The Weather Local snows, colder today; to- morrow partly cloudy, probably snow. L 5k ig~tan iIait& Editorials Roosevelt. Still At The Crossroads ... VOL. XLVIIL No. 63 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, DEC. 9, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS China Thwarts Nanking Push;' Truce Parley A New Rumor Nipponese Tell Foreigners To Leave City, Declaring Hostilities Are Imminent Tokyo Hopes Aides Will Oust Premier SHANGHAI, Dec. 9.-(Thursday) - (P) - Chinese defenders today staved off a major Japanese assault on Nanking from strongly fortified Chinese positions on Purple Moun- tain, key to the besieged capital. Artillery and anti-aircraft batter- ies pounded advancing Japanese units and prevented them from pushing farther than the mountain's foot where they occupied the massive tomb of Sun Yat-Sen, father of the Chinese Republic. Nanking Resists Chinese and Japanese sources agreed that Japan's vanguard at present was unable to storm the stronghold which looks down Nan- king's stout walls. (The 18 Americans still in Nan- king were given long coils of rope with which to slide down the 40- foot walls if the need comes, United States Embassy officials reported to the State Department in Washington).- Rumors spread today of truce negotiations between China and Ja- pan to save Nanking as Japanese gathered strength under the Capital's! ancient walls. Non-Combatants Warned Japanese military authorities in Shanghai earlier had warned all for- eigners and Chinese noncombatants to evacuate Nanking as quickly as possible, declaring that hostilities may engulf the city at any moment." Both Chinese and Japanese reports indicated the battle to decide the fate of China's evacuated capital already had begun. Notwithstanding the apparent im- minence of a major struggle at Nan- king, however, speculation here was rife over a possible bloodless coup in China's government that might ef- fet a sudden peace.1 The Japanese, now surrounding Nanking, have not launched an un- reserved attack on the city despite thorough preliminaries. Some sources interpreted the delay as an invita- tion to the Chinese Uo sue for peace. Settlement Possible Authoritative quarters, at the same time, expressed the belief that the de- parture of Generalissimo Chiang Kai- Shek from Nanking might cause his subordinates to seek a settlement. At Tokyo, meanwhile, a Japanese Foreign Office spokesman hinted that the United States, Great Britain, Germany and Italy were attempting' tomediate the conflict. None of those nations' embassies, however, would comment either on possible collec- tive or individual peace efforts. Three Are Taken; By ToastmastersI Oldest Campus Honorary Club Fetes Them Today Tcastmasters, oldest all-campus honor society, will take three students into membership at a dinner at 6 p.m. today in the Union. Charles Quarles, '39. Tuure Ten- ander, '38, and Bill Zewadski, '39L, will be taken at the dinner whose toastmaster will be Frederick Buesser, '40L. The purpose of this society, accord- ing to its president, Richard Hinks, '39L, is to encourage informal after- dinner speaking. The members are "chosen on a basis of ability as wits or speakers," Keith Bondurant, '38L, secretary, said. T. Hawley Tapping, general alumni secretary, is faculty sponsor of the society. Speech On 'Study' Takes First Prize Alford W. Dubs, '40, speaking on "Study," took first place in the final intradepartmental contest for Speech 31 yesterday. Milton Fineberg, '40, won second place with "I Don't Want To Go to War." Other speakers were Harold Gar- S.P.U.P.I.I.I. Buries Hatchet To Support Good fellows' Drivel Goodfellows' 60 Report Issued Union Men Arrested Communists And Fascists Also Reach Agreement To HelpInCampaigns By ROBERT PERLMAN Seven years of bitter strife between two secret campus organizations, the S.P.U.P.I.I.I. and the S.P.U.P.I.I.M. (unofficially known to insiders as the Anti-S.P.U.P.I.I.I.) came to an end last night when the two groupsjoined hands to support the third annual Goodfellow drive. Disraeli, president of the aforemen- tioned Society to Propagate the Use, of the Phrase "It Is I," and Wrag, head of the Society to Propagate the Use of the Phrase "It Is Me," buried the hatchet (sometime around 12:34 last night, somewhere on the road to Toledo, it is alleged) and issued the following joint statement: "We have forgotten our partisanI differences because we feel that the Goodfellow campaign to help under- privileged families, students and in- valids should receive the wholeheart- ed support of the campus and the community. We have, therefore, formed a coalition body, the Society to Propagate Support for the Good- fellow Drive, and we intend to co- operate in this project 100 per cent." A similar rapprochement