The Wcat:her Occasional Iiht rain today and possibly tomorrow; con- tinued cool. SW 43& Iaitij Editorials Spring Inventory . .. VOL. XLVII No. 146 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 27, 1937 PRICE 5 CENTS CIO Talkers Ask Election Of Laborites Kennedy Foresees Crash Similar To One In 1929 If Labor Advance Fails Director Praises Murphy, Roosevelt Oarsmen Gone, Busmen Strike; Londoners Fear For Coronation r _ _ _ ___ H erndoi Free As High Court Four-Fifths O f T he Bells Of St. Betsy Are Ringing Again Repetition Of Flood Meantime, Edward Forces Remroval Of Pubalicatioin DescribingHis Reign LONDON; April 26.- P) -The King's oarsmen were missed today because they won't haul His Ma-I love, abdication and coronation drew zlso to a quiet end. Six months ago tomorrow, the American-born Wallis Warfield Simpson obtained a pro- bationary divorce decree from her second husband, Ernest Aldrich Simpson. The date marks an end to the pro-I Limits Five-Four De Georgia Se Infrin 1 d atu e ' The girls of the Betsy Barbour need straLU e ain their ears no more for .the tinkle of the dinner bell. Four of the five dinner gongs which were stolen cision Holds from the dormitory now have been returned, so that the "Soup's On" is edition LaW now brought to them with more force tnd resonance. Disaster Threatens As Rivers Overflow jesty down the Thames tomorrow, bationary period and Mrs. Simpson's and London worried lest a bus strike attorneys may make the decree final tsar Coronation Day. by formal action within the next The city's 40,000 busmen want a two weeks. Legality Of Ancient - - :, ti InJ ./k Do tA U Progress of the American labor movement depends upon the election of pro-labor candidates to all public offices, two representatives of the Committee for Industrial Organiza- tion told approximately 350 persons last night in Pattengill Auditorium. "The American labor movement stands on one principle," Rinaldo Cappellini, regional director of the CI0, said. "That principle is that we will see that the representatives of our government will be the represen- tatives of our people, who will see that we can live as better men and better women." Praises Roosevelt, Murphy J. V. Kennedy, member of the De- troit Council of the CIO, was the othei union speaker. The Washte- naw Conference for the Protection of Civil Rights sponsored the meeting. "The Chambers of Commerce in America have worked hard for a good many years to see that anyone who owned anything was protected," Mr. Cappellini stated. "A few months ago, however, the people took it upon themselves to vote for themselves. "President Roosevelt is a friend of America," he declared. He also praised Gov. Frank Murphyn' for his policies in recent CI-spon- sored. strikes in Michigan. SWF Called Good Idea Following his address he said, "The Student Workers' Federation is an excellent idea. Its organizing on all the campuses of the country would be a fine idea. We need college men as leaders." Mr. Kennedy predicted another crash similar to that of 1929 if the labor movement fails. He emphasized the theory that the increased production of a speed-up system would flood the market and create unemployment. Resolutions Approved The meeting unanimously approved a resolution presented by the Rev. H. P. Marley of the Unitarian Church containing the following points: 1) To demand the rihts of organizing and collective bargaining from Wash- tenaw county employers; 2) to disap- prove of "lirge-scale deputizing or unprovoked arrests" by law enforce- ment agencies; 3) to "condemn such legislation as the Palmer and Brake bills, passed by the Senate at Lansing April 7, making it a felony for em- ployes to engage in sit-down strikes and for employers to deal with sit- down strikers"; and 4) to approve the Murphy-proposed bill to "set up a Michigan statute governing labor re- lationships in this State in accord- ance 'with the Wagner Act," Prof. Hobart R. Coffey of the Law School said he believed, after an in- terview with Sheriff Jacob Andres, that Sheriff Andres was sincere in his statement that he would not use his "vigilantes" to prevent labor ac- tivities in this county.- Band W11 Play Spring Concert At 8:15_Today Culminating several months of. practice, the Varsity Concert Band will present its annual Spring Con-] cert at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Audi- torium under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli. There will be no charge for admission . "The band has been pointing to- wards this concert ever since the lat- ter part of January," Professor Re- velli said. He added that this is one of the most difficult recitals the band has ever attempted. The overture "Oberon" will open the program. This, according to Pro- fessor Revelli, is considered one of the hardest pieces for a band to play, since it is especially difficult for the reeds and clarinets. A brand new