THE MICHIGAN DAILY Improved Roads: Decrease Costs, Survey Reveals Prof. Swinton Says Road Stabilization Results In Increased Safety Increased safety and lower costs both to the motorist and in highway maintenance are obtained through the stabilization of gravel roads, ac- cording to Prof. Roy S. Swinton of the department of engineering re- search. In a survey of wear on several Michigan highways, Professor Swin- ton discovered that stabilization saved about two-thirds of the mater- ial losses which are so great on loose, untreated gravel roads. Stabilization consists of the use of proper mixtures of soil, moisture and chemicals in road construction. Anthony Eden Gets The Low-Down On American Cabinet Republican President Probable I r I i i I A i 1940, Prof. Cuncannon Says (Continued from Page 1) presidency met defeat in recent elec- tions: Earle in Pennsylvania, Bulkeley Cuncannon's opinion, is popular with ( in Ohio and Murphy in Michigan. The the typical old-fashioned, run-of-the- McNutt machine did very badly in In- mine politician who is apt to be the diana. The Democrat most likely to type of delegate to sit in the national be nominated for the presidency, in convention. And the only place in the opinion of Professor Cuncannon, the North where the Democrkts did still remains Senator Bennett Clark well in the recent election is where of Missouri. they polled a large vote in the big There is great uncertainty, Profes- cities with the aid of machines like s that of Tammany in New York City, Kelly's in Philadelphia, Hague's in make-up of the Republican ticket be- Jersey City and Nash's in Chicago. cause of the scramble of so many men "A New Dealer running for president having back of them large delega- and backed by this crowd would be a tions from important states. The only curious political figure, indeed," he certainty at this time is that Thomas said. Dewey of New York will have a place Many Democrats who aspire to the on the ticket; which place it will be ~---no one seems to know. y e e q "Mr. Dewey, because he comes from 1S tii IE ; INew York, because he is a good speak- In Professor Swinton's survey, be- gun three years ago, extensive and continued examinations were made of gravel roads in five Michigan coun- ties. About 100,000 wear readings were made on these five road sec- tions. While a saving of over 60 per cent was made on stabilized roads, Profes- sor Swinton found, other roads re- ceiving surface treatment with cal- cium chloride had only about one-, half as much material loss as the un- treated roads. The cost of road stabilization, says Professor Swinton, is little or no greater than the maintenance cost of untreated roads where the loss of materials is so much greater. In addi- tion, he pointed out, the stabilized road is much safer because it is dust- less and has no loose surface, and at the same time allows greater speeds which may be counted at a saving for the motorist. Anthony Eden was the guest of honor and off-the-record speaker at a Press Club dinner in Washington at which the former British Foreign Secretary met most of the members of the American Cabinet. Shown here in a discussion at the dinner, left to right: Eden, Attorney General Homer Cummings, Postmaster General James A. Farley, and Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes. Of r~Curry HelpCrippled Approximately $50,000 worth of1 braces and appliances are made every year in the Orthopedic Appliance Shop in the sub-basement of the University Hospital. Here in one of the most complete and extensive workshops of any hos- pital in the country George E. Curry and eight workers, five men and three BloodTests Seen Banishing Syphilis Dr. Rueben L. Kahn, Assistant Professor of Bacteriology and Ser- ology at the University Hospital and originator of the Kahn test for syph- ilis, discussed the "Social Signifi- cance of Blood Tests" at Lane Hall yesterday. Medical authorities are not agreed that blood tests to control syhpilis should be made compulsory because they show some false positives, Dr. Kahn said. G 1 l Sit-Down Strike Termed Labor's First Weapon In Fight For Job UAW Research Traces Growth Before Labor Director Of Union Students (Continued from Page 1)1 New Health Service Will Open In 1938 InSpite Of Hardships Despite a one man "protest" picket and' a poor foundation, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director for the new Health Service Building, expects to move into the new structure which is being constructed on Twelfth St., just across from the League, sometime next year. The picket, recently withdrawn, was a protest against the use of non- union relief laborers on the PWA project. The foundation problem, however, is far more serious. The land upon which the Health Service will be con- structed has been filled in with rub- bish to a depth of more than 20 feet and in order to gain a firm founda- tion, solid concrete piers must be sunk until firm ground is hit. This