The Weather Occasional showers today with moderate AuthwAestAIY VOL. XLVII, No. 171 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2G, 1937 Editorials Was Europe Worthwhile?. . . PRICE FIVE CENTS F.D.R. Renews Plea To Enact CourtChange Says Child Labor Decision By Court Twenty Years Ago Must Be Reversed Security Decision Pleases President WASHINGTON, May 25.-()- President Roosevelt renewed his plea for enactment of his court reorgani- zation bill tonight with an assertion that an old child labor decision must be reversed if his new labor legisla- tion is to be declared constitutional. Expressing pleasure and gratifica- tion at the court's decision upholding the social security act, the Chief Ex- ecutive. told reporters that he hoped the tribunal would cling to the same human point of view in cases yet to be decided. The old child labor decision to which the President referred was the invalidation two decades ago of the 1916 act prohibiting the shipment in interstate commerce of products of factories employing children under 14., Answers Newspaperman's Question The President's new labor legisla- tion not only would bar child labor products from interstate commerce, but also. the products of employers who use "oppressive" labor practices. His statement was made in re- sponse to a newspaperman's question whether the decisions of yesterday had altered his plans for the court bill, under which five new justices would be added to the court unless as many older judges retire. The answer, the President said, was obvious. Many issues vital to the plans of his administration; issues in- volved in future legislation and in laws previously enacted have yet to be put to the test by the court. Four Important Changes His message of yesterday, propos- ing legislation prescribing minimum labor standards, involves four fairly important changes in national pol- icy, he indicated. He said that if the child labor pro- visions of the bill introduced in con- formity with his message are to be upheld there must be a decision re- versing the court's child labor de- cision of twenty years ago. Minimum wage and maximum hour provisions of the law, as well as those dealing with employers who defy the unions, each, he added, will present an issue with which the court has not yet come to grips. There, in one message, he added, were four new issues that in all prob- ability will have to come before the court. CIO Carries Steel Election In Penn. Plant Sharon Steel Corporation Workers Vote Decisively In Favor Of SWOC (By Associated Press) The Committee for Industrial Or- ganization continued its conquests in the steel industry last night by car- rying another plant election called to select a collective bargaining agency. Sharon Steel Corporation workers at Sharon, Pa., and Lowellsville, O.; voted 1,773 to 721 in favor of the steel workers organizing committee, powerful C.I.O. unit. ; Last week the organizing commit- tee won almost as decisive a victory in an election at the Jones and Laugh- lin Steel Corporation in Pittsburgh. Union workers struck last night at four Canton, Ohio, plants of the Re- public Steel Corporation. A spokes- man termed it "a spontaneous re- bellion against discrimination against C.I.O. men in Republic plants." Earlier in the day, John L. Lewis, chief of the C.LO., expressed uncon- cern yesterday over the American Federation of Labor's virtual declara- tion of war on the committee for In- dustrial Organization. President William Green of the A.F. of L. told the Federation execu- tive council, which adopted a four- point program to meet the C.I.O. drive, that the new campaign would extend into mass production indus- tries, a reversal of the organization's .nnl inrv Students Pause In Their Work To Hear Varsity Concert Band 1 .i First Vox Pop Program Of Semester Attracts President Ruthven By EARL R. GILMAN More than 1,500 students and townspeople reclined on the grass last night in front of the Library steps and listened to the 80-piece Var- sity Concert Band present its first outdoor concert of the semester un- der the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli of the School of Music. Students on their way to the Li- brary to study for the coming final examinations and dozens of profes- sors and even President and Mrs. Ruthven were inveigled into stopping whatever they were doing in order to hear the melodious strains. Several times the audience kept applauding until the band would grant them en- cores. In preparing for this first Vox Pop concert of the year, Professor Revelli stated that novelties would be the band's forte. The number that re- ceived the greatest ovation was such a piece: "The Whistling Farmer Boy." Lee Chrisman, '40SM, led the band in this piece and Fred Wiest, '38SM, who is also the drum major, took the