The Weather Probable rain or snow Fri- day with str'ong w", terly winds. L 3kF 6 :4IaiItt Editorials Apt flievtOf The (iei iol-t'fd ax I.Law . VOL. XLVII No. 47 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOV. 20, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Labor Study By Business Board Urged By Roosevelt Advisory Council Replies That It Will Cooperate By Formulating Plan Roper States Hope For Voluntary NRA President Suggests Study Of Absorption Problem Of Workers In Industry WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.-W)- Replying to suggestions by President Roosevelt that it study the problem of improving wages and working conditions and other major indus- trial questions, the Business Advisory Council said today that "all groups should cooperate fully to consolidate the recovery that we have thus far attained." The Council instructed its execu- tive committee to meet Dec. 16 in New York and formulate "a program of action." The full ,Council, along with former members who have dropped out under the rotating sys- tem, will hold a business meeting here Jan. 28. The President said, in a letter read to 'the Council by Secretary of Com- merce Daniel C. Roper, that "econ- omic and social betterment hinges upon a continuous study of trends, such as are reflected in human thought and action of our society." It continued: "Study and analysis of these trends are a vital preliminary to the adoption of plans and procedure best suited to meet conditions. More Private Jobs 'At this time I suggest a study on the part of the Council of the prob- lem of further absorption of work- ers by private industry. The problem of improving living conditions of low income 'groups through' low cost hous- ing and slum clearance, and the problem of improving wages and working conditions of employes in in- dustry." Saying that members of the Coun- cil, all private business men, had made trips to Washington at their own expense and had given freely of their time, Mr. Roosevelt asserted that "this attitude symbolizes the type of cooperation essential to a continuity of the progress we are making." The President's letter and his statement urging private industry to hire .more old and unskilled workers, were carefully studied by business leaders for a clew to New Deal policy toward industry in the next four years. Some quarters voiced the opinion that Mr. Roosevelt's purpose was to lay major social and industrial prob- lems before business and wait to .see what business would do-or suggest -before formulating any govern- mental program. Sellars, Nelson Defend Future Of Democracy A belief in the democratic tradi- tion and its future success in the United States was upheld last night! by Prof. Roy W. Sellars of the phi- losophy department and Prof. Nor- man E. Nelson of the English de- partment in the first of a series of round table discussions conducted by the Student Alliance. The topic of the discussion, which was to inclide Prof. Arthur S. Aiton of the history department who was unable to attend, was "Democracy and Dictatorship," Professor Sellars traced the devel- opment of political democracy from the Greek ideal through the Amer-. ican and French Revolution periods to the present. Professor Nelson agreed with the analysis and proceeded to criticize the recent statements of Col. Henry W. Miller pertaining to the "survival of the fittest" theory. "I believe Colonel Miller's position was a very clear and sincere state- ment of the conservative position," Professor Nelson stated, "but he in- volved himself in an absurdity." Professor Nelson continued the critiism h qsving "the cnnserva- Figures Fly, Digits Sit In Place As Dr. Finkelstein Cracks Whip A.F.L. Calls Dec. 4 Is Set Coast Strikes To Dedicate fr 'o i [.+-- -- _. ,1 A _1 v.. France Dispatches Warships To Spain To Check Blockade Long Mvemory Span 1s Aid tions to tabulate results, he used his! To api C mpuatins spare time figuring percentages and totaling votes by districts. Lecturer Claims It is his highly-developed esthetic sense, which he believes enables him By JOSEPH FREEDMAN to manipulate numbers. He is a pro- It took only one and a half hours found lover of music and is able to reproduce symphonic scores as read- for Dr. Salo Finkelstein to prove, ily as he can compute, althoughahe yesterday, to a highly skeptical Ann cannot play an instrument. His Arbor audience, which packed thep hobbies are chess and psychology. Natural Science Auditorium five min- He is not, he emphasized, a mathe- utes before the lecture, to overflow- matician; he holds a Ph.D. degree in ing, that he is the "world's greatest psych h odgyre calculating genius. In an effort to analyze his mind, Redlnspired Strike Leader J. Curran Sends Appeal To Greenj Denying Charges I.S.U. Leaders Call j Walkout 'Outlawed' Convention Is Counseled By Miller To Make Peace With Lewis' Unions TAMPA, Fla., Nov. 19.