The Weather Fair, rising temperature in west and north today; tomor- row unsettled, rain or snow. LL Sir 41 DIait~ Editorials Fairness To Labor... Clouds In The East .. . Scalping Scalpers.. VOL. XLVI No. 109 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Vandenberg Urges Relief Investigation' Politicians Reported To Be Soliciting Funds. Of Relief Workers Hopkins Disclaims Any Responsibility Black List Threat Reported In Use By Democratic County Committee WASHINGTON, March 5. - ()- Asserting a "small scandal" now was better than a big stench later," Sen- ator Vandenberg, of Michigan, today suggested a nation-wide investiga- tion of reports that politicians are collecting campaign funds from re- lief workers. He made his proposal after Harry L. Hopkins, WPA administrator, had disclaimed responsibility "for the acts of some politicians" who solicited campaign contributions from WPA workers. Hopkins' statement was contained m a reply to a request from Vanden- berg for an investigation of reports that the Democratic county commit- tee in Indiana County, Pa., was us- ing a black-list threat to collect the funds. Hopkins told the Michigan senator that WPA did not "sanction collec- tion of political funds" from its em- ployees, and made public a letter to the chairman of the Indiana County committee censuring him for sending out letters asking for contributions. "By the time Senator Rush Holt gets through with his disclosure of conditions in West Virginia and fur- ther Indiana County siutations show up," Vandenberg told reporters, "it will be perfectly obvious that a com- p 1 e t e nation-wide investigation should be made of this sort of ex- ploitation of human misery. "I am sure it will be welcomed by Mr. Hopkins," he added. "It wil ltake more than a bulletin from WPA headquarters and. more than a slap on the wrist to make some of these gentlemen behave. From the administration's point of view, a small scandal now would be better than a big stench later." His reference to Senator Holt was based on the latter's recent speeches in the Senate charging that the WPA director in West Virginia was using his job to campaign for the governor- ship. "Mr. Hopkins' response to my letter about the Indiana County situation," Vandenberg said, "was prompt in the first instance and sympathetic. I readily concede that the matter of discipline is out of his hands. The political branch of the government ic responsible. The relief branch is the victim, not the perpetrator.' Gram Explains Wage Payment t For NYA La or Office staff Works Day, Night To Complete Many Details, Says Director Prompted by student inquiries, Prof. Lewis M, Gram of the College of Engineering, head of the NYA on the campus, yesterday described the procedure by which checks are dis- tributed to student NYA workers, and why a delay, which some have be- lieved to be unnecessarily long, is un- avoidable. "The working month closes on the 26th," Professor Gram said, "and slips collected on the 27th. Because of the great detail involved it takes at least three days for the staff, which works day and night, to complete the payroll." The payroll then goes to Lansing, he explained, where it is checked - a process which is usually not com- pleted in less than 10 days. Nothing can be done by the University NYA organization to speed up this work in Lansing, Professor Gram empha- sized. "When the checks are returned to Ann 'Arbor, another day is necessary to check them with the payroll," he declared, "and consequently it is not until about the middle of the month Peet Describes 1 Of Goebel Emer Delicate Surgery On Brain Ends Sudden Crisis Of Toboggan Crash Victim Under the glare of a high-powered lamp which showered its rays throughout the white, sterile operat- ing room at University Hospital Feb. 25, Dr. Max Peet, world-famed brain surgeon, worked frantically for near- ly threehours to save the life of Dorothy Goebel. The dramatic story of that opera- tion, the results of which will enable Miss Goebel, Helen Newberry fresh- man who was injured in a toboggan crash Feb. 19 in the Arboretum, to return to her home in Detroit next week, was disclosed yesterday by Dr. Peet. But Dr. Peet doesn't think the story dramatic at all. "Shucks," he said. "anybody could have done it." He recalled how, on Feb. 25, Miss Goebel, with a fractured skull, was nearing her 150th hour of uncon- sciousness. A blood clot had been forming near her temple, and her bruised brain had started to swell. Then, late that night, without warn- ing, a crisis developed. To remove the blood clot and save Miss Goebel, Dr. Peet found he had to operate and operate fast. It was shortly after 11 p.m. when he and two assistants donned their white surgical robes and