The Weather Generally fair today and to- morrow; rising temperatures. liig tan tIaiti Editorials Federal Food And Drug Regulation... VOL. XLVII No. 109 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS May Settle GM Labor Trouble In Four Days Representatives Of Union, Corporation In Recess After 13-Day Session Knudsen, Martin To Return Monday DETROIT, March 4.-(P)-Final settlement Monday of General Mo- tors strike issues with the United Au- tomobile Workers of America was de- scribed as "possible" by a Corpora- tion official tonight. Representatives of Corporation and Union who have conferred for 13 days in efforts to agree on union demands adjourned their sessions until Monday and said the four-day1 recess was designed to permit them, to catch up with accumulated busi- ness affairs. They announced, however, that William S. Knudsen, executive vice- president of General Motors, and Homer Martin, U.A.W.A. president, would return Monday to the confer- ences which they left soon after dis- cussions started Feb. 16. Tentative Conditions Set For days the negotiators have argued on the union's demand for a national minimum hourly wage.- Union officials said today the Cor- poration offered $5 a day for men and $4 for women, but a General Motors spokesman said these figures were used only as illustrations. The union has claimed some workers re- ceive as low as $3.20 a day; the Cor- poration contends differentials in wage minimums are necessary be- cause of varying continuity of em- ployment, cost of living, and com- Tentative arments have been written on other union demands such as methods of handling grievances, seniority rights, the 30-hour week, abolition of piece-work, and speed of production. C. E. Wilson, General Motors vice-president ,said "it is pos- sible" a final agreement will be signed Monday. Body Workers Return The U.A.W.A. was negotiating to- day with two other automobile pro- ducers-Chrysler and Hudson-and preparing to bargain with more than half a dozen parts manufacturers whose plants have been affected by strikes.a More than 20,000 employes in body1 plants of the Briggs Manufacturing Company and the Murray Corpora- tion of America returned to their jobs today after sit-down strikes ended. They evacuated occupied plants last night and this morning.I Additional sit-downs in Detroit Automotive parts plants affected 1,- 200 workers in three plants of the Bohn Alumnium Company and the Michigan Smelting and Refining Co., and 1,050 in three units of the Pen- insular Metal Products Corp. whichj supplies mol4ifigs for automobiles. General Motors employes were told in a message from Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., Corporatlon president, today that' G.M. "will continue to negotiate with any group, or with any individual1 employe desiring to negotiate indi- vidually, in any or all parts of its plants," adding that the company "has no intention of discriminating' between organizations by which its workers may wish to be represented." Labor Unrest Hits England's Arms Prograti1 LONDON, March 4.-(AP)-Labor unrest and reports of sabotage cast shadows over Great Britain's great- est peace-time armament program today: The nation, digging deep into its resources to perfect an all-inclusive defense. plan, faced three develop- ments: 1. The army estimated its 1931 ex- penditure would be $410,870,000. This was added to the navy's estimate of $525,325,000 for a huge construction program. Estimates for the air force have not been announced. 2. Labor leaders were reported ready to take advantage of the in- dustrial boom accompanying the pro- gram with demands for a five-day week and higher pay. A strike hit the Derby Rolls Royce aircraft en- gine plant. 3. A secret service investigation of conditions at several aircraft factor- Vacuum Tube 'Shoots' Million Billion ProjectilesPer Second 10 Million Atoms Blasted Into New Forms By Gun, Crane Declares By SAUL KLEIMAN A High potential vacuum tube, which "shoots" one billion billion projectiles each second with a speed of more than three million miles per hour, is now being used by Dr. H. R. Crane of the physics department to bombard atoms and study their struc- ture. Two types of projectiles are being used in the tube, Dr. Crane said yes- terday, protons-the nuclei of ordi- nary hydrogen atoms-and deuterons -the nuclei of heavy hydrogen atoms. About 10 million atoms are blasted apart each second by this "atom gun," Dr. Crane indicated. But he pointed out that the number of atoms in a gram of lithium, which is now being bombarded, is so high that even that rate it would take about 30 mil- lion years to split all the atoms in one gram. The number of atoms in a gram of lithium may be represented by a one followed by 22 zeros, he said. The main part of this machine, which is known as the "high poten- tial," consists of a vacuum tube 16 feet long to which is applied a dif- ference of potential of about one mil- lion volts. The source of the protons