The Weather Generally fair and continued cold today and tomorrow. PM-NOW lo. ci 000,4r S4ir iga at Editorials Congress Is Still At It . . Child Labor Has Not Vanished .. . The Price Of Milk .. VOL. XLVIII. No. 55 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 3, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Japanese Take NewKeypoi ns As U. S. Seeks Trade Parley Nipponese Report Pursuit Of Nanking After Fall Of ThreeStrongholds Hull Fears Closing Of Chinese Ports WASHINGTON, Nov. 29.-(/P)- Anxiety lest China's open door be slammed shut has prompted the State Department to demand that Japan talk things over with the United States before altering the maritime customs service of China. The move, announced by Sec. Cor- dell Hull today re-aroused much official apprehension here that the reported intention of Japai to seize control of the customs might have the effect of restricting the commerce, of non-Japanese nations. Similar action has been taken by Great Britain. The two nations, act- ing independently but keeping each! other closely informed of their move- ments, presented their virtual de- mands yesterday in formal notes to the Japanese foreign office. T h e American representations, stressing in vigorous written phrases the same views previously set forth in an oral communication by the Ameri- can Ambassador to Tokyo, expressed strong opposition to any action cal- culated to disturb the integrity of the customs setup. I Indications here were that the American government is concerned more with what may happen to this country's trade with China if Japan assumes complete customs control than with any present financial in- vestments. It is recalled here that when Japan seized administration of the Man- churian customs after setting up the state of Manchoukuo it dealt a severe blow to United States exports to that territory. Shanghai SHANGHAI, Nov. 30.-(Tuesday) -(P)-Japan's army reported today its columns were pursuing retreating Chinese to fortified lines close tol Nanking itself after capture of three I Speaks Here Tonight Pittsburgh Eleven I:Turns Down Bids For Bowl Contests PITTSBURGH, Nov. 29.-{P)- Pitt's football Panthers turned thumbs down today on all post sea- son football games, including the ...,r RTe ugar and Cotton Bowls. The decision was made in a secret and reportedly stormy meeting called by Athletic Director James Hagan to sound out the opinion of the players. >' Whether Pitt actually was ap- proached concerni g the Rose Bowl was a subject of bate on the cam- pus tonight. Hagan asserted "We definitely ":: have not received a Rose Bowl bid ./ but he laughed off questions about A a possible "feeler" from California. 'MICKEY' COCHRANE the West coast representative. Last year, it was recalled, Pitt received no * PT!formal invitation. D inner To Fete John Weber, treasurer of the ath- letic council, said: Prep rlidders "We had invitations from the Su- gar Bowl and the Cotton Bowl which e e h we wanted to place before the boys, so ler Toni h we just tossed in the Rose Bowl for consideration too--in the event we should be invited. The third annual High School "The boys decided they didn't Athletes' Banquet, sponsored by the 1 want to play in any of them and as University of Michigan Club of Ann far as we are concerned, if California Arbor, having as its guest speakers should now invite us, we would have Mickey Cochrane, manager of the to reply negatively." Detroit Tigers, and Ear' "Dutch" 'Clark, coach of the Detroit Lions Stock Exchan re professional football team, will be"" held at 6:30 p.m. today in the Union L Ballroom.. L e a d e r Attacks George Burke, University attorney, e "" will be master of ceremonies, and xperimenting Fielding H. Yost, Director of Ath- letics and Coach Harry G. Kipke will also address the gathering. President Charles Gay Says The entire Varsity football squad, When Improvements Are football teams from Ann Arbor and P St. Thomas High Schools, the win- Ready, He Will Use Them ning intramural touch football squad from University High .School, and NEW YORK, Nov. 29.-(UP)-Charles groups representing Milan, Saline,R Dexter, Chelsea, Manchester and R. Gay, president of the New York Dundee high schools will attend. Stock Exchange, tonight warned The University Band, directed by against excessive regulation and "ex- Prof. William D. Revelli, will be on perimentation," and promised that theproramandPau J.Ken, '9,when improved methods can be found the program and Paul J. Kent, '39, b mata tdteecag will lead the group in singing Michi- by impartial study, the exchange gan sngs.would adopt them. gan songs. An attendance of more than 500 is His statement was issued in answer antici ated at the banqueth by Robi to the ultimatum of William O. Doug- ert O. Morgan assistant al mni sec- las, bairman Hof the S.E.C., last Tues- ert ancaistanthaluniec- day, that the exchange must reor- -retary, and chairman of the enter- ganize or face more drastic regula- tainment committee for the affair, tion . who said that University students could obtain tickets for it from Stan- p Gay quoted again from his annual ley G. Waltz, manager of the Union, report last August, in which he buturgd tem o aplyforticetswarned that regulation was making but urged them to apply for tickets the market dangerously illiquid, and early, as the supply is limited. Low Building Costs Sought By Roosevelt Seeks To Provide Building Boom By Checking High Labor, Material Rates Cut First-Payments For FHA, He Says WASHINGTON, Nov. 29.