The Weather Fair today; tomorrow mostly cloudy, no decided change in temperature. L Sir igan Abr 4:3att!J Editorials Regretful Reminder No. 5 .,. Minority Injustice.. VOL. XLVII No. 67 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DEC. 15, 1936 PRICE 5 CENTS Goodfellows Raise $1,675 In'36 Drive To Aid Needy Here Family Welfare Bureau Will Buy Necessities Immediately Contribution Of $25 Made By Wolverine Dean's Discretionary Fund To Receive $400; Give $100 To Social Service By MARSHALL D. SHULMAN On the corners of the city and the campus, more than 150 Goodfellows sold special editions of The Michigan Daily yesterday to raise a fund of approximately $1,675 for Christmas and year-'round aid to needy stu- dents, children, families and hospital patients. The purchase of Christmas baskets, shoes and clothing will begin im- mediately under the direction of the Family Welfare Bureau, which will receive approximately $1,100 of the fund. Needy students will be helped through the Deans' Discretionary Fund, which will receive approxi- mately $400 of the fund. The re- maining $150 will be distributed through the social service depart- ment of the University Hospital. Award To Be Made The Michigan Daily Goodfellow Award for the student organization showing the highest cooperative spirit will be presented this week, according to Dean Joseph A. Bursley, chairman of the award committee. Highestsalesman for the day was T. Reardon Peirsol, local insurance agent and investment broker, who directed the distribution of the Good- fellow Editions in the downtown area. His individual sales totalled al- most $100. Of the $1,675, approximately $785 was raised each by advance subscrip- tions from fraternities, sororities, dormitories and faculty members, and by the 10-hour street sale yes- terday. An additional $102 raised by advertising carried in the issue was turned over to the fund. All expense of publication of the issue was contributed by The Daily. The cost of the campaign will be less than $11. Honor Societies Sell Goodfellow salesmen were drafted from the ranks of campus honorary societies and publications staffs. Among the honorary societies were: Michigamua, Sphinx, Druids, Vul- cans, Triangles, Senior Society, Mor- tarboard, Wyvern, Sigma Delta Chi, Theta Sigma Phi and Tau Beta Pi. Both business and editorial staffs of The Daily were enlisted as sales- men for the drive, and the business staff of the Gargoyle. The drive was conducted this year with the assistance of a special com- mittee from the Men's Council, con- sisting of George Sprau, Jr., '37, chairman, James H. Walker, '37E, and Hubert Fones, '38E. The total this year was $300 above that of the first annual Goodfellow Drive, conducted last year. The Wolverine, student cooperative- restaurant, voted last night to con- tribute $25 to the fund, according to Don Murdock, '38, treasurer. Detroit Police Hold Engineer In Killing Case The slayings of 7-year-old Rich- ard Streicher, of Ypsilanti, and of 10-year-old Robert Kenyon, of East Tawas, were resurrected yesterday when Detroit police arrested Fred- erick Haag, 51-year-old engineering designer on charges of gross in- decency. He will be questioned in connection with the unsolved slay- ings. Haag admitted the truth of charges brought by two boys who attended a camp he conducted on the Huron River, according to A. Tom Pasieczny, assistant proseuctor of Detroit. Haag, a resident of Detroit, was arrested as he was loading camp equipment into an automobile prep- aratory to taking five boys to his camp, known as Camp Haag. Haag saidt n hav told the authnrities he Joe Louis Cools Simms At End Of26 Seconds CLEVELAND, Dec. 14.- A'i-Joe Louis, the DetroitBomber, shuffled out of his corner tonight and let fly with one devastating punch that knocked out Eddie Simms, Cleveland heavyweight, -to the amazement of 11,000 spectators. The bout was scheduled to go 10 rounds but lasted exactly 26 seconds. Louis landed only one solid blow, a vicious left hook that struck Simms on the chin. Simms fell backwards, his arms and legs in the air. Christmas Sing Rehearsal S e t For 7:15 P.M. Slides Will Help Practice Tonight; Regular Annual Program Tomorrow Rehearsal for what is expected to be the largest and most inspired Christmas Sing Ann Arbor has ever witnessed will be held at 7:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Prof. David Mattern of the Music School and Wilmot F. Pratt, Un- iversity carillonneur, will lead and instruct the audience, composed of campus and community organiza- tions, in