, . so .- The Weather Occasional showers today and tomorrow; warmer today and tonorrow, Y Bk ig zu VOL. XLVIM No. 146 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1938 San tion Given By Committee For Afternoon Peace Strike Demonstration Tomorrow To Be Held At 4 P.M. On MainLibrary Steps Lovett And Smith Will BeSpeakers The Strike Against War will take place on the steps of the General Library at 4 p.m., tomorrow, the Unit- ed !Peace Committee announced yes- trday. Permission to use the library steps for the demonstration was granted by the Deans' Committee after a pe- cJial meeting yesterday. The Peace. Committee's request to hold the strike at an earlier hour, however, was denied. Originally the -time had been set for 11 am., but the University was unable to grant permission for that hour because of the necessary dismissal of 11 o'clock classes Friday for the Honors Convocation. It wasl believed that the same consideration prompted the Deans to refuse to dis- miss other classes for the strike. - Robert Morss Lovett, professor of | English at the University of Chicago | and vice-president of the American i League for Peace and Democracy, will address the group on "The Strike - Against War: Its Changing Purpose." Tucker Smith, forner secretary of the National. Committee on Militar- ism in Education, will also speak. t The United Peace Committee isl composed of representatives from a number of campus organizations in- terested in peace., Any campus or local group Interested has been al- lowed to take part in the work of the Peace Committee, the chief part of which has been devoted to organizing the Strike Against War. Similar1 broadcoalition committees have been ' organized n other campuses throughout the nation. , The student nt-warstrike was intitd hn" students, mostly on eastern campuses, partic-.. ipating. In 1935, Professor Lovett spoke at 4 p.m. in Hill Auditoriums at a convocation for peace, following an unauthorized demonstration in the morning by 1,200 students. In 1936 the University dismissed classes for the-first time for the rally which was held at 11 a.m: on the Mall. Prof. Preston W. Slosson and three st'udent speakers addressed the as- sembly. At last year's peace deinonstra- tion, held at'11 a.m. on the Mall, Prof. Maynard Krueger of the economics department of the University of Chi- cago was the main speaker. More, than 1,500 students were present. Dra au Seasont Ticket Sale Is On This Week' Both Season, Individual Tickets Now Available; Fifty Cents Is Minimum Tickets for the Spring Dramatic Season are on sale this week at the Ga-den Room of the League, it was announcedyesterday. Both season and individual tickets will be sold. The separate tickets for evening performances of all of the plays except "Rain From Heaven," the finale, are priced at 50 cents, 75 cents, $1.10 and $1.50. Tickets for "Rain From Heaven," are priced at $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50. In addition, matinees' will be given Wednesday and Saturday for each play. For the first four plays, matinee tickets are being sold at 50 cents and 75 cents for balcony and orchestra respective- ly. For the matinee performances of "Rain From Heaven" tickets area priced at $1.50 and $2.00 for balcony and orchestra respectively. All seats for all plays are re- served the ticket committee pointed out, and orders should be placed as early as possible. Besides "Rain From Heaven," which will star Jane Cowl, the four plays to be given are in order, "The Ghost of Yankee Doodle," with Aline MacMahon; "Liliom," with Tonio Sel- wart; "The Late Christopher Bean," with Pauline Lord,. and "French Without Tears," with Doris Dalton. To "ead JDCDrive SAMUEL GRANT, '40 * * * Grant Named Head Of Drive Goal Set For Jewish Aid CampaignIs$1,600 Samuel Grant, '40, vice-president of the Michigan Hillel Foundation has been named Executive Director of the Ann Arbor drive to raise $1,600, local quota for the Joint Dis-i tribution Committee's national five million dollar campaign to aid Jews in Germany, Austria, Poland and oth- er central and eastern Europeari lands, it was announced yesterday. The drive will open Monday and continue for two weeks. Last year Ann Arbor raised $1,300 but due to the spread of Jewish persecution in Europe a larger amount of money is needed this year, Grant said. The drive will open with a mailing campaign. Post cards requesting con- tributions will be sent to every Jew- ish student, on campus. Representatives will be appointed to fraternities and sororities who will strive to make the highest mark, Grant said. . A special issue of the Hillel News, containing full details of the drive, will appear tomorrow. On May 15 the Foundation will hold a banquet to award prizes to students who do the most outstanding work duting the fund-raising campaign. Accent Expert To Speak Here Mar jorie Daunt Will Give University Lecture Marjorie Daunt, reader in the Eng- lish language at the University of London and visiting lecturer at Smith College, will give a .University lecture on "The English Accent-What Is It? Hlow Is It?" at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in the Natural Science Auditorium. Miss