..,... Weather Partly cloudy, somewhat cooler; tomorrow, cloudy and warmer. L SirP ~&tt What! Liberal Republicans? . . . Mr. Mooney's Inalienable Rights' . VOL. XLIX .No. 22 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCT. 20, 1938 PRICE, FIVE CE 0N Engineering Council Plan Gets Approval Of 14 Societies Proposal To Do Away With Class Officers Will Go Before Students In Poll Consider Removal Of Incompetents With a vote of approval from each of the 14 societies represented on the Engineering Council reported last night, the proposed amendment to the Engineering Council Constitution, which will abolish class officers and revise student government in the engineering school, will go before the students next Thursday for a final referendum vote. The amendment, introduced two weeks ago by Wes Warren, '39E, president, and ratified by the Coun- cil, provides for the election of two students every year from each class who will be known as Engineering Council Representatives and will act as sole representatives of the sev- eral classes in the student govern- ment of the engineering school. Dele- gates to the four class dance com- mittees each year will be chosen from this number, and keeping the num- ber of elective class positions to a minimum. A suggestion by Sigma Rho Tau that more concrete provision be made for the removal of men who proved unsatisfactory will be taken under consideration and possibly incor- porated into the amendment, the Council decided. A program to enlighten students in the engineering school concerning the salient features of the amendment under consideration will be conducted, by the Council all this week. "Under this new plan," Warren explained, "every man, fraternity or independent, will have the oppor- tunicy to apply for office and stand a chance at the polls. It will no longer be necessary for a man to be a part of an organized political ma- enie to get his name on the ballot. "Class committees," Warren said, "will no longer be composed of men who have been awarded consolaton prises as a result of political logrll- ing, but rather men who've won their psositions at the polls." The societies who voted approval of the amendment during the past' two weeks and announced results last night aie: Tau Beta Pi, American II- stitute of Electrical Engineers, Eta Kappa Nu, Glider Club, American So- ciety of Civil Engineers, Transporta- tion Club, Vulcans, Sigma Rho Tau, Technic, Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, American Society of Me- chanical Engineers, Quarterdeck, Tri- angles, American Institute of Chem- ical Engineers. Research Club P icks Sharfman New President Is Elected At Meeting Last Night Prof. L L. Sharfman of the econom- ics department was elected president of the Research Club at a meeting held last night in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham building. The honor is considered a high one in faculty, circles. Dr. Robert Gesell spoke on "The Story of Respiration." Other officers elected include Prof. A. F. Shull of the zoology department, vice-president; Prof. W. L. Ayres of the mathematics department, secre- tary; Prof. S. D. Dodge of the geogra- phy department, treasurer. Prof. J. M. Cork, of the physics department, and Prof. H. T. Price, of the English de- partment, were elected members of the Council, to serve with Prof. H. H. Bartlett, ex officio member. A meting of the club's executive council was held in the Rackham Building prior to the election. Jewish Professor To Speak At Union Spy Witness De To Forge.Pres U.S. Army Deserter Tells Scheme For The Stealing Of Navy Ship Blueprints NEW YORK, Oct. 19.-(JP)- Bungled machinations of Germana spies in this country were described in Federal court today by Guenthera Gustav Rumrich, 32, U.S. Army de-' serter who testified that Nazi agents once plotted to forge President Roosevelt's signature on bogus White' House stationery.. Moodily reciting his role as a con- fessed $40-a-week "mail order" spy' Rumrich said the ring's headquar- ters in Hamburg, Germany pressed him for information about the U.S. Navy aircraft carriers Enterprise and Yorktown. The order, he said, came from Karl Schlueter, the ring's "contact" man. "I told him the ships were being constructed in either of the two At- lantic navy yards," Rumrich testified. "He said the German navy was plan-~ ning to build airplane carriers and that the plans of the United States vessels would be of great help."' With Schlueter, he said, he evolved a scheme of getting some fake "White House" letter paper and forging the President's signature to a message ordering the Navy department to de- liver the plans of the two huge U.S. Navy craft. In his third day as the govern- ment's key witness against three