9 The Weather Snow flurries and decidedly colder today: tomorrow cloudy, snow, slightly warmer. LL ' A6F 4hr Iaitj Editorials The .oyalty Oath Must Be Revealed . . i VOL. XLVII No. 85 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JAN. 21, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Council Bans Social Events Of One House Phi Kappa Sigma Put On Social Probation Until March 20 For Violation Three Are Warned For Breaking Rules Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity was put on social probation yesterday un- til March 20 by the executive com- mittee of the Interfraternity Coun- cil for violating initiation rules, ac- cording to John Mann, '37, secretary. The action was provoked by the in- itiation of six men in November, none of whom had eligibility slips from the University and four of whom were pledged this semester and could not possibly have been initiated until next semester, Mann said. Violations of initiation rules by three other fraternities, Alpha Delta Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Zeta Beta Tau, resulted in warnings being issued to these fraternities, Mann said, but no further action was taken against them. Two rules in the Interfraternity Council constitution were violated by Phi Kappa Sigma. They were to the effect that no student shall be in- itiated without a certificate of scholastic eligibility issued by the dean of students, and that in no case shall a pledge having less honor points than hours be eligible for in- itiation unless he has at least 11 hours and 14 honor points in the semester in which he is pledged and then he shall be eligible for initia- tion the following semester. The three fraternities that were warned violated the rule concerning eligibility slips, Mann said. Though all three were found guilty by the executive committee, Mann said that the committee recognized certain ex- tenuating circumstances and for this reason did no more than warn them against further violations. Social probation, Mann explained, is an elimination of the fraternity's social activities insofar as they con- cern others through dinners, parties, dances and similar functions. Freak Weather Covers Nation As City Suffers Spikes And Rubber Soles Become Fashion Here As Sleet Descends Spiked golf shoes rose meteroically as an Ann Arbor fashion note yester- darubber soled sport shoes became "the" thing, professors started their classes late, and the taxi-cab busi- ness enjoyed an unprecedented mid- week boom all because the .17 inches of precipitation recorded by the Ob- servatory yesterday was accompanied by temperatures below 30 degrees. Travel Bad Eccentric and incongruous as the preventative measures were, their effectiveness was shown by the fact that no students were reported treat- ed by the Health Service for fall in- juries. Police records manifested the same spirit of caution among drivers, for only two accidents were reported, one of which resulted in the injury of Sue Biethan of 408 E. Kingsley St. She was struck as she walked across State St. at Lawrence St., police said. The state highway department re- ported last night through the As- sociated Press that travel conditions were the worst experienced this win- ter and that the same sleet that was impeding motorists had grounded all air traffic in Michigan. Nation-Wide Distress Distress over the weather was na- tionwide, according to the Associated Press, for while rain trickled off the silk hats of disgruntled diplomats at President Roosevelt's inauguration in Washington, sub - zero weather plagued nine western states, th'eat- ening California's $100,000,000 citrus crop. sorbed by the frozen ground. Middle Western rivers are ap- proaching the 1913 level because the unseasonable rains cannot be ab- The Mid-Western flood bowl has been so extensively inundated accord- ing to Associated Press reports, that radio equipped coast guard boats are being rushed on flat cars to flood ,John Held, Jr., Cites Amount of College Talent In America Famous Cartoonist Is Here To Get Local Atmosphere For Varsity Broadcast By CHARLES SCHUH John Held, Jr., famous writer and cartoonist who is to be the master of ceremonies on the Pontiac Varsity Hour broadcast tomorrow night formed a quick opinion of Michigan's campus as he got off the bus from Detroit in front of the Union yester- day. "This is the finest campus I ever slipped on," was his remark as he; recounted how he fell on the icy sur- face on State St. to become morec intimately acquainted with Ann Ar- bor proper. Of medium height and dressed in' the more comfortable campus styles' befitting an artist, he seemed little1 more than a college student as he Alcide Benoit Admits Killing State Trooper Paroled Convict Captured At Edge Of Monroe By State Troopers MONROE, Jan. 20.