The Weather L r igan ilatt Fair, cold weather today with moderate northwest winds. Editorials Olympics In The Original Manner .:. 9 VOL. XLVH No. 50 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 24, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS A.F.L. Asked To Slow C.I.O. Ouster Move Committee Asks For Unity. While Approving Rebel Unions' Suspension Way Is Left Open To Peace Overture Lewis' Sympathizers Hit Majority Leaders' Policy At Convention TAMPA, Fla., Nov. 23.-(A)-The American Federation of Labor had all but formally decided tonight to hold out the olive branch of peace once again to John L. Lewis' ten rebel unions. Debate on the Federation conven- tion resolutions committee's proposal to that effect dragged far into the night. Leaders in firm control of a sub- stantial majority of votes, however, had agreed: (1) To continue suspension of the rebels indefinitely. (2) To leave the way open for peace negotiations. (3) To empower the Federation's Executive Council to. call a special A. F. of L. convention to expel the rebels if peace overtures collapsed. Hatters In Opposition Principal opposition to this pro- posal came from the United Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers and the International Typographical Union. The head of each is also a member of Lewis' committee for industrial or- ganization. Max Zaritsky, president of the Hatters, contented the council had no right to suspend the Lewis unions, although he admitted his cause in the convention was a lost one. Other Lewis 'sympathizers struck the same note in prolonged oratory. The committee, nevertheless, rec-' ommended approval of the Executive council's suspension of the rebels two months ago for "insurrection" in trying to bring all the workers in each large industry into one big union without regard for the tradi- tional A. F. of L. craft lines. This plan was offered, the commit- tee said, "conscious of our responsi- bility to use every honorable means of uniting all labor in one house of labor-the American Federation of Labor." 'Room For All' "There is room enough for all," the committee added. "There is honor enough for all, but there can never be any place for dishonor. "We stand at the doorway of our greatest opportunity. Those who weakened us in what should be a united effort are doing what our tra- ditional enemies have always loved to see done. Matthew Woll, a federation vice- president and chairman of the reso- lutions committee, read the report to the most tense session of the con- vention. New Invention To Help Teachers' Work Shown A new invention, the result of years of work by an ex-cowpuncher, was demonstrated yesterday to mem- bers of the faculty of the School of Education and the University High School. The machine, patented as a "trans- laphon" by its inventor, Arthur L. Runyon, is an elaborate victrola, de- signed to make easy the work of all persons in the teaching profession and to aid those who are attempting to learn a language or are endeavor- ing to study a piece of music. Mr. Runyon also demonstrated the machine as a way to teach correct pronunciation of words in any given language. Mr. Runyon, upon the urging of those present, expressed the fodest of his dreams, the hope that some great university would build a library which would contain a recording of all the sounds known to the human ear. Leftists Charge Foreign States Gave Naval Aid Cruiser Explosion Caused By Submarine, Spanish Government Asserts MADRID, Nov. 23-(P)-The Span- ish Socialist government charged flatly tonight that foreign powers supplied submarines and naval equip- ment to the fascist insurgents and asserted one of the undersea craft torpedoed a government cruiser in Cartagena harbor. (British sources in London report- ed the explosions of the Miguel de Cervantes might have been internal and not caused by a torpedo.) The stricken vessel, the cruiser Miguel de Cervantes, would not be out of commission long, the Minis- try of Marine and Air declared.: A communique said another torpedo streaked under the bow of the cruiser Mendez Nunez barely missing that warship. While the Madrid government was making its charges of foreign inter- vention in the Spanish civil war, the fascist insurgents renewed their land and air bombardments of the be- sieged, capital. Six shells struck' the heart of the city. One aerial incendiary bomb fell in the War Ministry courtyard. Several militiamen were wounded and many windows shattered by the explosions. Other shells fell in the Puerta del Sol, the city's main square, the Plaza del Carmen and the Plaza de Bilbao. New Freshman Election lan is Considered A plan for the reformation of fresh- man class elections will be presented Nazis Admit Anti-Russian Campaigning Foreign Office Says Oral Agreement With Japan Is Not A Pact Strained Relations FurtherImperilled Ambassador Asks Reprieve For German Engineer Convicted By Soviet BERLIN, Nov. 23.