'AGE SUE THE MICHIGAN DAILY ;p / NEWS In Brief Spain HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Fron- tier-A Spanish government dispatch asserted Loyalist artillery yesterday scored hits on an Insurgent staff headquarters at Fuentes De Ebro on the Aragon Front in northeastern Spain. While Government field guns' pounded the middle Aragon Front Generalissimo Francisco Franco's In- surgent forces slogged through heavy rains and mud to prepare for their general offensive, which Insurgent leaders have declared would begin as soon as the weather is favorable. While Franco prepared for the "big push," Government forces harassed his fortifications and communica- tions. Today the Government re- ported its batteries had balked In- surgent efforts to fortify the banks of the Basa River in the Fuentes sector and had effectively bombarded the Zuera sector. Manila Growing records of death and de- struction today gave evidence that Wednesday's typhoon was the most disastrous in the Philippines in 25 years. The incomplete list of fatalities stood at 123, although many towns remained to be heard from. It was feared the total casualties would ma- terially exceed that figure. An in- cow plete survey of property damage estimated the loss at $4,000,000. Michigan At Lansing yesterday, a State fact- finding committee, appointed to de- termine the extent of Michigan's na- tural gas reserves, announced that it was too big a job. Insurgent Bombers Reap Human Harvest At Catalonia ------- - Wage And Hour Bill May Lower Pay To 40 Cent Minimum, Fuller Believes By HAROLD L. GARN' {)If the problem of wages and hours Since the Southern starndard of livirng If President Roosevelt's Wage and were left to the states, Professor is so much lower than the North's, Hour Bill is passed by the House I Fuller said, many would not act at Southerners fear that it will cut too employers may lower hourly wages all, but this bill will assure a general I greatlv into their profits and force to the 40 cent minimum as provided uniformity among all states. The soule industries into bankruptcy. in the bill, Prof. Richard C. Fuller'only way to insure high working stan- Professor Fuller declared. of the sociology department said yes-C dards is to set one plan, elastic There is some sentiment in the terday. enough to allow for differences in 'ountry which blames the present G rnecssion in husinsscnn recent'ov Two problems confronting the; House in the passage of the bill are! its constitutionality and its practical- ity, he stated. The possibility that the Supreme Court will approve the hillmO~ hn v~lov~nrl htlfl' various districts, Professor Fuller eMinent llatin and so the who I ernment legislation and so those who continued. "The policy of the bill in- voice this feeling are doubtful wheth- volves working out an elastic balance er this is the proper time for govern- of wages and hours applying to local ment to introduce a bill of this na- industries throughout the country." ture, he explained. Sil may be enianc favorable decision Labor Relations A clared. Concerning its fessor Fuller said th for uniformity an ard of wages and competition betwe different states in1 product and for lab The bill, which ceived the approva will adjust wages a ing to the needs of tries, which will be; dards set by the ,wage of 40 cents maximum working Now es y the Court's Laboring groups are not entirely in Just as laboring groups wan in the Wagner favor of the new bill because they fx wages, employers likewise N Lct case, he de- fear that boards set up by the bill the privilege, he said. If the may become reactionary at some time and Hour Bill is to succeed the practicality, Pro- and thus act against their best in-, gional boards will have to mal tat there is a need terests, he said. They also feel that thorough study of wage and d a basic stand- the bill will take out of their hands problems in their districts unde] hours to prevent something that rightfully belongs to1 supervision of the federal board, en employers of them-that of setting a wage scale fessor Fuller concluded . the price of