part of the little farmer lad's dog. Also included in the hour and a half presentation were: "Coronation March," by Meyerbeer; "Spring Time Overture," by Erick W. G. Leidzen; "Habenera," by Charles Benter; "El- sa Entering the Cathedral," from the opera, "Lohengrin," by Richard Wag- ner; "Spring, Beautiful Spring," by Paul Lincke; "L'Arlesienne," part 2 of suite number 2, by Georges Bizet; and "Pantomime," from the opera, "Il Cid," by Antonio Sacchini. "The Victors" and "Yellow and Blue" closed the program. After the concert the band marched down State Street to Morris Hall, ser- enading Helen Newberry and ,Betsy Barbour dormitories on the way. i Roosevelt Asks That America Share Helium Eckener Hopes Congress Will Act Speedily; Says 'We Must Have Helium' WASHINGTON, May 25.-(A')- President Roosevelt asked Congress today to permit foreign governments to use American helium as a means of safeguarding passengers on light- er-than-air craft. He transmitted to Capitol Hill a re- port from a special committee of five cabinet officers proposing relaxation of regulations which, since 1925, have limited sale of the fire-proof gas to domestic concerns. Dr. Hugo Eckener, the German di- rigible expert, commented through a spokesman that "this is definitely the first step toward what we want to get." He expressed hope Congress would act speedily on the recommen- dations. Dr. Eckener came to Washington from Lakehurst, N.J., where he in- spected the wreckage of the fire-de- stroyed dirgible Hindenburg, which used hydrogen. "We must have helium," he said at the outset of conferences with gov- ernment officials. The United States has a virtual monopoly on the gas. Eckener agreed to testify tomor- row before a Senate military affairs sub-committee considering legisla- tion to b'roaden helium export regu- lations. The cabinet committee report which Mr. Roosevelt sent to Congress said in part: "With adequate safeguards against the military use of exported helium, it would appear to be the duty of this country as a good neighbor to share any unneeded surplus it may have with other countries for the promo- tion of commerce and science, alle- viation of human suffering and safe- guarding the lives of passengers on airships, thus promoting internation- al good will." Murphy Says Civil Service Bill'Will Pass LANSING, May 25.-(/)-A predic- tion that the Legislature will enact a civil service bill was made by Gov- ernor Murphy today in an address before the Michigan Merit System Association. The Governor, who has conferred with members of the Legislature daily in an effort to produce action on the measure. declared it will be adopted as a "matter of principle and good government." A bill drafted by the special study commission named by former Governor Fitzgerald has passed the Senate, but has remained since in a House committee. Governor Murphy took occasion to praise Fitzgerald as a competent ad- ministrator. He commended his Re- publican predecessor for his interest in welfare reorganization and civil service. "Basically civil service is good gov- ernment," Murphy said. "Either we must join those who are on the level in wanting good government, as we take sides on the onestion. or those Fascists Face Fir s t Serious Test In Holland National Socialist Party Would Abolish Parties, Set Up Corporate State AMSTERDAM, May 25.- (AP) - Fascist strength will meet its first serious test in the Netherlands to- morrow when 4,000,000 voters elect a new House of Parliament. One hundred seats are at stake. The National Socialists, or Fascists, hope to win eight to 10 of the seats- a decided minority but a big increase from the two posts won last year. A 43-year old ex-engineer, Anton; Adrian Mussert, heads the party. He advocates the "leader principle" in statecraft, his followers support abol- ition of political parties, a corporate state, a strong army and navy. Estimating his party would win 10 seats, Mussert declared that such a victory would indicate a Fascist trend, that "in 1941 we are not going to be satisfied with 20 seats." When he has 40 men in the lower house, Mussert says there will be a program of "purification." His campaign pledges were to bet- ter conditions for the small peasan- try, and for benefits to labor. He indicated some sentiment for anti-semitic activity-the Nether- lands has 600,000 Jewish population. His opposition comes from Pre- mier Hendrik Colijn and his conser- vative anti-revolutionary party; from the Catholic party, Social Democrats, Liberals, Christian Historians and other groups. Sophomores Tapped By Sphinx Society Sphinx, junior literary men's hon- orary society, made its annual spring, raid Monday night, and yesterday took 18 men away for the traditional hay-rack-initiation ride. Those chosen are: Thomas Haynie, William Newnan, Leo