-(P)-Germany today admitted she and Japan had agreed on an anti-Bolshevist cam- paign as charged by Russia last week. A foreign Office spokesman made the announcement, the first admis- sion from Germany that the Russian assertions were true. The spokesman said, however, that there was no written agreement be- tween the two nations, and that therefore a pact, in the diplomatic sense of the word, did not exist. The already strained relations be- tween Germany and Russia were fur- ther endangered tonight by increased expressions of resentment over the death sentence given the German en- gineer, E. I. Stickling, convicted with eight Russians of plotting to wreck the Kamerovo mines in Siberia. MOSCOW, Nov. 23.-(IP)--German Ambassador Count Frederich von der Schulenberg tonight for the second time asked N. N. Krestinsky,, Vice- .Commissar for Foreign Affairs, to spare the life of Emil Ivan Stickling, German engineer condemned to be shot Sunday for plotting to wreck the Kamerovo Siberian coal mines. Rescuers Seek Seven Missing In Landslides Juneau Stores And Homes Buried As Tons Of Rock Crash Down Mountain JUNEAU, Alaska, Nov. 23.-(M)-, Rescuers searched the landslide-' ruined apartment district of Juneau tonight for seven persons, missing after tons of mud and rock crashed, into the area yesterday, killing at least one person and seriously injur- ing nine others. Earlier estimates by Fire Chief V. W. Mulvihill placed the missing at from five to 25 persons and said four were killed when twin slides rocketed off a mountain and swept through the neighborhood. The first of the two slides did little damage but the second cut a 100-foot path through the neighbor- hood, burying stores and residences in a 40-foot mass of mud. When the slide struck, citizens, army men and firemen rushed to the scene to clear the oozing mud, rock and smashed timbers which engulfed two apartment houses, a lodging house, a store and several small dwellings. Guided by the voices of people trapped within the buildings, rescue crews worked through the night to bring them to safety. Timbers, pulled from the debris, were ignited, casting a weird light over the dev- astated region. Power lines were wiped out and fire truck headlights { guided the rescuers in their work. Heavy rains, which apparently caused the slides, ceased during the night. The known missing were: Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Peterson, who were in the Peterson two-story con- crete building when the second slide struck. Pete Battelo, who was dining with unidentified friends in the Nickino- vich Apartments, now buried under debris. Mrs. Fred Matson. wife of a jewel- er. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Bodine and their stepson, (age not known) who were Nickinovich Apartment occu- pants. Astronomical Films To Be Seen Tonight Astronomical films taken under the auspices of the University will be fea- tured in a talk to be given by Prof. Heber D. Curtis of the astronomy de- Anti-Nazi Speaker Dormitories Can Succeed At Michigan Success Of Great Majority Of Housing Plans At Other Universities Cited Fraternities' Fears Called Groundless Problem Of Townspeople Renting Rooms Solved By GradualChange EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last in the series of articles on dormitories based on a survey conducted by The Daily of 50 universities and colleges throughout the nation. The Daily is as sending a rort er to E a st Lai-.-- FRANCIS A. HENSON Hen son Gives 1 i I today to investigate the dormitory sit- Tal On Nazis uation at Michigan State College, which will ask the State Legislature for an increased appropriation to build dormi- ictinis Today tories and provide other improvements. ____By IRVING S. SILVERMAN If the experiences of other univer- Receipts Of Speech To Go sities and colleges are any indication, To Society For Relieving dormitories can be successful at Michigan. Ger an Prisoners Following the description of the Personal contacts with the starving dormitories upon several of the cam- families of prisoners of Nazi concen- puses of universities and colleges., a tration camps provide the informa- summary of the problems which the tion from which Francis A. Henson construction of dormitories present will draw nhis sch ransdayHnonand the methods by which other uni- will draw in his speech here today on versities and colleges have solved the "Future Government of Germany them as shown through the survey, 'Now Underground." now seems necessary. The address will be made at 4:15 In the final analysis, it was shown p.m. in the Natural Science Audi- that more than three-fourths of the torium. The admission charge of 25 -th tions h reors te cents will go to the International Re- ha insiduions wic were contracted lief Association, whose representa- have drmiori twofithem atre soe tives in Germany at the risk of their, heing majority ofbth em stressing lives distribute money to political their success, both financially and prisoners and their families. socially. Mr. Henson, who was chairman of University's Problems a committee which tried- to prevent On the University of Michigan° American participation in the Berlin campus there are several problems )lympics, took a hazardous trip which present themselves in a con- through the Reich this summer on a sideration of dormitories. These "press" pass to make a first hand problems involve the ultimate posi- study of political and social condi- tion of fraternities, the future con-. tions. dition of townspeople who are now He was formerly the general sec- renting their rooms to students, the retary in the United States of the financing. the dormitories, the type International Student Service which of dormitories to construct and the aided in rehabilitating thousands of ultimate administration of the dor- student refugees from Germany. mitories, which may develop into Besides his main topic of the under- government. ground movement in Germany, Mr. Some fraternities view the building Henson will probably touch on other of dormitories on this campus as the of his lecture topics such as: "Death occasion of their downfall. But if Takes a Holiday (The XIth Olym- (Continued on Page 2) piad) "; "The All-Inclusive Press Pass in Nazi Germany"; "Jews: Verboten in Deutschland"; and "Is the Church t Doomed in Germany?" Prof John Shepard, chairman of the faculty committee that is bringing Mr. Hen- IP rotest Yale's son to the campus, said last night. P Mr. Henson will arrive here this D ism issal Act morning and will then be entertained D isunhistsaaHlActh at a luncheon at Lane Hall by the __________________________ members of the faculty committee. The committee includes: Dean Alice Say 'Non-Reappointment' Lloyd. Prof. William P. Wood, Prof. Of Prof. Davis Is Threat Roy W. Sellars, Thr. Edward Blake- man, Dr. Bernard Heller, Prof. Pres- To Academic Freedom ton Slosson, Prof. Robert Angell, Prof. Z. Clark Dickinson, the Rev. C. A protest against the dismissal of W. Brashares, and Prof. Harold J. Dr. Jerome Davis from the Yale Prof. Leroy Waterman, chairman of school of divinity was sent yesterday the department of Oriental Lan- to President James Angell of Yale guages, will introduce Mr. Henson at University in the form of a petition the lecture. signed by a dozen University faculty b* members. Football Bust Lists Ruthven, Yost And KipkeAsSpeakers The annual football bust held for ;he football team by the University of Michigan Club of Detroit will take place this Saturday at the Hotel Stat- ler in Detroit. The speakers for the evening will include' President Alexander G. Ruthven and Thomas S.xHammond, alumni member of the Board in Control of Student Athletics, both of whom will attend for the first time as featured guests. Fielding H. Yost, director of athletics and Coach Harry Kipke will also speak, as will the Huston brothers, Cy and Roscoe. The latter is postmaster of Detroit. C. C. Bradner, radio and news commen- tator for the Detroit News will com- plete the list of principal speakers. The entire coaching staff will be present. All senior members of the squad will receive gold "M" rings at this time, and the winners of the Varsity "M" for the season will receive the award. Reservations for the banquet may be made by communicating with H. E. Brown, committee chairman. Third Lecture Will Be Given By Woollcott Raconteur Makes His First Ann Arbor Appearance Sunday,_Nov. 29 Alexander Woollcott, considered America's leading wit and raconteur, will give his only public lecture of the year when he speaks Sunday. night in Hill Auditorium under the auspices of the Oratorical Associa- tion. Mr. Woollcott's appearance will be his first in Ann Arbor and the third on the current lecture series of the Oratorical Association. He will be toe first speaker to use the new public address system in the auditorium. Mr. Woollcott has had an exten- sive career as a journalist, author and radio speaker. In 1914 he be- came dramatic critic of the New York Times and served successively in that capacity with the New York Herald and the New York World. He is the author of many books including "Enchanted Isles," "Going to Pieces," "Two Gentlemen and a Lady," and two recent best sellers, "While Rome Burns" and "The Woollcott Reader." Mr. Woollcott has contributed to many periodicals and wrote a column, "Shouts and Murmurs," for the New Yorker. In 1931 he appeared as Har- old Sigrift in "Brief Moment" at the Belasco Theatre in New York City. He has been one of the leading radio personalities for many years, having millions of listeners for his "Town Crier" program from 1933 to this year. His most recent radio broadcasts have been confined to literary and dramatic criticisms. Mr. Woollcott, who was not orig- inally scheduled to appear on the Or- atorical Associaltion lecture series, was secured to replace Bertrand Rus- sell who was forced to cancel his en- gagement because of illness. The de- mand for tickets for the lecture has been great, according to officials of the association. Brown Says He Will represent State's. Interest DETROIT, Nov. 23.