,1 The Weatlier, Snow flurries with severe cold wave, strong northwest winds today; tomorrow cloudy, cold. C, 110. r 4Ig an jIaittj Editorials How To Prevent A Revolution ... Stay 'Way From The Clothes Closet .., VOL. XLVII No. 71 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JAN. 5, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Dissatisfaction WithCoaching Felt By Yost Board Will Not Act Unless It Gets Recommendation, Aigler Maintains Power His To Keep Or Dismiss Kipke By FRED WARNER NEAL Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost, who has the power to say whether Harry G. Kipke stays or leaves Mich- igan as head football coach, admitted last night that he is not "exactly sat- isfied with the present situation" and is "carefully studying the problem." Further than that Mr. Yost defi- nitely refused to commit himself. Conflicting statements in Detroit newspapers, some saying Kipke would be fired as a result of three unfortunate football seasons, some saying tle coach's contract would be renewed, Mr. Yost said, "didn't make any positive statements" on which he could comment. . "We are care- fully studying the problems," he asserted, "and, I guess, none of us are exactly satisfied with the sit- uation." Board Can Act Unless Mr. Yost definitely recom- mends to the Board in Control of Athletics dismissal, however, Mr. Kipke is almost certain to remain at Michigan. "It is extremely unlike- ly," Prof. Ralph W. Aigler of the Law+ School, chairman, said last night,' Leaders Of Opposing Sides In Michigan Strike Above, left to General Motors, Workers.r -Associatea Press Photo right, are William Knudsen, executive vice-president of and Isomer Martin, head of the United Automobile General otors Victory Seen In Present Labor Union Fight George J. Andros, sports editor of The Daily, summarizes recent newspaper statements regarding the status of Coach Kipke on the sports page, and Bonth Williams also treats the situation in hiĀ§ "Beneath It All" column on the editorial page. "that the Board will take any ac- tion on matters of personnel unless it receives a recommendation from Yost. "The Board could, of course, act if it wanted to,' Professor Aigler point- ed out, but he minimized the chances of such a situation unless Mr. Yost submitted to it a definite recom- mendation. The Board in Control, according to Professor Aigler, has no meeting planned and does not meet at speci- fied times "unless the situation re- quires it." Mr. Kipke stated that the situa- tion "is entirely outside my hands. Naturally," he said, "I am not going to leave Michigan unless I am told to. I like it here, so well, in fact, that I have built a home here." Kipke Honored Mr. Kipke, who was selected presi- dent of the American Football Coaches Association last week at a meeting in New York, which was al- so attended by Mr. Yost, evinced considerable surprise at the athletic director's statement that he is not "exactly satisfied with the present situation. Mr. Yost left little doubt that Mr. Kipke's status is occupying his at- tention, but, on the other hand, he indicated that action, if any, will not be forthcoming until spring. "The coaching staff has its contracts under the budget just like everybody else," Mr. Yost said, "and nothing can be done until the time for renewal." Capitol Ready For Beginn1ig Of New Session. Rayburn Wins Democratic House Leadership ; Old Friends MeetAgain WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.-/P) - Party pow-wows, the election of a Democratic house leader, reunions, back-slapping and a final polishing of an already scrubbed and gleaming capitol provided bustling prelimin- aries today for the opening of a busy, session of Congress. With the convening hour set for noon tomorrow, Senate Democrats and House Republicans chose their officers and then House Democrats met to settle a bitter campaign for the majority leadership between Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas and Rep. John O'Connor of New York. Rayburn won, 184 to 127. The Texan has been a fighting New Deal- I i r r c a c P s a L 11 ll d C C C f t: s a Luchek Sees Compromise As Probable Outcome Of Auto Strike General Motors Corp. will probably emerge victorious in the present strike of the United Automobile Workers union in the opinion of Anthony Luchek of the economics department and of the bureau of industrial re- search, a studenton labor relations in the automotive industry. "I would say that the labor groups1 have as their primary purpose the winning of a contract from General) Motors," Mr. Luchek said, "and the General Motors officials