The Weather Mostly cloudy, cooler today; tomorrow cloudy and continued cool. Y 5k iguu jDatt Editorials What Does It Cost You? . . The New Public Opinion... Johnny Get Your Gun .. . . A VOL. XLVM. No. 156 ANNq ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1938 PRICE FIVE CMNS '38 Miehigras Attrats 3,500 For First Da Prizes For Best Floats Won By S.A.E., Delta Gamma And Triangles Kappa Alpha Theta Best Of 65 Booths At 11:30 p.m. yesterday, more than 3.500 people had paid admission at Yost Field House to see and take part in the 1938 Michigras carnival held for the benefit of the proposed Wom- en's Athletic Association's swimming pool and the Varsity Band's trip to Yale, according to Hugh Rader, '38, general chairman. All Ann Arbor had turned out earl- ier yesterday afternoon to watch the huge Michigras parade which contained 60 units and stretched over six blocks. Gets Prizes Prizes of loving cups were awarded to Sigma Alpha Epsilon's float, which was a take-off on cigarette advertis- ers; Delta Gamma and Triangles. In the commercial section, loving cups were given to the Kiwanis Club, the Boy Scout troop No. 22 for their har- monica band and to Mullison's riding academy. Judges for the floats were Stanley Waltz, manager of the Union, Miss Ethel McCormick, social direc- tor of the League, and Mayor W. C. Sadler. Awards given to the best decorated bicycles Went to Bill Sturgis, Billy Taylor,' Helen- Apple and Bob Frink. Last night visitors to the Michi- gras found more than 65 booths to patronize. Booths ranged from the Chi Phi's "rat race" and Lambda Chi Alpha's "OShaugnessy's Saloon" to the Alpha Phi's "Shoe Shine" and Sigma Phi's "Dew Drop Inn." Cup Presented A cup was awarded to Kappa A- pha Theta's "Darts at Dwarfs" for the met clever booth. Honorable mention we to the Phi Kappa Psi and Pi Beta Phi's "Esquire Rodf" for dancing and dining, Alpha Xi Delta's ""Character Make-Up," and to Alpha SOmegas Frost Bites." Judging of booths was done by Dean Walter B. Rea, Marie Hartwig and Laurie Campbell, acting head of the women's physical education department. The Michigras will be held again starting at 7:30 p.m. today and will last until midnight.: Varsity Whips Ypsi Nine, 6-5, t Briggs Field Four Wolverine Errors Mar Play In Stadium Dedication Game By BUD BENJAMIN YPSILANTI, May 6.-(Special to the Daily)-The Varsity baseball team spoiled Micliigan State Normal's ded- ication day ceremonies at the new Walter 0. Briggs Field here today by winning 6 to 5, but the Wolverines tried hard enough to be gentlemen about it. With an estimated crowd of 1,800 looking on, the unpredictable Varsity sprang to an early lead, and then slipped into their old ways again with a sloppy exhibition that almost spelled defeat. d Tomorrow (Saturday) the Wolver- ines end their week's brace of four games facing Indiana on the home diamond. Game time is 3:15 p.m. There was little to cheer about in the Michigan victory today. Four glaring errors were committed by the Varsity, which, along with tech- nical miscues and misjudgments in the field, practically nullified their potent hitting attack. Ed Andronik pitched eight hit ball in going the route for Michigan, but three of the Ypsi blows were of the unearned variety. Big Ed struck out seven and issued a lone pass in a steady performance. The Wolverines finally met up with eccentric Martin "Rube" Zachar, who looks like Elmer Dean and pitches somewhat like brother Dizzy, and gave him a good going over. It start- A 'Fighting' Band Leads To Carnival Land Part of yesterday's Michigras parade is pictured above. The Varsity Band, seen above, le'd the parade and was followed by Mullison's tallyho. More than 60 units took part in the parade which stretched for six blocks. Sigma Alpha Epsilon's float won the loving cup for the most clever unit. Tag Day, Friday 13, To Prove Lucky Day For Fresh A ir Camp Student Religious Group, League And Union Back Fund-RaisingCampaign Tag Day, which will be held Friday, May 13, has played a significant part in the support of the University Fresh Air Camp since the camp was found- ed in 1921. Over the 17-year period, students have raised between $700 to $2,100 per year through tag day drives. Their contributions amount to $27,000 or approximately 20 per cent of the total camp funds. Student contributions have not, however, been limited to money alone. Many Michigan stu- dents have also