masks and began to apply the knife. He found that a sub-temple decompression- removal of a piece of the skull below the temple was necessary. Time passed, and the life of the pa- tient hung in the balance. Shortly after 1:30 a.m., Dr. Peet finished the operation. At 1:55 he announced briefly and tersely: "Miss Goebel is a little better," explaining that ht thought she would survive. And survive she did. Dr. Peet had won another battle with death, and the life of the Detroit student was saved. She was resting easily yesterday, Merit System Proj eet Set Up To Aid Cities Michigan Only State Where Assistance Is Given By CooperatingAgencies To assist in the installation of the merit system intMichiganacities, a co- operative project involving three agencies has been set up in the state to begin work next week, it was an- nounced yesterday by Harold D. Smith, head of the Bureau of Gov- ernments of the University of Mich- igan and director of the Michigan Municipal League located here. The project will be an experimental one, Mr. Smith explained, and Mich- igan will be the only state in which this work will be carried on. The cooperating agencies include: The Civil Service Assembly of U.S. and Canada, which will offer a general service to municipalities in the prep- aration of civil service ordinances, the Public Administration Service, which will act as the installation agency, setting up the merit system in the various cities, and the Mich- igan Municipal League, which will supply the technical personnel for the operating services and supplement the local personnel groups where such service is sought. The funds for this project have been provided from Foundation funds, it was stated. The setting up of the local services will begin next week under the direc- tion of Maxwell DeVoe, field repre- sentative of the Civil Service As- sembly and formerly personnel direc- tor of the Farm Credits Administra- tion of NewFOrleans and staff member of the Civil Service Commissions of New York and New Jersey. It was shown there are now requests for this (Continued on Page 2) Recovery Reported In Dr. Long, Son )ramatic Story Hockey Guard gency Operation Is Disciplined For Fighting i -- Forum Group To Be Set Up In University Aim To Foster Discussion Of Political Questions Through 'Senate' Faculty Members Help Organization He Laughed Too Soon; It Was Stage Money 1'Ministr 7 DOROTHY GOEBEL, '39 fully conscious and normal. She will suffer no after-effects from her in- jury, Dr. Peet declared, and she is expected to return home in approxi- mately a week although she may not return to the University this semes- ter. Semi-Pagranism May Be Near, T iichBelieves German Theologian Says Present Conditions Are Conducive To Setback A return to a semi-pagan concept of religion throughout the world if economic conditions remain such that the common people live in a state of meaninglessness and hopelessness was prophesied 1by. Prof. Paul Tillich, German philosopher and theologian, in his address yesterday afternoon in the Natural Science auditorium. Wayne University Athletic Board Suspends Widlak From All Sports lolnies Deplores Fight After Game Lowrey Thinks Penalty Is Too Severe, Incident ' vereiphasized' By FRED BUESSER Adam Widlak, Wayne University defenseman, who precipitated a mild riot when he struck Vic Heyliger, Michigan center, at the conclusion of the Wayne-Michigan hockey game in Olympia Tuesday night, was suspend- ed from athletic participation for the remainder of his college career by the Board in Control of Athletics of Wayne University at a special ses- sion yesterday. Widlak was found guilty by the board of striking Heyliger from be- hind after the final siren had blown, and when Widlak admitted the ac- cusation, and offered as his only ex- cuse that Heyliger had brushed him with his stick as he skated past, the motion for life suspension was made and passed. David L. Holmes, Wayne athletic director, told The Daily last night that this was not the first incident in which Widlak had been guilty of misconduct. Three-Sport Man Widlak is a junior at Wayne and in addition to hockey, plays football and is a boxer. He would have had another year of competition in all three sports and will be most sorely missed by Joe Gambis, Tartar foot- ball mentor, who had counted on Widlak for next year's grid team. "Several times in the past we have had trouble with Widlak," Holmes said last night, "and his personality and temperament make him difficult to handle. Members of several op- posing hockey teams we have met this year have told me after playing{ Social Work Science Students' To Fori Medium Professor Tillich stated that the against him that they considered him' economic situation in Germany