de- NLRB Orders Girdler To Hire 5,0 00_Strikers Responsibility For Labor's 1937 Strikes Laid At Door OfRepublic Steel WASHINGTON, Oct. 19-(P)-The National Labor Relations Board laid responsibility for the 1937 strike in Republic Steel Corp. plants on the company's "unfair labor practices" to- day and ordered it to offer reemploy- ment to 5,000 strikers. There was no immediate word from the Company as to whether it would appeal to the courts, but ir. Cleve- land, steel circles the opinion was that this was a foregone conclusion. The board's decision followed in the main, its order of last April which Republic appealed to the U. S. Circuit Court. Subsequently, the Labor Board withdrew this order when the Supreme Court condemned the pro- cedure the government had followed in the Kansas City stockyards rul- ing made by the Agriculture Depart- ment. Tom Girdler, chairman of the Board of Republic, denounced the original Gabor Board order, asserting it reflect- ed the "one-sided character" of the Wagner Act. He blamed the "arro- gance" of C.I.O. leaders for the strike. In hearings before the Labor Board, the Steel Company contended that the strikers had disqualified them- selves for re-employment. Its attor- (neys argued that acts of violence by individual strikers made reinstate- ment inequitable. The Board excepted only 11 men, however, in its sweeping order for reinstatement of the strikers. Those excluded, the Board said, were men who had pleaded guilty to possessing, and using explosives scribes Plan ident's Signature fendants, Rumrich said members of the ring rifled mail bags on German- owned transatlantic liners, tried to enlist "susceptible" U.S. Army and Navy officers in espionage for Ger- many, stole the secret "Z code" of the air force, and engaged his younger brother as a spy in Prague in antici- pation of Germany's march on Czechoslovakia. The witness, chewing gum and speaking a little wearily as if tired of the whole business-he said he once considered spying the epitome of glamor-testified that he himself once threatened a U.S. naval ensign with "dire consequences" if the of-. ficer refused to aid the ring. The witness, who got his spy job by writing to a German newspaper, said the plot to forge President Roosevelt's signature was timed for early last March and was frustrated by his arrest late in February. Gov. Murphy Plans Speech F or Students 'Youth And Government' Will Be Subject Of Talk To Be Given At Union Gov. Frank Murphy will address University students on "Youth and Government" at 2 p.m. Monday, in the North Lounge of the Union at a special meeting arranged by the Stu- dent Senate. The Governor willalso speak earlier in the day at a luncheon and at 1:30 p.m. in the Masonic Temple Accompanying him will be the five men who are running with him for reelection on the Democratic ticket: Lieut.-Gov. Leo J. Nowici, Auditor General George T. Gundry, State Treasurer Theodore I. Fry, Attorney general Raymond W. Starr and Secre- tary of State Leon D. Case. The meeting at the Union is the first in a series which is being planned by the Student Senate, in an effort to stimulate student interest in gov- ernment and politics, Tom Adams, '40, president, explained. The Senate political forum com- mitte which includes Harold Osse- pow, '39, chairman, Wallo Abbott, Jr., '39, and Jack Sessions,. '40, has an- nounced that invitations to address the Michigan campus have also been extended to Frank Fitzgerald and Nahum Burnett, Republican and Socialist candidates for Governor, respectively. Student, members of the faculty and townspeople are cordially invited to attend the meeting Monday. Minnesota Regents Elect Dr. Guy Ford MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 19-)-Dr. Guy Stanton Ford, Dean of the Grad- uate School, was elected President of the University of Minnesota tonight by a 7 to 4 vote of the Board of Regents, succeeding former Presi- dent Lotus D. Coffman, who died Sept. 22. Dr. Ford came to the University of Minnesota in 1913 from the University of Illinois. British Troops Subdue Arabs In Jerusalem 1,000 Soldiers Embroiled In Battle To Establishf Order In Ancient City City Curfew Raised And Food Given Out JERUSALEM, Oct. 1 - -Ap- proximately 1,000 British Coldstreamt Guards marched into the old city of7 Jerusalem at dawn today and de-t livered the district from the hands of Arab rebels who had held it for four days. z Wearing rubber.soled shoes for sure footing on the ancient cobbled' streets, the British troops entered the old city through historic Da- mascus gate and almost immediatelyt were met by a strong fullisade of rebelc fire. Within a few hours the troops hadI subdued the Arabs without loss of a British life. At least nine Arabs were