THE MICHIGAN DAILY RY HE MICHIGAN DAILY Reduction In Edison Rates Sought An Open Letter To The Michigan Public Utilities Commission ,- ,: =° r ,- - - -y ,I Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Publishea every morning except Monday during the trniversity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the tise for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All regd, eof republication of all other matters herein also sved. . ered at the Post offier at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as seodclass mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier 4*4.00; by mail, $4.50. 'ember, Associated Collegiate Press, 193738 REPRUSUNTED FOR NATIONAL AVERTISINS BY NationalAdvertisingervice, Inc. College Publishers RetresenTatvee 40 MADISON AvE. NEW YORK.N . Y. cHICAGO - BOSTON LOS ANGILIS - SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR.. IRVING SILVERMAN 2(ty Editor . . . . . . Robert I. Fitzhenry Assistant Editors . . . . . . Mel Fineberg, Joseph Gies, Elliot Maraniss, Ben M. Marino, Carl Petersen, Suzanne Potter, Harry L. Sonneborn. Business Department &U INESS MANAGER.... ERNEST A. JONES Credit Manager . . . . Norman Steinberg Circulation Manager . . . J. Cameron Hall Asistants . . Philip Buchen, Walter Stebens NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOTT MARANISS The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writrs only. It is important for society to avoid the heglect of adults, but positively dangerous for t to thwart the ambition of youth to reform the world. Only the schools which act on this belief are educational Institu- tions in the best meaning of the term. -Alexanter G. Ruthven. An Industrialist For Collective Bargaining A N ENCOURAGING SIGN for the future of American labor relations 4 (be read in a letter of John H. Goss, vice- president of the Scovill Manufacturing Co. of aterbury, Conn., and of the National Indus- trial Conference Board. Mr. Goss declares in engphatic terms that negotiation with trade unions as a means of settling labor problems is "here to stay," and advises business men to learn how to use this "finest tool yet devised with which to carve out the answer to the problems of our interrelationship with or employes." Mr. Goss speaks, of course, from the pint of view of the enployer. lie offers business men hints on how to conduct the actual work of nego- iation with workers' committees, suggests use of t sense of humor, restraint of temper and the tactics of a "good salesman." "If you are a poor salesman," he says, "you should substitute an Ssociate who is a good one. If you are a good ;alesman and the program does not go over With modification that you can readily agree to, then there is probably something wrong with the jrogram. In that case, they (the workers' com- mittee) will very clearly prove it to you, and you would better admit it and agree to change it." The time has passed, Mr. Goss declares, when the management could arbitrarily tell its workers how, much they were to be paid. Workers want as much money as they can get for their services, And "unless employes ae reasonably satisfied, there cannot be efficiency in operation." It would be foolish to think that employer- employe difficulties will disappear with the doption by American business men of Mr. Goss's tenets. The question of "a fair wage" will not be solved by a sense of humor. Declining in- dustries will not be put back on their feet by the retention of a sunny disposition on the part bf the executives. However, the fact remains, the Substitution of the Goss for the Girdler method of dealing with labor problems would have a most healthy and stabilizing effect on our economic life. In the long run, American business men will find that the cost of a few hours of give-and-take across the conference table is far exceeded by the upkeep of an army of spies and thugs, or the importation of a ready-formed battalion of Strikebreakers to stage a back-to-work move- ment. Mr. Goss, in concluding, remarks that labor leaders, "if they persist in militant methods, will discover sooner or later that they have not qualified and they, too, will lose their positions." Militancy on the part of labor leaders is a slightly' more involved question than Mr. Goss implies. There are doubtless some labor chiefs whose methods are unecessarily violent, but as a rule, militant unionism is the result of militant employer anti-unionism. Strikes are seldom called without sufficient cause, for the simple reason that workers immensely prefer working to striking and are not inclined to either walk out of or sit down in plants unless they are convinced they can gain a fair deal from the management in no other way. If Mr. Goss can induce capital to bargain intelligently