THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1935 College Official Says Industry Is Near Crisis Industry Must Determine Type Of Control, Says Rev..E. A. Walsh DETROIT, Nov. 13. -- (A) - The Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, S.J., vice president of Georgetown university, warned industry yesterday that its choice lies between speedy voluntary regulation and enforced government control. He told the Detroit Economics club in an address that the nation faces a crisis. "The constitution solved the first; great crisis in American life, in 1787," he declared.' ". Thesecond great crisis in the 60's was solved by Civil war and fratricide. "It is for business and American leadership to decide how the third crisis will be settled." Father Walsh declared it "unthink- able that the clear, middle path of reasonable sacrifice and supreme so- cial solidarity" will not be chosen. The speaker urged asa solution the creation of an economic council in place of congress, with representa- tion for all classes and sections, or the practice of an idea of "labor shares" in industry. He expressed the opinion that wages may not correctly measure la- bor's full shares in the returns from industry, and declared: "The day that 'labor shares' be- come universally adopted in the con- stitution of American industry will mark the end of Communism. 30-Hour Week To Be Pushed Michigan Waters Are Home For 177 Kinds Of Fish, Hubbs Finds University Expert Address From Hall Over WJR Delivers Morris "One hundred and seventy-seven different kinds of fishes are now re- cognized as inhabitants of the waters of our state, Michigan," Prof. Carl L. Hubbs, curator of the fish division of the museum of zoology, declared yesterday in the fifth of the weekly Mchigan, My Michigan series of talks from Morris Hall over WJR. The most beautiful of our fishes, Professor Hubbs said, are the eel-like creatures known as lampreys. Of these we have five species, more than has any other state. Three kinds are parasitic lampreys, which when adult attach themselves leech-like to a fish, by means of a round sucking mouth; then rasp open the side of of the fish by the movements of their sharp, horny teeth ,and finally gorge themselves upon the blood of their victim. Twomkinds of Michigan lampreys in contrast are small, harmless crea- tures, he went on, living a worm-like larval existence several years in creek bottoms, as do their parasitic rela- tives,, but unlike them never partak- ing of food after they become adult. The speaker went on to say: "Next lovely of Michigan fishes in terms of evolution, queerest of all in appear- ance, and rarest of all since it is known to have been taken but once in our limits ,is the paddlefish. This name appropriately refers to the long, oar-like snout of this odd fish." Less rare, though now perhaps ap- proaching extinction in Michigan, is the rock sturgeon. Once so common as to be considered a nuisance by the net fishermen, who threw them on the bank to die, sturgeon now rank among the rarest and most prized catches of the commercial fisherman, bring- ing him a price of about sixty cents a pound for the flesh, and even more for the roe from which caviar is made. As a contrast ,the two species of gars or "bill-fish" occurring in Mich- igan are despised by anglers as worthless aquatic wolves, destroyers of game fish, and themselves unfit for food, he stated. Professor Hubbs pointed out that they may not be so destructive as though, however, and are edible especially when baked in their thick shell of diamond-shaped, enameled scales. At 2 p.m. next Tuesaay, Prof. Jack- son R. Sharman of the physical ed- ucation school will discuss over WJR Michigan's camps for young people. Dr. Alder Claims Metaphors Aid War CHICAGO, Nov. 13. - U0) - Among the little things that start big wars, Dr. Alfred Adler, widely known Vien- nese psychologist, observed today, are metaphors. He contended that in order to build up war psychology it is first necessary to stir the people. One of the favor- ite forms is speech-making with gen-I erous use of metaphor, such as term- ing the home force the "bulwark of of civilization" and the enemy the "destroyer of democracy.' Dr. Adler, small, smiling, gray- haired and keen, in an interview as- serted this had worked out in Italy and every other nation that had tak- en up arms. "People know more than they un- derstand," he said. "The leaders in- stinctively understand how to arouse