af- a dangerous menace on the ice." ter the war was such that the pres- Holmes and the Wayne board ex- ent religious situation in Germany onerated Heyliger completely for his was a natural course. He defined part in the fight after witnesses at- the National Socialist philosophy of tested that if Heyliger'$ stick had religion as a return to a "post-Chris- touched Widlak, it was absolutely un- tian tribal" type. He said that since intentional. the Reformation Christianity had be- 'Owe Gracious Reception' come humanized, then secularized, "If we are hosts to large univer- and finally lapsed into a state of dis- sities in Detroit," Holmes said, "we integration. owe them a gracious reception. We Many people, Professor Tillich certainly did not fulfill that opliga- said, in Germany prefer the Hitler tion to Michigan Tuesday night but regime, and prefer the Nazi dictator- we are going to do our best to see ship to any form of democracy. Ac- that such an occurrence will never cording to Professor Tillich, the rea- take place again." son for this is that the German Coach Eddie Lowrey, when in- people have never experienced a true formed of the action of the Wayne form of democracy. He added that Athletic Board, said he thought that no churches in Germany were fight- the penalty was too severe, and added ing for the rights of man, for social that he believed the significance of justice, or for the removal of racial the whole episode was being overem- persecution. phasized. The struggle between church and "There is no fighting on the foot- state that Americans hear about is ball field," Holmes commented, "and not really such a struggle, Professor there is no reason why fighting can- Tillich said. Rather it is a struggle not be eliminated from hockey if between two different wings of the drastic enough penalties are imposed. church, with the government offering My stand is either no fights or no only half-hearted support to one fac- hockey.' tion. Wayne wuil not suffer from the loss The National Socialist theology of Widlak until next fall and winter. teacs that anyone believing in the In addition to his football ability he leader believes in Germany, and that has played, a few good games of anyone believing in Germany be- hockey for Wayne and was instru- lieves in God. Therefore, anyone be- mental in the Tartar six's recent win lieving in the leader believes in God. over Syracuse. ROCKFORD, Ill., March 5. - P) - Brewer Larson bought some beer. To Bartender Morris Coretz he said, "Here is a $5 bill - it's WPA stage money." Coretz laughed, took the bill, gave Larson the change. Then Coretz went to the bank. The teller told him the bill really was stage money. Police questioned Larson but in- formed Coretz they didn't know what they could do about it. Burlars Take 1,000 From '- - For Expression npor tiig mOre Plans for the formation of a "Sen- ate" composed of the entire student $500 In WPA Payments body, which will debate in open for- Also Stolen In Second um present day political questions, were announced last night. Robbery Reported The first meeting of the Senate will be held at 8 p.m. March 17 in the Merchandise, equipment, papers, Union Ballroom, when the question and cash totaling more than $1,000 "Should Students Support the Old in value were obtained by burglars Parties in 1936?" will be thrown on who entered the radio and outing the floor for discussion. Four prom- goods store of L. F. Courtright and inent professors will open the meet- Ernst M. Wurster at 215 N. Fourth ing with seven-minute speeches, Ave., early yesterday morning, leav- summing up the principles of the Re- ing almost no clues for police to work publican, Democratic, Socialist and from- Farm-Labor parties. From then on Doors shutting off the store from it will be entirely up to the students the alley in back had been drilled present. through to enable the burglars to re- The idea of the Senate, designed move panels from the two doors and to promote open and free discussion enter the store. of present day problems by students Outing Goods Taken here, came out of a group of 20 stu- From the stock of the outing goods dents, two from each social science store, owned by Wurster, was removed department and school in the Uni- merchandise valued by him at $800, versity, appointed by faculty mem- including a large number of jackets, bers. These 20, metting this week mackinaws, leather coats, and trous- with two professors from each unit, ers. Valuable papers, stamps worth devised the plan of operation for the $30, cash from an unlocked safe, a Senate. typewriter, adding machine and other The plan, in brief, is this: equipment were taken from Court- 1. All students are urged to attend right's side of the