or deutorons, which come from a gas discharge, is attached to the positive terminal of the tube. The protons or deuterons, having positive electrical charges, are then New Concepts Of High Court Are Demanded Basis Of Judicial Duty Is Emphasis On Human Needs, MacAllister Says A new conception of the Supreme Court, with remphasis on human needs, was called for last night by Thomas d MacA:sterof Grtnd Rapids, Democratic candidate for justice of the State Supreme Court, in an address before approximately 300 persons at a Roosevelt "victory" dinner in the Union ballroom. Although he did not specifically mention President Roosevelt's plan to increase the membership of the Supreme Court of the United States, Mr. MacAllister asserted that "a new conception of the judiciary must be based not on the old formalism, not on legal technicalities, but on the people's forward march. Murphy's Role Praised "With regard to the Supreme Court," he said, "we see that there is a new philosophy, to distribute the benefits equally among the people. And there is also an old philosophy, formalistic, narrow and holding back on progress. "It is as important to have men with a new philosophy on the court as it is in the executive." Mr. MacAllister refused to say, af- ter his address, whether or not he favored the President's court plan. Gov. Frank Murphy's role in the recent General Motors strike was commended by Mr. MacAllister, who said that the governor's methods were in accordance with this new philosophy. National Emphasis Changed Mrs. William Haber, leader of a study on social security for the local branch of the League of Women Vot- ers, praised the change of emphasis in American life, which, she stated, could be credited to the Roosevelt administration. "In these four years of the Roose- velt administration, the national emphasis has changed. Its real con- tribution has been in recognizing that the frontier of the future is the so- cial frontier. The public has been aroused, not about products and banking and technical matters, but about how these affect the life and work of our 125 million people." Join With Labor Class, Eby Tells Cooperatives The cooperative movement in the United States, in order to be success- ful, must concern itself with the or- ganized labor class, emphasized Ker- mit Eby, Ann Arbor High School teacher, speaking last night in Labor Hall to members of the Ann Arbor Cooperative organization. Mr. Eby, storm center last year when the administration of the Ann Arhor -Tigh Shno1 conidered his proposelled toward the negative ter- minal of the tube, to which is at- tached the material to be bombarded. Extending through the floor of a room in the first basement of the East Physics Building to the second basement below, the "high potential," looks like a vision out of H.G. Wells' "Things to Come." It is the "little brother" of the cyclotron, which is different in con- struction, but used for much the same purpose. Although it gives more cur- rent, the "high potential" develops only one million volts in comparison with the seven million generated by the cyclotron. Therefore, it is used mainly for bombarding the lighter elements, Dr. Crane declared. All the elements lighter than flu- orine, whose atomic weight is 19, have already been used, he added., He said that two things occur when (Continued on Page 2) Senate Passes POllock's Civil Service Law Bill Goes To Lower House; Will Probably Go Direct To Committee LANSING, March 4.-The State Senate moved today to take patron- age out of politics when, by a Vote of 23 to 7, it passed Prof. James K. Pollock's civil service bill. The bill was sped to the House of Representatives, where it will be con- sidered tomorrow and probably will go to committee. No open hearing in the House was anticipated. Professor Pollock, who, as chair- man of the Civil Service Study Com- mission, hailed as "a great victory" the passage of the bill which would place the State's 13,000 employes under a permanen merit system. Al- though some opposition in the House has been apparent, it is not organized and it was felt in the capital that the overwhelming majority the Senate gave the bill will be of benefit to it in the lower house. The bill, as passed by=the Senate, is more stringent than as written by Professor Pollock. The original bill allowed the head of a department to choose among the three highest elig- ible contestants to fill any position. This was amended to make appoint- ment of the highest man mandatory, after Senator Charles C. Digges, De- troit Negro Democrat, had contend- ed that it might make way for race discrimination. Senator George P. McCallum, Ann Arbor's Republican member in the upper house, defended the "rule of three" provision, arguing that civil service was more to obtain men fit from office than to rule out poli- tics. 23 Support Measure The Senate also struck out the pro- vision prohibiting State employes under civil service from engaging in politics. They may not, under the amended measure, however, con- tribute to political party funds. Sev- eral other amendments were offered unsuccessfully. Ten Republicans and 13 Demo- crats supported the measure. The opponents of the measure were Senators Miles H. Callaghan, Flex H. Flynn, McCallum, Elmer R. Porter and Samuel H. Pangborn-Republi- cans; andSenators Carrol B. Jones and Henry F. Shea-Democrats. Senator Callaghan has been the most vigorous opponent of the bill. Steel Prices Go Up After Pay Increase Carnegie-Illinois Makes1 Higher Rates Effective Immediately Showdown Impends Over Lewis Control PITTSBURGH, March 4.