S The Weather Cloudy with freezing temper- atures and variable northwest- erly winds. LI e I~iri guan A4*hrr .Akp iiattu Edtorials Strikes. VOL. XLVII No. 70 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DEC. 18, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Cut In Taxes Is Promised As Roosevelt Renews Work Improvement In Business Expected To Help Bring Balanced Budget Bishop Is Told Member To St McGovern Rises In House Of Commons To Request Return To Real Issues LONDON, Dec. 17.-UP)-"Jock" McGovern, the outspoken member of Parliament who once heckled King George V, rose in the House of Com- mons today to tell "the bishops" to "get out and deal with unemploy- ment instead of kicking a man when 3y Parliament1 op Kicking Duke if they don't get their way" and added: "If the issue (of Edward's marriage to Wallis Simpson) had been put to the country, he would have beaten the cabinet. The Prime Minister would have gone but the maa-(Ed- ward)-would have remained." H le said the ministers were "a num- ber of old, worn-out veterans who are continually threatening to resign." Defends Edward McGovern, who shouted out in par- liament three years ago, just as King G(1nrr V fini ch d hic dritina Dr. Edmunds Bell Ringers Is Named For Out 'Til '38, Russel Lecture Say Officials Pharmacology Head Gets! Arundel Remains In Cell, Award For Distinctive Disciplinary Committee Services During Year Hands Out Suspensions Here's One Election Samilton Wins; Gets Party Endorsement CHICAGO, Dec. 17.-()P)--Chair- man John D. M. Hamilton received an overwhelming vote of confidence today in a turbulent meeting of the Republican National Committee. The members voted 74 to 2 to reject his proferred resignation and to re- tain him at the party helm after threeand a half hours of acrimonious debate. Their deliberation room in a loop hotel re-echoed crosscurrents of or- atory. Sharp attacks on the Kansan evoked a spirited defense. Partici- t nni Pl hed onn cdemnds lfnr liberal- ! i f it t#ff } f i }. Selection Is Made By Research Club Must Have Good Records To Return, he's down."' Federal Borrowing Bringing into open debate the wrath of some parliamentarians Will Be Cut Down. against the Archbishop of Canter- bury's radio rebuke of former King Edward VIII, McGovern, once a WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.-(I1)- I plumber, said the cabinet members President Roosevelt today became the acted like "a lot of huffy old women hub of a whirling wheel of, second- - ------ - - ---- term activities that threw off, among other things, official word that the!Socia Security administration was striving for cuts in both federal appropriations and certain taxes. Labor's'Right,' At the same time the following re- ports emerged from White House H aber Asserts conferences and other authoritative circles: That the Chief Executive and Con-AB gressional leaders look to further im- Act Will Benefit Only Halfi provement in business to hasten-a re- Of Gainfully Employed; turn on a balanced budget. D ei a r e No Cabinet ChangeDomesticLabor Exempt That there will be no general hatupofthe awinetn. gnea EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the third in shake-up of the cabinet. series of articles in which Prof. Wil- That the government will do 'very liamt Haber of the economics depart- little" borrowing from now on to fi- ment explains thesocial secrity Act. nancerunnig expnses.This article describes the old age an-i nance running expenses. nuity pension plan. The Daily follow-I That the Civilian Conservation ing the Christmas recess, will publish Corps will be extended after March a summary of the remaining articles of 31 and made permanent July 1 the series. That the lending powers of the Re- In order to offer annuities to aged construction Finance Corporation will workers on the basis of "right" rath- be extended beyond July 1. er than "charity," as is now the case,' Chairman Harrison (Dem., Miss.) every worker in the United States will and Doughton (Dem., N.C.), of the pay to the government one percent Senate and House committees on tax- I of his wages and every employer will ation talked budget and taxes with pay one percent of his total payroll, Mr. Roosevelt. Harrison said after- under the Social Security Act, be- ward the question of eliminating Iginning in January, Prof. William nuisance taxes where administrative Haber of the economics department costswere "but of all proportion" to and chairman of the Governor's So- the revenue collected was being stud- cial' Security Study Commission, ied. Possible modification of the levy on undistributed profits of corpora- pointed out. tions, to ease the burden on com- Taxes Will Increase panies in debt. and those wishing to "These taxes will increase every enlarge their plants, also was under three years," he said, "until they review. he said. reach a maximum of six percent in No More Taxes 1949-three percent of the workers' He reiterated there would be no in- wages and three percent of the em- creased taxes at the coming session, ployers' payrolls." basing this opinion on the business These taxes, Professor