given their time, with little or no recompense, in working for the successful operation of the camp. This year more than 150 stu- dents will be working on Tag Day, and others will contribute their time throughout the year in various phases of the work of maintaining the camp. In years past many of the counsel- ors at the camp have been Michigan Varsity Teams Perform On Four Fronts Today Michigan's 1938 outdoor spring athletic season hits its peak this afternoon when varsity athletes perform on four fronts. In what will probably be the fea- ture attraction of the day, Coach Charley Hoyt's irrepressible track team takes on the thinclads from Illinois in a meet scheduled to start at two p.m.' at Ferry Field. Stocky Hlerm Fishman will toe the rubber for the Wolverine base- ball team in a diamond battle be- tween Michigan anda strong In- diana Hoosier outfit that finished second in the Conferencelast year. The'ball team cross bats at 3:15 on the home field. A persistent winner, Michigan's golf aggregation plays host today to Illinois' club swingers. The linksters will be at their game all day. Leroy Weir's surprising net team remains in the Chicago area today to face Chicago University's in- vincible Maroon aces, perennial Conference winners. (For details see Page 3) students. This year, for the first time, the entire staff of counselors will be students enrolled in the University Summer Session. Since its inception, Tag Day has been sponsored by the Student Chris- tian Association. This year, however, other University organizations are lending their support, principally the League and the Union. Other sources of income, in addi- tion to the Tag Day drive include a boxing show, boys' fees, gifts from foundations, such as the Rackham Foundation and the Children's Fund of Michigan, and many contributions -from Michigan Alumni, faculty mem- bers and clubs. Summer camp projects are found at the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Southern Califor- nia and Princeton University. The University of Pennsylvania camp pro- vided the model for the Michigan camp. Greiner Wins Speech Contest NLRB Will Reopen Hearings On Ford WASHINGTON, May 6.-P) The Ford Motor Company received notice today that the National Labor Rela- tions Board would withdraw its de- cision that the company had vo- ated the Wagner Labor Act. Board lawyers explained that this step was a "legal courtesy" preceding actual withdrawal of the 'decisioi. The Ford case is to be reopened by the board for further proceedings. Previously a trial examiner heard tes- timony on charges by the United Automobile Workers (CIO) that the company was guilty of unfair labor practices as defined by the Wagner Act. Railway Labor A tflailed As IndustrialBoon Sharfman Tells Teachers Measure Will Avert Wage Cut Crisis In Near Future Using as an illustration a major railway dispute that may arise in about a week when the railways noti- fy their employes that they must take a 15 per cent wage cut, Prof. I. L. Sharfman, head of the econ- omics department, yesterday ex- plained how the Railway Labor Act will serve to prevent serious economic disruptions, at the second annual conference of the Industrial Rela- tions Teachers, The men, through their union, will probably refuse to accept the cut and the machinery of the act will begin to function to prevent a discontinu- ance of service such as a strike would cause. Professor Sharfman pointed out that because of shrinkage of rail traffic caused by the present depres-. sion and because of the severe com- petition of motor and other forms of transportation, the only solution for the railways, which have been losing money since last fall despite an eight per cent increase in rates granted by the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, would be to cut operating costs. The first thing to be cut will natural- ly be wages, he said. When the employes, who claim they have been hard hit already, more than half a million of their number having lost their jobs since 1929-re- fuse to accept the cut, conferences will take place between the two sides. as is the usual case, Prof. Sharf- man said, they will probably be un- able to reach an agreement and eith- er or both sides may ask the National Mediation Board to step in. The Board, is an impartial body, but only medi- ates making no decisions. However, if an agreement cannot be reached and if