--()-By an overwhelming vote the delegates to the American Federation of Labor Convention, denounced the current Baird Bells Ruthven, Baird To Lead Impressive Ceremony In Hill Auditorium Audience To Hear VarsityBand Play Members Of Senior Honor Societies Will Serve As Ushers, Bursley Declares The Charles A. Baird Carillon, which is installed in the uppermost floor of the Marion LeRoy Burton Memorial Tower, will be dedicatedl From the outset, Dr. Finkelstein disclaimed any attempt to "show himself off," admitting that he knows no better than anyone else that 7 times 8 equal 56. His ability,, on the contrary, he attributes to "long mem- ory span, power to visualize, ability to perceive very fast and to see beauty in number." He often stopped during the course of his lecture when a "particularly beautiful" number came up. 7776 appealed to him because it equals 6 raised to the fifth power. Replacing the first digit by 1, he had the date of the American Revolution, inter- changing the first and last numbers gave him 1677 the date of Spinoza's death, and eliminating the one from this last combination resulted in the sum of the squares of 14, 15, and 16. All these facts occurred spontaneous- ly, he said, and without any premedi- tation. Dr. Finkelstein demonstrated his visual memory by asking members of the audience to fill the 25 boxes of a square. After studying the chart for a few seconds, he repeated the num- bers in the vertical, horizontal and diagonal columns. He displayed his speed in comput- ing by summing a column of 15 digits, multiplying a five digit number by a four, and resolving a four digit umber into the sum of four squares, all in the space of a few seconds. His calculations completed, he repeated the process until he finally obtained a check which he called definitive, "since I've never made a mistake in all my fourteen years of lectur- ing." Employed by the Columbia Broad- casting System in the last two elec- Big Subsidies Draw National Grange's Fire he has submitted himself to psycho- logical experiment both here and abroad. He calculated so rapidly, he explained, that ordinary stop- watches cannot time him. For his use a special "camera," was set up to flash a light when a button is pressed and turn the light off at thej end of a specified time. Many of' these tests showed a speed of lessl than three one-thousandths of a sec- J ond. His visual memory has enabled himj to master Polish, Russian, German,j French, Yiddish and English, all of which he speaks fluently. State Lawyers Hail Bonisteel As- New Head. Supreme Court Justices Attend Banquet Here; Van Ameringen Presides Seventy-five members of the State Bar of Michigan greeted their new president, Roscoe O. Bonisteel of Ann Arbor, and listened to an ad- dress by State Supreme Court Justice Louis H. Fead in a banquet last night at the Union. Three other members of the Michi- gan Supreme Court attended the banquet which was presided over by V. T. Van Ameringen, president of the Ann Arbor Lawyers Association.. They were Chief Justice Walter H. North and Justices ,Henry M. Butzel and Harry S. Toy. One of the chief problems beforel the lawyers of the state, Mr. Boni- steel said, is the qualifications for ad- mission to the bar. He emphasized the need for high moral standards in the applicant as approaching in im- portance his ability to pass state bar Freshman Politicos Hear Mayor Speak; Someone Is Fooled The embryo political master-mind who called up Mayor Robert A. Campbell yesterday afternoon and asked him to speak at the Freshman Independent party caucus in Lane Hall, may have thought he was slip- ping over a poke on the Independ- ents. But the mayor ciossed th-e n up by appearing in person and delivering, a speech which was generally conced- ed to be the best of the campus po- litical season. "Evidently the onnosition to vnur Cruiser, Destroyer, Sent To Barcelona Following Insurgents' Threat Mussolini Speeds Arms Preparations Fascist Nations Defended In Parliament By Eden; Madrid Again Shelled PARIS, Nov. lg- ~-France re- plied with warships tonight to a re- ported Spanish insurgent threat to blockade the Port of Barcelona against all governments sympathetic with the Madrid Socialist regime. seamen's strikes on the Atlantic coast Friday, Dec. 4, Dr. Frank E. Rob- as the work of communists. bins, assistant to the President, re- Spencer Miller, director of the vealed yesterday. Workers' Education Bureau, coun- Participating in the impressive seled the convention to make peace ceremony in Hill Auditorium, closely with Lewis' rebels to present a united modelled after the English practice I front to threats of fascism. NEW YORK, Nov. 19.