took place when the Young Communist League and the Debilitated Fascist Bund early this morning buried another hatchet (sometime around 6:47, and somewhere on the Moscow-Berlin axis, it is alleged). Members of the Bund agreed to forego the goose-step and YCL mem- bers said they would abandon the Green Warns CIO To Make Peace Quickly clenched-fist salute to adopt the Goodfellow united front tactic of dig- ging into one's pocket and giving to1 the fund. Only one person, a Vermont fresh- man staggering home from a beer party, was found in a campus and town-wide poll, who had any objec- tion to the Goodfellow drive. He! said he had heard that the whole thing was aimed at undermining the Constitution. Patiently the Goodfel- lows explained the situation to him. He left promising to swing Vermont's three electoral votes in the next elec- tion behind the Goodfellow drive. On another front George Quick,, class of '49, editor of the Gargoyle,; announced late yesterday that he (Continued on Page 21 High Tribunal And Business Termed Allies Ickes Hits Supreme Court, Decisions; Says Press Is; Also Under Its Control NEW YORK, Dec. 8.-(AP)-Secre- tary Ickes made a new belligerent thrust tonight at the supreme Court, accusing it of having "gone far to convert the bill of rights into a char- ter of corporate privilege." It was the first such attack by a major administration official in some time, and was made by the interior department head in a speech before the annual dinner of the American Civil Liberties Union. Ickes denounced some sections of big business, asserting that America's "giant corporations have assumed an overlordship over the civil rights and substantive liberties, of the indivi- dual," This "overlordship," he asserted, i t k On '36 Funds GivingOut BillsAt Ford's; ommittee Makes Plans For Daily Distribution To Begin Next Mondav 0 C Committee To Hear ... . ...w ".y.yr 7i W%% , Welfare Secretary had been aided by constitutional con- Declares That His Men Will structions by the courts which "safe- Arm Forces To Attack I guard the rights of the largest cor- F poration in its relation to the gov- 'Raiding Organization' ernment as if it were a mere indi- vidual." BUFFALO, N.Y., Dec. 8.- (P) - In an attack upon parts of the! American Federation of Labor press, he said that "under the stress' forces will launch a united attack of economic forces our press and news against the CIO unless a quick set- agencies are coming more and more tlement of the national labor war under the domination of a handful is reached, Wililam Green, AFL pres- of corporate publishers who may print ident, warned here today. such news as they wish to print and "Unless settlement is reached soon omit such news as they do not wish the AFL will arm its forces and turn to print. They may -even color the them loose against this raiding or- news." ganization (CIO)," Green told the. National Educational Conference ofa the Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks. "The house of the American Fed-e eration of Labor must be maintained at any cost," he declared. "Patience is a virtue and we have been patient, y b t thr nmC. time whe~n eve~n Mrs. Gordon W. Brevoort, secretary of the Family Welfare Bureau, the or- ganization which is enabled to per- form much of its work with Goodfel- low funds, issued a financial state- ment yesterday showing how the 1936 Goodfellow fund was used. A meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m.# today in the Union by the Goodfellow executive committee to discuss plans for the sale and distribution of Good- fellow Dailies on Monday, Dec. 13. Mrs. Brevoort will make an addressl to the group which is made up of leaders of honor societies and various independent, fraternity and sorority official bodies. Expenditures Listed The Family Welfare Bureau re- ceived $1,129.31 from the 1936 Good- fellow drive. Of that total the fol- lowing was used by the Bureau: EXPENDITURES (Student Goodfellow Fund) Jan. 1, 1937-Dec. 1, 1937 Cash grants................ $ 70.00 Loans .................359.98 Rent-.......................27.10 Fuel ....................... 34.35 Groceries...................21.75 Milk 67.22 Clothing and Shoes..........235.70 Household furnishings .. 8.30, Public utilities.......33.00 Medical relief...............54.46 Vacations...................12.00 Care of children .............4.00 Lodgings ................ 12.00 Services (laundry, housekeeper, mother's helper, etc.) .......134.17 Plumbing .................... 