-(A')- President Roosevelt asked Congress to cut the cost of home building as an anti-depression measure today-and Congress quickly showed a liking for the proposal. In a special message, the chief ex- ecutive suggested amendments to the Federal Housing Act which, he said, would halve the down payment on small homes and reduce the financing charges on them, as well as on more ambitious structures. He proposed, also, changes in the law to stimulate large scale construc- tion of houses for sale and houses for rent, with a $50,000,000 allocation from the Reconstruction Finance, Corporation to give the movementi impetus. As a supplementary project, Mr. Roosevelt announced he would hold conferences with industry, union of- ficials and financiers directed at re- ducing the cost of labor and of building materials. He blamed the high cost of these items for the con- tinuing lag in construction and called the latter "one of the principal rea- sons" for the current business re- cession. He said he hoped the total effect of this program, one of several methods he has chosen for combatting the slump, would be a boom in residen- tial construction spreading economic benefits in many directions. "The long continued lag in build- ing is a drag on all industry and trade," the message said. "This pre- sents an urgent problem which is the common concern of industry, labor and government. All business needs the infusion of orders and the diffu- sion of purchasing power that come when building is thriving." In addition to the liped-for hous- ing boom, the President is obviously counting on other lines of action to halt the depression: tax revision, an immediate purchase of some $245,- 000,C00 worth of Government sup-$ plies, a reduction in Federal alloca- tions for road building and a truce with the utilities that will encourage them to go ahead with "ong delayed construction programs running into the billions. While many Congressmen were ex- Sregina almost enthusiastic favor forI Tear Gas Bomb Hits Discordant Note At Recital Tear gas again visited Ann Arbor, but this time under more distin- guishedmcircumstances, when a tear gas bomb burst last night in Section 5 of Hill Auditorium just as Fritz Kreisler finished the first number of his scheduled recital. The applause was dying out when a loud explosion occurred and blue- gray smoke began to rise between seats 6 and 8, row 0, in the western side of the packed auditorium. The fumes spread rapidly and per- sons for several rows on either side of Row 0 rushed for exits. The audi- ence remained comparatively quiet and Mr. Kreisler did not leave the stage. Several suffered. ill effects from the gas and were unable to re- turn to the auditorium. An usher located a large blue foun- tain-pen-like tear gas bomb and turned it in to Edward Warren, head usher of Hill Auditorium, who would make no statement. They were un- able to locate the person who threw the bomb. Mr. Kreisler was inclined to treat the whole affair as a prank. "It was probably some freshman trick," he said laughingly. "I have had many bombs burst in my presence but none in such a spirit of fun." Dr. Charles. A. Sink, president of1 tle School of Music, stated that noth- ing of the kind had ever happened be- fore in Hill Auditorium. Police were not called and no explanation was ad- vanced. Tear gas made its last appearance in Ann Arbor Oct. 1 when police used it to quell student rioters following a pep meeting in the Auditorium the night before the Michigan State foot- ball game. Ford Disclosesi Car Production Despite Strike St. Louis CIO Head Retorts That New Output Is All Done ByUnskilled Men' ST LOUIS, Nov. 29.