-G')-Strik- ing seamen in the port of New York turned their attention today to an attempt to validate their walkout in the eyes of the American Federation of Labor, as in the courts they pre- pared to attack another labor organi- zation critic, the International Sea- men's Union. Informed of the action of the A.F. of L., in annual convention at Tampa, Fla., in denouncing the east coast strike as the handiwork of "commu- nists and other extremists," strike Leader Joseph Curran announced he had telegraphed this appeal to fed-' eration President William Green: "Twenty thousand members of the Tnternational Seamen's Union re- quest an opportunity to present facts in maritime strike on Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. The resolution of the I.S.U. executives at the convention was unfair." The resolution was proposed by of- ficers of the I.S.U., with whom the Curran group has long been in bitter conflict. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 19.-()- Labor difficulties paralleling the mar- itime strike reached farther inland today. with the spread of a textile walkout in the bag industry. The cities of Oakland and Berkeley went into the milk business as an of dedicating church bells, will be President Alexander G. Ruthven, Charles A. Baird, '95, Kansas City, Mc., lawyer and donor of the caril- lon, Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, coun- sellor of religious education, and Frank C. Godfrey, engineer of John Taylor Co., Loughborough, England, which made the bells. Band Is On Program Miniature bells, representing the carillon bells, will be presented by Mr. Godfrey to Mr. Baird, who in turn will present them to President Ruth- ven for acceptance in behalf of the University. Dr. Blakeman will deliver the ded- ication prayer, and then President Ruthven will symbolically ring the bells seven times. Simultaneously with the symbolical chimes, Wilmot P. Pratt, University carillonneur, will strike the Bourdon bell, largest in the carillon, seven times, which will be audible in HHill Auditorium. A brass ensemble of the Varsity- R.O.T.C. Band, stationed in the car- illon floor of the tower, will play a fanfare and the hymn "O God, Our Help in Ages Past" and the Varsity Glee Club, in Hill Auditorium, will sing "Laudesnatque Carmina" before the ceremony. Pratt To Give Concert Following the ceremony, the Glee Club will lead the audience in "The Yellow and the Blue." Mr. Pratt will give a concert on the carillon following the dedication cere- mony. Five thousand illustrated booklets, containing the dedication program, the concert program, and accounts of the casting of the bells and the construction of the tower, will be pre- pared for the occasion. ?!Mr. Godfrey, who is now in Spring- party thought it was quite a joke to ring me up in my office this after- noon," Mayor Campbell said, "but I'm still a student at heart and al- though I had a meeting to attend, I, canceled it to come here." Observing that the odds were against the Independent party, the mayor urged the freshmen to "be Scotch enough to fight it out and win." "Fraternities and sororities' have lost prestige in the last four years," he added, "and although the fraternity parties think they're go- ing to win, so did the Republicans and look what happened to them." Offering advice on how to organize for the campaign, Mayor Campbell, who has had enough experience in politics to know what he is talking about, suggested a central committee to direct the electioneering activities and receive reports. Gerstacker Wins In Vote Recount Carl Gerstacker, one of the two candidates on the '38 Engineers party slate in the engineering school elec- tion Wednesday who was defeated by a Consolidated party man was put in office yesterdaypasa result of a re- count, according to the Men's Coun- cil.{ Gerstacker had been defeated, 65 to 64 in the race for a position on the Honor Council by Robert V. Bax- ley. Gerstacker asked for a recount yesterday morning, within the 24-, hour limit for such objections cre- ated by the Men's Council. The second count gave him a mar- gin of one vote over Baxley, 64 to 63. Art Cinema Presents Chaliapin In Picture COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 19.-()- examinations.E The National Grange went on record There has already been a "defi-' today as opposed to subsidies or spe- nite raising of the ethical standardsr cial privileges in any form as a perm- of the profession throughout Michi-t anent program. gan," he said. The report of the organization's The epor of he rganzatin's Mr. Bonisteel stated that the state committee on agriculture, which was . . t sa adopted during the closing hours of bar will work to take the judiciary the 70th annual meeting, expressed ot of politics and to establish extra- the opinion, however, that subsidies legal requirements for membership. "as an emergency measure are justi- our judges must be stabilized! fled to right a temporary wrong or tr. Beeio hemasi inequality." Mr. Bonisteel also emphasized the "Farming involves all of the people need -for a program to improve the indirectly and about one-fourth di- present method of selecting judges I rectly," the report said: "We should and regulating their term in office. not ask for special privileges