unexpected difficulty has necessitat- ed the withdrawal of a large sum of money from the allotment of $450,- 000 which would have otherwise gone for equipment. The architect's completed plans call for a three story rectangular building, 200 feet long and 50 feet deep. There also will be a short 40 foot projection in the rear directly opposite the entrance. The first, floor will provide accom- modations for the general physicians', offices and the administrative offices and records. A large lecture room will occupy the short wing. The short extension in the rear will be occu- pied by a large lecture hall and staff room. In addition, a pharmacy, a lounge, and nurses' treatment rooms will be located on the first floor. The lobby, according to the drawings, will be very spacius and suitable for dis- playing health education and mu- seum features. Specialty departments will be housed on the second floor. There will be complete facilities for work in mental hygiene, sensitization, physiotherapy, x-ray, dentistry, sur- gery, dermatology, and eye, ear, nose, and throat departments. The ex- perimnental and testing laboratories complete the list of rooms. A 60-bed infirmary, divided Finto private rooms and small words, will dccupy most of the third floor, and there will be'a sun deck and a lounge on the roof over the rear wing. The remainder of the third floor will con- tain isolation rooms for patients with cantagious diseases. The basement will be utilized for the service departments. It will house the kitchen, dining room, work rooms, special pharmaceutical of- Officials Ignore Union Picket Here Commenting on the one man "pro- test" picket that the Ann Arbor Building and Trades Union has main-1 tained on the PWA Health Service construction job, Thomas C. Kea- ton, union secretary, said last night that Mr. Lesser, contractor on the project, has hired workingmen con- trary to the terms of the contract. The contract stipulates, Mr. Kea- fices, storerooms and statistical lab- oratories. The exterior will be very simple and composed of limestone and brick to harmonize with the adjacent League and dental buildings. The windows will be unusually large to insure a maximum amount of sunlight.. When completed, the new Health Service will be one of the finest in "the country, according to Dr. For- sythe. The University of California has a large building, built in 1928, called the Crowell Memorial Hospital, and Princeton has a $500,000 struc- ture which was constructed in 1925. These are the only two university health services comparable to the Michigan Service when completed. MSC Sees Grant' For New Buildgin EAST LANSING, Dec. 15-(P)-The State Board of Agriculture, govern- ing body of Michigan State College. decided today to ask the 1939 Legisla- tur for an appropriation of $2,633,477 for the college's maintenance and operation during the next biennium. The figure is the same approved' by the 1937 Legislature for the cur- rent biennium. Governor Murphy has curtailed allocations from the current appropriation,; however, under extra-I ordinary budget-balancing powers conferred upon him by the lawmak- ers. The amount of the saving under Murphy's economy program has not yet been definitely determined. The College Board also decided tot ask the Legislature to finance a build- ing program, but disclosed no estimate of the cost of such an undertaking. Suggested projects, ranked by the Board in the order of their import- ance, are: An addition to the campus powero plant. Two new buildings for Radio Sta- tion WKAR, which already has re- ceived federal permission to increase its power rating from 1,000 to 5,000 watts. A bacteriology laboratory building. The first unit in a natural sciences building, large enough to house theo college botany department.J A forestry and conservation build-t 1935 have been attained by strikes. Yet the sit-down strikes of 1936 and 1937 were vital forerunners to the attainment of their contracts, he de- clared. They demonstrated to em- Iploayers that labor could bargain as an equal. Objectives of the UAW are not con- fined to increasing wages, Mr. Mun- ger pointed out. A major problem to be solved concerns the fate of the 200,000 auto workers whom Mr. Mun- ger, contrary to prevailing employer Educators Learn Advanced Theory in Special Class Articles about progressive educa- tion often get into newspapers and magazines, but progressive education for educators involving? new and im- proved methods of teaching teachers how to teach is seldom publicized, al- though it is taking fully as great strides, educators believe. The education school, a pioneer in this type of work, sponsors and con- ducts, with the cooperation of the Extension Service, a typical course, Pupil Personnel in Elementary and. Secondary Schools, with classes con- ducted by Professors G. E. Carrotkers, Mowat G. Fraser, 0. W. Stephenson, Fred S. Dunham, Calvin 0. Davis, Harlan C. Koch, S. A. Courtis, Wil- liam C. Trow, Howard