5.20 Balance-Dec. 1, 1937 .........50.08 Mrs. Brevoort stated:M "Family agencies are often in an embarrassing position at holiday time. They are apt to find some dif- ficulty in providing the volume of "poor families" an enthusiatic com- munity might look for when the spirit of Christmas giving runs high. A strong professional responsibility to their families on the part of social workers has created safe-guards against indiscriminate giving which I tend to reduce still further the num- ber of families who ought to be the beneficiaries of a Christmas appeal. Should Be Lasting "The feeling that Christmas is no time to make temporary acquain- tances by means of Christmas gifts is growing. Of even greater importance is the growing realization that par- ents should be allowed the natural function of planning their own fam- ily Christmas, however meager. When parents fail to provide Christmas for their children, they show an inability to perform one of the normal func- tions of family life and, therefore, reveal an important problem of ad- justment. "It is quite obvious that Christmas baskets do not adequately fill the needs if the needs be those of family adjustment. A meal may be the least important and is undoubtedly the mostrtransitory of Christmas gifts. A family may be confused and hurt by1 kindly meant gifts at Christmas but entirely forgotten by the following April or August at the time of their greatest need. Assistance is real when it is given at the time that the recipient needs it." Jury Investigates Finance Practices Of 'Big Three' And Will Report Dec. 13, Complaints Charge Excessive Profits WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.-(4)-A ti-' tanic struggle with three big motor manufacturers-Ford, Chrysler and General Motors-may be one result of the administration's current cam- paign of anti-trust law proceedings. Attorney General Cummings an- nounced today that the auto financ- ing practices of the three companies' and their affiliates were under inves- tigation by a federal grand jury at Milwaukee, Wis. Jury To Report Monday Representatives of the motor mak- ers had approached the Justice De-' partment, he said, with a request that an attempt be made to "obviate" criminal proceedings by consent de- crees which would enjoin the com- panies from continuing certain prac- tices. "No agreement was reached," Cum- mings added in a formal statement. , "The grand jury is said to be ready p to report its findings on Monday. Dec. 13."I The material already laid before the jury by department attorneys, the Attorney-General asserted, was gath- ered in an investigation of complaints that certain automobile manufac- turers had coerced dealers into re- quiring that car purchases be fi- nanced through manufacturer-con- trolled companies. The investigation also went into complaints that financing charges in- cluded excessive profits, officials said. Affiliates Involved Cummings reported that the com- panies involved in the grand jury in-; vestigation, in addition to the man- ufacturers, were the Commercial In- vestment Trust and its subsidiary, the Universal Credit Co., both affiliated; with the Ford Motor Company; the General Motors Acceptance Company, a subsidiary of General Motors Corp. and the Commercial Credit Co., a sub-, sidiary of the Chrysler Corp. The Justice Department's refusal toI make peace with the auto companiesI followed the filing of anti-trust cases against a number of other corpora- tions. Last spring, Cummings asked the Federal Court in, the southern dis- trict of New York to dissolve the Aluminum Co. of America on the. ground it was exercising a virtual monopoly. Student Offers Plea Of Nolo Contendere Joseph Bernstein, '39, pleaded Coughlin Allowed To Edit His Paper Under Conditions DETROIT, Dec. 8.-UP)-The Rev. Fr. Charles E. Coughlin has his Arch- bishop's permission to return as edi- torial counsellor of "Social Justice" on condition he makes "Social Justice in content and in policy a journal such as the name of a priest may be in propriety associated with." Father Coughlin announced today he had the approval of Archbishop Edward Mooney for him to resume his editorial connection with the paper he started as part of his National Union for Social Justice movement and recently sold. Walter Baertschi of Toledo, O., who bought the paper, will continue as owner. Haber Attends Welfare Meet In Washington Group Discusses Problem Of Paying First Benefits In Present Recession Prof. William Haber of the econom- ics department will attend the meet- ing of the American Association of Public Welfare tomorrow and Satur- day in Washington, it was announced yesterday. A member of the advisory council, Professor Haber will participate in the discussions on the relationship between the new forms of social in- surance and the existing services for public assistance. The main problem in the rela-1 tion of social insurance to public as- sistance arises from the fact that 23 states will begin to pay "contractual benefits" to unemployed persons Jan. 1, during a