killed, and 40 were taken prisoner. Two British constables were wound-I ed. The British established complete law and order in the old city, tot which they had laid siege without at- tempting, until today, to enter. A deathlike silence hung over the quar- ter as the crack guards patrolled the streets. The Christian and Jewish popula- tion showed intense relief as the troops marched through the narrow deserted streets to the Mosque of Omar area, which they immediately cordoned off. Troops and police then began a methodical house-to-house search of' the district between the Mosque and the old city walls. As each section was cleared the inhabitants were al- lowed to circulate in the streets of the, old city, but were not permitted to leave its precincts. A curfew previously imposed was1 lifted immediately. Local authori- ties distributed bread to beleaguered,E half-starved residents.t Soldiers placed stout barbed wire1 barriers at all strategic pointsl throughout the city. Coffee Hours Begin Tuesday Vocational Speech Series Will Be Held In Union Regular Union Coffee Hours will begin Tuesday, Oct. 25, and last from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily, it was announced yesterday. The first 'of a series of 15 vocation- al guidance lectures will be given in the small ballroom of the Union at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 27, by Dean Henry M. Bates of the law school, ac- cording to Don Treadwell, '40, Union orientation chairman. Other speakers during the year will include Dean R. W. Bunting of the dentistry school; Prof. H. B. Lewis of the pharmacy school; Dr. W. W. Bishop of the library science depart- ment; Dean A. C. Furstenburg of the Medical School; Dean Wells I. Bennett of the architecture school; Dean Hen- ry C. Anderson of the engineering college; Prof. Earl V. Moore of the music school; Dean C. S. Yoakum of the graduate school; Dean James B. Edmonson of the education school; Prof. J. K. Pollock of the political science department; Miss Marian Durell of the nursing school; Dean C. E. Griffin of the business adminis- tration school; Prof. Jos ph R. Hay- I den of the political scietce depart- ment; and Dean S. T. Dana of the forestry and conservation school. , 135 Bandmen Leave Tonight For Yale Bowl One hundred thirty-five strong, Michigan's Varsity Band will leave Ann Arbor at 6:30 p.m. today en route for New Haven where they will cheer the football squad on in its encounter with Yale. Expected to arrive in New York City at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow the band will march from the Grand Central Station to the Lincoln Hotel, its New York stopping place. A police escort has been arranged and the city authorities, including Mayor LaGuar- dia, are expected to received the band members, Prof. William D. Revelli, director of the Bands said yesterday. The greater part of the funds to finance the trip to Yale have been raised by the Annual Michigan Band Varsity Night which was presentedI Tuesday evening before a capacity audience in Hill Auditorium. Tomorrow evening the band will be1 tie guest of the eastern alumni at a dinner to be given at 1:30 p.m. by the University of Michigan Club of New York City. Secret drill of formations to be pre- sented at the football game in the afternoon will be held Saturday morning in the Yale Bowl. Yesterday it was announced that students may obtain their tickets for the Yale excursion train by calling at the main desk of the Union from 10:00 to 12:00 a.m. or from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. today. Student Senate Election Spirit Reaches Peak Predict Wide-Open Fight; Record - Breaking Vo t e Is Seen For Tomorrow Indications of a wide open fight for the 16 vacancies in the Student Sen-' ate were evident on the campus yes- terday as independent candidates, coalitions and parties distributed handbills and circulars in eleventh- hour electioneering to win support for the all-student Senate poll tomor- row. Sixty candidates are in the race and a turnout double that of last year's 1700 is predicted by Edward Magdol, '39, director of elections. Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union and League, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Angell Hall, the General Library,' an the Engineering Arch. and from 12:30 pan. to 2 p.m. in the Law Club. Mag- dol reminds all students that identifi- cation cards will be needed to cast ballots., Sample ballots will be available for al candidates and students at 5 p.m. today in the Student Senate offices in Lane Hall, Magdol said. Those in- terested in serving as election clerks in the election tomorrow are asked to contact Magdol. Richard M. Scammon, who was student director of elections last March, has just arrived here by plane from Minneapolis to be present at the proportional representation vot- ing tomorrow. The fame of the Stu- dent Senate elections have traveled considerably, Scammon reports, as evidenced by the account of the voting here last year by George H. Hallett, Jr., famous authority on PR, in the ' "National Municipal Review." Stalemate Treat Parley With Franc Original Michigan Quarterback Dead Dr. Oshea S. Brigham of Toledo, who played quarterback on the first Michigan football team in 1870, died Tuesday night in Toledo after a 10- day illness. Dr. Brigham was one of the eleven men who went to Cornell to play a scheduled game the first year. The game was cancelled, however, because some sophomores on the team "got into some trouble" and were sent home by the university president. 'World's Largest' Gargoyle'A ppears On Campus Today The shortest route to the Arboretum and other important places on campusj are offered on the cover of Gargoyle, campus humor magazine, which goes on sale today. This issue, which is the largest in the history of the magazine, will be one sale on campus and at all book- stores for 25 cents. - Barechested masculine pulchritude will be displayed along with a picture of Robert Taylor to prove that hairy chested men, including Daily report- ers, are sissies. Along with these will be evidence that the four out of five theory is incorrect with pictures of° 16 new beauties who arrived at the University this fall. In addition to pictorial sections are humorous short stories, features, jokes and a new type of satirical cartoon. Craig To Talk At Convocation Economist Is To Address Forestry Conclave Here Roland D. Craig, chief of the divi- sion of econbmics of the Canadian Forest Service, will give an illustrated University lecture on "The Use of Air- craft in Forestry" at 4:15 p.m. today in the Graduate School Auditorium. It will be the second of three talks he will deliver here in conjunction with a meeting of the Central States Section of the Society of American Foresters which is expected to draw 100 delegates from five states. Craig will speak at 11 a.m. today in the Chemistry Building auditorium at a forestry school convocation on "Forestry in Canada." He will also speak on "Aerial Forest Surveys" at a session of the central state for- ester's group at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Graduate School. The meeting will start with a busi- ness meeting tonight in the Union. Other activities of the meeting will include a banquet tomorrow night in the Union at which Prof. Robert B. Hall of the geography de- partment will be the principal speak- er. Feuhrer's Price: Coloni( Big Air Force, Freedo In East, No Soviet Pa Hungary May Face New Czech Claii PARIS, Oct. 19.-(AP-Chancel Hitler's reported price for a guari ty of Franco-German peace appea too high to France today. In preliminary conversations G many was said in well-inforn quarters to have offered to guaran French frontiers against attack France would return Togo and Cameroons, pre-war German Color in West Africa; if France would r ognize that Germany should have r merical superiority in war planes 2 if France would assure German3 free hand in Central and Eastern I rope and renounce the Franco-R sian mutual assistance pact. Possibility Remains The possibility remained, howev that sufficient common desire exis so that some kind of an agreem might be reached. English lead have been described as urging t French to seek something parallel the Anglo-German friendship p initialled at Munich. In the willingness of both Fra and Germany to explore possibili1 of a non-aggression pact some Pa observers professed to see a di: matic game aimed at Italy-a wa ing by France that Italy should cc fine itself to the Mediterranean a a hint by Germany that unlessIt abandoned its support for Hungar claims Germany could find a pow ful friend in France. Von Welezeck Confers Count Johannes Von Welcze German Ambassador to Frar talked to Georges Bonnet, Fore Minister. Andre Francois-Pon French Ambassador at Berlin, f to Hitler's Bavarian home, Bercht gaden. The visit to Bonnet tot followed a talk Von Welczeck 1 with Premier Edouard Daladier returning from Berlin. Daladier's friends hoped an agr ment with Germany would impr his domestic position. He lid c versations with the Soviet Amb sador, Jacob Surits, presumably as what effect a Franco-Qerman agi ment would have on Franco-Sot relations. In a drive against spies the Frei Government forbade foreigners settle in the Paris region without s cial authorization. German Demand Czechoslovakia PRAGUE, Oct.19.