Haber ex- pickup and consequent higher tax re- plained, are to be paid by all work- ceipts. et's in certain industries and are to "Reports of receipts to the Treas- be assessed against wages up to the ury are most gratifying," he said. amount of $3,000 a year. This will Speaker Bankhead (Dem., Ala.) even include the salary of a corpora- came out of the President's private tion president, up to the first $3,000, office with a statement he had dis- he added. cussed prospects of keeping appro- priations down. "Certam workers are exempt either "The President is as anxious to do because of administrative difficulty that as any of us," he said. in collecting the tax or because of Daniel W. Bell, acting budget di- constitutional or other questions," rector, who attended a parley be- Professor Haber continued. He listed tween the President, Secretary Mor- domesticaworkers in private homes, genthau arnd Mari'iner S. Ecles, fed- farm laborers, employes in public eral reserve board chairman, said service of state, county or township "there is nothing left to be done on (the Federal Government cannot tax the budget now but the message." another political subdivision), em- (The President's budget message to ployes of chairtable, non-profit mak- Congress). ing organizations, as exempt from paying the tax. r l) 1 f I t , f i { 1 I , eWgev nxsn e nis tra lionaL The Henry Russel lecturer for 1937 Walter Harter and Jack Arundel, puon speech from the throne, that "you are will be Dr. Charles Edmunds, head former students who broke in the ization of Republican policy and crit- o gang of lazy, idle, oarasites," burst carillon tower at 3 a.m. Tuesday, gave icism of the party's action on social out in defense of George's son today' of the pharmacology department of a(leycmu nipopucn problems. a sleepy campus an impromptu con- prbes while members of the House were the School of Medicine, according to cert and damaged the clavier-instru- When the results of the roll call' debating a resolution opposing the announcement made yesterday by ments, were notified by the discipli- were disclosed, Hamilton stated: reduction of unemployment allow- the Research Club. nary committee yesterday that they "I am gratified. I'll keep right ont ances. T p ta dmay ot reenter the ntil working." Th ponmn aeby the Uivrit: "Let the bishops deal with unem- epter ty1938. The chairman shook hands with ployment instead of kicking a man executive council of the Re 'rHa his chief critic, RepresentativeP when he is down," he cried. Club and confirmed by the Regents. Harter, a junior, withdrew Wednes- Hamilton Fish of New York. " he ppontmet crris wih i anday after paying his $5 fine, facing "Let them go on the wireless and The appointment carries with it an almost certain suspension.Arundel, "I'm a Republican," Fish said. "I'm try to arouse the indignation and the award made from the income from who still languishes in the Wash- going along with him. I just wanteds conscience of the nation against so- an endowment established in 1925 by an opportunity to express myself" cial injustices that the common peo- the will of Henry Russel, '73, and is ten. Cout a bhen ithsay an T o t oexpres mheh p l s f f r . m d e a n u a l y t o t h f c u t y m e - D e c . 4 . B o t h h a d b e e n p r e v i o u s l y a r - i T h e t w o v o t e s a g a i n s t t h e c h a i r - e saide dsen ke de jud to h e ac plitye rested on a drunk and disorderly man were cast by Mrs. Katharine He said he had seen children killed wor of the a colaslyd charge and had come before discipli- Kennedy Brown of Ohio and L. W. by bombs in Spain and added: "That work of the greatest scholarly dis- nary committee before. McCormick of Philadelphia, who held action was cruel and deadly, but nTheir fate was announced by Prof. the proxy of James W. Arnold of swift and sudden. Death is being Another part of the endowment is E. Blythe Stason of the Law School, Georgia. Fish held the proxy of E.F dealt out to millions of children in employed to make a similar award to chairman of the committee. "After A. Rasmuson of Alaska but refrainedc this country-it is like putting them one of the younger members of the examining the facts," he said, "we from voting. into a compartment in which the life faculty, an assistant professor or in- have decided that Harter and Arun- / is slowly pushed out of their bodies." structor. This award is made at the del, having withdrawn, shall not be Fiod Never Mind Simpson time of the lecture, which will prob- readmitted before September, 1938, race He advised the cabinet and "the ably be held in the first week of and shall be admitted then only on bishops" to "never mind Mrs. Simp- May. making a showing satisfactory to the Of T cD son" and declared "we are all will- Dr. Edmunds, whose work in phar- dean of the literary college and to O®LtOs Planeg ing to relieve" Prime Minister Bald- macology has gained him interna- the dean of students that in the fu-t win and his cabinet "if they want tional distinction, is the twelfth fac- ture their conduct will conform vwithT to go." ulty man to receive the award. required standards."a His speech served as a prelude to After coming to the United States The disciplinary committee is con- i what may be a more extended attack from England in 1883, Dr. Edmunds posed of Dr. Stason, Joseph A. Bur-~( SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 17.