and honestly, he need fear little from labor. editor's note: The following letter to the Micigan Public Utilities Commission was sub- mitted to the Daily by Prof. Louis C. Karpinski. Professor Karpinski has received a reply from the commission stating that the commission is re- quired to serve a copy of the complaint oi the Detroit Edison company for its comment before setting a date for a hearing, and promising an investigation of rates "if the number of signa- tures on your petition indicate a general feeling among the customers of the Detroit Edison that therratesrare too high." The petitions for this purpose arc now being circulated. To the Michigan Public Utilities Commission State Office Building Lansing, Michigan Gentlemen: As citizens receiving residence service from the Detroit Edison Company, we appeal to your Commission for a real reduction in the rates charged for electricity to make them somewhat in accordance with the modern developments in electrical science. The present rates in effect in this territory constitute a discrimination against the citizens of the eastern portion of Michigan as opposed to those served by the Consumers Power Com- pany. The standard domestic rate given by the Consumers Power Company being $1.00 net for 20 KWH or less is $.17 less than the charge made for 20 KWH by the Edison Company. The second step is net 4 cents with the Consumers Power Company for 30 KWH, whereas with the Detroit Edison it is net 3.6 cents for the next 40 KWH leaving, however, the net cost for amounts under 50 KWH less with the Consumer Power Com- pany than with the Edison Company. No Reason For Difference There exists no valid reason in the production and distribution costs of the two companies for this difference. For the third step the net rate is 2 cents (up to 150 KWH) in the Consumers Power Company and 24 cents net in the Edison Company for all electricity consumed beyond 50 KWH. Again there is no valid reason for this discrimination against consumers in the area served by the Detroit Edison. Further than that, the Consumers Power Company, possibly be- cause of the competition of the municipal plant at Kalamazoo, gives a fourth step rate of .11/2c per KWH for all over a total use of 200 KWH per month. This rate is still further reduced in part to 1 cent per KWH when restricted water heating service is included, but there is some similar arrangement for water heating at a lower rate made by the Edison Company. Every consideration of equitable dealing by the Michigan Public Utilities Commission seems to require that the 'rates of these two companies be made to correspond to each other and, at the same time, more closely to the modern conditions in the production cost of electricity. 'Horse And Buggy' Rates The charges for the first step in electric ser- vice seem to me to belong to the "horse and buggy" days of electricity. At the present time it is well known that both for the Edison Com- pany and for the Consumers Company the cost of production of electric power is in the neigh- borhood of .6 of a cent per KWH and that a charge of 8.1 net for the first 10 (Edison) or 5 cents net for the first 20 (Consumers) is ex- cessive. The overhead cost would be borne by a charge of approximately $.75 for the first 25 KWH per month and this would give to the con- sumers at the lower end of the economic scale the possibility of modern use of electricity which, under the present ridiculous rates, they do not have. The former chairman of the Michigan Public Utilities Commission made an impassioned plea for the poor consumers who used only about $.50 worth of electricity, but when the Commis- sion put through their derisory reduction made largely, apparently, to prevent a real reduction in the near future, the poor consumer, over whom the Commissioner had almost wept, re- ceived a reduction of from 3 to 4 cents per month in his electricity bill. According to the figures given to me by the Detroit Edison Company, courtesy of Controller Harry Snow, out of 505,000 residence cnsumers of the Detroit Edison Com- pany, 255,000 received this laughable so-called reduction. My first request of the Commission is that the first step rate be reduced approximately to the figure 25 KWH for $.75 per month minimum charge, with the second step rate at 2 cents per KWH for the next 125 KWH. Would Aid 200,000 Consumers This charge would make it possible for some 200,000 patrons of the Detroit Edison Company to receive the benefits of modern electrical de- vices. This reduction, if accompanied also by the reductions in the lowest step rate to an approxi- mate charge of 1 cents per KWH, would in- augurate a tremendous revival of business in electrical equipment in the State of Michigan. The net benefit to the State would