-(IP)-An app ent stiffening of Czechoslovakia's titude toward Hungarian territa demands was indicated tonight w the Czech general staff hinted t the nation might counter with claim for certain Slovak areas aroi Budapest. At Hungary's capital city, ne tiators continued their efforts thresh out the problem, while rer sentatives of the new Slovak Ruthenian autonomous states , pared to present their side to Gerr diplomats at Munich. Katharine Dunbar Says Women. Need Technical Training Today Calderwood Explains Hungary's Claims Against Czechoslovakia "Today there is a need for a com- bination of general education and background plus technical training for college women in business," Mrs. Katharine Dunbar, guest speaker for the last Orientation lecture, told 400 University women at the League yes- terday. Before the depression business of- fices employed women for two dis- tinct types of work, Mrs. Dunbar ex- plained. Women were employed eith- er to do straight secretarial work or to meet clients, transact non-clerical business and act as assistants to her employers. Following the depression, the two positions have been com- bined with the result that business training must now be two-fold. In discussing the topic, "College Women in Business," Mrs. Dunbar outlined the criticisms that employers sometimes make of the college wom- an. The old prejudice that the college woman knows too much, that she is too sure of herself still exists, she Yale's 'Lonely Hearts' 1 Waiting Breathlessly. Miss Michigan Coed's fame hasj spread far and wide, even unto the , ivied cloisters of far-off New Haven. Witness this telegram, received last night: "Yale very anxious to meet up with \ g famous Michigan coeds to find out "" the secret of their success. How about some dates with the gals? We will be at the station on your arrival to take charge. Signed, Lonely Hearts." For some inexplicable reason, the telegram was addressed to the Gar- MRS. KATHARINE DUNBAR goyle office. --Other telegrams arrived throughout learn and an ability to teach are the evening. Five local sororities also By BEN M. MARINO H u n g a r y undoubtedly has a stronger claim substantiating its ter- ritorial demands upon Czechoslovakia than Germany had to the Sudeten area, Prof. Howard B. Calderwood of the political science department, said yesterday. He pointed out that Hungary, previ- ous to the World War, owned the land through which runs the southern boundary of Czechoslovakia. Approxi- mately 750,000 Magyars now reside in that territory. The grant to Czecho- slovakia was mad'e at the time in order to provide the Czech bumper state with a railroad which originally be- longed to Hungary. Apparently the Hungarian demands are not based on a desire for posses- sion of mineral wealth in that region, he added, but on nationality. Bratislava, the largest city in the disputed area, is largely inhabited by Magyars. It was the partitioning of Hungary which yielded that city and its surrounding territory in which Quoting from Lord Bryce's book "International Relations," Professor Calderwood explained that even at the time of the World War an im- partial party saw Hungary's plight. "The Ruthenians were separated from Hungary without being given an op- portunity to determine for themselves whether they desired to be free of Magyar rule. In addition, the Tran- sylvanian area, approximately one third Magyar in population, was severed from Hungary and given to Roumania, although desiring to re- main under the rule of that nation." Hitler, although he will probably, not take any active part in the present territorial altercations, can be ex- pected to throw every bit of his in- fluence indirectly in Hungary's favor. Professor Calderwood feels that Hun- gary's chances to achieve a greater part of the present territorial demand are very good. However, he does not expect that the terms will be met in full. Hungary, if successful, may lay covetous eves upon its minorities in Vulcans Hammer Eight Initiates In Sea Of Mu Vulcans, senior honorary enginee ing society, in collaboration with large mud puddle, initiated eight mi into the mysteries of mud and ha labor yesterday afternoon on t lawn of the West Engineering ann The men initiated were Dick Ta bell, Bob Hartwell, Charley Ket] Bob Reid, Jack Stevens, Steve Wo sey, Hugh Downer, and Pete Ipsen Smeared with machine oil in which lamp black had been rubb the eight novitiates circled for t hours about a large anvil set in I center of a sea of mud. From time time this activity was varied for t peldges by active who allowed th to dive head first into the pud or requested them gently with padd to stand on their heads in the m Dr. Abraham Cronbach, professor of Jewish studies at the Hebrew Union College, will speak on "Judaism and World Peace" at a luncheon meeting tomorrow at the Union under the joint sponsorship of the Student Re-