period of large scale un- employment. The states may get in- to serious difficulty with the sol- vency of their funds in view of the present business recession, Professor Haber explained. Only 52 per cent of the workers in the United States are covered by un- employment insurance. Those not covered can become a powerful pres- sure group demanding benefits and endangering the solvency of the in- surance schemes, Professor Haber contended. #The leaders assembled by the as- sociation will attempt to obtain ac- curate information on the size of the excluded groups and to assemble facts to ascertainthe extent to which the insurance system will provide for the needs for the unemployed. Released From Dearborn Jail After Being Charged With Blocking Traffic Union Will Petition Mayor's Removal DETROIT, Dec. 8.-(P) -Sixty members of the United Automobile Workers of America were arrested for "obstructing traffic" this afternoon when they distributed union litera- ture at Miller Road gates of the Ford Motor Co. in defiance of an order by Dearborn city officials. There was no violence. The men were held at Dearborn police head- quarters for three hours, then were released on their own recognizance. Adolph Germer, district organizer for the Committee for Industrial Or- ganization, declared that "we are go- ing to make a test case of this." Taken To Headquarters In groups of 10, they were hauled to Dearborn police headquarters and incarcerated. Police commandeered automobiles of some of the union men to expedite the transfer. Mayor John L. Carey of Dearborn, who issued the order designating the Miller Road section as an area of "congested traffic" and forbidding distribution of literature there, wit- nessed some of the arrests. He was at gate four, scene of a bloody battle during a previous visit by union members on May 26. In an unsuccessful attempt to avert the arrests, the UAW petitioned Unit- ed States District Judge Edward J. Moinet today for an order restrain- ing Dearborn city officials and Henry Ford and Harry H. Bennett of the Ford Motor Co. from interfering with the distribution of literature. The complaint charged Mayor Carey's order violated the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, guaranteeing equal protection of the laws. Action Deferred Judge Moinet deferred action. Dearborn police were waiting when the union contingent reached the Ford plant. Police Inspector Charles W. Slamer walked to Maurice Silver- man, UAW organizer, and said: "I ask you in a peaceful way not to pass out these bills." To that Silverman replied, "I am sorry, but we are go- ing to pass them out." Then the union men began handing~ copies of a special edition of the "United Automobile Worker" to pass- ing Ford employes and the arrests started. Larry S. Davidow, union attorney, (Continued on Page 8) 2 Faculty Men To Be Advisers F or Congress Prof. Bennett Weaver of the Eng- lish department and Dean of Stu- dents Joseph A. Bursley will become judiciary counselors for Congress, in- dependent men's organization, it was announced after a meeting of the group's executive council Tuesday. The council will act in the selection of officers for Congress. Congress also pledged active sup- port to the annual Goodfellow Drive. Its representative on the Student Model Senate Committee was in- structed at the meeting to back strongly a system of proportional representation for that body. The name of the cooperative com- mittee was changed to the Student Welfare Committee to include more of student functions. The Congress voted to adopt a merit system of honor points for members as a partial basis for appointive po- sitions. It was decided that service pins and keys would be used in the future. u L briere canAes uAu when even patience must end." "The question blocking a settle-1 ment is not the one of craft unions versus industrial unions as claimed,"1 the AFL leader asserted. "This problem could be settled easily." j The CIO proposed that the AFL 11 tak in the CIO unionstastdual units. leaving two rivals in many fields of work under one banner, Green said. "We will ieve' agree to such a proposal," the AFL leader declared. Green reviewed the recent confer-' ence in Washington between himselfI and John L. Lewis, CIO leader, in which they sought to settle the labor warfare. "Lots of people think the reason a settlement can't oe reached is be-I cause someone has designs on dictat-, WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.