the songs of the program with the aid of slides on whichgwill appear, the notes and words of the numbers to be sung at the Sing. The Sing will be held on the north lawn of the League at 7:30 p.m. to- morrow. Groups from Ypsilanti, Sa- line, Chelsea, and other communi- ties of Washtenaw County will at- tend with townspeople and students. Members of the following organi- zations have been invited to attend the rehearsal today: Choral Union, Stanley Chorus, Varsity Glee Club, Freshman Glee Club, University High School, all church choirs, Ann Arbor High School chorus, St. Thomas Pa- rochial chorus, Women's Club chorus, St. Joseph's Mercy hospital nurses' chorus and University hospital chor- us. Members of fraternities, dormi- tories and sororities, independent stu- dents, faculty members and their families especially invited to come to the rehearsal, Professor Mattern said. Copies of the words of the songs have already been distributed to fra- ternities, sororities and dormitories on campus, and The Daily will print the words in tomorrow's edition. Kimmel's Trial Will End Today, RappPredicts The trial of Grant Kimmel, 56 years old, Washtenaw County farm- er charged with assault with intent to kill John Sheets, Detroit police- man on Sept. 24, will go today into what is hoped to be the last session of his trial according to Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp. Testimony given yesterday by Al- meda Kimmel, 12-year-old daughter of the accused, climaxed the day's proceedings of the trial, which has been in session since last Saturday. "'I'll get my gun and shoot you,"~ she quoted her father as saying. A move in favor of the defense came earlier in the afternoon when Prosecutor Rapp said that he was go- ing to point out in the course of the trial that Kimmel had abused his children and used obscene language in the presence of his wife. Defense attorney Jacob F. Fahrner returned by saying that the two charges that the prosecutor had said he would bring up in the trial were offenses. against the state in themselves, and that the prosecutor should make a formal charge of them and not in- clude them in the proceedings of this trial for assault with attempt to kill. Literary Quarterly L-A _ -- " _ 0 _._t am w_7_1 Albert Falk Here; Round Antd Round' Plan IsExplained Albert S. Falk, originator of "the money goes 'round and 'round plan," the panacea for the world's economic ills, was in Ann Arbor yesterday. He arrived here in the early hours of the day accompanied by a kindly motorist who had heeded his thumb- ing signal. His ultimate destination is Washington, D.C., where he intends to let the Guardians of the Republic in on his plan. "Put garbage back where it be- longs-in the garbage can," were the words with which Falk intro- duced the plan which he claims will make Dr. Townsend blush with shame. Falk, the man, was not al- ways a server and a devotee of the better things for mankind. Out in Wheaton, Minn., his birthplace, he was the town's best paperhanger, so he says. Then he went to Florida and got a, job with a circus as an acrobat. This shows Falk's ver- satility. Falk's attire clearly shows that he is not one of the money-bag exploit- ers of the poorer citizens. At present he is making a hitch-hike tour ofthe country spreading the good word of his new idea. This has caused his clothes to become travel-worn. He wears a pair of blue denim pants and a somewhat frayed sheepskin coat. All his worldly possessions are carried in a convenient briefcase. According to Falk, Townsend went at it with too big ideas. Falk's plan (Continued on Page 8) Student Labor~ Board Meeting To Hear Plaints Men's Council Committee On Labor Meets Tonight To BeginWeekly Series The committee of the Men's Coun- ci' on student labor will hold its first session at 9 p.m. today in the ' Michigan Upion to hear all com- plaints from students in regard to working conditions on the campus. The committee will meet every Tues- day night to hear such grievances. The committee received official sanction last week from the Univer- sity to act as a clearing. house for; student labor complaints. The chair- man of the committee, Tom Sulli- van, '37, vice-president of the Men's Council, reiterated last night his statement that the confidences of the students appearing before the Com- mittee will be fully respected. Students desiring to register labor complaints have two courses of ac- tion, Sullivan pointed out: Either they can go directly to the -dean of students' office to offer their com- plaint; or