Daunt is an authority on An- glo-Saxon and on the history of the English language and literature. At London she teaches Anglo-Saxon in relation to modern phonetics, treat- ing it as a modern language. Her lecture here is expected to deal with everyday problems of speech, both in America and England. Local Strike Hearing Date Set ByNLRB National Board Will Hear1 ITU Local's Charges' In Washington On Monday Dismissal Brief Is Filed With Sample The Shoreham Building in Wash- ington, D.C. and 10 a.m. next Mon- day have been set by the National ie- Iations Board as the time and placer for the opening of its hearing, onI .charges of unfair labor practicesi made by the striking Internationall Typographical Union against the Ann Arbor Press. This is the first time that a heain has been shifted to the capital out of the jurisdiction of an injunction issued by a state judge.1 The Detroit office of the NLJRB had originally scheduled the hearing for March 31 in Ann Arbor, but was re-r strained from opening the trial and from gathering evidence by the terms of an injunction issued the day be- fore by Circuit Judge George W. Sample. The switch to Washington occurred after the union obtained permission to withdraw its charges on April 11 fropi the Seventh Regional NLRB office in Detroit and after that office had revoked its complaint against theA company. NLRB attorneys will issue subpoen-1 as some time this week requiring the (Continued on Page 6) Coops Termed Consumer Boon By Warbasse< The tragedy of American economic organization is that, in the presenceE of practically unlimited capacity to I produce, the country is heading for chaos simply because of its unaware- ness of this fact, Dr. James P. War-! basse told an open meeting of the Ann Arbor Cooperative Society last night.1 President of the Cooperativei League ' of the United States and author of many books on the sub- ject, Dr. Warbasse advanced the idea that the cooperative movement, by virtue of its practical results and democratic organization can be the hub' of an economic system that serves all the people. Production in the present economic order is motivated solely by profit, whereas in a cooperative society the only actuating motive is the supply of consumer demand, Dr. Warbasse said, explaining the theory and prac- tice of the movement. Efficiency and economy are the only determining factors of a cooperative's existence, he declared, adding that failues have come only because of the lack of edu- cation in the principles of consumer cooperation, and not because of any inherent economic inconsistencies in the movement itself. Spring Parley Opens Session On Saturday Richard Scammon.To Act As Chairman Of 2-Day Meeting On Education General Meeting To Start Discussion Final plans for the eighth annual Spring Parley, which will convene this week-end to discuss "Our Uni- versity: Milestone or Millstone," were completed at a meeting of the Par- ley's executive committee Sunday in the League. According to Barbara Bradfield, '38, chairman of the com- mittee, this is the most comprehen- sive plan for discussion ever drawn up for the Parley. Richard M. Scammon. Grad., who was chosen general chairman for the Parley at the meeting, will open the first general session at 2:15 p.m. Sat- urday in the Union Ballroom. The meeting will last approximately half an hour, during which time the chairmen of each of the five panels will give a short talk defining the subjects with which his section will deal. At 3 p.m. the five section meetings will begin separately and continue simultaneously until 5:30 p.m. The sections will convene from 7 to 10 p.m. The five topics which will be con- sidered by the sections are- Our Se- curity: Sufficient or Deficient?; Our Leisure Time: Profit or Loss?; Our Opinions: Expressed or Suppressed?; OurEducation: Shakespeare or Slide- Rule?; Our Housing: Rooms or Ru- mors? Sunday morning, with Scammon as chairman, the Parley will recon- vene from 10 am. to noonfor paiel discussion. At this time an attempt will be made to tie up the conclusions of the various sections and decide upon resolutions asking changes in the University set-up. The student and faculty panels for each of the five sections, meeting with the student chaia ~e~ ecutive committee o naors have charted a tentative course for discussion in each of the sections, it was announced. Miss Bradfield (Continued from Page 2) Student Senate To Seek State Housing Funds Committee Recommends University VGrade Plan For Ro ming M ouses Plans to carry the student hous- ing problem to Gov. Frank Murphy took form yesterday as the Housing Committee of the Student Senate recommended a committee be formed to seek funds from the State Legisla- ture to increase cramped rooming fa- cilities -in Ann Arbor. The committee also urged that rooming houses be graded by the CUniversity and a list of thesegrades as well as prices asked be published by the Dean of Student's office. The repor of the Housing Committee, whio was unanimously adopted, will be presented to the Senate at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. A recommendation for a student rent strike next fall aimed at lower- ing room rents through