-()- I on the British Broadcasting Com- received his doctor's degree in med- sley, dean of students, and Prof. Axel Searchers failed tonight to developr pany for carrying the Archbishop's icine from the University in 1901', and Marin of the mechanical engineering their only "clue" in the hunt for an' speech, in which he called Edward's an A.B. degree in 1904. He became a department of the engineering col- airliner lost with seven persons, alle determination to marry Mrs. Simpson professor of medicine in 1907 and lege. feared dead, and wearily moved tot "a violation of Christian principles served as assistant dean of the med- "begin al lover."n of marriage" and termed friends of ical school, from 1918 to 1921. He T At least 25 planes and hundreds of the former king "a circle whose has served on several national com- R ege ts Na mel men will launch at dawn tomorrow a standards and ways of life are alien mittees and councils in medical re- F widened hunt for the western ar ex- to the best instincts and traditions Is'earch, and was appointed health' De roi" I " ' idpreshtrafor thewichedisappered of his people." commissioner for the League of Na- Tetuolti rm press transport which disappeared -jLions at Geneva in 1925. He is the;Tuesday. ro-author with Dr. Arthur R. Cushny F or Dor m J.b The new program was announcedc M urphy Asks of a "Laboratory Guide in Pharma-F r oJ as dusk settled over Utah's jagged, M clogy" and has contributed exten- Isnow-crested mountains. A day-longc I " l sively to professional periodicals. The Board of Regents has selected effort ended with no report that anye Fo A S c iLast year's lecturer was Prof. John Taylor & Meyer, Detroit, as archi- of the ground searchers-on horse- G. Winter, chairman of the Latin de- tects for the two dormitory units back, snow-shoes and skiis- had1 Act partment and director of the division which will be built on Madison St., found the place where one said yes- of fine arts. The late Dean G. Carl President Alexander G. Ruthven an- terday he. saw possible "traces" of Huber of the Graduate School was nounced yesterday. the plane. Pleads For Quick Action awarded the honor in 1935, while the "Plans are now being prepared and Seventeen planes covered an esti-t 1934 lecture was given by Prof. Er- .imated 100 square miles as groundc AS I See No Cangeit is hoped that by Monday or Tues-t As I Sees No Change mine D. Case, director of the Museum day of next week they will be in the crews fought snow and ice today In Federal Deadline of Paleontology. a ofnt td Presi where the hunt centered in the ------ .------ han contractors ,rbss, Wasatch Mountains southeast of dent Ruthven said. here. DETROIT, Dec. 17.--()-A plea i CpS tHe indicated that the contract "Tomorrow," said A. E. Cahlan, that legislators submerge partisan would be let within the next few spokesman for Western Air, "the feelings at the special session of the weeks and that work on the two units s Legislature next Monday and speed- or B roadcast would begin as soon as possible. Tay- "The plan is to make a detailed ily enact an unemployment insur- for & Meyer drew plans for .the hunt all along the airline route be-r ane aw was voiced today by ovennex, to which the units will tween Milford and Salt Lake City, nor-Elect Frank Murphy. be adjacent.s extending 25 miles out on either side. Returning from a month vacation President Ruthven said that a There will be definite assignments in Florida, Washington and NewI Glee Club, Band, Selected I meeting of the Regents to select the for the participating planes so the York, Murphy conferred briefly with l usical Talent, Make Up contractor had not yet been set. territory will be covered thoroughly."s Dr. William Haber, chairman of the Over Milford, 180 miles southwest1 social security study commission, and Tentative Program Kim nmel Case May of Salt Lake City, pilot S. J. Samson Edmund C. Shields of Lansing, Na- Tosent the last radio report heard fromf tional Democratic committeeman, but Michigan students and organiza- CroTo Jury iodav the lost liner at 3:27 a.m., Mountain no announcement was made of the tions will be the principals in the na- 'Standard Time, Tuesday. The shipr discussions. tion-wide broadcast to be made from T'was due here from Los Angeles at Murphy declared he has been campus on January 22 T. Hawley The trial of Grant Kimmel, 66-4:10 a.m. studying the situation in various state Tapping, general secretary of the year old Lyndon township farmer In mid-afternoon, although no departments, especially the liquor Alumni Association and press rela- charged with assault with attempt change in plans was announced of- control commission. tions director of committee in charge to kill John Sheets, 32-year old De- "My one objective will be to give of the program disclosed yesterday. troit policeman, was expected to be ficdalong planes