and we Too many judges, he said, are re-! should not permit special privileges placed because of political changes' to others. When subsidies are used just at the time when their ex- we believe they should be limited to perience, gained after years on the family sized farms and not paid to bench, has made them highly quali-j corporations or non-resident owners. fled for the positions they hold. "We do believe in equality with in- He pledged the bar to classify the dustry and that justice and fair lawyers of the state as to their par- treatment should be meted out to all ticular fields "for the benefit of alike. For a long time permanent members of the profession who may program, we are convinced that ag- wish to consult them," and to obtain riculture as well as industry must "a better distribution of court opin- stand on its own feet." ions. " Dean Lloyd, Mrs. Ray Defend Proctor System At Mosher Hall emergency measure because of a tie- up of dairy plants by a strike of union milk wagon drivers. Efforts to bring about a resump- tion of maritime peace negotiations remained virtually at a standstill although Assistant Secretary of Labor Edward F. McGrady continued his attempt to get union representativesI and shipowners together. field, Mass., will return in time for "Don Quixote," the English screen Student Labor the dedication, Dr. Frank E. Rob- version of Cervantes' novel, starring bins said. Feodor Chaliapin, will be presented Members of Michigamua, Tau Beta today at 3:15 p.m. and today and to- In Leao ue Ask ! Pi, Galens, Druids and Vulcans, sen- modrywat :15 p.m. nthaydia for honor societies, will serve as ush- morrow at 8:15 p.m. in the Lydia r e n e ers, Dean Joseph A. Bursley said last Mendelssohn Theatre by the Art Cin- ne n rease ight ema League. The 53-bell carillon is the world's Chaliapin, Russian singer and ac- third largest, taking its place after tor, has been heard in America on Form Chapter Of Workers carillons in New York and Chicago. the opera and concert stage, has Federation And Present The Burton Memorial Tower was sung here in several Choral Union built from funds contributed by Concerts at Hill Auditorium. Requests To Employers friends of the University, the Board The picture, which critics declare of Regents, the School of Music, and follows the novel, was made in Spain Twenty-six men student workers from gift funds possessed by the Uni- under the direction of G. W. Pabst, of the League last night formed a. versity. an exile from Nazi Germany. unit of the Student Workers' Federa-j tion and as their first organized step- decided to forward to their employ- Mackinac Bridge Is Becoming ers a demand for an hourly wage of 35 cents in cash payment, an increase e essitClaim s Prof. Cissell of five cents over the prevailing wage rate. ) Included in their demand for an. increased wage was the request that By TUURE TENANDER return of the New Deal for another the "minimum" wage system, where- The oft-proposed Mackinac Straits four years an extensive public works by a certain amount of the daily wage bridge, given renewed interest by the program might well mean federal aid must be paid in food, should be election to the governorship of Frank in the construction of a bridge over abolished. the straits. The newly-formed chapter, of Murphy, who during the campaign The construction of a bridge con- which Willard L. Martinson, Grad., declared himself in favor of the proj- necting the two parts of the state is' was elected president last night, also ect, would be a very desirable thing no new idea, according to Professor formulated a demand that appointed for Michigan and will soon become a Cissell, who said that interest in such representatives of the chapter should practical necessity, Prof. James H. a project has been manifest intermit- be allowed to present the chapter's Cissell of the engineering college said tently during the past 30 or 40 years. case at each meeting of the Board of yesterday. In 1934, however, definite steps Governors of the League in which "The automobile traffic between were taken to determine the feasi- employes' wages are discussed. the two peninsulas is increasing at bility of such a bridge. The Michi- Other officers elected last night in- a yearly rate of 25 per cent," Profes- gan legislature provided for a Mack- elude: Samuel T. Henderson, '39, sor Cissell, who is secretary and con- inac Straits Bridge Authority to vice-president; Victor A. Kirk, '39, sulting engineer of the Mackinac study the problem and ascertain the secretary-treasurer. Straits Bridge Authority, said, "and best location and approximate costs Martinson appointed a permanent at the opening of hunting season re- of a bridge. committee as representative of the cently there was a line of cars two "The estimated cost, as determined chapter in official business. Members .miles long waiting to cross by means by a group of competent engineers are Henderson, Max Reynolds, a