Beebe, Wally Hook, Harold Davidson, William Wat- son, Fred Janke, David Laing, Ed- ward Magdor, Horace Gilmore, John Mitchell, Elmer Gedeon, Irvin Lisa- gor, Edward Stanton, William Hock- ett, Paul Brickley, Frank Morgan and Phillip Buchen. UAW Defines Its Objective In FordFigh Officials Await Approval Of City Before Starting Booklet Distribution Seek Six-Hour Day, $8 Minimum Wages DETROIT, May 25. - (P) - The United Automobile Workers, aiming its unionization drive at the gates of the Ford Motor Company's giant Rouge plant, today named the six- hour day and $8 minimum daily wage as objectives. Opening the second of its offices for the campaign to organize the workers of the only major automobile producer who has not negotiated with the UAWA, the union adopted a slo- gan of "Unionism, Not Fordism." In the somber gray building which ance housed a bank branch-just outside the city limits of Dearborn where most of the 90,000 employes of the Rouge Plant reside-union offi- cials awaited permission to distribute leaflets to Ford workers as they leave company property. Must Issue Permission Under a Dearborn ordinance the city clerk must issue permission for distribution of any handbill, after approval of its contents Walter Reuther, president of the U.A.W.A. west side local, said dis- tribution of the leaflets, if permitted would mark the first such action by a union at the Ford plant since the Rouge unit was built. He said the Dearborn city clerk had promised to mail the union a permit for the hand- ing out of union literature. Six hundred Ford workers whom Reuther described as "key men" chosen by himself and William Mc- Kie, west side local organizer, ap- proved final plans for the organizing campaign Sunday, the local president said, adding small group meetings had been held secretly over an eight- month period. Get Six Dollars Daily Employes of the Ford Company now work five eight-hour days a week with a $6 daily minimum. Henry Ford has talked recently of "really high wages" In one usually well informed source it was said recently that Ford's wage adjustment plan contemplated a five- day 30-hour week with a minimum wvage of $7 a day, and three shifts instead of the present two 8-hour tricks. The automobile manufacturer re- cently distributed to employes cards of "Fordisms" one of whichwas: "We have never had to bargain against our men and we don't expect to begin now." Wayne Dickens, '39, Shoots Self In Head Wayne Dickens, '39, Ann Arbor, 24 years old, 620 E. Liberty Ave. shot himself in the head with a 22 caliber rifle at 10:30 a.m. yesterday. He was taken to the St. Joseph's Mercy Hos- pital, where his physician described his condition as serious but said that he was progressing as satisfactorily as could be expected. Dickens was at one time employed as a clerk at the University Hospital. ROOSEVELT SICK WASHINGTON, May 25.-(R)-- President Roosevelt remained in the residential quarters of the White House most of today because of a head cold. He did appear, however, for his regular press conference. + Ii Ben Leopold, '39, thought it was a horrid examination, but he changed his mind when his Ec. 52 bluebook was returned, yesterday, with 100 on its cover, the first time, according to Prof. Shorey Peterson, this has hap- pened in several years. A member of Phi Eta Sigma, Ben won't have anyone think of him as a grind. He played baseball on the near-championship Wolverine nine last year and won his numerals as a freshman. "The examination was perhaps ai little easier than usual, though it was not intentionally so," Professor Peterson explained. The median wasI only two points above its usual mark, he said. Sadler To Talk At University Lecture Today Psychiatrist Also To Meet' With Faculty Membersr And Physicians At Union1 Dr. William S. Sadler, of Chicago,I who has conducted a clinic upon men-I tal hygiene for 20 years, will lecture on "Religion and Mental Health" at 4:15 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium. A discussion will follow the speech. Well known for his books, which in- clude "The Physiology of Faith and Fear" and "The Mind at Mischief," Dr. Sadler will also meet with a fac'- ulty group including various counsel- ors and physicians at a luncheon to- day at 12:15 p.m. in the Union. Dr. Sadler's latest book, "Theory] and Practice of Psychiatry," is one of the most widely read texts on the subject. Critics have said it places him among the men who have had a long private practice and still ad- vanced science.I "Few practicioners speak more; readily than Dr. Sadler and few have been more helpful to laymen interest-c ed in the preventive phases of Mentali Hygiene," commented Dr. E. W. Blakeman, religious counselor... "We . have invited him to the campus in response to a rather wide interest in the problems of adjustment and a1 wholesale appreciation of the work of the Health Service and the Counselors among their students," he continued.7 Object To Effort To Stop Setting Aside PWA Fund WASHINGTON, May 25.