-(P)- The nation's largest steel producer' increased the price of its products $3" to $8 a ton tonight to finance a gen- eral wage increase and 40-hour work' week for its 120,000 employes. The Carnegie-Illinois Steel Cor- poration, largest subsidiary of the U.S. Steel Corporation, made the price advance, effective immediately, two days after ordering a 10 cents an hour pay raise for the workers under an agreement with John L. Lewis, Committee for Industrial Organiza- tion. The announcement came while the company's so-called "company union" was preparing for a showdown with Lewis' forces for leadership of the men in the mills. The corporation's wage and hour schedule, effective March 16, will trail the price increase by 11 days, but the company explained that present or- ders on its books could not be com- pleted before April 1, depriving it of mlch immediate benefit from the higher prices before that date. The company announced the new prices would remain in effect until June 30, and pointed out: "The advances in their delivered prices are necessary to cover in- creased cost of production due to labor advances." Typical hikes in 'the schedule in- luded sheet bars, from $34.50 to $37.50 a ton, and standard rails, from $39 to $42.50 a ton. A movement in defense of the em- ploye representation plans centered in the Chicago and Pittsburgh district mills following President Benjamin F. Fairless' recognition of the Lewis union organization committee. Organized steel labor received Fair- less' recognition as granting a year's "breathing stell" in steel labor strife, but battle lines were forming for an' iatensifled contest between the in- durial union and the representatives' plan. Shells Imperil U.S. Embassy, Kill Spaniards MADRID, March 4.-W)P)-Insur- gent shells screamed into Madrid's residential districts tonight, causing casualties among civilians. Two big missiles landed in a plaza six blocks from the American em- bassy building. (A large percentage of the Americans in Madrid live at the embassy). Official reports said the govern- ment's southern army, trying to keep the insurgents away from the sea- port of Almeria, had cut a road be- tween Orgiva and Velez Benaudalla, lying just north of Motril and occu- pied by insurgents operating out of Granada. The government soldiers also gained possession of heights dominat- ing Orgiva and were pressing toward Velez Benaudalla in an effort to cut the main Granada-Motril highway at that point, these reports said. Fighting in El Pardo and Univer- sity City areas materially improved government positions, official reports declared tonight. Students Like Drinking, But Abhor Drunks' American college students admire the man that can drink like a gentle- man, abhor the drunk and drink more hard liquor than lighter bev- erages, according to a survey recent- ly completed among 1,475 colleges. One third of the colleges replying to the questionnaire reported a great increase in beer drinking, but two- thirds saw an even greater increase in cocktail and highball consumption. Other findings made by the survey, which was conducted by the Literary Digest, were: "Everywhere, teetotal enforcement in colleges appears to be crumbling. The average undergrad- uate does most of his tippling off the campus. Women students have lost their moral revulsion toward drink- ing." Student editors and leaders also received questionnaires, the magazine states, and most student editors agreed that repeal has aided tiem- perance, the majority favoring edu- cation for drinking, not against it, as a solution for the liquor problem. "Because liquor can be gotten so (Continued on Page 6) Huron Parley Will Hear Talk By Dr. Ruthven Improvement Of Valley Is Aim Of Meeting Opening At 9 A.M._Today President Ruthven will open a con- ference on the general subject of "The Improvement of the Huron River Valley" at 9 a.m. today in the UnionI with a talk on the topic of "The Huron Valley." This conference, which it is hoped may result in a movement to improve the Huron River Valley, is being sponsored by the Huron River Im- provement Commission. and the Washtenaw County Road Commis- sion in cooperation with the exten- sion division of the University. It will feature speakers, Dean Henry M. Bates of the Law School, Prof. Willett-"F;Ramsdel of the-forestry school, Alex M. Dow, president of the Detroit Edison Co., Arthur M. Stace, managing editor of the Ann Arbor News, Prof. William Hoad of the sanitary engineering department and Prof. Lewis M. Gram, chairman of the civil engineering department. Legislators, park officials and news- paper editors of five counties have been invited to the conference, which will deal with engineering, beautifi- cation and stream pollution. Following President Ruthven's talk at 9 a.m., Mr. Stace will speak on (Continued on Page 6) Campaign Cost For '36 Is Set At 48 Millions New Restrictions Urged By Senatorial Committee After Investigation WASHINGTON, Marche 4.