them. Metaphors are used to arouse. Heroic words are uttered. By means of propaganda the people come to be- lieve theirs is a religious or cultural mission. There is marching. Heroic music is played. Everybody wants to be a hero." There are many more potential heroes before a conflict, he remarked with a twinkle through rimless spec- tacles, than actual heroes when it ended. SPECIAL SESSION UNNEEDED LANSING, Nov. 11. - (R') - How- ard A. Starrett, State director of the Federal Re-employment Service, said Sunday that a special session of the legislature to enact unemployment insurance for Michigan was not necessary. DRUG ADDICTS A recent estimate by the Chinese government shows that there are 20,- 000 drug addicts in the city of Nan- king alone. Figures In Sino-Jap Crisis Chief Justice Hughes Appoint Jurist To Detroit Financiers Will Try Judgre Sought To Preside At Bankers' Trial troit, for the remaining bank trials. Should no other federal judge be available in the sixth circuit, Chief Justice Charles Evais Hughes would designate a jurist from another cir- cuit. Bard has predicted that it would require eight months or a year to dispose of all the bank cases pending in Detroit. He said several days ago that he would ask no change in the trial schedule as agreed upon with Judge O'Brien. The Supreme Court did not elabo- rate on its refusal yesterday to re- view the lower court decision dis- qualifying O'Brien from.- the bank cases. It did not delve into the merits of his plea. The decision barring Judge O'Brien was handed down by the circuit court of appeals at Cincinnati, and sus- tained the contention of the depart- ment of justice that he be disquali- fied because of prejudice. WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. -() - The Federal judiciary cast about to- day for a new judge to succeed Dis- trict Judge Ernest A. O'Brien in the remaining trials or a group of De- troit bankers indicted following the 1933 collapse. Officials of the department of jus- tice would not comment on the Su- preme Court's denial yesterday of O'Brien's request for a review of a lower tribunal's decision barring him from further bank trials. It was stat- ed authoriatively, however, that Guy K. Bard, special prosecutor, would ask Presiding Judge Charles H. Moor- man of the court ofappeals in Cin- cinnati to name another federal judge, from a state other than De- -Associated Press Photo. A central figure in the latest con- flict between China and Japan is Gen. Wu Teh Chen (above), mayor of Greater Shanghai, where a Jap- anese marine was slain. The ser- icusness of the situation was in- creased by anti-Japanese terrorism. ri 111 By A. F. Of L.' Laborites Also Will Press Congress For Approval Of Licensing Bill WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. - (P) - The Black-Connery 30-hour week bill tops the American Federation of La- bor's 1936 legislative program. "We expect to make that our major objective," said William Green, fed- eration president, in discussing with reporters today what the A.F. of L. would ask of the next session of Con- gress. Second on the list is the industrial licensing bill to give Congress power to establish minimum wages and maximum hours, as well as other labor standards,,for industries send- ing their products into interstate commerce. Senator O'Mahoney (Dem., Wyo.), introduced this measure last session and it was still in committee at ad- journment. Green said he expected public sen- timent for such an amendment would be aroused if the supreme court, meanwhile, invalidated more admin- istrative measures. The federation is already on record as favoring wiping out the highest court's power to throw out legislation as unconstitutional. This year's Atlantic City, N.J., convention instructed the executive council to draft and have intro- duced an amendment to remove any shadow of doubt as to the consti- tutionality of such measures as the NRA and the Guffey coal acts. This will be drafted at the council's Jan- uary meeting. Enactment of the 30-hour bill is considered by Green to be the only solution to the unemployment prob- lem. Quotations Higher On Thanksgiving Turkeys DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Room of the Michigan League Build- ing. Cafeteria service. Dr. William H. Hobbs, Professor Emeritus of Ge- ology, will speak informall on "Earth- quakes." Pi Tau Pi Sigma: Special meeting at R.O.T.C. Headquarters at 7:30 p.m. Uniforms requested. Plans for sup- per