their by collective bargaining. bor. Farmers are against the bill be- has already re- cause its provisions will not affect ART DIRECTOR TO SPEAI il of the Senate, them. They are also apprehensive of Sylvester Jerry, State directc nd hours accord- the higher prices that might result. the Federal Art Project, will gi particular indus- Southern opposition against the bill gallery talk at 4 p.m. Sunday or governed by stan- is very strong because Southern man- exhibition of modern German bill, a minimum ufacturers feel that it will give Wash- American water colors in the N per hour and a ington a chance to interfere with1 and South galleries of Alumni week of 40 hours. their private industries, he stated. morial Hall. t to want Wan A schoolboy's mother at Leridia, Catalonia in Spain weeps over the body of her child after nine Insurgent aviators bombed a grade school there, killing this lad and 55 classmates. More than 200 persons were killed and 400 wounded in the bombing of the town. Carillon Broadcast Illustrates Speed Of Radio, Abbot Declares Announce New SwingSeries' Douglas Gregory To Give Tango, Rhumba Lessons Ready . - i d 0 THE 1938 Great Difference Observed Between Reception Time ThroughRadio And Air the telephone wires is 30,000 miles per, second. The sounds leave the an- tenna in Trenton to become radio waves and travel back to the auto- . wingereietengineer for the The neatest trick of the week con- State Public Utilities Commission sists of huddling around the Baird and chairman of the committee, de- Tower and conducting a physics ex- elared the group would make no such peient while ound waves a estimate but would attempt instead Prof. wiloatpas cocertne to evolve a plan for co-ordinating cProf. Wilmot Pratt plays concert se- interests in the industry to "get thections on the cawhn Professor Pratt is broadcasting, Prof. Waldo Abbot, Adrian director of the University Broadcast- ing Service, said yesterday, listeners Gov. Frank Murphy completed an should drive their cars to the base inspection of the Michigan Girls' of the carillon tower, which is 200 Training School at Adrian yesterday feet high, turn on their radios and afternoon with the comment that he proceed to observe thedifference in was "greatly pleased" with the school the speed of sound and the speed of and vocational' work done at the in- radio transmission. 1 t f S C k mobile radio in Ann Arbor at a speed A new series of Swing Sessions have of 186,000 miles per second. been planned to begin Wednesday, The listener in his car will hear ! Dec. 1, in the League Ballroom,an- each bell over his radio after it has nounced Jean McConkey, '38, vice- traveled 70 miles, and a fraction of a president of the League in charge of second later he will hear the same these sessions. sound as it dxops 200 feet from the The new series will be open both to bell chamber tonhis ears, since sound lthose students who were enrolled in waves travel only 1100 feet per see- the first series and to those who were', ond. not. The price will be $3 per couple 'for the six sessions. ]oodyear,G MThe "Little Apple," a dance for two !couples, is to be featured, as well as the Rhumba and the Tango, she said. Plants Closed ;fewmore shag steps will also be Douglas Gregory, '39, will direct By Sit - Downs the session, and he and Marie Saw- yer, "39, are to demonstrate the Contin from Page 1) ew steps as they did in the first (Coninue fro Pag_1} _ series. Charlie Zwick's Swing Tiio will furnish the music for dancing. Labor Relations Board. In DetroitI Larry S. Davidow, union attorney, said the UAW would charge the Fisher 'Angel-Face' Geary Company discriminated against em-,. ployes for union activities. IsJailed At Albany The charge will be based, he said, MICHIGAN CALENDER FEATURING TWENTY-ONE FINE PICTURES OF CAMPUS BUILDINGS including Mailing Envelope....75 cents EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS P.M. 6 :00-Ty Tyson. 6:15-Dinner Music. 6:30-Press Radio News. 6:45-Art of Living., 7:00-Top-Hatters. 7:30--Girls o the West. 7:45-Soloist. 8:00-Believe It Or Not, 8:30-Jack Haley_ 9:00-NBC Feature. 