-(/P)-Sheriff Joseph J. Bairley of Monroe County said tonight that Alcide (Frenchy) Benoit, 24, paroled convict, had con- fessed that he slugged and shot Michigan State Trooper Richard F. Hammond to death this morning. Benoit was captured at the edge of Monroe an hour earlier by four state troopers and taken to the Monroe County jail, where he was questioned by state and county officials. Spent Night In Barn Prosecutor, Francis C. Ready and State Police Captain Lawrence A. Lyon declared Benoit admitted .in an oral statement that he fired the fatal shot, but insisted that it was fired during a fight with the trooper, and not while the latter was in a dazed condition. After handcuffing Hammond to the mailbox post, the officials quoted Benoit as saying, and firing the fatal shot in the process, he fled, hiding in a field while a posse flashed lights within a few feet of him. After the posse had gone, he said, he spent the remainder of the night and all of to- day in a barn near Monroe. He admitted, the officials said, that he had committed robberies in Flint, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Pontiac and Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland and Chi- cago. Extensive Hunt The capture of Benoit came after one of the most extensive manhunts in the history of Michigan, partici- pated in by state police from Mich- igan, Ohio and Indiana and by city, and county police throughout south- eastern Michigan. I e- J-Hop Reservations To Be Made Today Independent students who plan to attend the J-Hop and who desire booth accommodation are asked to meet at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 319, the Union, Frederick V. Geib, '38, Union executive council member who is in charge of booth accommoda- tions, announced yesterday. Fraternities planning to occupy booths must present typewritten lists of at least 25 couples who are to occupy the booths and their ticket numbers to Geib at 721 Tappan Ave. or at the Union. Chaperons are to be included in the list. sat comfortably smoking his pipe and chatting pleasantly. Refusing to talk seriously until after he had ad- journed to a beer tavern for dinner where he hoped to absorb some of the atmosphere, and stopping on the way to inspect the Student Publica- tions Building, which he said made him wish he could be starting out again, he later took a more serious attitude He said that the only reason he came to Ann Arbor two days before the broadcast was that he might get in the atmosphere of college life again. To make this series of Var- sity Shows he gave up a syndicated contract because he wanted the con- tracts and experience to be gained by the time spent with college men. The campuses of colleges and uni- versities he considers a gold mine for talent. "Practically every great play, mu- sical review and big comedy picture has been written by men who were college students," he said as he ex- pressed his enthusiasm for tomorrow night's broadcast. Of his own success, he is quite in- different. He made a fortune from his cartoon the College Flapper, and has built many of his cartoons around college life. "It just happened that I crossed the path of Time as Time crossed my path and we clicked," is the way he philosophically explained the suc- cess which has come to him as the result of his outstanding work in the fields of writing, drawing and sculp- ture. NBC Radio Men Here To Equip For Broadcast I Technicians Find Music Played On Bells Must Be Slow And Clear League Offers TwoProposals To Employes Action Seen On Situation; Finance Committee May Review Complaints Students Granted Right To Organize Inauguration Of President Held In Rain Roosevelt Dedicates 2nd Strike Unemployed Now Totals 135,000 As Parley Continues . I Administration To H Unfortunate Citizens elip Alternative proposals for ameliora- tion of working conditions in the Michigan League were put forward last night by Mrs. Ellen S. Stanley, business manager and member of the Board of Governors, in a meet- ing of League directors and employes, The Daily was told by workers in the. establishment immediately following the conference. Mrs. Stanley called the meeting of 25 men and women students em- ployed in the League to discuss the wage-increase requests in a letter submitted by their employe organ- ization with a claimed membership of approximately 100. In reply to the employe request of a $2 food allowance plus a minimum hourly wage of 1.3 cents for all full- time employes, embodied in a letter to the board of governors, which failed to act on the' question in its Monday meeting, Mrs. Stanley sug- gests, The Daily understands, that the proposal may be brought before the finance committee of the League in the meeting next week. The Two Plans If the League budget will not per- mit the requested increase, it is understood that the business director will ask for a report from the em- ployes