on Sunday will be discussed. Freshman Glee Club: Regular re- hersal in the Music Room of the Union at 4:30 o'clock. All members please be present. New members will be welcome. Druids will have a luncheon meet- ing today in the Union. Contemporary: Luncheon meeting for staff members, 11:45 a.m., at the Haunted Tavern. Archery Tournament: The finals in the archery tournament will be held at 4 o'clock, on Palmer Field. All women students interested are invited to participate. Hillel Players: All members are urged to attend a very important meeting at 4 p.m. at the Foundation. Emergency elections and the forma- tion of a program are on the agenda. Hillel Foundation: There will be a meeting of the Graduate Club tonight at eight o'clock. Raphael Haskell will speak on Palestine. Sphinx will meet today in the Union for lunch. Art Cinema League: A meeting of members will be held in the Michigan League at 4:00 p.m. Book group of the Michigan Dames will meet at the League this eve- ning at 8 o'clock. Garden Section of the Faculty Woman's Club meets at 3 p.m. in the small ballroom at the Union. The Garden Editor of the Detroit News wil lhave charge of the program. Coming Events Hillel Foundation: Dr. Hootkins' class in Jewish Ethics willmeet at the Dental Professors Attend Convention Several members of the faculty of the dental school were present at the annual convention of the Amer- ican Dental Association held at New Orleans Nov. 4 to Nov. 8. Dr. George B. Moore, who gave a paper and a clinic at the meeting, was elected secretary of the orthodontic section. Others who attended the conven- tion were Drs. O. C. Applegate, Rus- sell W. Bunting, Paul H. Jeserich, R. H. Kingery, F. B. Vedder, and M. L. Ward. Foundation on Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. All interested are welcome. Applied Mechanics Colloquium: Professor L. C. Maugh, "Recent Meth- ods for Calculations of Structures." Review of Literature. The meeting will be held in Room 314 West Engi- neering Annex on Thursday,.Novem- ber 14, at 4:00 p.m. All interested are cordially invited to attend. Weekly Reading Hour: The pro- gram for Thursday afternoon, No- vember 14, at 4 o'clock will be as follows: Lillie H. Lee, grad. "Caravan" by C. Mertz. Ida Sogher, grad. miscellaneous poetry. Geraldine Elliott, grad. scene from Maxwell Anderson's "Elizabeth the Queen." Margaret G. Roberton, grad. "Stu- dies in Heroes." Reception for Graduate Students in Chemistry: All graduate students and faculty in chemistry, chemical engi- neering, pharmaceutical chemistry, and biochemistry are cordially invited to attend an informal reception to be held at the Michigan League, Thurs- day evening, November 14, from eight until ten o'clock. This invitation in- cludes wives and husbands. Alpha Chi Sigma, Professional Chemical Fraternity. Iota Sigma Pi, Honorary Chemical Sorority. Phi Lambda Upsilon, Honorary Chemical Fraternity. SHOES REPAIRED WE MAKE OLD SHOES NEW AGAIN Our Specialty is Cleaning and Blocking Hats. All Work Guaranteed! AMERICAN HAT AND SHOE SHOP 110 E. Washington ANTIQUE SHOW November 14,;15, 16 ANN ARBOR ANTIQUE DEALER'S ASSOCIATION presents its 4th EXHIBITION and SALE Harris Hall Corner State and Huron "Gee! Do the Daily Classifieds - bring results that quickly? Call 2..1214 FOUNTAIN PENS and PENCILS ... A large and select stock of nationally advertised makes, Priced $1.00 and up. WAHL, PARKER, SHEAFFER, WATERMAN, CHILTON, CONKLIN, SWAN, and Others Broken stocks at special prices. Service work a specialty. 0. D. Morrill 314 S. State St. Stationery & Typewriter Store. Since 1908 Phone 6615 I I_ A U m 'Announcing-- The 1935o,1936 Student- Faculty DIE C ORY d University of Michigan The names, telephone numbers and Ann Arbor addresses of CHICAGO, Nov. 13. - (P)-- Dressed turkeys for the Thanksgiving trade were quoted 3 to 5 cents higher per pound than a year ago in the big Chicago wholesale poultry market to- day. The Chicago poultry board's prices on old and young hens were 24 and 28 cents per pound respectively com- pared with 20 and 23 cents at this time last season. For old and young toms the prices were 23 and 27rcents compared with 20 and 24 a year ago. MILLER Drug Store 727 North University Phone 9797 1/2-Ib. Nestle's Milk CHOCOLATE BARS 2 for 25c :k every Student and Faculty Member in the University. i I -M Sernors. iii , AT ONLY C PER COPY December 1 is the deadline I Campus Sale This Week Get your Michiganensian Photographs NOW! I ii ii