piece, "Mannen Veen," a tone poem about the Isle of Man, will be presented. This piece by Haydn Wood will have an organ ac- companiment by Robert Campball, '37SM. Everett. Kisinger. '37SM. Max Mit- 7 z/2 hour day, rather than the present eight, and have threatened to strike at midnight April 30. The labor con- ciliation department sought to effect a truce, but conferees reached no decision in a five-hour session to- day. They were to meet again to- morrow. The King revives an historic custom on his journey down river to open the National Museum at Greenwich, but he chose a modern naval launch rather than the gold state barge with its crimson-coated oarsmen. And as the day for crowning Kingt George VI approached with a crown- ing fanfare of preparation, Edward: of Windsor won withdrawal in Eng- land of "Coronation Commentary," the book which referred to his tenure on the throne as marked in part by "muddling, fuddling and meddling." The man who might have been the central figure in the forthcoming coronation pageantry received also an apology from the publishers. Geoffrey Dennise wrote the book (which United States publishers said, would be released regardless of the London action). Another chapter in the drama of . London newspapers expressed grave 1 alarm over the bus strike prospect, and some feared such a walkout WASHINGTON, April 26.-(IP)- might extend to subway and subur- The Supreme Court today relieved ban transportation. Angelo Herndon, Negro Communist, Such a strike could "do serious in- jury to the people of London" if it of an 18-year prison sentence, find- remained in effect during the Cor- ing that his conviction under an an- onation with its expected hundreds cient Georgia anti-sedition statute of thousands of tourists, the Times j was unconstitutional. remarked. By a five-to-four decision, it held The bus workers had insisted they . L I .i i G NU.7 wvl ncl 11 CLLt 111°u1 J l CU "Ii11CY } i axwY{ 1xxl.lxV VIE..( 'VALV J' Y Plants Closed By UAW Action Non-Automotive Factories Are Affected By Detroit; Saginaw Strikes DETROIT, April 26,-/P)---Strikes directed by the United Automobile Workers of America affected four Michigan plants today, "only two of them connected with the automotive industry. In Detroit, 300 sit-down strikers left the Parke Davis & Co. pharma- ceutical plant, which employs 2,100 persons, but not until one group of strikers had turned a fire hose on a police detachment that included high I departmental officials and Federal narcotic agents. That incident occurred at the en- trance of the sixth-floor drug and chemical department, where $2,000,- 000 worth of narcotics and medicine were stored. Twenty-five men were detained for investigation. In Saginaw, 700 members of the United Automobile Workers, most of them from other plants, picketed the Baker-Perkins, Inc., plant, where baking machinery is manufactured. UAWA officials said a strike was called because 60 employes were dis- charged after a short-lived sit-down strike Friday. The Nelson Brothers foundry and the Saginaw steering gear division of General Motors Corp. were closed because union employes left their jobs to join the picket line. Police opened a lane through the] would accept no compromise and that they would not agree to a month's truce todcarry through the Coronation period. Liberal Group Will Oro'aniz At U nionTo da Offers Program Of Peace, Security, Equality, Broad Social Life,_Civil Rights A membership and organizational meeting of students interested in ed- ucation and action on peace, eco- nomic security, social equality, aca- demic freedom and broadening cam- pus social life will be held at 8 p.m. Loday in Room 319 of the Union. A constitution and recommenda- tions on affiliating the local group with the national American Student Uion will be presented by a com- mittee appointed at the last meeting, April 3. Steps will be taken tonight toward the formal organization of the group, it has been announced. The constitutional committee of the group, temporarily meeting as the Student Union, consists of Rich- ard Clark, '37, president of the Stu- dent Christian Association, William Barndt, '37, associ'ate business man- ager of The Daily, Marshall D. Shul- man, '37, associate editor of The Daily, Tom Downs, '39, president of the Student Workers Federation, and Joseph Bernstein, '39, president of the Student Alliance. "This organization will offer an ex- cellent opportunity for those students interested in furthering the realiza- tion of the five objectives, peace, se- curity, equality, academic freedom and a broader social life, to make themselves effective," Richard Clark, member of the constitutional com- mittee, said last night. "The 1,500 students who demonstrated against war last week," he stated, "will have an organization to continue their peace activity throughout the year through a permanent organization that will cooperate with existing groups working for the same objec- tives." 