-UP)- House members r e v o I t e d today against efforts of their leaders to pre-i vent earmarking of the proposed $1,- 500,000,000 work relief fund and ten-, tatively set aside $505,000,000 of it for the public works administration, flood control, highways and other projects. The uprising prevented final pas-1 sage of the measure and Majorityi Leader Rayburn (Dem., Tex.) an- nounced it would not come up again until Thursday. Informed the House had stipulated $45,000,000 should be available for flood control, President Roosevelt told his press conference every dol- lar earmarked for purposes other than those in the bill meant that fewer people on relief rolls would be given jobs. Ignoring cries of "pork barrel" and warnings that the entire relief pro- gram was in jeopardy, the House gave at least tentative approval to other amendments earmarking $300,000,000 for the public works administration, $150,000,000 for highway construc- tion and grade crossing elimination, and $10,000,000 for construction of small lakes and ponds in the Great Plains area. Under its rules, the House may re- verse itself on any of these amend- ments before final passage of the bill. Some members said, however, a coalition already had been formed to insure retention of the earmark- ings. Action On Pin Ball Games Is Withheld No action will be taken on pin ball machines in the city or county at the present time, Prosecutor Albert Rapp said yesterday. Because of the city ordinance li- censing the machines it would be un- fair to destroy and confiscate those in other parts of the county, he said. Fills 18 Positions Perfect Ec Exam Score Startles 'No Grind' Ben 1 For Unioiu,Boards (.) Warning To Palefaces Given By Michigamua When out from the paleface wigwam From behind the staring moonface Came the slow and solemn five booms Telling that the evening spirit Wanders over the woods and mea- dows, Lights the campfires of the heavens Then the Michigamua warriors In their feathers and their warpaint Soon will gather round the oak tree 'Round the oak tree called the Tappan There to greet the trembling paleface Many in number wait the bidding Of the loud rejoicing redskins For before they take the long trail To the home of Michigamua Many trials and many tortures First must prove their strength and courage Ere the red man bids them welcome, Ere he calls each paleface "Indian," Ere the peace pipe smoke goes sky- ward. Jews In Ital Asked To Back Fascism Or Go Must Also Cease Criticism Of Germany, Support Of Zionist Movement Men's Council Members Include Rader, Telfer, Luby And Smith 1 1 l J f 1 1 1 t i i Davidson To Serve On Athletic Board Vice-Presidents Of Union To Be Clement, Rogers, Rader And Benedict Eighteen sophomores and juniors were elected as vice-presidents of the Union, and to positions on the Men's Council, the Board in Control of Ath- letics and the Board in Control of Student Publications in the all-cam- pus elections held yesterday. The heaviest voting was in the lit- erary college where Hugh Rader, '38, Bruce Telfer, '38 and Earle Luby, '38, were elected to the Men's Council with 188, 160 and 151 votes respec- tively. Other persons elected to the Council were Goff Smith, '38E, from the engineering school; Robert Laitn- er, '38BAd, from the business ad- ministration school; Graham Bene- dict, '38F&C, from the forestry school; Maurice Gerow, '38SM, from the music school and James Rigg '38A, from the architecture school. Miller Sherwood, '37, outgoing president of the Council, announced last night that an important meeting of the new Men's Council will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in! the Union for the purpose of electing officers for the New Council. New vice-presidents of the Union elected include Hugh Rader, '38, from the literary school; Carl Clem- ent, '38E, from the engineering school; Charles Rogers, '38L, from the Law School; Kenneth Beach, '38M, from the medical school; Gra- ham Benedict, '38F&C, on the com- bined curriculum and Allan G. Rut- tle, '38D, from the dentistry school. Rittle had not been put up as a candidate for the position, but his name was written in by enough den- tal students to elect him. Harold Davidson, '39, was elected to the Board in Control of Athletics, and Walker Graham, '38, Frank Coolidge, '38 and Arthur' Lundahl, '38, were elected to the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. All -Campus Vote ROME, May 25.