without ques- tion run into millions of dollars. The second request which we make is that your Commission reduce the final step rate to 1 cent or 11/4 cents per KWH. Particularly for the farmers of Michigan, but almost equally for householders throughout the state, this rate would enable the use of labor saving devices and stimulate the sale of electric kitchen stoves and heaters. Apparently the Detroit Edison Company does not believe in the modern use of electricity or they would themselves have requested some such reduction long before this, as such reduc- tions are indicated by the present cost of pro- duction. In Canada particularly, where they have enjoyed even lower rates for some years, there is approximately, I am told, triple the amount of electricity used per capita as com- pared with Michigan. The citizens of the State of Michigan are entitled to similar benefits. A practical monopoly in the sale of electricity is given by the State of Michigan to the Edison Company in this area, but it places in the hands of your Commission the obligation to see to it fhc f-p nfe h lr h r ltniAin _nri r creased due, largely, to modern developments re- ducing the cost of production of electrical power. Further, a study by your Commission of the reductions which have been afforded to the large consumers of power en masse, will reveal that these consumers have received double and triple the benefits which they have granted so grudgingly to residence consumers. The residence consumers are the particular concern of your Commission, since the great corporations are able to protect themselves by the threat of manu- facturing their own electricity. In connection with the derisory reduction last made by the Detroit Edison Company it was widely advertised that the reduction amounted to $7,000,000 per annum. This is wholly a ficti- tious statement of the case as no change in the net income of the company was made by this reduction and had a real reduction rate been made the increased use of electricity would have resulted undoubtedly in practically no loss of net income to the company. The determination of the effect of the reductions proposed should not be advertised by the Commission in accord- ance with some fictitious scheme proposed by the Edison Company on the basis of the con- tinued use of the same amount of electricity as ifeemr to Me Heywood Broun The Daily Worker has gone to bat upon the case of Mickey Cochrane, of the Tigers. I picked up a copy of this radical sheet by mistake in the subway yesterday. My eyes are not what they used to be, and I swear I thought that some absent-minded royal- st had mislaid his Herald Tribune. When I got a good look at the abandoned paper and discovered its identity I was minded to toss it back upon the floor before it could enmesh me in subversive activity. But the ride was long and the day was hot, so I thought, "I'll just look at the sport. page. There can't be any harm in that." I remembered that the Worker had a sport page, because when the innovation was intro- duced some years ago a newspaper wit remarked, "I suppose those Reds will try to class-angle the box score." He was joking, naturally, be- cause a hit is a hit and an error is an error under any economic system whatever. The sport page featured a column "On the Scoreboard-By Lester Rodney," with a picture of a ball player in one column measure, just above the fold. In its physical appearance this was just like the makeup of any one of the most patriotic papers in the land, and so, heed- lessly, I plunged into the text. ~ * * * Surprise And Horror Imagine my surprise and horror to discover that the baseball expert of the Worker was using the summary dismissal of Mickey Cochrane as a text to agitate against the sanctity of private property and question the gratitude of big league mnagnates. "It's a thankless task, this working for million- aire owners like Briggs and Wrigley, who sit in their front office and play with the jobs of their men as the whim strikes them," whined this outside sports writer who would evidently tear down the Bill of Rights. "It reminds me of the Redfield cartoon wherein two wealthy dowagers are reclining on a lawn and one of them yawns, 'Let's fire a butler-I'm bored to death.' " By now, of course, I had my warning but just out' of a kind of mocking curiosity I plunged ahead to see what sort of garbled tale the radical would cook up in his attack on a prominent busi- ness man like Mr. Briggs, who makes auto bodies. And before I read another word I said in a voice loud enough for all my fellow passengers to hear, "If he doesn't like it in the American League why doesn't he go back where he came from?" According to Rodney, of the Worker, Mickey Cochrane took a laggard team in 1934 and won the