-(P)-Thel Brookings Institute recommended to- night the repeal of the tax on undis-1 tributed corporate profits because "it1 limits the possibility of prompt and i flexible capital developments and I handicaps with particular severity a multitude of small and medium- sized business enterprises." "'It bears with particular severity upon new companies or those which are endeavoring to recuperate from a period of misfortune," the Institu- tion added. Its recommendations were based onj a study of effects of the tax on 1,560 corporations which answered a ques- tionnaire sent out by Senator Steiwer (Rep., Ore). yThe Institution said amendments ing the policy of.the American labor could eliminate some of the most movement," he added. "And I some- "flagrant weaknesses" of the law butf times think this, too." even then retention of the tax would not be warranted. Junior Group "The practical difficulties in ap- plying such a levy to the complex Cold Threatens and varied organization and opera- ides Named tion of American industry," the re-" roport concluded, "are such that equit- By Enoineers In South able and effective administration is impossible." A House tax subcommittee already Announcement of complete com- Sixteen Deaths Attributed has agreed tentatively on modifica- mittees for the junior engineering To Freezing Weather tions that might meet some of the school class was made yesterday by objections raised by the Institution. Ken Evenson, '39, president. Those on the executive committee, ATLANTA, Dec. 8.-(R)-A new cold all juniors, are J. M. Stevens, chair- wave coming from the northwesde d brought threats of hard frest:Reform Considered man, A. A. Peterson, R. Karbell, M brhtotrtordwfreezing Markel, and W. Warren. On the weather tonght or tomorrw f par Byts Stock Ex hIepublicity committee are W. R. Blake- of the South and fears of additional y SockX Exchange tecarmn .R ReeJ ley, chairman, R. R. Roemer,J. damage to fruit and vegetable crops. } Rinek, S. G. Christian, G. McCain Much of the nation was hit today by NEW YORK, Dec. 8.-(P) -Re- and A. C. Rissberger. the worst storm of the winter. sponding to "reform" pressure from Members of the finance committee Sixteen deaths were ascribed to the Washington, and the economic pres- are L. Worthing, A. Faste, F. Wolcott, cold, the snow, or perilously glassy sure of members' dwindling revenues, R. Hartwell and W. Buchanan. R. roads. the governing committee of the New Morgan is chairman. The social com- The worst December storm in ten 'York Stock Exchange moved today mittee is composed of S. Crossman, years brought nearly a foot of snow to consider sweeping changes in ad- chairman, A. Warner, J. Fechnay, J. to Buffalo, N. Y. A 47-mile-per-hour ministration and in increase in com- Elsner, J. Easterly and F. Space. gale piled up high drifts and crippled missions. The junior independent engineer traffic. Charles R. Gay, president, was au- J-Hop booth committee includes Fred Heavy storms swirled from North i thorized to appoint a committee of Osberg as chairman. H. Snoden .D "nolo contendere" yesterday in Judge George W. Sample's Circuit Court to N.And . the charge that his conduct in front New nd 'tahZEd of the City Hall on April 8, 1937 was Panorama Features "disorderly." F tr The same disposition of the case, 'Student Opinion' requiring Bernstein to pay $29.50 in fine and costs or spend 10 days in A new and "vitalized" Panorama jail, that was made in Justice Court goes on sale today printed by a new May 20, was made yesterday, releas- process on larger pages and "chock- ing him from the charge and from full" of features, according to Joan $200 bond. IV. Hanson, '40, editor. A "nolo contendere" plea neither In an attempt to make the pictures admits nor denies the defendant's clearer the magazine is now using the guilt, but means that he does not same process as national photo- contest the case. graphic magazines, Miss Hanson said, Bernstein was arrested with Rafael while pages are 9 inches by 12 inches " Haskell, '38E, at the City Hall after instead of 811 inches by 11 inches. five others were arrested on disord- The price will not be increased. erly conduct charges for participat- "Student Opinion," containing stu- ing in a strike demonstration in dent views along with the pictures of front of the Ann Arbor Recreation the speakers, is the new feature this center on April 8. month, Miss Hanson said. The maga- zine also contains the "Psychography of a Married Student" and special Investigation Starts features on the 'Law School and Architectural College. Into G.M. Dismissal DETROIT, Dec. 8-i)-The auto- mobile industry's first arbitration of employer-employe relations got under, ,way in reality today. Delayed for a week by procedural squabbles between counsel for the United Automobile Workers and the 'To The Goodfellow Editor: I wish to lend a helping hand to students, children and families for whom there would be no Christmas otherwise: Enclosed find my contribu- tion of $ ..... . I General Motors Corp., the arbitra- II . I tion hearing was started in earnest I