on these two alternatives: (1.) A cut in the number of work- ers in the building to raise the wages of those who remain. (2.) An hour's work for a definite plate meal. This information was given by em- ployes, but Mrs. Stanley refused to comment on the meeting. .The employe organization, includ- igapproximately all workers in the building, will meet before the end of the week to take a stand on the proposals, according to Robert, Fox, '38E, newly-elected chairman. Already In Effect Mrs. Stanley, meeting with the workers, along with Miss Edna Hamil, director of the dining rooms, and' Miss Ethel McCormick, social direc- tor, insisted that, in answer to the second request of the employes' let- ter, the merit system requested was already in effect, The Daily under- stands. The students were reputedly told that the third point of the letter asking for permission for an em- ploye organization to present needs . of the group to the employers, was granted. No one will be discharged for activity in such an organization or for expressing his own opinion, it is understood. The employe organization in the League is not affiliated with any other workers group. Richard Clark, '37, was named chairman of the committee by Miller Sherwood, '37E, president of the Men's Council, to take the place of Thomas Sullivan, '37, who resigned. Thousands Chilled By Cold Downpour WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.-UP)- Franklin D. Roosevelt, standing bare- headed while rain pelted relentlessly into his face, pronounced the Pres- idential oath today and dedicated his second administration to helping the economically unfortunate. Thousands of his fellow citizens spread across the capitol plaza, too chilled and soggy for prolonged dem- onstrations of enthusiasm. Thou- sands more lined Pennsylvania Ave. to see the President pass and watch the parade which followed. Cold Handicaps Police estimated that some 150,- 000 or 200,000 people saw at least portions of the ceremonies. So penetrating was the cold and the downpour that hundreds began leaving Capitol Plaza soon after Mr. Roosevelt commenced his speech. Those who remained heard only scat- tered phrases, for the rain, drumming on a canopy of umbrellas, created a clatter that the loud-speaker system could not overcome. The speech was more than half-delivered before there was a murmur of applause. Then, the President, approaching his cli- max raised his voice: "I see millions whose daily lives in city and on farm continue under conditions labelled indecent by a so- called polite society half a century ago. I see millions denied education, recreation - and the opportunity to better their lot and the lot of their children. Speaks 'In Hope' "I see millions lacking the means to buy the products of farm and fac- tory and by their poverty denying work and productiveness to many other millions. I see one third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nour- ished "It is not in despair that I paint you that picture. I paint it for you in hope-because the nation, seeing and understanding the injustice in it, proposes to paint it out. The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much. It is whether we provide enough for those who have too little." Peace Council Plans Demands From Congress Application of pressure for peace legislation in the present Congress through writing letters to members of the two houses became a salient point in the anti-war program of the Peace Council at its meeting last night in the Union. The Peace Council is enlisting the support of.all campus organizations interested in the peace movement in order to obtain a continuous flow of letters to representatives as ques- tions arise concerning peace during the remainder of the presentsession. The anti-war film, "Dealers in Death," will be shown in Natural Sci- ence Auditorium Feb. 17 and 18. The program, to last an hour and a quar- ter, is sponsored by the council, and an admission price of 10 cents has been set to cover the actual costs Speaks Here Tonight Radio technicians arriving in Ann Arbor from the Chicago offices of the National Broadcasting Co. made, ready yesterday to set up their equip- ment as the completed Michigan pro- gram for the Pontiac Varsity Hour was being groomed for the dress re- hearsals this afternoon and tomor- row. Their first point of interest was the conditions which would determine whether or not the Baird Carillon could be broadcast. Careful investigation of the carillon tower disclosed that the bells might be broadcast with certain reserva- tions. Climbing. into the ice covered tow- er to listen to the bells at close range as the microphone would pick them up, they found that music played for the broadcast must be neither too fast nor too high or the result- ing music would be blurred by the continuing resonance of the