they can appear before the committee which will judge the merits of the complaint, and if it is found justifiable, the committee will bring the grievance before the Dean of Students' Office and recommend action upon it. The purpose of the Committee, Sul- livan explained, is to aid these stu- dents naturally reticent about labor grievances and those who would rather deal with a student organiza- tion first before going before the, administration. The members of the committee are: Sullivan, Richard Clark, '37, presi- dent of S.C.A., William Yost, '37F&C,. and Tom Downs, '39, who, although not in the Men's Council, has been included in the Committee as presi-. dent of the Student Workers' Federa- tion. The room in which the committee will hear complaints will be posted on the Union bulletin board. 2 Dormitories At Estimated Cost. Of $175,000; Financed By Issuance Of Bonds I To Be Constructed N ankin Shows Force To Help Rescue-Chiang Central Government Seeks Compromise With Anti- Japanese Leader SHANGHAI, Dec. 15.-(Tuesday) -(M-General Chiang Kai-Shek, head of China's national government, was reported today to have tele- graphed his wife "I am well; do not worry over my safety." The report of Chiang's message to his wife, Wellesley-educated sister- in-law of the late Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, "Father of the Chinese Republic," was issued by the official central news agency in Nanking, NANKING, Dec. 14.-(T)-Nanking leaders hoped tonight their display of force would persuade mutinous Mar- shal Chang Hsueh-Liang to surrender his captive, Gen. Chiang Kai-Shek, head of the Chinese government. While the Nanking government sought a compromise with Chang, it tightened its cordon of loyal divisions around rebellious Shensi Province where Chiang was held. The nature of the proposed com- promise was not revealed, but it was stated that Yu Yu-Jen, head of the control Yuan of the central govern- ment, was at °Loyang, Honan Province workingat the delicate task of ob- taining General Chiang's freedom. Nanking officials made no effort to minimize the gravity of the crisis, which some considered the most dan- gerous confronting China since the E beginning of the nationalist move- ment more than a decade ago. These officials said the first task of the government was to demon- ; strate the nation's unity and show to, all how Marshal Chang had erred (Contipued on Page 8) Haber Says Security ProgramV Will Be Bi gest U.S. Business 6 I ..____ . He Calls Social Security Laws Most Significant In American History 1 EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of articles to be published by The Daily in which Prof. William Haber of the economics departnment will ex- plain the Social Security Act and its implications. In this article he de- scribes the magnitude of the program. The next article will deal with old age pensions, apart from annuities. By IRVING S. SILVERMAN The program which has been in- itiated by the Social Security Act will eventually become the biggest busi- ness in America, Prof. William Haber of the economics department and chairman of the governor's Social Se- curity Study Commission, declared yesterday. He called the social security legis- lation more significant than any pre- Enoland's New Monarch Turns To State Tasks Celebration Of George's 41st Birthday Waits While He Works LONDON, Dec. 14.-(P)-George VI set about building a reputation as "the business man king" today by spending 150 minutes transacting state business while his family waited at home to celebrate his 41st birth- day. The new monarch, pushed to the throne when brother Edward re- nounced it for love, first dispatched to Parliament his pledge "with God's help and supported by my dear wife, to uphold the honor of the realm" and then turned to practical affairs of state at Buckingham Palace. Hunderds stood in the rain to catch a glimpse of the new king-emperor as he arrived at Buckingham from his Piccadilly home to receive Lord Hali- fax and get off to an early start on the tasks of empire, many of them delayed and ignored during the days of crisis preceding Edward's abdica- tion. Hillel Players A.S. .E. To Give Annual 'Fun - Fest' A t Un~ion Tomorrow The momentous question of; "spoofuncup," "spoofuncup," who is going to get the "spoofuncup" will be given its annual answer tomorrow at the Union when the American So-, ciety of Mechanical Engineers de-, cides who is the most popular un- popular professor in the engineering college. Last year Prof. Walter E. Lay was the honored recipient- getting