-(P)- Senate investigators, reporting that as much as $48,000,000 may have been spent in the last presidential campaign, urged Congress today to clamp new restrictions on political expenditures. In its final report the Senate cam- paign expenditures committee re- vealed that it had traced disburse- ment of $23,973,329 by candidates and political organizations. Untabulated expenditures by in- dividuals and localgroups, it assert- ed, would perhaps double this total. Expenses of the Republican Na- tional Committee and its related or- ganizations reached $14,198,202, the investigators disclosed, while the cor- responding Democratic units spent $9,228,406. In the 1936 campaign-more than twice as costly as any other on record -an average of 52 cents was spent for every vote cast. Plant Reopens As 78 Are Driven Out SARNIA, Ont., March 4.-(/P)- Production was resumed today at the Holmes Foundry, scene of violence yesterday as 300 non-union workmen forcibly ejected 78 sit-down strikers from the plant they had held since Monday. I Nation Condemned ToFutilityBy Court, Roosevelt Declares Kenny, Thom Made Aides For Carnival Either "Miss America of 1936" or "Miss Chicago of 1937," as yet un- named, may be brought here as an added feature of the Michigras on April 23 and 24 in Yost Field House, Willis H. Tomlinson, '37, ,general chairman, announced yesterday. Fifty concession booths, all which Yost Field House, the site of the carnival, will accommodate under present arrangements, have been spoken for by 58 fraternities, soror- ities and other campus societies. Tomlinson also announced the ap- pointment of two assistant chaimen, Sally Kenny, '38, who will represent the Women's Athletic Association, and Jack Thorn, '38, a member of the executive council of the Mich- igan Union. Committee chairman- ships have not yet been named. Organizationsso far planning par- ticipation in the carnival, which will be the "opening gun" in the Univer- sity's centennial celebration, are the Union, the Varsity-R.O.T.C. Band, the gymnastic team, which will give several exhibitions, Mimes, Sigma Delta Chi, 36 fraternities and 22 sor- orities. Tomlinson said that in addi- tion two orchestras will be obtained. Dentists Have ore Sueeess , N* IF Bunting Finds Opportunities Are Better, More Immediate Than In Other Fields Chances for success are better for the dental school graduate than for the student from any other profes- sional school or college, Prof. Russell W. Bunting of 'the School of Dentistry said yesterday in a vocational guid- ance lecture, sponsored by the dean's office of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Moreover, Professor Bunting said, success comes much sooner after ma- triculation for the student of dentis- try than for the lawyer, doctor or other professional school graduate. The field of dentistry is rapidly grow- ing, he explained, and will continue to expand for some time, since only 20 per cent of the population of the United States is receiving private dental care at the present time. Professor Bunting declared that "in Europe American dentists are recognized as the best in the world," and that the University dental school was the best school in the world. Discussing the work of the den- tal school student, Professor Bunt- ing said that because of the heavy schedule which usually necessitates classes from eight to five p.m. every day, he would not advise students who wished to engage in outside ac- tivities to enter the dental school. Tenth League Model Group To Meet Here The tenth annual meeting of the Michigan Model Assembly of the League of Nations will be held May 7 and 8 in Ann Arbor, Prof. Howard B. Calderwood of the political science department announced yesterday. The Model Assembly, Professor Calderwood explained, is a conven- tion, of delegates from various col- leges and universities in the State of Michigan representing different na- tions at the conference. "These dele- gates try to advance the viewpoint of the country they represent rather than advance their own views," he said. The meetings are conducted, ac- cording to Professor Calderwood, in the same manner that the League of Nations conducts its meetings. A plenary session is held, followed by meetings of committees. Supreme Court Majority Charged With Economic Prejudice In Decisions Denies Any Intent To Seek 3rd Term President Asks Immediate Action To Free Policies From Legal Doubts WASHINGTON, March 4.