pennant. The next season he added a world's series victory, and in 1936 and 1937 he brought his team home in second place behind the ram- paging Yankees. In the latter year he kept on catching while he was sick and was beaned and almost killed in a crucial series with the Yankees. Now he is tossed out without notice. Mr. Briggs builds bodies, and maybe he finds it difficult to distinguish between a dented fender and a ball player with a fractured skull. Scrap iron is scrap iron in men or materials. * * * What Propaganda Will Do To You But hold on. What's happening? Those last two sentences weren't in the Worker at all. I made them up right out of my own head. That's what propaganda will do to you if you don't watch out. Abashed and repentant at being taken in by the smooth words of Rodney, the Red, I jumped out at the next subway station, and procured a copy of the New York Times. To my surprise I found that his facts were correct. It was only his implications which were wrong. John Kieran in the Times stated the sound position which every rooter should take. "The Detroit ball club," he wrote, "is the prop- erty of Mr. Walter O. Briggs, the big body man, and nobody should try to tell him how ,to run his business. He hired Gordon Stanley Cochrane. He fired Gordon Stanley Cochrane. That's his business." And to that I am sure that everybody deretofore. We believe that this prin- ciple has been established for utility companies by the action of the Inter- state Commerce Commission in reduc- ing some years ago the rates of 3.6 cents per mile to 2 cents per mile for passengers riding in coaches. Had the railroad companies been allowed to figure as the Detroit Edison Company in the past has wished to figure, they could have established a tremendous loss in income, amounting to bank-t ruptcy. However, in point of fact, theI new rates produced a tremendous in-t crease in income. There is every indi- cation that the .same thing will be# true with the use of electric current in Michigan if the rate reductions1 are made as suggested. Commerce Favored As explanatory to the section above,t let it be noted that in the years 1932,k 1933, 1934 and 1935, the average rate per KWH for residence consumers de- creased about 11%2%, whereas the av- erage rate per KWH for Commerciale consumers was reduced by 15%. The; rate per KWH of the Industrial Con- cerns was reduced by 25% until this average rate is 1.35 cents per KWH or' about 1/3 of the rate of 4 cents (3.96 cents) which is the average per KWH on the total residence consumption. Obviously with an attractive rate such as the proposed rate some of the additional current sold to present sub- scribers with the slightest additional expense would be at the first step rate of 3 cents, a great deal at the second step rate of 2 cents. Even the 1%/4, cent rate would doubtless be more profitable than some of the Industrial business. No one can overestimate the impor- tance of such reductions as proposed. To the farmer, in particular, these rates would make it possible for him to benefit by modern electrical de- vices, and for the farmer's wife this means comforts not to be obtained in any other manner due to the difficul- ty of procuring domestic help. For hundreds of thousands of citizens these rates would mean a richer life, lifting the burden of much household drudgery. Thousands and tens o1' THURSDAY, AUG. 11, 1938 VOL. XLVIII. No. 39, 1938 Extension Courses. Bulletins listing the courses to be offered by the University Extension Service during the first semester of 1938-1939 are now available at the Extension of- fice, 107 Haven Hall. Summer Session French Club: The last meeting of the club will take place on Thursday, Aug. 11. There will be a banquet at 6:30 p.m. in the "Second Floor Terrace Room" of the Michigan, Union. The French CGnsui of Detroit will be the guest of honor. Mme. Charles E. Koella will sing seme French songs and Dr. Didier Graeffe .will play a sonatine by Ravel. The members who have not yet signed up for the banquet please do so before noon Wednesday by tele\ phoning Mr. Koella, 3923 or Univ. 405. Those who have signed up and cannot come please telephone also. Guidance Banquet: Thursday, Aug. 11 at 6 p.m. on the third floor of the Michigan League, 75 cents. All those interested in the results of some research work in guidance and per- sonnel problems are invited. Phone reservations before noon on Thurs- day to Miss Ingram, Bureau of Ap- pointments, 4121. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. Western Reserve University will give a lecture at 4:30 p. m. today in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Build- ing. His topic is "John Milton's Workshop." Linguistic Institute Luncheon Con- ference. 