united stu- dent action was understood to have been debated and to have received the support of a considerable portion of the committee. The committee also advocated that hearings on the general subject of rents be continued in an attempt to analyze charges that exorbitant pro- fits are accruing to landladies and rooming house owners. Both land- ladies and students will be asked to testify. Included in the report is a sum- mary of the evidence presented be- fore the committee at an open hear- ing April 5. A minority report will also be filed by Tom Downs, '39. Other recommendations submitted by the committee provide for, a fur- ther hearing at which Dr. Lloyd Gates, University sanitarian, will be asked to present a report on sani- tary conditions in rooming houses and for an investigation into alleged monopolistic activities on the part of contractors and men supplying build- Firm Against German Pact Unite To Speed Industry Or Face Dictatorship, Daladier Warns French PARIS, April 25.-(/P)-Premier Edouard Daladier tonight made known his government's flat opposi- tion to any four-power European pact that would include Nazi Germany. I Associated Press Briefs The premier's stand was disclosed as he warned Frenchmen to unite in speeding industry or face dictator- ship. French officials said that the for- eign office "understood" the British government had given up its idea for a four-power pact linking France, Britain, Germany and Italy to guar- antee European peace. Such a pact many observers had thought would result from. the new Anglo-Italian accord and pending French-Italian friendship treaty ne- gotiations. Informed sources said the British had abandoned the plan when they saw that France was determined to back her Czechoslovak ally and that Adolf Hitler equally was determined to keep his hands free in eastern Europe. In disclosing Daladier's stand, the premier's associates said a four-point plan for Franco-British discussion (continued on Page 2). T o Hold Special School Election Voters Judge $270,000 l Expansion Bond Issue Voters in the Ann Arbor school dis- trict will go to the polls in a special election to be held May 10 and decide whether a bond issue to the amount of $270,000 shall be issued to pay for a new elementary school on the north side and a junior high school in the southeast section, the Ann Ar- bor School Board decided unani- mously in a meeting held last night. Building of the schools will, be de- pendent upon the Federal govern- ment offering a grant of not less than 45 per cent of the cost. Total expen- ditures, with the grant, will amount to $490,000 if the measure is approved by the voters. Land for the southeast school will be bought with money already in the possession of the Board, it was de- cided. The action halted friction between (Continued on Page 2) City Bankruptcy Act. ApprovedBy Court W ATrmTr Anril 5 .-UP- ophy have been explained in ma- terial, scientific terms.E Dr. Adler characterized the posi-E tivist's idea of philosophy as "idle speculation of a tired scientist," andt pointed to an undue place given toE scientific studies in liberal education. "We are turning outrbachelors of science who cannot read, write or speak,' he declared, He asked for a greater emphasis on philosophy in modern university curricula, as is being attempted at the University of Chicago. Science and philosophy are equally valid kinds of knowledge, he said, with the latter in many ways superior, and through a (Continued on Page 2) President Asks Taxes On Bonds _ t His Message Urges Court To Overturn Old Rule WASHINGTON, April 25.-(P)- Congress received, with obvious ap- proval, today a message from Presi- dent Roosevelt urging that future state and federal bond issues and sal- ary payments be made subject to both state and federal income tax, laws. In effect, Mr. Roosevelt asked the Supreme Court to overturn past court decisions which, he said, had encour- aged "men with great means" to lock up substantial portions of their funds in tax exempt securities. He said that court decisions had led to a sys- tem of reciprocal immunity under which income from federal bonds were exempted from state taxation, and vice versa. But, he added, more recent rulings indicated the courts themselves were questioning this position. "Therefore" he said, "it is not un- reasonable to hope that judicial de- cision may find it possible to correct it- Loyalists Halt' Rebel Attacks Counter-Attacks Stop Push Toward Coastal City HENDAYE, France (At the Span- ish Frontier), April 25.