3 PEYhae Cn l.o- Of Railroad Empire NEW YORK, April 26.- (P) -A that in the Herndon case, at least, the law infringed upon constitutional liberties by placing "vague and inde-' terminate" limits upon the rights of freedom of speech and assembly. Hughes Delivers Opinion Herndon was convicted on a charge of possessing radical literature. Whether the decision had the ef- fect of invalidating the old Georgia law, enacted during the turbulent Re- construction era, or was confined to the case at issue was a matter of controversy after the opinion had been read. Delivering the majority opinion for himself, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, and Associkte Justices Har- land Fiske Stone, Louis D. Brandeis and Benjamin Nathan Cardozo, Jus- tice Owen J. Roberts repeatedly as- serted that no proof had been ad- duced that Herndon had read the literature in question, or had ad-f vacated the armed overthrow o'f the! government.! Sta.tute Termed Dragnet "The statute as construed and ap- plied," said Roberts, "amounts mere- ly to a dragnet which may enmesh anyone who agitates for a change of government if a jury can be persuad- ed that he ought to have foreseen that his words would have some ef- fect in the future conduct of others. "No reasonably ascertainable stan- dard of guilt is prescribed, so vague and indeterminate are the boundaries thus set to the freedom of speech and assembly that the law necessarily vi- olates the guarantee of liberty em- bodied in the Fourteenth Amend- ment." .Annual School Music Festival HereSaturday The second annual high school mu- sic festival to be held Saturday, May 1, at Morris Hall, Ann Arbor High School, Newberry Hall and the Glee Club room at the Union will attract between 500 and 550 high school music students, according to advance notices. Prof. William D. Revelli of the School of Music is chairman of the festival committee. Judges are Prof. Joseph Brinkman of the School of Music; Leon Ruddick, Cleveland; Harold Bachman, University of Chi- cago; Clarence Warmelin, Chicago; and Leonard Falcone, Michigan State College. There will be competition in the playing of 18 solo band instruments, 6 solo orchestra instruments and va- rious ensembles. An added feature of this year's program is a division for junior high school students. The latest was returned to the dormitory addressed to Elizabeth White but the third was returned in Saround-about fashion. It was left in the corner of the office in the Burton Memorial Tower addressed to "Wil- mot Pratt, Bell Ringer, Music School," and was immediately re- turned to the dormitory again to summon the girls to their hash. The bells first began to disappear around Christmas Vacation and have :een returning and disappearing since. At one time all were gone so that the girls had to depend upon their watches to ascertain when to appease their appetites. The gongs are the gift of a former graduating class. Nelson Namned Pharmacology H[eadAtTulne Will Remain To Complete Present Semester Here, Leaves In Fall Dr. Erwin E. Nelson of the phar- macology department of the Medical School has been appointed head of the department of pharmacology at Tulane University, it was made known yesterday. Dr. Nelson will finish the present semester at the University and will leave for Tulane on July 1. He will assume his teaching duties next fall and will utilize the summer to pre- pare for his new position. Taught Here Since 1919 After he was graduated from Drury College, Dr. Nelson came to the University and here received his nas- ter's degree, his doctor of philosophy degree and a doctor of medicine de- gree. ' He also studied at Johns Hop- kins University and at the University of Munich. Dr. Nelson has been on the faculty of the Medical School since 1919. He has published more than 30 scientific papers, chiefly in the field of bioassay, and is editor of the pharmacology section of Biological Abstracts. He is also a member of the revision com- mittee of the United States Pharma- copoeia. Worked In Washington Since 1931 he has been consultant pharmacologist to the Food and Drug Administration of the United States Department of Agriculture at Wash- ington, D.C. In 1935 he was given two years leave to organize and ex- pand the Pharmacology Laboratory of this organization, and during this time acted as Chief of the Division of the Department of Pharmacology, established as a result of the expan- sion. Dr. and Mrs. Nelson and their two daughters will make their home in New Orleans. Dr. Nelson is replacing Prof. John T. Halsey of Tulane University. RUSSIA TO BUILD AIRCRAFT MOSCOW, April 26.