after the Board leaves the case interstate commerce is endan- gered, the President will be notified and an emergency Board will step in. This board first acts as a fact- finding committee and then turns into a mediating group. Professor Sharfman suggested that I the Adjustment Board, a bi-partisan group that gives cases preliminary hearings should be changed to a non- partisan group to avoid mere decisions (Continued on Page 6) Banker Outlines Manager's Job Dodge Talks Before 200 Business School Alumni Few people recognize the difference between doing and managing, Joseph M. Dodge, president of the Detroit Bank, told 200 alumni of the bus- iness administration school last night in the Union. He selected as the outstanding characteristic of the manager an incessant "demand for progress. The job of the manager, Mr. Dodge declared is to "analyze and define problems-he deals with things gone wrong because things all right take care of themselves." Prestige and high income come to the successful manager, Mr. Dodge said, but the also pointed to the "fet- tered" business man of today who is bound by the multitude of circum- stances that surround his business. Mr. Dodge warned that experience alone is not a sufficient qualification for management, for, he pointed out, "experience is valuable as a defensive quality-not as a creative quality." The qualifications of a good man- Swing Concert Planned To Aid Fund Pro gram Swing fiends will be given the long-awaited opportunity to hear the famous collection of old and new swing records of Philip Diamond of the German Department at a concert at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the main ballroom of the League for the bene- fit of the local fund campaign being conducted by the Hillel Foundation to aid European refugees. Campus swingsters have long tried to get Mr. Diamond to give a concert of his records. The opportunity to help-the fund drive finally won him over. "The admission price is only 10 cents," Mr. Diamond said, "since it is all in the spirit of fun, but it should help the drive a little." The concert will be arranged ac- cording to orchestras with comments on the band personnel by Mr. Dia- mond, who was a pianist at the time these orchestras were at the height of their popularity. Among the selections to be present- ed are numbers by Bix Beiderbicke, Red Nichols, Miff Mole and Joe Ven- uti, all real swing bands of the old school. Mitrany Scores New European1 Security Pacts; Says Strict National Basis Cannot Secure Peace, Internal Or External Comparing events in the contem- porary European crisis with the state of affairs following the Napoleonic Wars, Dr. David Mitrany of the In- stitute of Advanced Studies at Prince- ton told the Michigan Model As- sembly last night in the League that internal and external security can- not be secured on the strictly nA- tional basis so earnestly sought in Europe today. The failures of the Holy Alliance and the Concert of Europe in the 19th century are being paralleled today by the League of Nations' attempts at international organization and the other alliances among nations de- signed for reciprocal military support. These efforts, Dr. Mitrany said, are not failing because of an inherent weakness in the international move- ment, but rather because of the in- ability of the nations to grasp the im- plications of the problem and to adapt themselves to the exigencies of any working system of international organization. He dismissed the present Anglo- Italian alliance and others-which he (Continued on Page 2) Civil Service Leak' Denied Brownrigg Sees No Need To Reexamine Employes LANSING, May 6.-(j)-The Civil Service Commission accepted a report of William Brownrigg, personnel di- rector today, that there was no jus- tification for charges that a group of state empoyees had obtained ad- vance information concerning the questions to be asked in a civil service qualifying examination. The commission held there was no justification for a reexamination of those who took the test and concurred in Brownrigg'saction in deciding that the 21 challenged questions should not be counted in grading test papers. Brownrigg told the commission he could "guarantee" that there was no "leak" in his department and served notice that the examinations were so designed that cramming or tip- offs would be of no appreciable value to the test-taker. 