DAY, OCT. 2, 193 THE MICI G A N D A I LY I TwnStdnsVot German Contest Duke To Visit Industrial Equitable Salary Determination Town Students Vote - Crime No.1 Problem Entrants Urged Cities In Coming Tri Is Industry's Aim, Riegel Finds a NEW YORK, Oct. 21-(IP)-George Crime and juvenile delinquency, To AStart Now Link, Jr., attorney for Charles E. Large industrial firms are tending will be published in about three public opinion, drugs and liquor, and Bedaux, friend and travelling com- to determine salaries more equitably months by the Bureau. child labor are considered the four APPOINT NEW DEPUTIES Appointment of Thomas L. Knight,. 48 years old, and Forrest Hillyer, 36, as full-t;me deputy sheriffs, as au- thorized by the county board of sup- ervisors, was announced" yesterday by Sheriff Jacob B. Andres. PREUSS TO SPEAK AT HILLS Dr. Lawrence Preuss, of the po ical science department will spt on "International Law and thePr. ent Crisis' 'at the service to be h at 8:00 p.m. today at the Hillel foi dation. , i Contest To Come In April; Examination And Essay To Be Bases Of Award Contestants for the Bronson-Tho-} mas German Prize were urged yester- panion of the Duke nounced today that Duchess would visit of Windsor, an-|through objective methods, Prof. John Lthe Duke and approximately W. Riegel of the Bureau of Industrial all major industrial centers" in the United States on their forthcoming tour. They intend buying 'no property here,-he said. day y Prf. HnryW. NrdmeerFinal plans for the former king's day by Prof. Henry W. Nordmeyer, American itinerary will not be com- chairman of the German department, pleted until about Oct. 25 or 26, he to begin as soon as possible the re- said, adding their American visit quired reading necessary before the would be "purely private." competition, which will be held about He said the couple would arrive in April 1. New York the second week in Novem- The . Bronson-Thomas German ber and spend a month travelling Prie, consisting of $35, is awarded back and forth across the United States,-"one way across the north- annually to undergraduate students ern part of the country, the other way{ in German 31 or above, in an essay through the south-or vice versa." I and examination competition on! some section of German literature. Each contestant must obtain a reading list from the German depart- ment from which to select reading for one of five sections: classicism, romanticism, short stories of the 19th century, drama of the 19th century, and other works of literature. After satisfying the department that he has completed the necessary reading, he will be admitted to the contest and may write his essay in either English or German. The prize was donated by Thomas Bertrand Bronson, '81, master of modern languages in Lawrenceville Preparatory School, through a grant of $1,000, the interest on which was to be used for an annual essay award. He named it in honor of Calvin Tho- mas, '74, professor of German lan- guages and literature in the Univer- sity from 1887 to 1896 and later Geb- hard professor of German in Co- lumbia University. Feder Stays Mum In Interview Here Relations, stated yesterday following' a discussion by 20 manufacturing rep- resentatives at the Bureau's con- ference here last week. "Companies are identifying condi- tions of salaried employment whichl impose responsibilities and call forl employe effort. Thus, the different burdens connected with salaried po- sitions are being more accurately ap- praised for the purposes of compen- sation," Professor Riegel explained. Among clerical positions such fac- tors are, for example, the length of the learning period required, serious- ness of possible errors or failures, organization of problems presented to the employe and the influence the employe is expected to have upon other persons. "Industrial relations managers, in comprehensive salary-control plans, contrast all clerical positions with reference to such critical factors and, taking into consideration, current market rates for basic services, estab- lish basic salaries payable to em- ployes for par performance in each position. Individuals, whose quality1 of work is above par, naturally com- mand rates above these." The conference the first conduct- ed by the Bureau this year, will be followed by another on the, same subject, Nov. 5 and 6, to which rep- resentatives of 20 different non-com- peting manufacturing companies will be invited. An analysis of the ma- terial presented at these conferences "Judging from inquiries received by! the Bureau," Professor Riegel ex-! plained, "it is clear that the repre- sentatives who convened here are among the pioneers in salary ad- ministration. The forthcoming bul- letin, I believe, will be received with much interest by other companies." most important problems of the day, by seniors in Ann Arbor High School, according to a recent survey. Disarmament was the seniors' fifth choice from the list of 48 social prob- lems submitted to them in an effort to survey the trend of thought in Ann Arbor homes on social, economic and political questions of the day. Buried farther down in the list of vital topics, the students selected government control of industry, in- ternational government and imper- ialism. STETSON HATS Featured At WAGNER'S - State Street Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classified Ads- FIND ABANDONED CAR An automobile, found abandoned five days ago on a highway at Chelsea, was ordered towed into a garage there Wednesday by sheriff's officers. Ef- forts are being made to locate the Royal Oak resident to whom the car is registered. - - - I ....._._ 11 IRead It In The Daily II (Continued from Page 1) man publication of New York, he de- scribed as "colorless." Questioned about the German need for colonies, which plays so large a part in the speeches of the paper- hanger. and in particular whether the need was for the purpose of col- onization or export markets, Herr Feder deftly side-stepped with an elo- quent 10-minute reply which was translated as, "I do not want to talk politics." This position was coyly maintained by the Herr Professor throughout the interview. As for Fritz Kuhn, fuehrer of the German-American Bund, Herr Feder had not only never met him, but had never even heard of him, ac- cording to his own solemn affidavit. 6 _ . _j C' _ : 7 C :' f ----------------- SMART MODES for SMART PEOPLE in sport, semi-dress, and dressy millinery $1.95 up Schiller's Hat Shop 219 South Main Street t d S' .', YOU'LL BE TOLD % WHEREEVER YOU GO About ARBOR SPRINGS WATER ,..,..... ...,.,. .... ........ MW* ... .. ..., . .., ... . . ... ..V GMM .... . FRIDAY and SATURDAY This Coupon Is Valuable By Special Arrangement With the Manufacturer This certificate and 59c entitles the bearer to one of our Indestructible VACUUM FILLER - Holds 204% more ink SACKLESS FOUNTAIN PENS, Visible Ink Sup- thanype ordinary, sack- ply. Lifetime Guarantee with every pen. Will New one-stroke Vac- not leak, blot or break. Ideal for uum Filler. Zip! One pull and it's school. 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