are just as anxious to prevent such a thing from occurring. But I believe General Motors has the power to wait the strikers out. "The present temper of the union officials appears to be for nothing less than a signed contract which tvould provide for collective bargain- ing between the Committee for In- dustrial Organization officials and the GeneralMotors plants." If. John L. Lewis, director of the C.I.O., fails in gaining a contract with General Motors, or at least a satis- factory. compromise agreement, he will suffer a considerable loss in pres- tige, according to Mr. Lucnek. The strength of two C.I.O. unions, the automotive workers and the Flat Student Gone;' Mother Seeks Aid In Search Glass Workers Union, are pitted against General Motors, he said, and the strike of the glass workers is likely to delay automobile production even more than the automotive un- ion's strike because glass plants re- quite more than a week to be re- stored to productive condition. Mr. Luchek pointed out that a pos- sible result of the strike would be a compromise agreement barring a con- tract but allowing for recognition which, however, would not be binding on the part of either side. The automobile industry strike was not anticipated before late spring, Mr. Luchek said, but he pointed out that "some observers believe the failure of Lewis to bring a quick settlement of the steel industry strike necessi- (Continued on Page 3) Student Labor Will Distribute Bulletin Today All Complaining Workers1 Are Asked To See Men's Council Committee The Student Workers Federation, encouraged by interest expressed by the administration and student body planned last night to publish today, a mimeographed bulletin announcing meetings to discuss methods of bring- ing the dissatisfaction to a head. Tom Downs, '39, president of the federation, suggested that employees and ex-employees of the Michig-Inn who have complaints, to register them today at the regular meeting of the Men's Council committee on* labor. The committee, recently ap- pointed by the council, will meet at 9 p.m. today in the Union. ToniSul- livan, '37, is chairman of the corn- mittee designated to hear student complaints. At 4:45 p.m. tmoi row, according to the bulletin, Michigan League em- ployees, both men and women, will meet in Room 302, the Union, to discuss the decision of the Board of' Governors of the League announced yesterday. The Board announced that it would not consider the ques- tion until its meeting in July preced- ing the writing of the annual budget. Prof. H. C. Anderson, chairman of the mechanical engineering depart- innt, a member of the League Board, who announcedsthe decision, was in- vited to attend the meeting tomorrow of the employees, according to Downs, but declined the invitation. Thieves Take MoneRad FromSor'ority. Nazi Actions Bring Threat Of New War German Warships Patrol Bay Of Biscay; To Halt Spanish Ships Spanish 'Practice' On CoastArtillery (By The Associated Press) Europe rode last night toward a swift climax at sea and the dangers of widespread war evolving from the Spanish civil conflict. Nazi warships patrolled the Bay of Biscay off the northern Spanish coast, and Berlin announced they would continue to halt Spanish So- cialist merchant ships to avenge cap- ture of the Nazi freighter Palos. Baskues at Bilbao uncovered heavy coastal artillery for "practice" firing today-the range of fire to encompass the patrol route of the German Koenigsberg and the Ad- miral Graf Spee. Great Britain ordered her 17 war- ships in Spanish waters to protect the empire merchantmen after the steamer Etrib was halted and the steamer Blackhill shelled in the Bay of Biscay by fascist craft. French observers asserted "unde- clared war" prevailed between Ger- many and the Bilbao officials, and sources close to the foreign office said France and Great Britain might seek to force arbitration. A Spanish embassy spokesman in Paris said his Socialist government was considering an appeal against Germany to the League of Nations. In Madrid itself Fascist warplanes killed at least 100 citizens, wounded between 200 and 300, wrecked houses and spread fires throughout a wide- spread area. The bombardment caused damage Tin the hitherto neu- tral zone, and in other parts of the city heaps of bomb wreckage were a familiar sight. The Berlin government confirmed officially capture of the Spanish ship Marta Juquera, in addition to the Aragon. Unless the Nazi demand for re- lease of the Spanish passenger and cargo of the freighter Palos is com- plied with, attacks against Spanish ships will continue, a Berlin