-(P)-A Rus- sian plan to become in 1937 the first nation to produce airplanes on an assembly line, as a step toward mass production of military aircraft, was disclosed tonight by Michael Kagano- vich, vice-commissar for the defense industry." IingSteps Out; Queen Is Sa fe --W ith8 Cops It was shortly after midnight on Saturday night. Jane Edmonson, '37, one of the Gargoyle's 10 most beautiful women, and King Louis, '40M, were sitting alone in the Ed- monson living room. One lamp was burning. Ali was quiet. Suddenly a shadowy figure darted past the window. The two parlor oc- cupants saw it but reasoned that itj was a member of the household and nothing. However, when the figure again loomed out of the darkness, and a face pressed itself against the win- dow, Louis drew himself up to his full height and prepared for action.! They watched the prowler as he fumbled about in his pockets, final- ly locating a ring of keys. The tinkle of the metal against the door was too much for the on-lookers, and Louis carefully crept out of the room and crawled to another door of the house. With bated breath he opened1 the door and stepped out into the darkness. He yelled at the man, who threw one glance in Louis' direction. and then hit the open road. Louis took up the pursuit with gusto. The chase proceeded over fences, through back yards andoverdback porches. Louis gained steadily on the fugitive and finally cornered him. After giving his adversary a face full of flying knuckles, Louis emerged, on top. He dragged his prisoner back to the Edmonson home where, in the, meantime, Miss Edmonson had called (Continued on Page 2) L. G. Christman ElectionVictor By Big M 'argin Lewis G. Christman, 1331 Olivia Ave., was elected alderman from the seventh ward in a general election held yesterday to fill the vacancy created on the city council by the resignation of Prof. Leigh J. Young of the Forestry school who resigned to be a candidate for the presidency of the council. Christman, a Republican, defeated the Democratic candidate, Fred Nor- ris, 1423 Henry St., by a vote of 289 to 180. Christman captured both' precincts of the ward, the first by a vote of 60 to 50, and the second by a vote of 229 to 130. Christman came to Ann Arbor five years ago as vice-president of the First National Bank, and is at the present time liquidating agent of the bank and is also engaged in personal trust and legal worl. He is a grad- uate of the Law School. Nurse, Three Men Are Ilurt In Crash Miss Vera McCully, 23 year old graduate nurse at St. Joseph's hos- pital and three Detroit men were seriously injured at 9:45 p.m. Sun- day in a head-on automobile collision on U.S. 12 about five miles west of Chelsea. The others injured were Ernest' Combers, Robert B. Aylesworth and Malcolm F. Detlefs. Miss McCully suffered a fractured skull and" a possible fractured right arm. Combers received a fractured forehead, Aylesworth has fractures of both upper and lower jaws and Detlefs suered a fractured knee cap. According to Detlefs, the accident occurred when Miss McCully, who was travelling east alone, turned out to pass two eastbound cars and lost control of her own machine, which swerved to the left over the rain soaked pavement directly into the path of Detlef's car, Curtis-Wright Corp., Official To Lecture T. P. Wright, vice-president of theI Curtis-Wright Corp., will be the prin- cipal speaker at the first annual ban- _ - ,, af ..f h , Tv ;4 fi, r E ,,,,,__ .n ThamIes River High Water Forces 6,000 To Leave Lonon, Out., Homes Ohio Swells Along 900l e Course 43-Foot Level Predicted In East Liverpool, O. Traffic May Stop (By The Associated Press) With memories of the disastrous January floods still fresh, residents of six states on both sides of the Alle- ghanies were alarmed tonight as con- tinuous rains sent rivers and streams out of their banks. The high water area spread into Canada, with London, Ontario, evac- uating 6,000 persons as the Thames River, rising six inches an hour under the pulse of rain-swollen tributaries, reached its highest level in 40 years. Boats were lacking in the Canadian city to remove several thousand more residents from homes endangered when a breakwater over~flowed. Pittsb.urgh Endangered The situation by rivers: Ohio-Swelling for 900 miles from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati, a 43-foot level predicted at East Liverpool, O., which would halt street car and in- terurban traffic. Police closed Pitts- burgh wharves and business men soughtato protect the city's "Golden Triangle" with sandbag barricades. Lowland residents moved to upper stories or fled the sections. Potomac-Business suspended at Cumberland, Md., as water rolled through downtown streets. CQnemaugh-Schools closed, trol- leys stopped and business at a stand- still at Johnstown, Pa. Numerous highways covered with water. Trains rerouted away from washed out tracks. Some villages isolated. Allegheny and Monongahela-ris- ing a half to a foot an hour and spill ing into the Ohio at Pittsburgh, Tracks washed out. Ohio Rises At Wheeling Robinson-Bridge washed out at Drange, Va., and party of four or five autoists