ranged farther south the administration of the liquor con- The carillon which The Daily was given to the jury today. an alonLake C tc i Th carllonwhic TheDail wasof Salt Lake City._ i trol act character and morality," he s Prosecuting Attorney Albert J. previously given to understand would said. "I am not reflecting upon any- e a featured part of the program Rapp began summing up his case yes- TAPPING TO VISIT PORTO RICO one. Speaking for myself alone I am probably will not take other tha' terday afternoon, but the court was determined that it will be adminis- small part in the program. Mr. Tap- recessed before he finished. He and T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tered on a high plane, without fa- ping id. the attorney for the defense are ex- tary of the Alumni Association and voritism, privilege, scandal or impro- T rogram must be triumph, he pected to conclude their arguments editor of the Michigan Alumnus, is priety"cTied. "Michiganetoday. leaving Sunday for a short vacation, fon thnedirst hianhas been picked Kimmel was on the stand yester- trip to Porto Rico. While there he' broadcasts to be given from the day morning for cross-examination. will visit several schools and colleges Get outdoors .famous American campus. Thous- . T " ands of dollars are being invested in * *"1"* *C*I Chiang's F'ate Is Undecided; Rebel, Loyalist Armies Clash Rebel Negotiators Confer; Government 'Will Never Come To Terms' Chang's Situation Said To Be Weak NANKING, China, Dec. 18-(Fri- dayI-(R')-Two armies fought today while secret negotiators debated set- tlement of a civil war that may cost the lives of both leaders, Generalis- simo Chiang Kai Shek and his captor, Marshal Chang Hsueh Liang. ,The Nanking regime, although as- serting its armies were highly suc- cessful on the Shensi battlefront and declaring its refusal to compromise with the rebel Marshal Chang Hsueh Liang, was known to be considering terms on which the leader of the up- rising at Sianfu, capital of Shensi, proposed to free Chiang and end the civil war. Loyalists Gain Loyal divisions were reported steadily driving the rebel troops back on Sianfu, over which government planes were flying in awesome dem- onstrations. It is in Sianfu that the government asserts the generalissimo is held captive, with several of his generals, by the rebel "Young Mar- shal." Deep interest centered, however, in the closely guarded conferences at Nanking, where James Elder, British adviser to Marshal Chang, was closet- ed with Madame Chiang Kai Shek, her brother-in-law, Dr. H. H. Kung, minister of finance and temporary head of the government, and her brother, T. V. Soong, exminister of finance and high in government councils. Elder arrived by air from Sianfu to communicate terms on which Mar- shal Chang proposes to settle the crisis which has plunged China into civil conflict. Only the highest lead- ers of the Nanking government were permitted to talk with him. Chang Scored The government, however, out- wardly maintained an unyielding at- titude toward Marshal Chang. The control Yuan (council) voted that the rebel chieftain should be con- demned to public execution for his rebellion, a crime "so enormous * * it cannot be expiated should he (Chang) die a thousand deaths." After the meeting between Elder and Nanking leaders an official spokesman asserted it "would be be- neath the dignity of the government to negotiate with Marshal Chang, whom we considered a bandit. Nan- king might be prepared to offer Mar- shal Chang assurances for his per- sonal safety but the government will never come to political terms with him." It was nevertheless known that ef- forts to obtain a negotiated settle- ment of the crisis were going forward. 7,000 Men Idle As Fibre Plant Enters Strike DETROIT. Dec. 17.--(P)-Officials of the United Automobile Workers of America today claimed more than 7,- 000 workmen are idle because of strikes in four auto plants. The list was augmented today by a strike at the National Automotive Fibres Co., manufacturers of floor pads, cushions and upholstery, where it was claimed 1,500 are idle as the re- sult of a strike shortly after 6 a.m. Strikers maintained picket lines but did not remain inside the factory as they have at the two plants of the Kelsey-Hayes Co., wheel manufac- turers and at the Aluminum Co., of America. While the strike at the fibre com- pany was being called, officials of the Kelsey Wheel Co. in Windsor, Ont., announced that 25 per cent of the men who struck there yesterday had returned to work this morning, and the plant had resumed operations. The strike at the fibre company was called, Stanley Novak, organizer, said, because ten union shop mem- bers had been dism.issed yesterday. The strikers also are demanding Wage increases of 25 cents an hour for both ben and women. Approximately 60 per cent of the employes are women, union officials declared. C. E. Carpenter, plant manager, de- Hinshaw, Otte, To Head Senior Ball Committee Other Dance Aides Named By Dewey; Conger Is Permanent Secretary Announcement of the appointment of Joseph Hinshaw, '37, Delta Kappa Epsilon, and