spokes- man said. Berlin scorned the retaliatory order by Bilbao to its patrol boats to fire on any ships interfering with Spanish merchantmen as a "childish threat." First Witness In Betty Baker Trial Is Called The first day of testimony in the circuit court trial of Mrs. Betty Baker, 30-year-old wife of an Ann Arbor po- liceman, for the murder June 29 of Clarcnce Schneider, a roomer in her home, began yesterday. CoronergEdwin C. Ganzhorn, who examined the body after the shoot- ing, was the only witness called. He took the stand after the early part of the afternoon was spent impanel- ling a jury. Dr. Ganzhorn testified that Mrs. Baker appeared calm after the shoot- ing. Police were not called until three hours after the fatal shots were fired, testimony revealed. Manufacturers, Strikers Work For Public Favor As Violence Breaks Out Automobile Workers Meet And Consider Demands Upon General Motors Board Able To Call A Complete Strike Nearly 40,000 Men Now Idle Because Of Strikes; Governor May Mediate DETROIT, Jan. 4.-(P)-The first violence of widespread labor troubles in the automotive industry marred the strike front today as state and Federal governments offered media- tion services. A police officer and two union pick- ets were hurt slightly at Cleveland, The "strategy board" of the United Automobile Workers of America and the Committee for Industrial Organ- ization met to consider next steps to enforce demands upon General Mo- tors Corp., the industry's largest pro- ducer, for a general collective bar- gaining agreement. The board has been empowered to call a general strike if it deems such action advis- able. Strikers Hold Nearly 40,000 General Motors em- ployes are idle because of U. A. W. strikes closing eight plants, and shut- downs of five other units of the cor- poration's automotive divisions. Bar- ring unforeseen quick settlement of the disputes, approximately 135,000 will be without work by the end of the week, a company official said, adding that complete suspension would cost employees $1,000,000 daily in wages and the company approxi- mately $330,000 daily in net profits. At Flint, 500 strikers held to their posts in two plants of the Fisher Body Co., a General Motors division, for the third day in the face of a sweeping circuit court injunction ob- tained by the company. No bench warrants, a prerequisite to their ar- rest or forcible ejection, had been is- sued this afternoon. A copy of the injunction however, was served upon Homer Martin in Detroit today. A committee of company officials and attorneys labored to make the working of thetinjunction flawless. with a view to testing the company's power to use that means of prevent- ing "sit-down" or "stay-in" strikes. Murphy Willing Governor Frank Murphy and Ed- ward F. McGrady, assistant secretary of labor at Washington, expressed their readiness to mediate in the dis- pute between the union and the auto- mobile concern. Murphy, after a conference with Homer Martin, international presi- dent of the union, and other officers of the automobile workers and of John L. Lewis' Committee for Indus- trial Organization, asserted "there is not going to be violence" in Mich- igan strikes. He added that "settle- ment must be reached through ad- judication and conciliation." Washington, offering the Department of Labor's services toward "an amic- able settlement for both sides." De- partment conciliators have been at Flint for several days. Sloan Claims Jobs Will Never Be Shut To Non-Union Men (By 'ifle Associa Tct -ss) Excerpts from the address of Al- fred P. Sloan, Jr., last night fol- low: First. let me say that General Mo- tors products were never in greater demand than today. This good bus- iness insures plenty of jobs, with gen- erous hours of employment, for some time to come. Yet under these conditions you are being forced out of your jobs by sit- down strikes, by widespread intimida- tion, and by shortage of materials produced by similar tactics in many allied industries. Your employment and wages and the welfare of your families are being endangered by ac- tions beyond your control and that of your company. The same ruth- less tactics are threatening the gen- eral recovery of business, in which the automobile industry had the leading part. You are being told you had better join a union. You are being told that to bargain collectively you must be a member of a labor organization. You are being told that the automo- tive industry is to be run as a closed shop. You are being told that if you do not join now it will be impossible for you to work in any automobile plant when the union wins, unless you pay. In other words, you will be without a job, therefore you must sign up, pay dues; or Llse. I want to say to you most frankly, that this is positively not so. Do not be misled. Have no fear that any union or any labor dictator will dom- inate the plans of General Motors Corp. No General Motors worker need join any organization to get a job or to keep a job. Varsity Cagers Engage Butler Squad Tonight Near Capacity Crowd Is To Greet Home-Town Boy, Townsend By RAY GOODMAN INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Jan. 4.