12:10 p. m. Thursday, at the Michigan Union. Dr. Carl Voegelin and Dr. Zellig Harris will report on the Siouan project carried on at the Institute this summer. Lecture-"Experiences inyEurope During the Past Year" by Prof. Raleigh Schorling in the University High School Auditorium at '4:05 this afternoon. Hopwood Contest. All manuscripts for the summer contest must be in the Hopwood Room at 4:30 p.m. on Friday afternoon, Aug. 12. Linguistic Tnsti teFinal Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Fuel 'v . in the amphithe- atre of the Rack1':am Building. Prof. E. H. Sturtevant vUll discuss "The Indo-Hittite Hypothe&'." Commereal Education Students: Tour of the Burroughs Plant Mon- day afternoon, Aug. 15. Cars will leave University Parking lot at 12:15 p.m. Tickets 50 cents at University. High School Office. candidates for Masters degree, 1i (Continued on Page 3) James H. Hanford oft Professor Classified Directory SILVER LAUNDRY-We call for and deliver. Bundles individually done, no markings. All work guaranteed. Phone 5594, 607 E. Hoover. 3x LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. bx thousands of children and old people TYPING - experienced. Reasonable will be able to enjoy on our cold win- ter mornings a little electrical heat in the early morning hours. This is what electricity may mean with mod- ern rates in force. Respectfully submitted, -Louis C. Karpinski Utilities Have No Comment LANSING, Aug. 10.-(-P)-The Pub- tic Utilities Commission declined to comment today on a petition by a group of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti residents for a reduction in the rates of the Detroit Edison Co., for elec- trical service. The commission's rules forbid statements concerning rate reduc- tion petitions until the affected com- pany has had eight days in which to file an answer. 4a AS OTHER SEE IT Synthetic Record Breaking It is a proud and happy day for the United States Navy, which claims new world records for two of its divers. Five hundred feet is the new depth mark, as compared with the previous descent of 402 feet. This is a notable achievement, and even more remark- able is the fact that the navy has perfected a method of smashing deep- sea records without leaving the Wash- ington navy yard. The divers sat in a diving tank partly filled with water, and then air pressure was applied equivalent torsea pressure at 500 feet. Their reactions were carefully anal- yzed, and the new record was joyous- ly proclaimed. The possibilities of the technique are limitless. Any day now, an aviator may claim an altitude record of 149,000 feet after donning an oxygen helmet and sitting in a cubby hole where air pressure has been reduced to the stratosphere equivalent. An athlete, after a strenuous grind on the treadmill, can announce a record that excels Glenn Cunningham's best. An accomplished shadow-boxer can boast a theoretical knockout of Joe Louis. It is a neat method of avoid- ing the psychological strain of com- petition and the technical difficul- ties of actually attempting a feat. In other words, the navy's great accomplishment is summed up in the pld nursery rhyme: "Sir, may I try andeep-sea dive?" "Gob, it's a darling notion;, Go jump into the diving tank And don't go near the ocean." -St. Louis Post Dispatch Add Fortune Teller To League Program rates. Phone 8344. L. M. Heywood 43r TYPING -Neatly and accurately done. Mrs. Howard, 613 Hill St. Dial 5244. 2x LOST-Black Conklin fountain pen, Name, H. R. Lillie, on pen. Call 23125. 66x FOR RENT by month or semester, excellent Vagabond house trailer.. 21 feet, equipped, sleeps four. Avail- able Sept. 25. Write T. E. Dunlap, 1345 Wilmot St. 17x PIANO RECITAL-Bethlehem M. E. Church, N. Fourth Ave. Rudolph Von Charlton, graduate student, today at 8:15. Assisted by Geraldine. Boland Watts. 67x NEW VAGABOND TRAILER. Only one to sell. 40% discount. Hudson Sales, Ypsilanti, 100 E. Cross St., Ph. 413. 69x FOR RENT to instructors or gradu- ate students for 1938-39 school year, beautifully furnished suite, with fireplace and lavatory, Garage. 3001 Geddes Ave. 73x FOR RENT next fall. Attractive room with private bath to accommodate gentlemen. Call afternoons. Tele- phone 3100. 72x LOST: A lady's yellow gold Elgin be- tween Liberty and State and East Medical Bldg. ¢Please call 4121-Ex. 660. Reward. 70x WANTED: Ride to Kansas City. Share expenses. To leave about Aug. 20. Gentiles only. Phone 4493. TYPING-Theses aid reports neatly and accurately. N'ear pus. Reasonable. Call 619. typed cam- 68x I ladiadies here's how to pe pull 'em in ... . advertise your Fall rooms to rent in the August 13th ORIENTATION ISSUE ... sent to all prospective freshmen. Bring your ads t'.m.. 40 A recreational evening in conjunc- tion with the last League dance of the Summer Session tomorrow is be