- UP) -Premier Mussolini's Milan newspaper askedj Jews today to give whole-heartedI support to Fascism or to leave the country, and to cease criticism of Germany.j The choice appeared to be one be- tween race and country., Editorial writer Oreste Geegorio wrpte in Mussolini's Popolo D'Italia that Jews must decide "whether they are Jews in Italy or Jews of Italy." The editorial emphasized thatI Italian Jews must give up any oppo- sition to the German Nazi principle of a pure Teutonic race (evidenced by many restrictions upon Jews in Germany) and must - abandon any participation in the Zionist' move- ment for a national Jewish home in Palestine.. The paper held that opposition to Nazi ideas would be "irreconciliable with the friendship that binds us to Germany and which has objectives far fhore vast and fundamental than the Jewish question." (Italy and Germany are linked by friendship ac- cord to cooperate in action upon European problems). Support of the Zionist movement would be "in definite opposition to the Mediterranean spirit of Italy" because, the newspaper said, the Na- tional Home Project is desighed to set up a new state under British con- torl which would be hostile to Arabs and Moslems. (Mussolini has pro- ,laimed firm friendship for the people of Islam). Despite the strong tenor of the editorial, there was a definite indica- tion that Mussolini's declared policy of friendship and justice for Jews would be continued. Dynamite Explosion Kills Three Youths SCOTTDALE, Pa., May 25.-(,)- Three boys were blown to bits today in an explosion that demolished a dynamite warehouse near Pine Tree, two miles from this Westmoreland County Coal town. Coroner H. A. McMurray's office identified the boys as Wilbur Sea- christ, 36, and Boyd Long, 16, both students at Scottdale High School, and Howard Stull, 15, of nearby Huntingdon township. The investigators said they believed the boys had been using a rifle found near the scene to shoot a target against the building. One bullet was discharged from the rifle. The bodies, mutilated and unrecog- nizable, were found about 50 feet from the twisted timbers of the old frame building which had been used for storing blasting powder sold to nearby coal mines. Mrs. Lindbergh Ready Kraus Praises Plan To Provide Book Fund For Needy Students Soviet Planes Complete Trip To North Pole MOSCOW, May 26.-(Wednesday) ---/)-Three Soviet planes bearing a 'year's supplies for the Russian North Pole base completed their flight to the top of the earth today, circled the camp seven hours after taking off from Rudolf Island for their 560 mile Arctic flight. The fleet of three planes sighted the camp established b~yDr. OtJ Schmidt on a floating ice floe in the polar seas at 6 a.m. Rudolf Island Time (9 p.m. E.S.T.) and immediately prepared to land. The commander of the expedition, which it is hoped will eventually make possible a commercial air route from Moscow over the Pole to the United States, radioed the news of the feat back to Moscow as soon as he had achieved his objective. The message proclaimed in a mat- ter of fact manner that the Polar fleet had hit the camp site squarely on the nose after an uneventful jour- ney. Weather at the North Pole post, the report declared, was good and the planes were circling to get the drift of the wind before settling down on the special runway scooped out of the Polar ice. Student Workers Will Meet Tonight The Student Workers Federation will hold its last meeting of the se- mester at 8 p.m. today in the Union, Morris Lichtenstein, '38, said yester- day. The completion of the first full year of activity finds the Stiinat By JOSEPH GIES "A splendid opportunity for assist- ing needy students," was the manner in which Dean Edward H. Kraus of the literary college characterized the newly-formed project for establish- ing a student book fund yesterday. The plan, which is being drafted in detail by a committee consisting of Prof. Erich A. Walter of the English department, chairman; Prot. A. L. Moore of the engineering college; Dr. William W. Bishop, director of the department of library science and Dean Kraus, calls for the establish- ment of a reserve of textbooks built up from the contributions of students which will be used to supply books for those who are unable to afford' the purchase price. Books are now that the book aid plan would help to fill a long-felt need in the University for more effective assistance to stu- dents under financial handicaps. "We need more scholarships and aids of every sort for needy students," he said. "If there is a good response to our call for contributions during the re- mainder of the present semester, we have every expectation that the plan will prove a success," Dean Kraus concluded. According to Professor Walter, chairman of the committee, the loan of books will be limited to those stu- dents who are actually in need of as- sistance. "Any student who is gen- uinely in need of help," he explained, "may go to the loan committee or be