9:30-Special Delivery. 10:00--NBC Jamboree. 11:00-Newscast. 11:15-Webster Hall Orch. 11:30-Dance Music, 12 :00-Dance Music. A microphone is placed in the bell chamber of the Burton Tower and is connected with an amplifier in the control booth. The sound of the1 bells is carried from this microphone to the telephone exchange in Ann Ar- bor, thence to the Detroit exchange and over a wire to the control booth on the 28th floor of the Fisher Build- ing in Detroit. These electrical impulses, continued Professor Abbot, are then conveyed by telephone wires to the WJR trans- mitter at Trenton, Michigan. The speed of the electrical impulses over Worley Damage Suit Moved To Dec. Term Trial of the $5,000 personal injury damage suit brought by Prof. John S.1 Worley of the transportation engi- neering department against Mr. and Mrs. John Hoban of Ypsilanti, arising1 from an automobile collision Aug. 31, 1936, was adjourned Thursday to the December term of circuit court. 1 Witnesses Judge Clyde I. Webster' and Mrs. Webster of Detroit, were un- able to testify this term, Professor W)rley's counsel stated. Professor Worley is a defendant in; a cross-bill action brought by theI Hobans. Mrs. Hoban is asking $5,000i for injuries received in the collision' and Hoban is seeking $2,000 to re- cover his wife's hospital expenses. WAHR'S BOOOKSTORES 103 North Main Street 316 South i I . . Iii "tl WXYZ P.M. 6:00-Day in Review. 6:15--Mark Weber Orch 6 :30--Football Scores. 7 :00--Message of Israel. 7:30-Town Talk. 7 :45-Sandlotters. 8:00-Al Roth Orch. 8 :30-Linton Wells. 8:30-Fray and Braggiotti. 8:45-Victor Arden. 9:00-National Barn Dance. 10 :00-NBC Symphony Orch. 11:30-Sandy Williams Orch. 12 :00-Graystone. 12:30-Rudy Vallee Orch. CKLW P.M. 6 :00-Turf Reporter. S:15-Vincent York Orch. .:30=-Dance Orch. 7:0--Palmer House Ensemble 7:45--Dance Orch. 8:00-Hi, There. Audience. on the cases of George Method, chairman of a union negotiating com- 1 mittee, Arnold Rolling, Thomas Welch and Lester Cismas, all shop committeemen. E. R. Leeder, plant. manager.,, said the Fisher Company "would insist on suspending" the men for their part in a 'sit-down which halted plant operations Monday and Tuesday. LANSING, Nov. 19.- (A')--The Lansing office of the United Auto- mobile Workers disclosed today it had mailed notices to 3,000 unionl members employed in the Fisher Body Corporation's branch here call- ing them to a meeting Saturday at 3 p.m. when a strike vote would be taken. Lester Washburn, president of the local and regional director of the 'UAW, said the strike vote meeting was being called at the request of Fisher Body workers to protest the I discharge of a union member last Wednesday. He charged the cor- poration had violated the terms of a recent agreement. ALBANY, N.Y., Nov. 19.-- (A') -- Percy (Angel Face) Geary was locked up tonight in the "escape proof" Al- bany County Jail, 'along with John Oley and Harold Crowley, his jail breaking, convicted kidnaper com- panions. He was brought here from Syra- cuse after being hustled off a New York Central train at Schenectady, 15 miles away. Engineer And Inventor, Class Of '87, Dies Here Earl Porter Wetmore, '87E, of Con- cord, 74 years old, internationally- known engineer and a member of the first regular class in mechanical en- gineering to be graduated from the University, died Thursday in Univer- sity Hospital. Lifelong friend of Dean Emeritus Mortimer E. Cooley, Mr. Wetmore was associated with the development1 of electric railways in this country and in Europe. He held more than a dozen patents on inventions. o CHURCH DIRECTORY 9 :0-J.ohn Steele. R( 9:15-Chicago Symphony. - Radio Class To Present 9:30-Hancock Ensemble. 10:00-Dramatic Program. Fifth Episode Of Serial1 10 :00--DermaticenPrch.in 11:00-Canadian Club Reporter. 11:15-Horace Heidt Orch Joan and Jack at Michigan,' thel 11:30-Billy Swanson Orch. dramatic skit written and presented 12:00-Isham Jones Orch. by students in . Prof. Waldo Abbot's I 12:30-Wayne King Orch. radio course, will be on the air from' WJR 9 a.m. to 9:15 a.m. today over station P.M. 6:00-Football Jamboree. WJR. This is the fifth in the serial 6:15--Stevenson News, presentations. :00-NrtsCmeis to Life. From 9:15 a.m. to 9:30 a.m., the 7:30-Carborundum Band. class in Radio Reading and Drama-? 