-(iP)--Milton N. Johnson, manager of the Ford Motor Co. assembly plant, announced tonight 52 cars were turned out today despite a strike by the United Auto- mobile Workers of America. Britain And France To Oppose German Colonial Demands The Deer Seem All Right But Hunters Need Aid State Conservation Director P. J. Hoffmaster ordered an irtvestigation Monday to determine the cause for a sharp increase in fatalities among deer hunters during the season which ends today. With one day to go, the Con3erva- tion department recorded 11 deaths from gunfire in the woods since the season opened Nov. 15. A twelfth fa- tality, a hunter who tripped over his gun and was killed at his home as he prepared to go deer hunting, was not included in the department's records. At least a dozen hunters were wounded. New Invention Is Described To Acoustic Group Phonograph 'Needle' Does Not Injure Discs Even After Hundred Playings More than one hundred playings of a disc recording without injury to the record is now possible by means of an exceptionally light, high-fidelity reproducer developeu at Harvard University, the Acoustical Society of America was told by Dr. F. U. Hunt yesterday at its meeting in HutchinsI Hall. The reproducer, which was built by' Drs. Hunt and J. A. Pierce of the Cruft Laboratory at Harvard, places a weight of less than five grams upon the record in comparison with a weight of from 30 to 50 grams for most standard transcription repro- ducers. It can be moved across a ro- tating disc record without producing a scratch and can be dropped on the record from a height of one-half inch without producing a dent, yet it re- produces the recording without dis- tortion from 30 to 18,000 cycles, Dr. Hunt told the meeting. The mass of the entire moving sys- tem is approximately 50 milligrams or about one-fifth the weight of the standard steel needle now in use. In- stead of a needle, an inverted conical shell, whose apex bears a sapphire stylus, is used. The base of the shellI is attached to a loop of phosphor (Continued on Page 2) Bryan To Show Films On Japan In!TalkHere Premiers Of Two Nations Agree Time To Concede Has Not Yet Arrived Organize Program To Proinote Peace LONDON, Nov. 29.-(IP)-The pre- miers and foreign ministers of Britain and France today decided in a "suc- cessful" eight hour discussion of ma- jor world problems they were not yet ready to grant any German political or territorial demands. French Premier Camille Chau- temps said the British and French ministers were in "full solidarity" -in their search for peace. "We made a tour of the world," he said as he left Prime Minister Neville Chamber- lain's official residence. Diplomats Pleased The diplomats appeared pleased with their first day's work and au- thorized this official five point ac- count of the conference: 1. France fully understood the lim- ited scope of Lord Halifax' explora- tory talk with Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler and agreed with Britain it ful- filled its purpose; 2. The ministers discussed the co- lonial question in all its aspects and agreed it required further examina- tion; 3. Both governments expressed themselves as concerned for preserva- tion of peace in central Europe and discussed Germany's ambitions there; 4. They also expressed their appre- ciation of the "seriousness" of the Chinese-Japanese war and their "need for vigilance" to safeguard their interests; 5. They pronounced non-interven- tion the right policy in the Spanish civil war. The ministers were understood to have dwelt seriously on French For- eign Minister Yvon Delbos' coming tour of France's eastern and central European allies. Informed sources said the two na- tions had declared their desire to cooperate with all nations but needed a great deal more preparation before a detailed plan could be drafted. The premiers and foreign ministers of the two powers, which-with the United States-largely dictated a new map for Europe after the World War, sat through the first of two days of talks which observers in both Lon- don and Paris described as among the most important since the war ended. U.S. To Be Informed While the United States took no part in the conference. It was under- stood Washington later would be in- formed on any phases of special in- terest. As the convc. ations began among Chamberlain, Foreign Secretary An- thony Eden, Chautemps and Foreign Minister Yvon Delbos, the chances for settlement of Europe's problems were held generally brighter than in sev- eral months. The conflict between China and. Japan, however, cast an ominous shadow. But equally important in the re- view of the entire post war era were the issues raised by a Germany reborn under Hitelr-her claims to colonies and demands for special rights in central and eastern Europe. Of only slightly less importance was the Spanish Civil War and its attendant threat to Mediterranean security. Behind the Anglo-French meeting, was believed to be a determined ef- fort by Chamberlain to find some method of European settlement that would lead to arms limitation. Britain, spending vast sums on an armament race from which she would like to withdraw but cannot, has shown recently a more conciliatory attitude toward German demands. Like France, however, Britain was in- sistent any concessions be coupled with peaceful guarantees from Ger- many. . i important strongholds.rd Harried by heavy aerial bombard- ments, the Chinese