-(/P)-Senator- Designate Prentiss M. Brown told the Economic Club today that he will represent "all the interests of this great state." "I am a liberal," Brown said. "I think that way. I have fought for the underdog and will continue to do so. "I think that consistency is a vice of small minds, and I want to work for principles." After saying that the automobile industry was "the real leader in bringing about high wages for the people of the nation" and mention- ing the recent "gradual rise in wages," the new Senator said he ex- pected to see "further legislation on minimum wages and minimum hours." At another point he said: "But don't think the Democratic party is antagonistic to business." "The most important thing we need in commerce and industry," he de- ela a_ is ea sound ,urren y T eel Highest Court Upholds State Job Insurance By 4-4_Ballot New York Statute Passed Under Federal Program; Stone Unable To Attend Green Hails Action As 'Labor Victory' New Court Line-Up Seen Possible Election Result $y New Deal Leaders WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.-()- Constitutionality of the New York Unemployment Insurance Act was upheld today by the Supreme Court in an evenly-divided decision which gave fresh hope to supporters of pending New Deal legislation. The New York law, similar to that already passed in 16 other states and the District of Columbia, was enacted under the Federal social security program of taxing employers for the benefit of those out of work. With Justice Stone absent because of illness, the court voted four to four on the New York law. As soon as word of the decision spread around Capitol Hill, Senator O'Mahoney (Dem., Wyo.) said in a statement: "Mr. Dooley seems to be right." It was Mr. Dooley, a news- paper columnist's fictional character, who said: "The Supreme Court gen- erally follows the election returns." Wide Effects Foreseen O'Mahoney's statement reflected the hopes, if not the beliefs, of many New Deal leaders that the Court's decision was evidence of a new divi- sion on the high bench. If a new Court line-up should re- sult in favorable decisions on pend- ing New Deal cases, it might have far-reaching effects on the current drive in some quarters for an amend- ment to the Constitution. At Tampa, William Green, presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor, said, the ruling was "a great victory for labor." He added that the decision "encourages labor to be- lieve that the National Social Se- curity Act will be held constitution- al." Chairman Winant of the Social Security Board promptly urged states which have not enacted similar laws to "proceed quickly" to do so. He said eight million workers in the past year had gained the protection of unemployment insurance. States May Proceed Legal observers suggested that even if the unemployment insurance section of the Federal Act should be held invalid, the states still could proceed with their own programs. The Federal legislation was designed to encourage states to enact benefit laws of their own. Under the New York measure, em- ployers of four or more persons, with a few exceptions ,are required to pay a tax on payrolls and the money is pooled for the benefit of the unem- ployed. The Federal Social Security Act al- so taxes employers, but they are per- mitted to deduct from the Federal levy 90 per cent of the amount paid out under a state plan. The Fed- eral government pays expenses of administering approved state laws. While no announcement was made as to how the Court was divided, many observers believed Chief Jus- tice Hughes and Justices Brandeis, Cardozo and Roberts supported the Act against Justices Vandevanter, McReynolds, Sutherland and Butler. Blakeman Calls Christmas Sing Meeting "Tloday The student committee for the an- nual community Christmas Sing will meet at 5 p.m. today in the Union, it was announced yesterday by Dr. Ed- ward W. Blakeman, counselor in re- ligious education. The committee composed of the heads and representatives of the ma- * jor campus organizations will set the date and make further arrangements for the traditional affair in coopera- tion with Prof. Earl V. Moore and Prof. David Mattern of the School of Musim, T. R. Piersol representing the Ann Arbor Chamber of Com- merce. Wilmot Pratt . niversitv 4Previously, the delegates had de-4by a special committee of the Men's' cided to bring the issue to a final vote Council within the next two weeks, it before adjourning tonight. was announced last night by Miller G. Sherwood, '37, president of the Coun- 0. P. Van Sweringen cil. The special committee, which con- Succumbs On Trainisists of Sherwood, Herbert B. Wolf, '37, president of the Union, and Mar- .