bells. Further, notes of the higher register of the carillon keyboard would neces- sitate too wide a musical range for proper microphone pick-up. Fortu- nately, the numbers picked by Mr. Pratt for the program were confined to the lower and middle registers of the keyboard. Since a sheet of ice covered the bells and muffled their tone, the technicians were not yetprepared to say definitely that the carillon pro- gram could be included. Final tests are to be made today over a radio line and through a test board to deter- mine exactly the feasibility of the carillon's inclusion in the broadcast. The remainder of the program to (Continued on Page 2) EDWARD TOMLINSON r Lecture Story Will Be Given By Tomlinson' Writer To Show Colored Movies Of Haitian Life In Lecture Today Edward Tomlinson, lecturer and writer on Latin-American affairs, will present a lecture story, "Haitian Ad- venture," with color motion pictures at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium under the auspices of the University Oratorical Association. The lecture, the fifth on the cur- rent Oratorical Association series, will show the highlights of Mr. Tomlin- son's latest photographic expedition among -the descendants of the first African slaves in the Americas which he made last spring. Mr. Tomlinson left early in April with photographer, assistants and 500 pounds of cameras and equip- ment, on an expedition which took him to every section of the Island Republic of Haiti. "Haitian Adven- ture" is the first complete lecture story, with natural color motion pic- tures, of the customs, folkways, relig- ions and civilization of the country called "the black man's America." Mr. Tomlinson, in addition to his work as a writer and lecturer, has been a radio commentator on Latin- American affairs. He Ndas in charge of the broadcast of the Pan-Amer- ican Conference for the National Broadcasting Co. in December. He was born in Georgia and at- tended Georgia Normal College and the University of Edinburgh in Scot- land. Gargoyle Presents J-HopIssue Today' Pictures of the "10 prettiest co- eds" and an article on "The John Townsend Plan," are featured in the J-Hop issue of the Gargoyle which goes on sale today. The co-eds were selected by the Gargoyle staff on the basis of "types" of beauty. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. Workers Alleviate Crisis By Returning To Jobs Vlurphy, Perkins Confer At Capital Buick Plant At Flint Now Shut Down; GM Refuses Peace With Sit-Downers DETROIT, Jan. 20.-UP)-Add- ional shutdowns spread unemploy- nent because of strikes to more than 135,000 General Motors wage-earners tonight as the Federal government ent its aid to untangle the coditions >aralyzing a giant industrial con- ern. Secretary Perkins and Gov. Frank Vurphy sat for the second successive lay in labor department offices at Washington with leaders in the auto- notive dispute. Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., president of General Motors; William S. Knud- en, executive vice-president; John Thomas Smith, general counsel, and Donaldson Brown, finance committee hairman, were today's conferees. Martin To Washington Yesterday it was John L. Lewis, chairman of the Committee for In- dustrial Organization backing the au- tomotive strikes, who talked for nine hours with Murphy and Miss Per- kins. On Lewis' call, Homer Martin, president of the United Automobile Workers of America, and John Bro- phy, C.I.O. director, headed for Washington from Detroit tonight. Effects of widespread U.A.W.A. strikes closed the Buick Motor Co. plant at Flint and the Fisher Body Co. plant at Baltimore, both General Motors divisions, today. The Buick shutdown threw an additional 10,- 000 out of work and brought to ap- proximately 38,000 the number idle in Flint, leaving the A.C. Spark Plug plant the only G.M. unit operating in that city. Anti-Strike 'Sit-Down' One of the principal obstacles to settlement negotiations remained the continued presence of union strikers in two Flint Fisher body plants, scene of riots Jan. 11 that injured 27 per- sons and caused Governor Murphy to call out 2,300 national guardsmen General Motors has declined to ne- gotiate with the union while these men it describes as "clearly trespass- ers" remain in the plants. Martin, leaving for Washington tolight, said "there will be no change in the union's determination to hold the men in the plants until negotiations with the company are completed." Non-union employes of the Balti- more Fisher plant prepared for a "sit-down" demonstration in Wash- ington tomorrow unless the federal government takes steps to end the strikes. They voted such action to show "that the employes are satis- fied with working conditions here (in Baltimore) and do not want to be- long to a union." Baltimore Strike A Chevrolet plant adjoining the Baltimore Fisher