feared drowned. The streams swelled from the fall of from 48 to 72 hours of rain on the Allegheny watersheds. Activity was feverish at Wheeling, W. Va. last night asall forces were mobilized to fight the swell of the Ohio. A hun-, ired WPA workers were ordered to stand by with sand-loaded trucks. A rnearby CCC camp was ready to rush another hundred workers .to the scene. The river was expected to go to 48 feet there Wednesday night. .At the predicted crest the rivers will have inundated the homes of hundreds of flood-weary families in the nearby communities of Sharps- burg, Millvale, Etna, McKees Rocks and other sections. In the downtown "Golden Tri- angle," of Pittsburgh the city's bi- lion-dollar business district, mer- chants and others prepared for any eventuality, even though observers assured them the 36-foot stage would not bring serious damage to most of this busy, congested area. Glacier Effects Will Be Subject Of DalySpeech The effect of the glaciers of the Ice Age on present geological forma- tions will be graphically described by with illustrations by Prof. Reginald A. Daly of the geology department of Harvard University, at 4:15 today in Natural Science Auditorium. Famous for his writings and theories on various phases of geolo- gy, Professor Daly was the first to suggest that atolls in the volcanic islands of the Pacific owe their pres- ent peculiarities 'to the lowering of the sea by withdrawal f much of its water to furnish the glaciers ,of the Great Ice Age, according toDr. George M. Stanley of the geology department. Such effects of glacia- tion will be discussed by Professor Daly in his lecture "Land and Sea in the Ice Age," Dr. Stanley said. f nnRienr s.R : ch picket line this evening for the 300 Pennsylvania philanthropist and two or 400 day shift employes who re- New York investment bankers-all in fused to join in the strike. The their forties and heretofore compara- pickets, however, brgke windshields tively unknown in powerful financial of several automobiles and jerked circles-stepped into the limelight to- tail-lights and windshield-wipers .lay as purchasers of the controlling from othe oto aoobile Workers block of securities in the vast Van national executive board resumed in Tweinge aroa p. Detroit this afternoon the sessions The three are Allan P. Kirby, of which were held for four days in W nlkesBarre, Pa., son of one of the Washington last week. The meet- founders of the Woolworth chain and ings will continue for three or four in the past chiefly interested in the days. General organizational prob- Kirby family philanthropies, and lems, including a membership cam- fRobertk h. Young and Frank P. Kolbe paign among Canadian automobile of the stock exchange of Young, Kol- workers, will be discussed. be & Co. jThe purchase was announced by r I George A. Ball, Muncie (Ind.) glass 1-eurpNl O P t jar manufacturer, on behalf of the Labor Relations Bill George and Francis Ball Foundation i-philanthropic institution to which _--_ the Indiana capitalist transferred the LANSING, April 26.-QP)--Admin- controlling stock of Midamerica istration floor leaders in the legisla- Corp., top Van Sweringen holding ture said today they expected Gov- j company, a month ago. Michigras Wins Dignified Place As Result Of Carnival's Success By ROBERT WEEKS They carted away the ferris wheel, they took down that horror inspiring "loop-o-plane" and they swept up the withered carnations and gar- denias, and with all of these opera- tions the Michigras has assumed a dignified position among undergrad- uate projects with a profit of $2,- 784, and possibly more, according to Willis H. Tomlinson, '37, chairman. With the gross receipts at $5,284, and the expenses estimated by Tom- linson to be $2,500 at the most, the Dorm Project will probably receive around $2,000, Tomlinson conjec- tured, and the women's swimming, pool fund will be increased by about $1,000, he said. The Dorm Project's goal is the at- the Mosher Hall flower booth and' third was the Sigma Phi fraternity's "Souse Sherwood or Dew Drop In." These three organizations will be awarded prizes, he said, which will be decided upon later. All of the business connected with the Michigras is yet to be settled, Tomlinson said, advising all organi-, zations having bills from their car-; nival expenditures to present them to Dean Walter B Rae, financial ad- visor. Fraternity bills, he said, must be presented to Jack Thom, '38, for approval before being given to Dean Rae. Winners of the credit slips given out as prizes by some of the booths, were advised by Tomlinson to turn them in for merchandise within the ernor Murphy would present before the end of the week a labor relations bill that would "go farther than the Wagner Act."I The bill still was in the hands of Governor Murphy, undergoing re- visions. The Governor himself de- 'Ensian Customers May Check Names A F.f ol 1,c ~h {ttortr.