Y. McClusky, Willard C. Olson, L. W. Keeler, Clif- ford Woody, Francis D. Curtis and Dean James B. Edmonson. Conducted as a field course, classes meet eight times during the school year at widely separated points in the state: Belding, Cass City, Ludington, Midland, M'onroe, Owosso, Three Riv- ers and Sturgis. "Most teachers and administrators in public schools throughout the state are too busy to keep up with their reading on advances in educational theory and method," Dr. Calvin 0. Davis, secretary of the education school, declared. "'This course is de- signed to bring to them the newer ideas, theories and practices in edu- cation. So far as I know, no- other school of education in the country offers the same type of course." Murphy Defend's State's Civil Service Organization LANSING, Dec. 15 .-(AP)--Governor Murphy defended the. state's civil service system today from charges of James F. Thoms j , Republican State Central Committee 'Chairman, that the act which created it was women, cut, stitch and hammer away, and economist opinion, believes can making braces, celluloid jackets, never be reabsorbed by the industry. frames and every conceivable type of Stranded by a declining market, these appliance that will make life more workers must be cared for by govern- 1pleasant and normal for crippled or handicapped patients, Without theseI ment and industry until some per- aids many people would be helplessly manent solution can be worked out, confined to their beds. Mr. Munger demanded. Devising and fitting the braces and Employers and unions must co- appliances is a difficult "ask. Curry, operate if the problem of the clash however, has been at it for 25 years of the worker's drive for higher wages and besides being a skilled mechanic with the limits of industry's abil he has a knack of inventing things to pay is to benefit society, Mr. Mun- and a knowledge of anatomy that ger declared, enables him to do the job. Scoring "enterprises depending on All in all there are approximately human rather than machine labor 150 different orthopedic appliances which pay low wages to cut costs in and each particular type must be a competitive market" as "obsolete," especially adapted to fit the indi- Mr. Munger declared that unions vidual patient. For this reason no feel high wages should be set in those stock of appliances can be kept on industries as a penalty to such prac- hand. Instead the shop storeroom tices and as a stimulus to introduce contains piles of steel, rolls of felt new machinery. "We don't want tech- and other raw material ready to be nological development of industry to whisked into a brace or temporary be sabotaged by efforts of employers leg at a moment's notice. themselves at the workers' expense," When a patient is referred to, the he said. Orthopedic Appliance Department, he The mushroom growth of the UAW Iis sent to one of four fitting rooms to a membership of 400,000 auto where measurements are taken for workers (the industry embraces an appliance to fill his particular 650,000 workers) has raised many need. The doctor in charge of the problems, Mr. Munger pointed out. case tells Curry the correction re- Chief among these was the problem quired and leaves it to his ingenuity of wielding control over men who to figure out a way to make the themselves "didn't know what they ncessary device. One case may call wanted or how to get it." It was in- for a celluloid jacket made by wrap- evitable in the early stages of organi- ping stockinet around a mold which zation that leaders come to the top is the exact size of the injured part who were not truly representative of and then painting the stockinet with the membership. In the past two celluloid dissolved by acetone. The years, however, a "group conscious- next patient may need a brace cut ness and solidarity not apparent to out of quarter inch steel with. ani the outsider, have developed," Mr. acetylene torch. The shop is equipped Munger said. to supply either. i m Classifie~d Iretory er, because of his attractive personal qualities and because of his fine run against Herbert Lehman for the gov- ernorship of New York, which he lost by only 64,000 votes, less than one per cent of the total, is bound to be in the picture. Because of his ex- treme youth, he will be 38 in '1940, and the fact that he has had no na- tional experience whatever, he is like- ly to be nominated for vice-presi- dent," Professor Cuncannon declared. Professor Cuncannon believes Ar- thur Vandenberg of Michigan, Robert Taft of Ohio, Arthur James of Penn- sylvania and Leverett Saltonstall of Mass. will fight it out for top place. One has as good a chance as the other depending on the current of events and the whims of public opin- ion. In every 20 years since 1880, the J emocrats have had two adminis- trations and the Republicans three. There are many signs, Professor Cun- cannon said, that this historic ratio will be maintained. "However any speculation as