the most boos. Tomorrows Roast under the direc- tion of Roastmaster E. L. Ericson, professor in the engineering college, will have a corps of speakers whom the A.S.M.E. guarantees will not be boring. They will positively be squelched at the end of three min- utes with the command, "Sit down." Among those who threaten to be regi- mented are Dean H. C. Sadler, Prof. H. C. Anderson, Col. H. W. Miller, Prof. Charles M. Good and Prof. James H. Cissel. Tickets to the Roast may be ob- tained at the Union, Ulrich's book- store, in the West Engineering build- ing and from officials and members of the A.S.M.E., vious governmental undertaking in the history of the United States. Professor Haber has recently re- turned from Albany, N.Y., and Wash- ington, D.C., where the commission studied social insurance legislation. The commission has announced that it is preparing unemployment insur- ance legislation which will be ready to present to the state legislature by Jan. 1, when the legislature convenes. This legislation, Professor Haber as- serted, is of primary importance, for the state can not benefit from the unemployment insurance clause of the federal Social Security Act un- less it has unemployment insurance provisions within the state. Professor Haber is also former ad- ministrator of SERA in Michigan. "If the act is effectively admin- istered," Professor Haber declared, "it should make for the greater se- curity and contentment of the masses of wage-earners, constituting a bul- wark against the hazards of modern economic life." "If the task is bungled," Professor Haber continued, "the act will in- troduce problems of administration in government finance which may re- quire many years to correct." Numerous questions have been asked, Professor Haber added, about the purposes of the Social Security Act, its functions and the benefits which it will offer Professor Haber will endeavor to answer many of these questions in future articles to appear in The Daily. Student Strike Is Threatened If Frank Goes Wisconsin President Gets Wide Support As Crucial Regent Meeting Nears MADISON, Wis., Dec. 14.-(P)-A group of University of Wisconsin stu- dents sounded out sentiment on the campus today for a general classroom walkout should President Gleen Frank be forced to resign. "Let's support prexy" was scrawled on blackboards in several classrooms. "We believe we already have 2,000 to 3,000 students behind us, and the word is being spread around," said an anonymous spokesman. The uni- versity enrollment is more than 10,- 000. A lecture by Prof. William H. Kiekhofer was interrupted by an im- promptu student cheer for Dr. Frank. Donald Heun, president of the In- terfraternity Board, said fraternity members were solidly supporting Dr. Frank. A showdown in the dispute between Dr. Frank and a majority faction of the Regents over administrative pol- icy is expected when the board meets Wednesday to act on budget recom- mendations. Dr. Frank found support from a regent and a University of Chicago professor in the latest of frequent controversies which have character- ized his 11-year tenure. France Desires New Agreement On War Debts WASHINGTON, Dec. 14.-(P)- France told the United States tonight that she hoped to open negotiations for a new agreement on the war debt defaulted obligations, long a source of international friction. Although the French government and other debtor nations served the usual notice that they would not pay the semi-annual installments due to- morrow, the French note delivered to the state department spoke of the possibility of some new "arrangement acceptable to both" parties. Ruthven Confident Houses Will Be Ready By First Semester Of Next Year Dining Room Units To Be Put In Union Halls Are To Be Located On Madison Street, Next To Union Annex Two dormitory units, which will together house 122 men, will be con- structed here at the approximate cost of $175,000, it was revealed yes- terday by President Alexander G. Ruthven. The cost of the dormitory units will be borne entirely by the issuance of dormitory certificates, which are understood to have already been subscribed. This plan is similar to the one used in financing the build- ing of Mosher-Jordan Halls. Arrangements Not Complete The dormitory units will be located on Madison St., adjacent tothe Union annex, which is now under construction. Dining room units will be provided in the Union addi- tion. President Ruthven, who said the Board of Regents had voted the ask- ing of bids on the project at a spe- cial meeting