stu- of ferrys." headed by Francis C. McMath, form- dent at Michigan State Normal Col- lee, Kiih'g Robe Johno.m'38, To The granting of federal funds for er president of the Canadian Bridge Downs, '39, president of the Student the project was deemed not unlike- Company now residing in Detroit, is Wnrl ar ~nt-nn ,.na ly by George A. Osborne, editor of $32,400,000," Professor Cissell said. Informed sources said Premier Le- on Blum's government answered the Fascist pronunciamento of a block- ade by ordering two warships, a cruiser and a destroyer, to stand off Barcelona to protect French ship- ping. The cruiser Dupleix and the de- stroyer Albatross, it was said, were dispatched to Catalan waters. The French Mediterranean fleet of two battleships, five cruisers, 13 de- stroyers and eight submarines was engaged in maneuvers "somewhere" between Toulon and Perpignan- within five hours striking distance of Barcelona. ROME, Nov. 19.-WP)-Premier Mussolini and his Fascist grand council today ordered speeding of air and naval armaments in case Italian and German recognition of the Span- ish Fascist insurgents shoud bring serious international complications. The accredited Italian charge d'- afaires, Filippo de Ciutiis, to- night was enroute aboard an Italian warship to the seat of the provision- al government of the Insurgent Gen- eral Francisco Franco. As Mussolini's-foreign office gath- ered in foreign reaction to the Ger- man and Italian recognition of Franco Wednesday, the Fascist grand council declared "the military prep- arations of Italy in this special mom- ent must be accelerated, above all in the aerial and naval fields." The Spanish situation, official' circles were agreed, was the proper interpretation of the "special mom- ent" phrase. European fears that Italy and Germany might send direct aid to the forces of Gen. Franco now that they have approved his government as the legal one in Spain were scouted by competent government sources. LONDON, Nov. 19.--?P)--Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, aroused by Parliament opposition jibes, sided heatedly with Italy and Germany to- day against charges they had violat- ed the Spanish non-intervention ac- cord. "As far as non intervention is con- cerned," he said, "I can say cate- gorically that I think there are oth- er governments more to blame than those of Italy and Germany." His statement, which some mem- bers took to be a veiled thrust at Russia, ;threw the house into an up- roar. Cheers from the government benches .mingled with cries of "shame! shame!" from the Laborite M.P.'s. Eden ignored subsequent heck- ling, and avoided further definition of the "other governments." Informed sources said the next British move might be a warning to Gen. Franco to keep away from British ships, or be fired on by Brit- ish men of war. MADRID, Nov. 19.-()-Fascist aerial bombs struck in the heart of Madrid again today, partly wreck- ing the postoffice, the central bank and an ornate palace, once the home of the Marquis of Linares. Crowds in the postoffice were sliced down by shrapnel from the explod- s ing bombs, and unestimated num- bers were killed. The front of the building was rip- ped apart and windows shattered. Two street cars were jerked into the air by the force of the fearful ex- s plosions in Cibeles Square, near the postoff ice. Mosher Hall's much-discussed proc- tors who check the girls in their rooms each night were vigorously de- fended last night by Miss Alice C. Lloyd, dean of women, and Mrs. Mar- tha Ray, social director of the dormi- tory. The proctor system, denounced by two residents of the dormitory in let- ters to The Daily as "regimentation" and "spying" provides for four girls, paid $15 per month by the National Youth Administration, whose duty it' is to visit each room between 10:30 p.m. and 11:45 p.m., and see that thel residents are in their rooms and quiet. 4t was started this year when, on the advice of Miss Lloyd's office, the Mo- sher house council adopted it. Jor- dan Hall rejected it at the same time, and, Miss Lloyd pointed out, "no at- tempt has been made to force it on Phem " at Mosher Hall "so far has not suc-1 ceeded" in controlling noise, which, she maintained is "the most persis- tent and most difficult problem to handle" in the dormitory. But, she continued, "I do not think that the prestige of student government has been in the least hurt by the present situation at Mosher Hall. The house organization here is an unusually strong and effective one," and its willingness to give the proctor system a fair trial "has strengthened it" if anything. Miss Lloyd and Mrs. Ray explained that Mosher-Jordan dormitory is made of cement and steel, "which prevents fire but amplifies noise. Since the opening of these halls," the dean of women said, "there has been a continuous problem in regard to noise, and the student government in spite of valiant efforts to assist, has -In hn- ohn f hAa m- ea Amfiinl