GE 9IX THE MICHIGAN DAILY I I W-NW"NNWWMW Roosevelt Wins In State Vote Col. Frank Knox Chosen By G.O.P. In Primary Of New Hampshire MANCHESTER, N. H., March 11. -(R')-Nearlytcomplete vote tabula- tions indicated today President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Col. Frank Knox won complete victories in the New Hampshire presidential primary. The primary yesterday was the first statewide vote on presidential dele- gates of the present national cam- paign. Roosevelt leaders claimed the fig- ures assured the President of New Hampshire's eight convention votes, divided among eight delegates-at- large with a half vote each and two district delegates from each of the two congressional districts. Moses Places Second Former U. S. Sen. George H. Moses, (Rep., N.H.), second highest vote get- ter on the Republican delegates-at- large slate, asserted the Republican vote sent Col. Knox off to a "flying start," although none of the delegates was officially pledged to the Chicago and Manchester publisher. Republicans voted for seven dele- gates-at-large and two delegates from each of the two congressional dis- tricts, giving thesconvention delega- tion eleven votes. The Roosevelt-pledged delegates- at-large candidates leading with votes from 254 precincts out of 294 included former Mayor Henri T. Ledoux of Nashua, 13,308; James J. Powers, Manchester, 12,808; William H. Craig, Manchester, 11,855; Amos N. Blandin, Bath, speaker of the House of Representatives, 11,107; HenryM. Moffett, Berlin municipal court clerk, 10,697; James A. Broder- ick, Manchester, 9,827; Samuel T. Ladd, Portsmuoth, 9,426; and Laura M. Trudel, Derry, 8.175. Bridges Tops G.O.P. Gov. H. Styles Bridges topped the Republican delegates-at-large slate. He had 27,864 votes with 261 precincts out of 294 tabulated. He was fol- lowed by former Senator Moses with 25,521. Former Gov. Huntley N. Spaulding received 23,232 and U. S. Representative Charles W. Tobey, 22,330. They were followed by Attorney General Thomas P. Cheney, 19,306; Republican National Committeeman Robert P. Burroughs, 13,944; Charles E. Carroll, newly elected mayor of Laconia, 12,679; and Harold K. Da- vision, former president of the state senate 12,067. Two Republican candidates, un- pledged but favoring Gov. Alf Landon of Kansas,were ninth and fourteenth on the slate of 16 delegates. Thirty- three precincts were missing. Graduate Will Direct Offering Of PlayGroup Comedy By Moliere To Be Sponsored March 18, 19, 20 And 21 At League Charles T. Harrell, Grad., will di- rect Moliere's "The Doctor In Spite of Himself," which will be presented by Play Production March 18, 19, 20 and 21; in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, along with Clifford Odets' one-act play, "Waiting for Lefty." Harrell has been a member of Play Production for four years, and has played many important roles in the student productions. Last summer he played the lead in "The Doctor In Spite of Himself," when it was pre- sented during the Summer Session by the Michigan Repertory Players. Other roles he has played in the recent productions are Malvolio in "Twelfth Night," Lysander in "A Midsummer Night's Dream," Bran- well Bronte in "Moor Born," Richard Crale in "Merrily W'b Roll Along," and the title role in "Dr. Knock." In ad- dition, he has acted as publicity man- ager for Play Production this year. "The Doctor In Spite of Himself," one of Moliere's most famous and frequently played comedies, is a sharp satire on social conditions among the learned professions in seventeenth century France. "Waiting for Lefty," the other pro- duction scheduled for the double bill is a new play, produced last year by the Group Theatre in New York, and deals with a New York taxi drivers' strike. Two J, ay SociologyTrip ToToledo s dk(h isD sed(I1~ ''E~i~eiI f C . ~aiL~t(i ' h WI iNt) if I itm e 1efor finals, the a-, By JAMES A. BOOZER Examination of slum districts andl discussions with labor leaders fea-I tured the two-day SCA trip to Toledo' held for University students interest- ed in social conditions, William Wil- snack, '37, president of the Student l Christian Association, said yesterday. "Fifteen students from the Uni- versity went down in three automo- biles," he said, "in order to study at first hand the social conditions of that community." Prof. Roderick D. McKenzie, head of the sociology department aided in arranging the tour, he said. It was the first trip this year to nearby cities for the purpose of seeing under what conditions American families are liv- ing. The two-day tours are open to anyone on the campus who is in- terested, and the expenses connected with it are kept to a minimum, ac- cording to officials. It is expected that another such tour will be an- nounced soon. After arriving in Toledo at 2:30 Dietz, Interpreter, Is To Give Recital Paul Dietz, dramatic interpreter, will give a recital of selectionsfrom the works of Goethe and Schiller at 4:15 p.m. today in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre under the auspices of the Carl Schurz Memorial Fund and the German department of the University. Mr. Dietz has devoted his life to the stage both here and abroad. His greatest success in this country was in the role of Pontius Pilate in the Freiburg Passion Play which toured this country for four consecutive sea- sons. p.m., the students went directly to the home of Professor Bushnell, head of the University of Toledo sociology department, where they were shown housing plans the government has diawn up for the slum clearance pro- ject in that city. With Professor Bushnell they went on an inspection tour of the district affected. Living conditions were seen at their worst, Wilsnack said. The tenements to be torn down had been evacuated, and the students found in their ex- amination of the interiors of the houses still standing places where more than twenty families had been living in a fourteen room building, with the "most filthy conditions" prevailing. There were instances where lack of water had made exist- ence even more unbearable, he said. They had dinner that evening at the Central Y.M.C.A., after having met with Vern Pfaender, government agent in charge of contracting, and' the problems with which he was faced were discussed.' A meeting with labor leaders had been arranged by Professor Bushnell,' and the party talked with representa- tives of the Toledo electric light union, central labor board, teachers; union, the editor of a Toledo labort publication, and a member of the, board of education. Subjects of the conversations were vertical unionism,, history of unionism, Toledo Auto- Lite strike, white collar unions, and other aspects of the union movement. Sunday morning part of the stu- dent group visited a Negro Baptist Church, while others made a general tour of the city. The afternoon was given over to a meeting with relief workers and di- rectors of relief work in the Y.M.C.A. where they were shown Community Chest films of social work in the city. General relief problems were dis- cussed. I can tho, orohloiixi ,cif umniciuril Lrovorn- iAnn Arbor police could understand it: ment, especially as they are correlat- or even if midsemesters, or if the J- ed with the relations between business Hop were in the offing. and government at 7:15 p.ni. today But the local department is se- at a professional meeting of Delta verely puzzled at present by the Al ~ ~ ~ t ti w omite the completion- of the first 10-year cycle of the ahunni Ten Year Pro- gram will be discussed today at a meeting in the Union of a committee of alumni officials from the Middle West appoint ed by Emory J. Hyde, president of the Alumni Association. 'he prograin which was begun in 1927 was intenided to give the alumni a definite period in which to accom- plish various projects relative to the University, such as the erection of the Burton Memorial Tower being sponsored by the local alumni club. Sigma fj pi, f l e !ifal business ad- ninistratit) _Ifr0'ttrnit y. The meet int, wihich is beim held as a lr ' of the fiaterinity's student- professional program. will be pre- ceeded by a closed dinner. Mayor Campbell, who is an alumnus of this frternity, will attend the dinner thft of Ihbree CaSes of igareMttes,L1 ( slil ig 30,000 "coffin nails,'' from a box car on a siding in the Ann Arbor Railroad's yards sometime between 1 and 2 a.m. yesterday morning. Someone, they maintain, must real- ly have been in need of a smoke. 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