'Passage Predicted British Labor Wins 3rd Election Based On Foreign Policy LONDON, May 6.-(AP)-Great Brit- ain's National Government lost its third straight by-election to the Labor Party today after a fight waged large- ly on the issue of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's "deal with dic- tators" policy. The government, however, still had 415 seats in the House of Commons to 195 for the opposition.I While C. C. Poole, 35-year-old rail- way clerk, was sent into Commons from the Lichfield constituency, near Birmingham, the Government on an- other front strove to knit the "na- tional unity" for which Chamberlain has been pleading. Labor was jubilant over the victory in the Lichfield constituency which includes some suburbs of Birming- ham, Chamberlain's home town. Labor leaders attributed the vic- tory to popular resentment against the Government's foreign policy and' what critics call "pro-fascist" senti- ments in the government. What amountd to an unofficial popular front-with Liberals, Inde- pendents and Laborites uniting to support Poole-was a major factor in his election. British, French, Seek lPeaceful Czech Solution Is House Forces Vote On Wage-Hour Act; Awarded $100 First Prize In Cleveland CLEVELAND, May 6.-(Special to The Daily)-Speaking on the need for more college-educated persons in politics, Fred H. Greiner, '39, today took first place honors in the Nor- thern Oratorical League contest here find with it a: prize of $100. James Rahl of N'.rthwestern University was awarded the $50 second prize. Greiner, who won two local elimina- tion contests before he was, chosen the "University's representative, com- peted against speakers from the University of Iowa, Western Reserve University, Northwestern University, University of Minnesota and the University of Wisconsin. Citing the troubles and problems caused by political bosses and un- scrupulous politicians Greiner said "We must do away with the idea that politics and government are separate entitles. We must destroy the idea of politics as a game." English Ambassador Will See Goering On 3-Point Plea To Prevent War PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, May 6.-P)--The German Agrarian Party today injected a discordant note into the 40th birthday cele- bration of Konrad Henlein by an- . nouncing its separation from the , Nazi chieftain's Sudeten German group. LONDON, May 6.- (P)--Great Britain and France decided today to make a quick effort to ease Czechoslo- vakia's minority trouble and get Eu- rope away from the brink of possible wA r.. Informed sources said that, without waiting for Adolf Hitler's return from his state visit to Italy,;SirNeville Henderson, British ambassador to Germany, would see Field Marshall Hermann Goering, acting Chancellor, tomorrow in Berlin on behalf of the democratic allies. .Advise Czek Concessions Stripped of diplomatic niceties, the Anglo-French approach' would -in- clude: 1. A request for German aid in get.- ting Konrad Henlein, Nazi leader in Czechoslovakia, to moderate his de- mands for that nation's minority of 3,500,000 Germans. '. An Anglo-French offer to "ad- vise"' the Czechoslovak government' to make liberal concessions. Warn Germany 3. A warning that "rough handling" of the minority issue by Germany most certainly would precipitate a war. In Rome, Mussolini was represented as having promised Hitler to bring all diplomatic pressure possible upon Prague both to grant Henlein's de- mands and to loosen, if not sever, the Czechoslovak alliance with Soviet k-ussia. Norton Committee Head, Sees Ultimate 40 Cent Low And 40 Hour Top Both AFL And CIO Back The Measure WASHINGTON, May 6.-(P)- Backers of the Wage-Hour Bill, mus- tering a majority of the House in a quick maneuver, snatched the legis- lation away from the hostile Rules Committee today and thus made pos- sible a showdown vote on the hot issue before Congress goes home to face the voters in primary campaigns. Amid tumultuous scenes, 228 legis- lators lined up in a fast-stepping queue and affixing their signatures to a petition forcing the committee to take the bill out of a pigeon-hole and send it to the floor for consideration beginning May 23. Jubilant advocates of the legisla- tion--and some opponents as well- said this spelled victory for the mea- sure on the final vote. "The bill's going through as it is; we shall resist all amendments," said Rep. Mary Norton (Dem.N.J.) chair- man of the House Labor Committee sponsoring the legislation. The bill calls for a flat 25-cent.ai- hour minimum wage, to be increased by annual five-cent jumps to 40 cents. It also provides for maximum hours, graduated downward fro 44 in the first year to 40 after the second. The action todaywas in sharp con- trast to the 216 to 198 vote by which the House sent a different Wage- Hour Bill back to the Labor Comniit. tee last Dec. 17, a vote which-shelved the subject until this session. Last year's bill, however, was un- satisfactory to the Axerican keder- ation of. Labor, whereas both the AFL and the CIO, were pulling for the 1938. measure. Bankers of the latter bill also contende their cause received a powerful boost when Sen- ator Pepper (Dem., Fla.) New Dealer, won overwhelming renomination in Florida this week over Representative Wilcox, critic of many administra- tion policies. Wage-Hour legislation is a cardinal point on the Roosevelt program. The speed with which the signa- tures went on the petition today al- most took the leaders' breath away. One hundred names were attached in a bare half hour, and the whole thing Was over in slightly more than two hours. MIPA Meeting Closes'Toay 700 High School Editors To Attend Roundtables More than 700 high school editors from 60 schools throughout the State attended the annual Michigan Inter- scholastic Press Association's dinner last night and heard C. J. Tinker, of the State department of conservation, speak on wild life. At 8 a.m. today, delegates from all the publications will attend a break- fast where convention policies will be discussed. The journalism depart- ment, which is sponsoring the con- vention, will be in charge of the breakfast. Round-table d scusson will be held at 10:30 a.m._ today on colum- nists, art, classified advertising, news- writin'g, quill and scroll, news-maga- zines and photography. The convention will be closed with a luncheon at '12:30 p.m.at which Prof. Donal H. Haines, of the jour- nalism department, will preside. After the luncheon, delegates to the con- vention will attend the Michigan- Illinois track meet. Sino-Japanese Deadlock Ushers In Eleventh Month Of The War SHANGHAI, May 7.-(Saturday)- -(P)-A bitter deadlock today ushered in the eleventh month of undeclared war between China and Japan. On the main front in southern Shantung Province, Japan's modern army was halted in its tracks for the second time in six weeks. It had been forced buck from its furthest advances in other provinces. Chinese asserted they still were gaining slightly in their counter-of- fensive against the Japanese North of Pihsien, in the center of the Japanese lines. They acknowledged, however, that Japanese artillery again was buttres- Cir th1.. Anmvnnitirrns At Ta~n- and Honan provinces because they have had to drain those fronts of troops to bolster their main cam: paign. Neutral observers believe three fac- tors-China's German military ad- visers, her Soviet Russian-made air- planes and China's new spirit of re- sistance-now seriously threaten Japan's hopes. The Japanese defeat at Taierhch- wang five weeks ago, the worst de- feat of a modern Japanese army, brought the first real evidence that the Chinese were listening to their German advisers. Further evidence is the new deadlock in the same area NLRB Hears Striker Describe Formation Of 'Company Union' Armin M. Fillinger, striking Inter- national Typographical Union mem-; ber, told the National Labor Relations, Board in Washington yesterday that A. J. Wiltse, Ann Arbor Press man- ager, suggested that he organize the, Independent Association of Ann Arbor Press Employees, Inc., so that the plant could conform to a recent Mich- igan act governing labor conditions in ntant riin sttemit ing h sso- he expected to complete his submis- sion of testimony on Monday. He will offer six more witnesses, most of them discharged Press employees. Fillinger further charged before Trial Examiner Frank Bloom that the management gave him suggestions for the articles of the Association and that membership cards were printed in the plant. Petitions For Congress Positions Are Due Today All petitions for Executive Coun- cil positions of Congress, independent men's organization, must be submit- ted at the Union desk before 5 p.m. today, it was announced yesterday. Any independent man may petition for a seat on the Council. Those po-