- -(Special to the Daily)-With its opening Big Ten encounter but four days away, Michigan's varsity bas- ketball team will meet Tony Hinkle's Butler University squad tomorrow night at the spacious Butler Field House, where a near capacity crowd is expected to welcome back a home town boy, Jake Townsend, who made good as the Wolverine pivot man. Captain John Gee, towering center, has returned to regular playing con- dition and will be listed in the start- ing lineup. Long John received a broken nose in the first encounter with the Washington Huskies, played at Seattle during the Christmas va- cation. Bill Barclay, erstwhile quarterback, will also be in a starting role, follow- ing his excellent performance against Toledo when he tallied ten points. He replaces Ed Thomas at a forward' post. Thomas is a first year man who has been troubled with a char- ley-horse recently, but he may never-' theless see considerable action. Butler University already has a vic- tory over a Western Conference five and is eager to chalk up another. The Wisconsin Badgers fell before them in a one-sided game, 41-23. However, the Bulldogs provided little opposi- tion for a strong Indiana team and were trampled over Friday to the tune of 61-27. Michigan will be able to use its superior height to an excellent ad- vantage, as did the Hoosirs, an ad- vantage which may determine the ultimate winner. The Butler offense has been only mediocre so far this season and far below its usual standard. However, (Continued on Page 6) Graduate, Former Goshen Mayor, Dies GOSHEN, Ind., Jan. 4.-(P)-Wil- lim . T Charnlev 4. former mavnr Workers' Union Men Say Knudsen Really Opposes CollectiveBarganining Say National Move Must Come First Munger Asserts U.A.W. Has Only Ben Keeping To Standard Practices EDITOR'S NOTE' The Daily has sent one of the members of its editorial beard, Ralph W. Hurd, to the strike area in Flint and Detroit to report the controversy between the United Auto- mobile Workers and General Motors. By RALPH W. HURD DETROIT, Jan. 4.-(Special to The Daily)-At the headquarters of the United Automobile Workers here today it was apparent that of the many phases of the strikes against General Motors the struggle to enlst public opinion in the cause of one side or the other is of immediate and fundamental importance. .Both sides seem agreed that the public believes in workers' rights to collective bargaining, but are uncer- tain of the popular attitude toward stay-in methods, picket lines and the activities of union organizers. Knudsen's Attitude Union officials contend that the statements of William S. Knudsen, executive vice-president of General Motors, in favor of collective bargain- ing are for public consumption only and do not indicate the real attitude of the corporation. In the words of William Munger, research director of the union, "General Motors is opposed to' collective bargaining and for the corporation to request local dealings between the union and plant man- agers is to deny true collective bar- gaining altogether." (Knudsen has asked that the union negotiate with individual plant man- agers throughout the country because of varying wages and conditions in different regions.) Defeating Bargaining "The plant managers are complete- ly subject to the dictates of Knudsen or Sloan (Alfred P. Sloan, General Motors president),' Munger contend- ed. "If we were to go to a plant manager for a settlement of basic issues," he said, "he would do nothing without the complete approval of the central office. Therefore we must have a national agreement on such fundamental issues as speed-up, min- imum wages, and collective bargain- ing rights before grievances of a purely local character can be settled." Both the corporation's policy of de- centralization and its ability to shift production from one plant to another (a strike reserve plant of Fisher Body in Detroit, formerly idle, is now being utilized) tend to defeat the collec- tive bargaining rights of the corpora- tion's employes and make impossible local bargaining, Munger