THE MICHIGAN DAILY W-, -a T i t '! V-& A V 71 ? WV Y , -mr-M Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg (left), of Michigan, dropped around to the Washington office of Senator Elect Robert A. Taft, of Ohio, and gave him an affectionate welcome. Both men are considered among the possibilities for the Republican presidential nomination in 1944. FordAdvances dsel Ford Defends Poicy lacult { Carl Lower Taxes Ca Dean JaJ o 1 tureducationr To A id Utun Bishop, Lib3 iging Chi Opposes Special Reduction visory gro lbraries set For Plant Expansion poration of Equipment purchases 2:00 -4 WASHINGTON, Dec. 6-0)--Busi- ness, as represented by Edsel Ford and a half dozen other employers, told a Senate Committee today that lower taxes would go a long way toward promoting industrial recovery.k? Ford, President of the Ford Motor s M. Company and son of -fenry Ford.O its founder; said he believed a reduc- ]The tion of taxes would be "as good an er r incentive to business as any." Stray King. Testifying before the Senate Profit- sets Sharing Committee, he expressed op- beau position, however, to granting special tax credits for plant expansion, pur- chase of equipment and regularization of employment, asserting they "might' bead to consequences difficult to handle." Leaning forward in his chair as he talked, Edsel Ford, president of (The committee is studying the the Ford Motor Co., told the Monopoly committee in Washington that question of allowing such credits in his company's policy of encouraging inventors to manufacture their the hope of encouraging production owning inventions tended to encourage competition. and the sharing of industrial profits with employes.) wit eplyc.)Guithe Re~elected Head Delitscher Vereiu Ford said the Ford Motor Company believed in the principle of sharing Of Santa Fe Lab Board profits directly through high wages. Chorus To Mee Largely as a result of that policy, he Dr. Carl E. Guthe, Director of the said, there has been no "serious" University Museums, returned Mon- labor troubles in the Ford plants, day from a week end in New York, The chorus of the Deutscher Verein, "We try to be more than fair to spent attending a meeting of the Ad- student German organization, will our employes," he added. "We try visory Board and the Board of Trus- hold a rehearsal meeting at 4:30 p.m. to pay them just as high wagesas tee opo ogyat whch a e ratory o today in the Michigan League, accord- we can and produce at as low cost Atrplg twihh a e as possible, thus creating volume elected chairman of the board of ing to Dr. Otto G. Graf, of the Ger- production." trustees. man depatrment, advisor. In carrying out this policy, Ford ###s ##. said, the company established a mini- mum wage of $5 a day in 1914, raised YPSI LA NT I NORMAL CHOIR it to $6 in 1920 and has maintained it V SINGING UNACCOMPANIED 250 VOICES There except for a drop during the FREDERICK ALEXANDER, Conductor depression to $4 a day. M Goodfellows-Monday H ISIS MSAA7 W llard Addrs Nativity Music from Many Lands Old Music-Young Voices .ce c_ ssn PEASE AUDITORIUM, Y SILANTI No Reserved Seats Science Association THURSDAY, DEC. 8, 8 P.M. SHARP ADMISSION 25c Prof. Hobart H. Willard of thewith chemistry department addressed the' HUGH meeting of the American Association!An for the Advancemeru of Science at Screen Lancaster, Pa., yesterday on "Ultra- Dir violet Fluorescence and Its Applica- tion." 302 South State St. (Near Liberty St.) In a second lecture, "Recent Ad-FU A P Ste vances in Analytical Chemistry," Pro- FOUNTAIN PENS fessor Willard described new appara- TYPEWRITERS tus, methods and reagents, many of STUDENT SUPPLIES which were developed here. Profes- sor Willard is one of the directors of " h the American Chemical Society.The y Men Attend - "negie Meeting Ames B. Edmonson, of the school, and William W. irarian, will attend a meet- cago tomorrow of the ad- iup on teachers' college t up by the Carnegie Cor- New York. 4:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 P.M. OW PLAYING! [-G-M's ROMANCE CWINGS OF SONG! rmne ..oohn aus s II, World's Waltz g, in a production that i sa new standard for 74 uty and l-thrill I i ISE FERNAND INERGRAVEl MLIZA KORJUS HERBERT " LIONEL ATWILL d Cast of Thousands Play by Samuel Koffensten and Walter Reisch ected by Julien Duvivier Extra NEWS OF THE DAY SATURDAY - - Shining Hour" 7 - -.----....... Fear Ef f ects The psychological effects of fear7 on the quality of a speaker's voice will be analyzed today when Prof. G. E.bDensmore of the speech de- partment is harnessed to a cathode ray oscillograph during his weekly radio class in diction at ; p.m. today. The oscillograph, constructed in the engineering school, consists of a 16-inch glass funnel which encloses apparatus so delicate that when a person stands near it a stream of electrons radiating from the currents of action from his body will cause a deflection of the instrument. This is larger than most apparatus of the same type which is usually about nine: inches, long. Voice To Be Recorded1 As Professor Densmore talks into the microphone today, his voice willf be recorded. The mechanical "hills" produced on the record will then be photographed to put refinement intoJ the motions. The lines produced on 1 this film will be large and the effects on voice quality can easily be an- alyzed. Physiological measurements of Professor Densmore's breathing and pulse changes will also be taken to correlate them with discoveries made on the voice record. Has 'Mike Fright' Miss Miriam R. Bonner, Grad., is performing this afternoon's experi- ment. Already the test has been tried on a number of students and Professor Densmore is being tried to- day because of his frank admittance of "mike fright" at the beginning1 of every program. Short speeches have been used at the University of Wisconsin for the test, but the longer talk is expected to give a series of influences which may be contrasted. ACT AT 3 P.M. 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