were reported falling back to the line of Chinkiang Medical Exam Tanyang-Kintan, 40 to 60 miles easta and southeast of Nanking. China's Pl n e Frl almost deserted capital. Chinese Desperate Far to the south the' desperate Red Chinese right wing stalled Japanese Aptitude Test Is Required progress from Hangchow Bay. On For Most Schools the north the Kiangyin ports, over- i oking the mighty Yangtze River, The Medical Aptitude Test of the _were stubbornly held, although out-Asoitnof meca Mdcl flanked and threatened with mom- Association of American Medical j Cnlle es. a reauirement fnr admis- 1 "I would be less than candid if I failed to say that recent market de- velopments have confirmed my belief that in the interests of the public and thA iv tnr the t fnn nn o f .Informed of this production report, Delmond Garst, strike leader and a' regional director of the CIO union, said: "I guess Johnson is proving one I Uthinp -thnLt t '.JIA d't npri aZiA1pU. ana Le nves or, tie quesuion of .Ir,-16C11v what are wise restrictions upon the (Cont scope of the market is an urgent one."' Usually well-informed Wall Street Bus I sources had asserted that Douglas' ultimatum to the exchange liad fol- lowed a long controversy with repre- en sentatives of the SEC over Gay's; Auw st renort. which some felt tended i inued on Page 6) men to build automobiles. If they built that many cars I'd hate to ride ne Orders in any of them." Seek To Reach Quota Garst charged Ford was operating To Retuirn with imported labor and not with reg- ular employes.. Johnson denied this as he did also ome Back Or the Union charges which precipi- s -Final Word tated the strike call last Wednesday -that the company discriminated D; Nov. 29.-(-P)-Grey- against union men, fostered a com- ne officials ordered their pany union and forced employes to rt ni ht tf r onrt fnr sign "loyalty pledges. to place the blame for the autumn slump at the SEC's doorstep. entary capture. "-'bC", t ,SSXS.-CLV *sJ± w ...at- .....t N But elsewhere the story was of al- sion to practically all medical schools B and to the University medical school,. most unimpeded Japanese progress. will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday General Ludendorff Kiangyin City-not the forts-Wut- in Rooms 25 and 1025 Angell Hall. coumns whichad falleno Jaese: The test is given only once a year, uht r Death into the heart of China, leaving their so all students who expect to enter a ___ rising sun flags fluttering from Pa- medical school next fall should take M godas and postoffices in capr the test, it was said. It is not neces- Ludendorff, German World War com- towns. sary that all pre-medical require- mander towns. .~~~~I ments be completed at the time the*mnewsna et oih. Shanghai Tense ets be t the r imet An operation performed by Prof. in Shanghai the tense internation- reis taen, if the e qfren Ludwig Kielleuthner failed to give al situation arising from Japan's sei- trance to bmedicaletedschool in timhe forl en-of the General relief from a bladder zure of all Chinese communications 193n. The tests are used by the ad- infection. His pulse was irregular facilities and efforts to gain control1938. Thers are ueda sth a and there were other complications, of the. Chinese maritime customs was mission officers of the medical schools the surgeon said, adding that there somewhatneased. mas one of the criteria in admitting was little hope for recovery. students. Gen. Ludendorff is one of the last An authoritative source said for- The cost of the test is covered by a surviving World War iilitary figures. eign officials of the customs service $1.00 fee which each student must He is 72. During the war he was chief and Japanese had reached an agree- pay at the cashier's office immediately of staff under Field Marshal Paul Von menu which would permit emumption I if he intends to take the test. Hindenburg. of virtually normal cargo landings ini the port of Shanghai. Previously the I customs had refused to authorize cargo landings in the Japansse-oc- Galens Start Drive To Provide cupied sections of Yangtzepoo, Hong- kew and Pootung, in which the majorI Christmas For Hospital Children docks are lotted. T 'Either C Quit' I CLEVELAN hound Bus Lin striking drive: work at noon themselves "a The "deadl sent to striki Greyhound L rs 'nJg1I t, Lo epj J I Wednesday or consider s having resigned." ine" was set, in letters ng drivers of the nine ines affected, a short time after T. J. McGrath, counsel for1 the drivers, had reported that "pros-' pects for settlement are getting brighter." The letters advised the drivers of the contract terms which were ac- ceptable to the company in its nego- tiations with the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen which called the strike. "Sufficient time has now passed to enable you to determine whether you wish to continue to work for