asserted. G. M. Policy "Moreover," he continued, "in seek- ing a national agreement we are only following standard trade union prac- tice as illustrated by the United Mine Workers, and the Amalgamated Clothing Workers. The fear expressed by Knudsen that a national agree- ment would lead to a closed shop is only a front and has no justifica- tion in the present situation." In a press conference late yester- day, Homer Martin, president of the U.A.W. stated that the action of Gen- eral Motors in securing an expartite injunction against union activities in Flint without a hearing or testimony "demonstrates how much General Motors believes in collective bargain- ing." Still, later, in another respect, he oberved that labor concessions in one plant with a tightening of policy in others "act to defeat rather than promote collective bargaining." Tern Registration Starts On Feb. 11 Student registration for the second semester will begin Thursday, Feb. 11, to continue until noon Saturday, Feb. 13, Shirley W. Smith, secretary of the University, announced yester- day. The student body has again been divided into alphabetical group, Missing Since Work From University Dec. 2; School Had Been Poor The disappearance of William Earl Mcrse, '40 missing since Dec. 2, was disclosed for the first time yesterday by Joseph A. Bursley, dean of stu- dents. When Morse, whosL home is in Jo- liet. Ill., disappeared from his room- :ng house and failed to appear at his classes, his mother, Mrs. Cora Morse hoped that her 19-year-old son would return during the Christmas Vacation and asked that no police search be instituted, Dean Bursley said. Following her wishes, he ex- plained, no publicity was given the missing student until yesterday. With the hope of his return during the holidays shattered, Mrs. Morse wired the dean yesterday asking that the police and newspapers be in- formed of his disappearance. Morse lived at 431 S. Division St. and was taking seven hours in the literary college at the time of his disappearance. He had been doing poor work in his classes and had also been suffering from ill health according to Dean Joseph A. Bursley, who assigned these conditions as pos- sible motives for his disappearance. In a letter to Dean 'Bursley, Mrs. Morse conjectured that he might have gone to Chicago. ! Cognizant of this the Ann Arbor police have broadcast his description. Because of the lack of publicity given Morse's disappearance, Dean Bursley declared that it was not im- possible that he was still in Ann Ar- bor. Neutrality, Labor's Relations To Industry Face New Congress More than $116 and a radio were taken at about 6:30 p.m. yesterday from the Delta Gamma sorority, 1205 Hill St., when bui'glars entered the second story of the house while mem- bers were eating dinner. Most of the girls in the house suf- fered losses, Virginia Van Dyke, '38, a member of the sorority, stated. Winifred Arnold, '37, lost $48, Mary Alice MacKenzie, '39, $12, Opal Mc- Credie, '37, $16, Joanne Westerman, Neutrality legislation and the re-; lationship of labor to industry prom- ise to be two of the most important; problems that the 75th Congress,+ which assembles at noon today, will have to face during the coming ses- sion. "The question of American neu- trality policy is one of the significant+ issues that this Congress will have to deal with," Prof. Howard B. Calder- wood of the political science depart- ment said yesterday. The neutrality legislation contain- ing the munitions embargos which+ was enacted during the Italo-Ethio- pian campaign expires May 1 and new legislation will undoubtedly; come up in Congress to supplant it.+ Especially urgent is the need for some definition of foreign policy to- ward countries engaged in a civil war, as in the case with Snain at the+ along political fronts that the present legislation has other inadequacies in addition to its failure to apply to countries engaged in civil war. Presi- dent Roosevelt desires "discretion- ary" powers of embargo and some members of Congress back this plan, while others wish to make it man- datory that embargoes be immediate- ly forced upon belligerent powers. Michigan's Senator Vandenberg and others feel that if discretionary powers are given the President they may be used in favor of one belliger- ent and opposed against another. Confusion seems to exist over the term "discretionary." The President apparently wishes discretionary pow- ers in the sense that he can add to the list of embargo items. The position of labor and its pow- er to bargain collectively with in-' dustrv have hecme inereasinrivnur- 5i cledule Of Exams