store. and express their opinions freely. Gloves taken from the stock of the 2. The Senate will meet at regular store were worn while the store was periods, tentatively once every two ransacked, so that no fingerprints weeks, and each time a new resolution were left. The man or men who will be debated. engineered the burglary left with one Student To Preside show case partially emptied, and 3. An impartial student chairman dropped some merchandise in the will call meeting to order, introduce alley in their flight, leading police the professors for preliminary re- to beeve that they had been fright- mharks and proceed to recognize in- ened away in the midst of their work. dividual students from the floor who Robber Gets WPA Checks desire to speak. Another robbery reported to police 4. The resolutions are decided up- yesterday was the theft last week of on by a committee of six, called the $500 in WPA checks, constituting pay- council, formed from members of the ment for 17 workers on the rolls. No original committee of 20. The coun- attempt to cash the checks has been cil will rotate, two of its members learned of, and payment on them has changing for each meeting of the been stopped. Senate, the new members being Duplicate checks, however, will not drawn from the committee of 20. reach Lansing for three months and 5. Participation within the Sen- a State loan of $300 has been made to ate, with the exception of faculty permit a 60 per cent payment to the members who may state facts on workers whose checks were taken. either side at the beginning of each They will be given government com- meeting, is to be entirely up to stu- modities to help tide them over until dents. the next pay day. 6. The students may divide them- The checks, according to officials, selves into right and left groups, by disappeared some time between 5:30 sitting on the right or left sides of p.m. last Friday and 9 a.m. Satur- the Ballroom. day when the pay-off began. There 7. The committee of 20, which will is no safe in the WPA office at 415 be advised when it wishes by the pro- W. Washington St., where the checks fessors, will continue to act until the were kept. end of this semester, at that time making plans for continuance of the M ovie Senate next year. oreign Faculty Supports Plan Among those faculty men who are Based On Novel lending their efforts to the formation of the Senate are: Prof. Robert C. Angell of the sociology department, Prof. Arthur W. Bromage and Dr. - Harlow J. Heneman of the political ' science department; Prof. Preston W. Crine And Punishment' Slosson of the history department; In French To Be Offered Professors John L. Brumm and Wes- ley H. Maurer of the journalism de- In League Theatre partment; Prof. Max Handman of the economics department; Prof. Dostoevsky's novel comes to lif John P. Dawson of the Law School; tonight at the Lydia Mendelssohn Prof. Roy W. Sellars of the philoso- Theatre when the French version o phy department; and Prof. Harold J. "Crime and Punishment" begins it McFarlane of the engineering col- two-night run. lege. Having arrived in the United State Among those students appointed by when the Hollywood version of th the faculty men to map out the Sen- novel was making its debut in Ne ate's program are Edward Stone, '36, York, critics have had a rare oppor executive chairman; Mennen Wil- tunity to compare the efficacy o liams, '36L; Dean Baker, '36; Abe foreign and native treatments of on Zwerdling, Grad.; Thomas H. Kleene, theme. According to them, the hom '36; Evelyn Brigham, '36; Evelyn interpretation tended toward the de Erlichman, '36; Dwight Swain, '37; tective story approach, something th Cyril Hetschko, '36L; Fred Brandeis, original was never intended to be. Grad.; Maurice Barsky, '36; and Fred On the other hand, the Frenc Warner Neal, '37. version is said to follow closely th Those comprising the council for original in both incident and char the first meeting March 17 are Stone, acterization. The character of th Williams, Zwerdling, Hetschko, Bran- police chief especially, it is held, i deis and Neal. Miss Erlichman will admirably interpreted by Harry Bau act as permanent secretary. er, while the student who has mur dered a pawn broker is an accurat i t Pportrayal by Pierre Blanchar, Ros Iniiation Petitions kolnikov in the play. Above all, the motivation for th Must Be In Today crimehas been debated. The Ameri Is Shaped By Hirota Half Of Cabinet Posts Are Filled In Several Hours After Effort Begins Premier Assured Of Strong Backing Veteran Foreign Minister Approved By Leaders Of Militarist Group TOKIO, March 5. - (P) - Koki Hirota, veteran foreign minister, made marked progress tonight toward forming a new cabinet to succeed the one shattered