel Cowa and Englishmen" with Ilka Chase, and the co will be remembered "Music in the Air" Sister" in which he w, ally received here last Ilka Chase, distingu actress will also be fe Star Final,". the qt "Position in Life,"e Wealth." The Rocky dancing partners of N Josephine Baker in Paris will be featured Dance with Coca," "V nity." "Au Revoir PE original creations. Mlle. Nija Tarasov Russian numbers w featured at the Bar winter. Sorel Felicia Vilan, featured danc will do their origin which have also be Barbizon Sunday N "Homesick," "Franki and "Serenade to a V Miss Sorel is the prob for the ballerina of t nnra next vear. T Awards In Fiction The minor awards of $250 in the iences win fiction field were given to Eugene S., Brewer, '35, Owosso, fOr "Some oel Coward Brass and No Groceries," and Walter at Time P. Domanowski, '37, Detroit, for "Three Stories." The minor poetry award of $250 has been fea- was won by Otto A. Bird, '35, Ann Ar- Nazimova, has bor. No major prizes in this division t of "Up to the were awarded. Monday in the Arthur Clifford, '35, Ann Arbor, was yit was an - te minor award winner in the drama y Robert Hen- field, receiving $250 for his two plays, Dramatic Sea- "See a Man Die" and "Child of Dark- ness." krbor audiences The three minor essay awards of ng him in many $250 each were given to Richard H. ts which he did Mattox, '36, Shenandoah, Ia., Dorothy, n production of S. Gies, '36, Ann Arbor, and Dorothea MacGregor, '36, Bay City. es songs and Their contributions were entitled, )ward,. and by respectively, "Essay on Social Values," an Zeno, Viola "Three Essays," and "Three Literary ne Sillman and Essays." k, the Vienese, The winners were announced by 'rican, Romney Prof. Howard Mumford Jones of the Paul and Lief English department, acting director of als, Nina Tara- the Hopwood contest, following the atricia Calvert, annual Hopwood lecture delivered by nd Jessie Royce I Henry Hazlitt, distinguished New , Felicia Sorel, York editor and critic. n Gray, and the Many Former Winners d Sillman. Cohen's award was the fifth he has s revue has been won in Hopwood competition. Two s and Music," of the other four were for dramatic "ools Rush In" contributions, and the others were en-. ers added to the tered in the prose narrative and es- say fields. Clifford and Miss Gies have each do many skits won three previous prizes, Clifford ," and "Strange having succeeded in the drama, essay, tion of the now and poetry fields, and Miss Gieshay- bers from "New ing won in the essay, poetry and Coca; "Embar- prose contests. Elizabeth Love, Elder has already received prizes York ingenue; for prose narrative and fiction offer- nce" with Miss ings. All the other winners were rd's "Mad Dogs given awards for the first time this Romney Brent, year. mpany. Slezak Sinclair Lewis, Nobel Prize winner for introducing in 1930, Ruth Suckow, author of "Iowa and "Meet My Interiors,' a recent Literary Guild as enthusiastic- selection, and Webb Waldron, Mich- t year. igan graduate and former Hopwood ished American judge, were the judges for the fic- atured in "Five tion contest. uintuplets skit, The essay entries were judged by and "Ladies of John Erskine, author and professor of Twins, former English literature at Columbia Uni- distinguette and versity, Van Wyck Brooks, essayist the Casino de and critic, and Mary M. Colum, win- I in "I Want to ner of the Guggenheim Fellowship Waltz With Dig- in Literary Criticism for 1930. ar is' and other Judges Well Known rarils g n her Mark Van Doren,anthropologist a will sing her and professor of English literature hich have been at. Columbia, Frances Frost, author bizon Plaza all and Demetrios and magazine contributor and Ezra ers of the revue Pound, founder of the Imagist move- al dance forms ment in poetry, determined the poetry en seen at the awards. ights including National judges in the field of e and Johnnie,,,drama were Robert Littell, author ealthy Widow" and former dramatic critic of the able nomination New York World and the New York he Metropolitan Evening Post, Arthur Ruhl, author 'he entire revue and dramatic critic of the New York Henry Hazlitt Says Proletarian Literature Is Not What It Seems By MARSHALL D. SHULMAN pecting, but it will not remain as Proletarian literature is neither literature." proletarian nor truly literature, in the LiThe radicals reply: 'What of it? opinion of Henry Hazlitt, distin- phasize the class struggle. So-called guished critic and editor who deli- "pure" literature is of minor impor- vered the Hopwood Lecture for 1935 yesterday afternoon. "The term is a misnomer. It is not proletarian in thewsense that it has its origin in the working class, and the authors who write it - John Dos Passos for example - cannot in any sense be called proletarian. "Nor even if the revolutionary ideal could be realized would there be any proletarian literature," Mr. Hazlitt believes. "Although the working peo- ple would supposedly be liberated for more literary activity, it could no longer be called proletarian since class distinctions would at the same tie ,aesricnnn e tance.' And the answer lies in the defini- tion of an author's objectives, de-1 clares Mr. Hazlitt. "'You are either interested in inducing social change{ or in writing what is truly litera- ture. The novel that is written with the social motive behind it will not endure. "Of course it is true that many great books did come into being with an idea of ameliorating social con- ditions, but these are great for the qualities of expression entirely lack- ing in the so-called proletarian liter- ature today. "The young writer of'today is faced