-(P)- President Roosevelt swung tonight into the thick of the fight over his proposal to revamp the Supreme Court, with a charge that the trib- unal's majority had condemned the nation to be "a no man's land of final futility." Accusing the justices of rendering Congress impotent to attack social and economic ills, he called for ac- tion "now" to "free from legal doubts those policies which offer a progres- sive solution to our problems." No Third Term Sought With an obvious reference to the "dictator" charges hurled by his en- emies, he disclaimed any intent to seek a third term in office. And he struck again at the tribunal's major- ity with the accusation that some jus- tices were letting their own economic beliefs control their decisions. He said it pleased the "personal economic predilections of a majority of the Court that we live in a nation where there is no legal power any- where to deal with its most difficult' practical problems-a no man's land of final futility." The speech, his first utterance on the courts since his message on the judiciary went to Congress a month ago, was delivered at a gigantic "vic- tory dinner" here, featured event of dozens of Democratic dinners throughout the country celebrating the 1936 landslide. Pecites New Deal Effort Mr. Roosevelt recited the New Deal's effort to deal with the farm problem by the Agricultural Adjust- ment Administration, and of the ef- fort to improve labor conditions through the NRA. Again and again, he emphasized in short, emphatic sentences that the conditions which his administration seeks to correct by legislation are conditions that exist "now." New Tmult Found The Democratic party, he con- tinued, will remain the majority party only if it solves "the pressing prob- lems that perplex our generation." He pledged that those problems would be solved." "After election day in 1936," he said, "some of our supporters were uneasy lest we grasp the excuse of a false era of good 'feeling to evade our obligations. They were worried by the evil symptom that the propa ganda and the epithets of last sum- mer and fall had died down. "Today, however, those who placed their confidence in us are reassured. For the tumult and the shouting have broken forth anew-and from sub- stantially the same elements of op- position. Prosperous Nation Sought "This new roar is the best evidence in the world that we have begun to move against conditions under which one-third of this nation is still ill- nourished, ill-clad, ill-housed. His great ambition, he went on, is to turn the Presidency over "to my successor whomever he may be, with the assurance that I am at the same time turning over to him as Pres- ident, a nation intact, a nation at peace, a nation prosperous, a nation clear in its knowledge of what pow- ers it has to serve its own citizens, a nation that is in a position to use these powers to , the full in .order to move forward steadily to meet the modern needs of humanity." 21 Engineers Have Straight 'A' Grades Straight "A" records were attained by 21 regular students of the College of Engineering during the first se- mester of this school year, a report from . the secretary of the college showed yesterday. Those in the senior class who had all "A's" were Thomas C. Hill, J. Donald Hughson and Robert J. Tarte. Tii in y wn - T- -Rd 128 Students Fell By Wayside, Reports From Six Colleges Show By ROBERT FITZHENRY The terrors of mid-year examina- ations have been dispelled. Reports garnered from the offices of six un- dergraduate schools indicate that a total of 128 students, or slightly less than 2 per cent of the enrollment, were dismissed at the mid-years be- cause of delinquent grades. How- ever, the deans of the several colleges seemed to concur in believing that June would witness a decided in- crease in the number of dismissals. Casualties were greatest in the lit- erary college, where, according to Wilbur R. Humphreys, assistant dean, 169 students or slightly less than 4 per cent of the total enrollment were, dismissed. Of the 169, however, 95 were reinstated immediately to begin their second and last trial, Dean Humphreys said. Actually then only sophomores. There were only six freshmen dismissed, according to the office of Alfred H. Lovell, assistant dean of the engineering college. The small number of freshmen was at- tributed to the leniency of the com- mittee on student delinquencies, who, it was said, are disposed to give first year men a second chance if any po- tentialities are shown. The schools of forestry, music and education came through the exam- ination session with the highest rec- ords, each reporting only one casual- ty of poor grades. In the College of Architecture 3 students were asked to withdraw for academic reasons. Dean Humphreys and Dean Sam- uel T. Dana of the forestry school agreed that the leniency shown in their respective colleges toward the delinquent students was due for the