Grey- hod"said a letter sent to drivers i The plant manager asserted he was Julien Bryan, roving reporter for going ahead with plans to reach the "The March of Time," will give an December quota-135 cars a day- illustrated lecture on Japan as the and needed 50 or 60 more men to do second attraction of the Oratorical that. Association Lecture Series at 8:15 Police Guard Is Ready p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. Watchers at the main gate counted! For many years Mr. Bryan has 552 men leaving tonight in automo- been considered one of the ace biles. Police cars dropped into. the cameramen of the country, depicting string of cars at regular intervals and I through the medium of his motion the exodus through a picket line was pictures, history in the making as made without incident, caught by the eyes of his camera Two Ford workers Floyd Atwell throughout the countries of centrall and Dallas Ashburn, reported they and northern Europe. were waylaid and beaten "by union During the past year, Mr. Bryan men" six blocks from the plant this overcame the prejudice of the people morning. (Continued on Page 4) 11 1l1 , a2t i C le a tlj4'U1Y t of Central Greyhound Lines, Inc., by Litzenberg Tells Fraternal Meet R. WV. Budd, president. 'The company, therefore gives no- tice that those of you whose records To Abolish Artificial Boostng warrant employment must report for Sp inx Inducts 1.3 Initiates Into Group Sphinx, junior literary honorary society last night invited 13 persons into membership. Included in thel number was one faculty member, Prof. Arthur E. R. Boak, of the his- tory department. The invited students were Ralph Heikkinen, John Brennan, Walter Peckinpaugh, Richard Fox, Robert Perlman, Burton Benjamin, Hamilton Morris, Harvey Clarke, Ross Faulk- ner. Max Hodge, Philip Woodworth With the opening of the Galens tag sale tomorrow at all points on the campus, the Christmas season will unofficially begin in Ann Arbor. Galens, honorary society for junior and senior medical students was founded in 1914. Ever since that time, the society has conducted an; annual drive for the children in the University Hospital. Galens uses the funds for a Christ- mas party for children who are con- fined in the hospital during the Christmas holidays. The annual party includes a dinner and the dis- tribution of candy and toys. This work by 12 o'clock noon Wednesday, $1,000 a year to keep the workshop Dec. 1, or you will be considered as Fraternities were urged to improve open.having resigned from the service of themselves by self-criticism and re- In 1928 Galens held their first tag the company." verse the attitude which has caused sale on campus, and by this new No conferences were scheduled to- them to be "losing caste in recent method more money was obtained. I night between company officials and years," by Prof. Karl Litzenberg, of The tag drive took in $1,000 that John L. Conner, Federal conciliator, the English department, speakingI year and provided a Christmas party I who has been seeking to bring the two Saturday before the 29th annual ses-' for 350 children. sides to agreement. McGrath, dis-: sion of the National Interfraternity The tag drive reached its peak in cussing hopes for a settlement, said Council in New York. 1930 when students apparently had "much depends, of course, on develop- He stated that fraternities could I more money than in later years. That ments- no longer afford to "raise songs of year Galens received $1,825, surpass- * false praise" and to have a "laissez ing all their expectations. (In that Ann Arbor Friends faire" attitude. He pointed out that year also the Galens decided that the picture of fraternal America is women were more human and gen- To Meet Tomorrow discouraging, because of the "naive erous than men, according to an edi- fakery" known as 'boosting," and fi v r +1- lb.. l-, 1 11r,'aad ,inn fr-q, fPniHACnc . rpla~n n-! ideals or by the moral force of what it pretends to represent. I am inor- dinately suspicious of the booster be- cause he always exerts more energy in praise than he spends time in analysis." He went on to say, "It is my firm conviction that your most solemn duty is . . . to convince your frater- nity members that they cannot longer raise songs of false praise; that they can no longer take a laissez-faire at- titude toward the system; that they can no longer practice that windmill tilting which I have called boosting.' He charged that the fraternity sys- 1 1 1 r Y Y ',.l Government Denies Insurgent Air Raid MADRID, Nov. 29.-(A)--Govern- ment army headquarters tonight offi- cially denied military reports that an Insurgent air raid caused almost 100 casualties in Guadalajara, 30 miles northeast of Madrid. The Government communique said that 30 Insurgent planes flew over the city but that Guadalajara au- thorities declared no projectiles were i t