8:00-Your Unseen Friend. tics, under' the direction of Prof. 8 :30-Phillip Morris. 9 :00--Professor Quiz. Louis Eich of the speech department, S:30-Saturday Night Serenade. will be heard. 10:00-Your Hit Parade. The program at 5:45 p.m. will pre-I 1 :45-Radio Soap Box. 11:15--Bunny Berigan Orch. t sent Prof. David Mattern of the' 11:30-Benny Goodman Orch. 12:00--Emery Deutsch Orch. School of Music conducting the 12:30-Bob Crosby Orch. University Glee Club in a quarter hour of singing. STOCKS STILL WEAKT Stocks continued weak in the New TO TEST DOG FOR RABIES York market yesterday, with most of A dog owned by Dean Edward H.i the leaders in fast relapse. Bonds Kraus of the literary college was re- 3 were reported lower, the same condi- ported Thursday to have bitten Davidj tion existing on the Curb Exchange, I Nelson, 1708 Geddes Ave., on the leg. a w ge of renewed selling hit the Deputy Sheriff Thomas Knight or-- lea ders. Foreign exchange remained dered the dog tied for 10 days to steady. 'determine whether it had rabies. The finest book, no matter what the Standard! I3INDIN(G- lA TERIAL- ENGRAVING- COPY- I. the Ensian .. HILLEL FOUNDATION East University and Oakland. Dial 3779. Dr. Bernard Heller, Director. 2:00 P.M. - Popular Concert. 8:00 P.M.-Student symposium, "Morals- Law or Convenience." Speakers: Bernard H. Fried, '39 Med. Erwin Elman, '38 Law . FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron. Rev. R. Edward Sayles, MinLter. 10:45 A.M. - Rev. R. Edward Sayles will preach on "The Law of Harvest." 12:00 Noon. Student Class omitted. 6:15 P.M. Roger Williams Guild. A Thanksgiving Service in charge of stu- dents. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 South Division Street. Sunday morning services at 10:30 a.m. Sun- day school at 11:45 a.m. Free public reading rooms at 206 East Lib- erty. FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Stalker Hall - Student Headquarters. State Street between Washington and Huron. 9:45 A.M.- Student class at Stalker Hall. 10:40 A.M. - Worship Service. Dr. Charles W. Brashares' subject is "What's Good." 6:00-8:00 P.M. - Wesleyan Guild meet- ing and fellowship supper. "Problems ofgChristian Students in India" by Miss Sarah Chakko, Instructor, Isabella Thoburn College, India. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Meeting at Masonic Temple, 327 South Fourth Avenue. ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Liberty at Third Carl A. Brauer, Minister 9:30 A.M. - Church School 9:30 A.M. - Service in German. 10:45 A.M. - The morning worship. Ser- mon: "Thoughts at the Close of a Church Year." 6:00 P.M. - Supper for the Student club. 6:30 P.M. - Hay-ride Party. Come pre- pared. Thursday, Nov. 25, 10 A.M. - Thanksgiving Day Service. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH (American Lutheran Church) Washington Street and Fifth Avenue. Rev. Ernest C. Stellhorn, Pastor. 9:00 A.M. - Sunday school. 10:30 A.M. - Service in English language, with sermon by -the pastor. 5:30 P.M. - Meeting of the student club at Parish Hall. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH East William at South Fifth Avenue Henry O. Yoder, Pastor. 10:30 A.M. - Church Worship Service Sermon: "Scorned Love" by the pastor 4:00 P.M. - Lutheran Student A Capella Choir practice at Trinity Lutheran Church. 5:30 P.M.-Lutheran Student Club meet- ing in Trinity Lutheran Church for this week only. Speaker: Rev. C. F. Schaffnit, supt. of Lutheran Charities of Detroit. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH 432 South Fourth Avenue, Dial 7840 Theodore Schmale, Pastor. Morning Worship: German at 9:00 A.M. English at 10:30 a.m. Sermon topic: Life's Final Goal g Young People's League at 7:00 PM.. Moving Pictures of summer camp activities will be shown. r''11 fb i7 lil ill; i f . "t f rt f r it v r u^ frr ln nWr ( rr usĀ° 1,1 II II III I Ill