regards the future of this country politically," he conclud- ed, "in the immediate years ahead is to some extent handicapped by our peculiar relationship to a some- what confused foreign situation and by the fact that the large proposed expenditure on armaments in this country will materially help business in the near future but will seriously harm it in the long run because such expenditure is basically unproduc- tive." Must Tackle Study Hazard Football stars may receive their education as a by-product of foot- ball games, but education is still 'heir ultimate end in college, according to Prof. Charles M. Davis, academic counselor of the literary college, in an article in the current M.chigan Alumnus Quarterly Review. In his article, Professor Davis tells of the difficulties and disadvantages which face the football player in his scholastic life in colleges and uni- versities where academic standards are maintained, even for athletes. The hardest thing for the average football player, as for any freshman, Professor Davis said, is to realize that the college means business. When he realizes this and gets out of pro- bation, where he usually finds him- self at the end of his first semester, he usually is able to make good. While the foow' ill star may have the disadvantage cf inadequate pre- vious training in high echools which "let athletes through," Professor Davis points out, he has an added in- centive to study in the fact that he must keep eligible to play on Satur- days-which is probably the most important thing in his life. Play Will Be Given By University High University High School students will carry on a tradition of many years standing when they present a Christmas play, "A Sign Unto You," at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Friday in the school auditorium. Following the custom established when the school began, carolling and a procession of undergraduates through the halls will high-light the presentation. Cast members are Charles Howe, Peggy Cannon, Jeanne Finlayson, Betty Haas, Jim-Bob Stephenson, Tom M4oore, Dorothea Sleator, Gul- tekin Aga-Oglu, Bonny Bevan, Char- lotte Fariss, Anne Hackett and Sally Maurice. Charles McGraw, Grad., is iin charge of the play. z I 7=- is in----rge oftheplay. ', ,I FREE ADJUSTMENT' [ Winter carbureter adjustment and exhaust gas analysis without charge. Enjoy winter driving with more miles per gallon of gasoline. Please phone or stop by for an appointment so you won't have to wait in line. LAR-MEE BATTERY AND ELECTRIC SERVICE 112 South Ashley Street Phone 8908 A MERRY CHRISTMAS And HAPPY NEW YEAR to All! FOR RENT FOR RENT-Furnished apartment. Also extra room if desired, 426 E. Washington. Inquire at 422 E. Washington. Phone 8544. 268 WANTED - TYPING TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. 5th Avenue. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 79 TYPING at reasonable rates. Mrs. Howard, 613 Hill St., dial 5244. 176 LAUNDRIES LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 9 LOST and FOUND LOST-Silver bracelet on diagonal, call 5700 at 6 p.m. Reward. FOUND-Two dollars lost by a girl purchasing Goodfellow Edition at Law School Monday morning. Call Mrs. Rogers 2-3241. 247 LOST-Sorosis pin on or near cam- pus. Finder call Janet Martin, 8891. Reward. 269 LOST-Brown zipper notebook with G. Robert Harrington on cover, 231 Angell Hall. Reward. Call 4850. 271 MISCELLANEOUS WASHED SAND and Gravel, Drive- way gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, Phone 7112. 17 PAPERHANGER-Craftsman, cap- able fine paper work. Dial 7209. 181 SITUATION WANTED' - Reliable young man desires work as porter and all-round maxn at Fraternity or Sorority. Al references. Phone 2-2016. 270 LINEN HANKERCHIEFS, luncheon sets, bed spreads, pillow cases, hand embroidered, some with University Seal. Reduced price. Phone 2-2713 VAtATION MOVIE CALENDAR DEC. 17-20 BOB BURNS "ARKANSAS TRAVELER" DEC. 21-24 ANDRE LEEDS "YOUTH TAKES A FLING" and GLORIA STUART "LADY OBJECTS" DEC. 25-28 Jack Oakie - Jack Haley - Adolphe Menjou "THANKS FOR EVERYTHING" DEC. 29-31 GEO. BRENT "RACKET BUSTERS" and SALLY EILERS "TARNISHED ANGEL" JAN. 1-4 Frederick March - Virginia Bruce "THERE GOES MY HEART" L after 5:30. 2481 248 ing. "partisan" and "New Deal." A livestock judging pavilion for i"The civil service system repre- which a request has already been sents the hopes and hard work of submitted to PWA officials. If the friends of good government in Michi- federal request is denied, the Board gan for years back," the Governor will ask the Legislature to finance said in his daily press conference. a $90,000 structure, otherwise to par- "I trust it will be appraised in that ticipate on a fund-matching basis in light when any attack upon it is a $120,000 building. I considered." We Wish You. A MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR THF STAFF BEST WISHES for A MERRY CHRISTMAS I I1 I L~ ~ ii U '~X\$ "'v *3~E.,IDUIE.~ I V *~ * 11