factory is scheduled to shut down tomorrow affecting 1,- 200 workers. Settlement of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. strike today and brightened prospects in the Libby-Owens-Ford strike were welcomed by automobile manufacturers whose stocks of glass had dwindled to small proportions, endangering production schedules. The glass shortage has been cred- ited with responsibility for part of the General Motors shutdowns. The striking Federation of Flat Glass Workers are affiliated with the C.I.O. and have a "joint council" with the automobile workers. Chrysler Chir Will Sing Here On Feb. 14 A concert by the Chrysler Choir of Detroit will be given at 3 p.m. Sun- day, Feb. 14, in Hill Auditorium. The concert is being sponsored by the Men'srCommittee on Dormitories, the University Musical Society and the Glee Club. The proceeds will go to the dormitory fund. Tickets will be 25 cents each and will go on sale Monday, according to Aggressiveness And Initiative Most Important To Employers Rev. Gallagher, 70 Years Old, Dies In Detroit Late Bishop Considered Influence Protecting Father Coughlin DETROIT, Jan. 20.--VP)-The Most Rev. Michael J. Callagher, bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Detroit, died in Providence Hospital tonight. He was 70 years old. The prelate, who had been suffer- ing from a throat ailment 10 days, was taken to the hospital only today. The bishop's housekeeper became alarmed when he failed to awaken from a sound sleep late in the day and she summoned a physician. Dr. Ray Andries examined Bishop Gallagher and ordered him taken to the hospital immediately. He died within a few hours. Bishop Gallagher broke into the nation's headlines in the months im- mediately preceding the Presidentia: election as the defender of the Rev Fr. Charles E. Coughlin, of Royal Oak, head of the National Union for Social Justice and strong opponent of the Roosevelt administration. Upon one occasion Bishop Gal- lagher was called upon to defend Fr Coughlin before Pope Pius. By WILLIAM SIZEMORE Aggressiveness and initiative are the traits appreciated most highly in prospective employes, Edwin W. Old- ham of the Firestone Tire Co. tech- nical department, who is here inter- viewing mechanical and chemical en- gineers, said yesterday. Not only are these qualities impor- tant in hiring men but equally so in firing them, he continued. "For," he said, "those lacking these personality attributes are the first to go in time of depression when retrenchment movements are taking place." Scholastic ability is highly desired by the Firestone Co., but it is sec- ondary to a likable personality, Mr. Oldham said. A neat appearance, the ability to is conducted with the idea of giving the man an opportunity to sell him- self to the company but at the same time with the idea of selling the com- pany to the applicant, Mr. Oldham said. A student who has worked his way through college has a distinct ad- vantage over other prospective em- ployes, he said. A man with prac- tical experience in the line he is studying is also at a great advantage, he pointed out. Members of the technical person- nel department are generally well which they are hiring men. Mr. Old- acquainted with the division for ham said. Many times, he declared, applicants are interviewed with a specific job in mind. .) .l By TUURE TENANDER Dean Clare E. Griffin and Prof. Charles L. Jamison, both of the busi- ness administration school, yesterday agreed that shortening of working hours was definitely not a means of encouraging business recovery. Both men thus lent their approval to the statement made last week by1 the Brookings Institute to the effect that shortening of hours could not be construed to be an aid to increased activity in industry. The application of restrictions to production , was also described by Dean Griffin and Professor Jamison as a temporary measure to be resort- ed to in the case of emergencies such as depression periods. The report issued by Brookings said in part: "Whatever merit production restric- Den rif n ad. "This process can i be justified from the humane and so- ciological viewpoint," he added, "but it does not increase the material ad- vantages of labor as a whole and does nothing to stimulate business, for the purchasing power of labor remains the same although distributed among a larger number," The Brookings report stated that emphasis should be placed on keeping the price of goods down, rather than upon raising prices. "The farmer, the person on fixed income and the person who is steadily employed would all be better off if the price of manufactured goods were kept at as low a level as possible," Professor Jamison said, "even if the ratio between wages and prices were kept constant." Brookings Working Hour Report Approved By Griffin And Jamison DenGrfi si. Ti poes a