- shall D. Shulman, '37, editorial di- CLEVELAND, Nov. 23.-P)---,Oris rector of The Daily, met last night in P. Van Sweringen, who started his the editorial offices of The Daily to business career as a newsboy and, hear petitions for the reformation with his brother, Mantis J., lived to of the present system of class elec- manipulate and control a $3,000,000.- tions. 000 network of railroads and real eow.n estate, died today on a railroad trip Reformation was urged by Ann Vie- to New York. ary, '40, leader of a group of inde- The noted financier, who wrote an pendent students, on the ground that almost incredible chapter in the story the present system is not represen- of 20th century transportation, died tative. after a heart attack as his train ap- James T. Warner, '40, representa- proached Hoboken, N. J. He was 57 tive of the Washtenaw Party, and years old. Stuart Robson, '40, representative of It was less than a year ago that the State Street party, presented ob- his brother, Mantis, died in Cleveland jections to the plan offered by Miss in the midst of their struggle to pull Vicary, but all three concurred in the their railroad empire out of the de- judgment that the present plan is pression. not representative, and agreed to as- At the Van Sweringen offices here, sist in the formation of a new plan. Joseph Doherty, public relations counsel, said that two men who werepBowra To Lecture with the railroad magnate on the trip claimed a minor accident in the On Classical Poetry Scranton, Pa. railroad yards "prob- ably contributed to a heart attack." T lrce iceive Phillips Award In Scholarship Renewal of a Phillips Scholarship1 to Robert Perlman, '39, and the' award of Phillips Scholarships to l Betty M. Steinhart, '40, and Bernard Shriber, '40, were announced yes- terday by Dr. Frank E. Robbins, as- sistant to the President. 'Phillips Scholarships, six in num- ber and each for $50, were estab- lished in 1896 by a bequest of Henry Phillips, Jr., Philadelphia, Pa. They' are awarded or renewed annually tot freshman literary college studentsj for proficiency in the study of clas- sical languages, which they must continue to study for the duration of the scholarship. All three scholarships were award- ed for this school year. The awards were made by a com- mittee consisting of President Ruth- ven, Prof. Campbell Bonner of the Greek department, Prof. John G. Winter of the Latin department and Dean Edward H. Kraus of the liter- ary college. 10 Will Be Initiated By Honorary Societyl Prof. Norman E. Nelson of the4 English department, president of the1 Teachers Federation here, explained that although several members of that group had signed the protest, it was not instituted as a measure of the Federation. The names attached to the petition were not made pub- lic, Professor Nelson said. "We have always admired the sane conservatism of Yale," the petition states, and according to Professor Nelson, continues with the statement that it would seem from newspaper accounts of the situation that Yale was showing an intolerance that, be- cause of that institution's high standing, would endanger academic freedom in this country. Dr. Davis was informed in the spring of 1936 that his appointment would not be renewed. He is associ- ate professor of practical philan- thropy in the Yale divinity school. He joined the Yale faculty in 1924 as an assistant professor and was promoted to his present status in 1930. It is the assumption of liberal organizations that his dismissal fol- lows protests against liberal activi- ties of the professor. He has made many speeches in the cause of lib- eralism, and was one of the first to advocate the recognition of Russia by the United States. According to the Yale statement of the affair, the "non-reappointment" Farm Worker Accused Of Attacking Employer Mike Soloway, 55 years old, an employe on a farm in Webster town- ship, was held in county jail yester- day after he had been accused of at-' tapking- his emnlover. C. C_ Demers. C. M. Bowra, a fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, will give a University lecture on "Hellenism and Poetry" at 4:15 p.m. next Monday in Natural Science Auditorium under the aus- pices of the Greek and Latin depart- ments. 1Mr_ Rnwrq. whn ic e hitinzr tic