John Otte, '37, Chi Psi, as co-chairmen of the Senior Ball was made yesterday by Allan Dewey, '37, Zeta Psi, president of the senior Half Employed Included "The result of these exemptions," Professor Haber claimed, "is that only half the gainfully employed will be included in the old age annuity system. Others are exempt and. since they do not pay, they build up no annuities 'from which they might benefit. If they should need aid after they reach 65, they would have to apply for it from the straight pen- sion fund, wait for an investigation of their resocurces and receive aid only according to their needs." Because there will be no annuities r 0onunued on Page 2 'Rest, Relax And, class.]Is Dr. Bell's Other members of the Senior Ball Committee named by Dewey include: Fred Buesser, Delta Tau Delta; Elli By ROBERT P. WEEKS Wade, Alpha Phi; Kathryn Ann Paradoxical vacations that end Keeler, Kappa Alpha Theta; William with the student more worn out than Anspach, Zeta Beta Tau and Roswell b Curtis, Chi Phi. before he left school were denounced Virginia Smith, Kappa Kappa by Dr. Margaret Bell of the Health Gamma, will head the Cap and Gown Service yesterday. "Rest, relax and Committee, which includes Betty get outdoors," was Dr. Bell's perscrip- Roura, Betsy Barbour; Fritz Buchan- tion for an enjoyable vacation that an, Delta Tau Delta; Arthur Ernst, was also satisfactory from the stand- Zeta Psi and Swift Corwin, Delta point of health. Kappa Epsilon. To students driving home and to Robert Friedman, Kappa Nu, was those who will use automobiles while named chairman of the Finance they are home, Dr. Bell issued a Committee, assisted by Ruth Clark, warning against careless driving and Helen Newberry; Marion Holden, Pi more particularly against driving af- Beta Phi; John Barker, Beta Theta ter having had anything to drink. An Pi; Ray Goodman, Sigma Alpha Mu; average of two students each year Joan Niles, Martha Cook; Evelyn fail to return to Ann Arbor after va- Bluestein, Alpha Epsilon Phi and cation. Dr. Warren G. Forsythe, Beth Trumbull, Mosher-Jordan. director of the Health Service has V acation Advice dlared that one of the most disheart- ening ways of starting out the new year back in school was to fall ill with some children's disease like mumps or measles after the second or third day back in Ann Arbor. Unfortunately this is not a rare occurrence, Dr. Bell stated, for stu- dents have a number of opportuni- ties for picking up such diseases when they are home and they do not exercise enough caution in avoiding children with these diseases or the rooms in which the children have occupied. Research concluded within the past month on the transmission of such diseases by means of droplets sus- pended in the air has revealed, Dr. Bell stated, that these droplets often remain in the air for several hours the programs, and more thousands s I1 IL 1 a1U Z Uu W will be spent on publicity. Michigan S by being picked first has been great- Reactionary Past Marley Says ly honored and has consequently, aV large part of the responsibility for By ALBERT MAYIO a specific contribtuion to religion the success of the rest of the series, Institutionalized religion has a have been forced out of the fold, he concluded. I questionable record as far as hu- only to be reclaimed by a later gen- Though Mr. Tapping estimated man progress is concerned, the' Rev. eration. These men made their con- that 20 well placed radio stations H. P. Marley said yesterday in an tributions because of the religious could cover the country so that every- interview with reference to a Daily nurture they received in the church, one would be able to hear the broad- editorial criticising, and a forum but in spite of the church which re- cast, more than 70 stations in the red letter written by Prof. Preston Slos- jected their teachings." network of the National Broadcast- son of, the history department, de- The church has definitely been ing Company will be used to insure fending the churches as institutions. conservative and at times reaction- as large an audience as possible. The "Both Professor Slosson and The ary, Mr. Marley declared, "but out of 85,000 alumni in all parts of the Daily editorial writer are correct in these periods of stagnation when the country are being notified of the their viewpoints, but they do not church has been static there always program, both as groups and as in- have a complete understanding of evolved a new spirit usually embodied dividuals. Thousands of others in- the religious problem today," Mr. in these individuals." terested in hearing the new carillon Marley said. "The church, which is The question of evaluating the will be sure to listen. institutionalized religion ,is quite dif- short comings of the church lies in The part which the Baird carillon ferent from the essence of religion the fiel dof social psychology which will play in the program is at present which may be found in isolated in- must answer the question of why the doubtful. Not yet sure whether its dividuals whom the church rejects mass of institutions moves more r } 2 ., S . 1 e s e z e e i! I