-(IP) -Em- battled Government forces struck furiously to turn the tables today on the Insurgent offensive in eastern Spain. Reports from both sides told of a sustained Government attack which halted the Insurgent drive toward Castellon de la Plana, coastal objec- tive of the' Insurgents. A second attack was launched on the northern front by Government fighters in an heroic attempt to res- cue their comrades of a "lost divi- sion," cut off by the Insurgents high in the Pyrenees. Twenty-five miles north of Castel- lon, an Insurgent Italian column op- erating along the seaboard still fought for possession of Alcala de The University forged to the fron- tier of American higher learning yes- terday with the announcement by Dr. Lloyd S. Woodburne assistant to the dean of the literary college, that Michigan will inaugurate, in the fall of 1930, an experimental tutorial sys- tem modeled on the Oxford plan and similar to systems extant at both Harvard University and Swarthmore College. The first state-supported institu- tion to accept the plan, Michigan 'will give it a trial period of five years with no more than 100 students en- rolled under it at any one time, Thirty students from this year's freshman class will be selected at the outset o their junior year to start the experiment. Individual Gets Attention The new system refuse's to push sll students through the same hopper and places heavy accent on indivi- dual attention, with an eye to a hore thorough-going synthesis of knowi- edge. Subject matter, it is intended, will be- fashioned to the Intellectual figure of the student. Students desiring entrance into the tutorial plan must fulfill a listof special requirements including: a 'B average, personal interview with the board of tutors, qualifying examina- tions in English composition and one foreign language acceptable to the Board., About 12 tutors 'will be selected fro~m the faculty to rganiz*e and su- perVise the entire program of the honors student. Only half of the work will be in regularly scheduled courses, but an extensive supple- mentary program of assigned red- ings and research will be administered by the tutor, During his last two years the stu- dent will concentrate his interests around a central theme- and extend his knowledge in collateral fields. Weekly conferences pertaining to the extra-class study will be held with the tutor and the latter will report this work as a regular course with & number, filling in a grade for th final accomplishment. Seniors Write Essay During his senior year each student will be expected to write a "penetrat- ing" essay upon any subject selected by him after consultation with his tutor. The merit of the essay will be appraised by members of the Board of Tutors and faculty members who are specialists in the subject, The present "package" system of examinations will be replaced by comprehensives, administered at the end of the senior year in the field of concentration and allied subjects. Students who have demonstrated su- perior ability in these tests will be recommended for honors at gradua- tion. Members of the faculty chosen for duty as tutors will be relieved of at least one third of their present teah- ing duties. The Board of Tutors will be appointed by the Dean and the Executive Committee. The tutorial plan was drawn up 'by a panel of seven faculty members who signed their recommendation in the , following order: Prof. Erich A. Walter of the English department, Prof. Burton D. Thuma of the psy- chology department. Prof. Ralph A. Sawyer of the physics department, Dr. Woodburne, Prof. Warner 0. Rice of the English department, Prof, Ar- thur S. Aiton of the history depart- ment and Prof. Charles F. Remer of the economics department. Morgau To Lecture On Religion Tonight Kenneth Morgan, director of the Student Religious Association, will give the first of a series of three le- tures on contemporary Hindu leaders at 7:30 p.m. today at Lane Hall., He will talk on "The Founding of a Namw P.Hiunn and" dis awathae ifh A Anglo-Irish Accord From London came news from the Associated Press that Great Britain and Ireland embarked yesterday on an era of good neighborliness with the signing of a sweeping accord which still, however, must be ratified by both parliaments. The accord provided for termination of trade and financial disputes and makes Ireland' responsible for her own defense. ,Jap Columns Advance In China three Japanese columns were advancing today almost within striking distance of the vital Lung- hai Railway. As these troops were strung out over a 50 mile battle front in the biggest drive of the Sino-Ja- panese war, the Rising Sun of Japan, bent on vengance, was nearing Tai- erhchwang after savage fighting. Lewis' Foes Confer Closer to home, AP reported from Washington the AFL executive coun- cil would consider today whether to carry its fight against the CIO into John L. Lewis' own back yard, the, soft col i eld\. tongue-lashing from Harry S. Toy, who is bent on becoming Michigan's next chief executive. Toy, speaking at Coldwater, accused Murphy of having an "unholy alliance" with per- sons who "defy law and order" as well as charging him with "vicious pan- dering to class hatred." Grundy's 'Funeral Day' At Grundy, Va., scene of the tragic explosion which took 45 lives Friday, it was "funeral day" yesterday. Ac- tivity throughout the district was sus- pended as the town prepared to honor its dead. Noyes Fears Dictator News from New York quoted Frank B. Noyes as saying, as he ended his 38-year tenure as president of the Associated Press, "I pray to God that the time may never come when any individual can dictate to the news- papers of the United States the na- ture of the reports they give." Oppose Naval Bill Back in Washington, Senate op- ponents of the huge naval expansion bil raked that measure with charges