Saturday in Detroit, is confident that the construction will be finished by the beginning of the first semester of next school year. Neither financing arrangements nor architectural plans are yet com- pleted, President Ruthven said. Mosher-Jordan Halls were financed in 1930 by the issuance of $955,00 of Mosher-Jordan trust certificates, drawing 6 per cent interest. Committee Encouraged The Committee on Men's Dormi- tories is greatly encouraged by the action of the Regents, Gilbert Tilles, '37, chairman of the committee, as- serted last night, for, he said, where only one dormitory unit housing 62 men was contemplated, it is now pos- sible that there will be three dormi- tory units available for freshmen at the opening of the University next September, housing approximately 184 men. Dean Joseph A. Bursley comment- ed that "the work of the Dormitory Committee has just begun. It has served to bring the glaring need of dormitories .at Michigan to light, and they must continue with their in- valuable work on this project." Hope For Private Aid Regent Junius E. Beal stated last night that the Regents' action arose from the anxiety displayed by Presi- dent Ruthven who he said, believed that the University is losing students through its inadequate housing facili- ties. Regent Beal further remarked that if the dormitory units prove success- ful, the University may expect private aid for future units. He revealed that several potential private builders are awaiting the success or failure of the two dormitory units before in- vesting, private capital in other units. Caroleers Promise Students Big Boost With Little Woman Troubadours at a dollar a dozen Swill be available the rest of the week by calling telephone number 6345. At that number you can talk to Glenn Phelps, '37, who has hatched the idea of renting out a band of mninnesinger's for serenading pur- poses. Ten "trained voices" will sing 'neath your lady's window for the pit- tance of a dollar bill. Their classified advertisement in today's Daily says: "Wooing. The Caroleers. Ten trained vcices for wooing purposes. Prices reasonable. Phone 6345." It all grew out of a chain of ex- periences last Saturday night, ac- cording to Phelps. About fifteen hardy undergraduates, having been ejected from several downtown beer- ing places, decided to offer up a selec- tion of carols to the fair occunants Ulster Is Restraining De Valera In Forming Republic, Scott Says Give One-Act PlaysToniaht Three one-act plays will be pre- sented at 8 p.m. today by the Hillel Players at their regular meeting in the Hillel Foundation, Louise Samek, '38, president of the players, said yes- terday. The plays, which are directed by Miss Samek, Marguerite Merkel, '37, and Murray Davis, '39, provide an ex- perimental theatre, Miss Samek said, whereby student talent can be de- veloped. These one-act plays will also provide one basis for the selec- tion of the cast for the three-act play which the players will present in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre later in the year, she said. The three plays to be presented to- night are respectively, a light com- edy, a psychological drama with the mask effect, and a dramatic story of two men trapped in a mine, Miss Samek said. The cast for the plays include, Mi- riam Sauls, '37, Diane Davidson, '40, Jean Finkelstein, '39, Harold Gast, '39, Sidney Liff, '38, Ada Zola, '37, Peter Morse, '40, and Davis. -00" In view of Eamon de Valera's ac- tion in Ireland during the last few days in which "half an English crown," was acknowledged by ac- cepting the new king but abolishing the governor-generalship of Ireland, Prof. E. Morley Scott of the history department explained in an inter- view yesterday that hostile Ulster in Northern Ireland is the restraining influence upon de Valera which will retard him in taking further ad- vantage of the abdication by estab- lishing an Irish republic, his ulti- mate goal. nP Vset-r a rne not wantconmnlete fessor Scott pointed out, are: Pro- testant north and Roman Catholic south; industrial north and agricul- tural south; small north and large south. This hostility of Ulster, Pro- fessor Scott claimed, is the principal reason why de Valera's program has thus far been a cautious one. At present, he said, there is no hope for a reconciliation between the two parties, for the northerners feel con- fident that their interests will be re- spected under English guidance. As for the abolition of the position of the governor-general in Ireland, Prnfessor rntt said that the gonvernnr