last week by bullets of army .revolters. Several hours after he had been summoned to the imperial palace by Emperor Hirohito and entrusted with the formidable task, Hirota an- nounced he had filled more than half the posts, assured of support from many quarters. His selections were: Premier Koki Hirota. Foreign affairs: Shigeru Yoshida. Navy: Osami Nagano. War: Count Juibhi Terauchi. Finance: Eeichi Baba, president of the Hypothec Bank. Home: Takukichi Kawasaki. Justice: Naoshi Obara. Kurahei Yuasa was appointed to succeed Viscount Admiral Makoto Saito, assassinated last Wednesday, as lord keeper of the privy seal and Psuneo Matsudaira was named min- ister of the imperial household to succeed Yuasa. Hirota, a surprise selection, has been popular with a majority of the army and navy blocs, and has also occasionally opposed 'expansionist plans. Army leaders were quoted as say- ing Hirota would be acceptable to them as the head of a new national government. Council Votes Protest Against ReliefRequest City Requested To Assume Responsibility Of Relief For Employables The Common Council last night voted a protest resolution to the Emergency State Relief Commission, stating that it would not appropriate additional funds to take care of those now on relief. It was further em- bodied in the resolution that Alder- man Redmond Burr, of the first ward, should go to Lansing to place the res- olution before Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald. The action of the Council followed receipt of a letter by Charles F. Wagg, county relief administrator, from the State, in which the city of Ann Arbor was asked to assume responsibility for paying 45 per cent of the relief for employables in addition to paying the same amount for unemployables. The state, which formerly had full responsibility for all employables, is running short of funds, it was said. Must Drop 380 Cases e Mr. Wagg, appearing before the SCouncil, stated that unless some sort f of action were taken immediately, some 380 cases would have to be re- Smoved from the welfare rolls by Fri- day, March 13. He estimated the ad- ditional cost in assuming responsi- w bility for the employables at $2,200 for the month of March. Uinder the - present agreement the cost to the city e was estimated at $3,500. e The action of the state is not con- - fined to Ann Arbor alone, similar let- e ters having already been sent to all county, city and township officials. -h In passing the resolution last night, e the Council acted in accord with the - Washtenaw County Welfare Relief e Committee and the Common Council s of Ypsilanti, who have already lodged - protests with the governor, - Shorten Cheever Court e A motion to give the east 42 feet - of Cheever Court to the University was introduced by the street commit- e tee and was unanimously passed by - the Council. The Regents have been Teachers Removed For Social,I olitical Reasons, Tillich Says By TUIRE L. TENANDER I fessor Tillich said. The feeling that, "Over 1,000 professors and assist- the German people are the dominantj ants have been removed from Ger- people is entering very strongly into man universities and colleges for the German philosophical movement. political and social reasons," declared Asked if he thought that there was Prof. Paul Tillich, formerly of the any likelihood of the Protestants and University of Frankfort-am-Main, in Catholics in Germany uniting in op- an interview shortly after his address position to the Nazi government, Pro- yesterday afternoon in Natural Sci- fessor Tillich said that they were ence auditorium, even now planning to join forces to Te tateen asiaseresist the government's religious pol- The statement was in answer to a ie.Haddth elgusedr query as to whether education in Ger- icies. He added that religious leaders man institutions had suffered under in Germany have to move carefully, the National Socialist rule. Professor but that both faiths were united in Tillich was of the opinion that the an attempt to save Christianity. He Universities defnitely had suffered be- said that this union was effected soon Umvrsiie denielyha sufeed e-after an address by the Bishop of cause of the loss of so many ableafean drssbth Biopf teachers. Trier, some time ago, in which the e sbishop had urged a combination of S~eakinv with a heavy German (Special to The Daily) GRAND RAPIDS, March 5. - The condition of Dr. Dwight C. Long of the University history department and his 17-year old son Robert, hurt' in an automobile crash Monday, was termed "satisfactory" tonight by Blodgett hospital doctors here. Dr. Long escaped without fractur- ing either his skull or veterbrae, as was at first feared, an X-ray proved; nnl nn carnc rnnlinn tinnc ivprp h--