U The Weather Generally fair and continued cold. LI e AJPV A6F t 4:3att Editorials Problems Before The 75th Congress .. . VOL. XLVII No. 7ANANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WENESDAY, JAN. 6, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Answer Note, Britain Tells RomeBerlin Fascist Nations Promise Decisions On Volunteer Enlistments Friday Nazis State 'Palos' Incident Is Closed LONDON, Jan. 5.-(P)-Great Bri- tain demanded tonight that Italy and fGermany speed their decisions whe- ther to agree to force a halt to enlist- ment of foreign volunteers in the Spanish civil war while a series of diplomatic maneuvers heightened tension throughout Europe. As Britain thus sought to bring to a climax one of the paramount prob- lems of keeping the civil conflict confine to local dispute, there were these pertinent developments: 1. Germany ordered the Spanish socialist government to give up the sequestered cargo and passenger of the freighter Palos by 8 a.m. Friday, or lose to Fascists two Spanish ships seized in reprisal. Berlin indicated. however that there would be no new reprisals and that the incident would be considered closed, regardless of Spanish action one way or the other. Saturday Is Deadline 2. The British government de- manded that Germany and Italy an- swer not later than Saturday the Anglo-French proposal of Dec. 23 on banning foreign volunteers. 3. Germany and Italy indicated their replies would be "conciliatory" and that they would be forthcoming Friday. 4. The Spanish Socialist ambas- sador at London handed British for- eign secretary Eden a note in which his Valencia government held seizure of the Palos cargo was "a perfectly legitimate act"-because it allegedly was composed of war materials. 5. The commander of the British destroyer Grafton informed London he had been given "satisfactory" promises from Spanish fascist patrol ships that British shipping rights around the Straits of Gibraltar will be honored. This statement was in reply to British protest against the halting of the English merchant ves- sel Etrib by insurgent trawlers. SFrench And British Confer PARIS, Jan 5.-(/P)-French and British general staffs talks to prepare the defenses of the .two nations against European war probably will follow the conference between the countries' war ministers, a source close to the defense ministry said to- night. Witness Claims Mrs. Baker Is Psychopathic Sheriff And Police Chief Testify Gun Could Not Be Fired Accidentally A prosecution witness yesterday described the attachment of Mrs. Betty Baker, accused of the slaying June 29 of Clarence Schneider, a roomer in her home, as the result of a "mother complex." Milton Schancupp, Owosso at- torney employed as an assistant in the attorney general's office at the time of the shooting, testified that Mrs. Baker was "very sympathetic and was always picking up dogs, stray cats, or people who were in trouble.'' Schancupp said that Mrs. Baker telephoned him the night of the shooting that he, as a family friend and legal adviser, must "come at once." "Something terrible has happened," he said Mrs. Baker ex- plained to him. I can't tell it over the phone." He arrived, he said, to learn "Cub," which was Mrs. Baker's pet name for the 24-year-old Schneider, had been "acting tempestous around the ,house and that Mrs. Baker had de- cided to "put him in his place" by frightening him with a service re- volver belonging to her husband, an Ann Arbor policeman. Baker, em- ployed on the night shift, was asleep at the time. "Betty told me the gun accidental- ly discharged and the bullet killed Schneider," Schancupp testified. "She said she never intended to kill him-had no reason to." Schancupp testified that he first made Baker's acquaintance in 1921 when Mrs. Baker was employed in Final Examination Schedules First Semester, 1936-37 College of Literature, Science and the Arts, School of School of Music, School of Forestry and Conservation, Business Administration, and Graduate School. Education, School of Exam Group Letter A B C D E F G H I ' J ' K L M N O P Q R Time of Exercise To be used only inc ase no group letter is listed Time of Exam Monday Monday Monday Monday Monday Monday Monday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Special Special Special Special at at at at at at at at at at at at at at 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 Monday, Friday, Wednesday, Monday, Tuesday, Monday, Tuesday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Thursday, Thursday, Saturday, Saturday, Saturday, Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Jan. 8, 5, 3, 1, 9, 1, 9, 8, 2, 3, 2, 10, 5, 4, 4, 6, 6, 30, 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 -- COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING January 30 to February 10, 1837 NOTE: For courses having both lectures and quizzes, the Time of Exercise is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the Time of Exercise is the time of the first quiz period. Drawing and laboratory work may be continued through the examination period in amount equal to that normally devoted to such work during one week. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. All cases of conflicts between assigned examination periods should be reported for adjustment to Professor J. C. Brier, Room 3223 East Engineering Building before January 27. To avoid misunderstandings and errors, each student should receive notification from his instructor, of the time and place of his appearance in each course during the period January 30 to Feb- ruary 10. No single course is permitted more than four hours of exami- nation. No date of examination may be changed without the con- sent of the Classification Committee. Time of Exercise Monday at 8 Monday at 9 Monday at 10 Monday at 11 Monday at 1 Monday at 2 Monday at 3 Time of Examination Monday, Feb. 8 8-12 Friday, Feb. 5 8-12 Wednesdqy, Feb. 3 8-12 Monday, Feb. 1 8-12 Tuesday, Feb. 9 2-6 Monday, Feb. 1 2-6 Tuesday, Feb. 9 8-12 Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday at at at at at at at 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 Monday, Feb. 8 Tuesday, Feb. 2 Wednesday, rFeb. 3 Tuesday, Feb. 2 Wednesday, Feb. 10 Friday, Feb. 5 Thursday, Feb. 4 *Saturday, Feb. 6 *Saturday, Feb. 6 *Thursday, Feb. 4 *Saturday, Jan. 30 *Thursday, Feb. 4 *Tuesday, Feb. 9 E.M. 1, 2; CE. 2 Surv. 1, 2, 4; German M.E. 3; French; Draw. 1, 2 E.E. 2a; Met. Proc. 2, 3, 4; Spanish. Economics Drawing 3 2-6 2-6 2-6 8-12 8-12 2-6 8-12 8-12 2-6 2-6 2-6 8-12 8-12 there is no con- Both Parties Of Assembly In Caucuses Push Routine Of Change Of Administration Into Background For Present Republicans Might Use Guiding Group LANSING, Jan. 5.-(P)-The in- coming legislature pushed the routine of a changing administration into the background today. Democratic and Republican mem- bers of the House and Republican members of the Senate caucused to- night to perfect their organizations. Whether the minority senate group would designate a floor leader was' one of the questions to be threshed out. Some members favored the ap- pointment of a steering committee in preference to loading the re-I sponsibility of guiding Republican legislation on one senator. The Republican senators were un- decided whether to nominate one of their number for president pro-tem. The Democrats had endorsed Senator William A. Palmer of Flint. Because the majority group had consented to the retention of Fred I. Chase, Re- publican, as secretary, some Republi- cans were willing to concede the pro- tem honor. In the House the reelection of Speaker George A. Schroeder seemed likely. Representative Edward H. Fenlon, St. Ignace Democrat, had been boomed for the speakership, but administration forces demanded that Schroeder be given another term. It was understood Fenlon was ready to step aside unless an unexpected. amount of support developed. It was a foregone conclusion the House Democrats would push through the election of former Representative T. Thomas Thatcher as clerk to succeed Myles F. Gray. Phi Kappa Phi Holds Initiation Dililier Toniiglit Irofessor Hobbs To Speak On 'Looking Beyond The Horizon'; 45 Elected Phi Kappa Phi, national senior honorary society will hold its mid- winter initiation banquet at 6:30 p.m. today in the League. Professor-Emer- itus William H. Hobbs will give an il- lustrated lecture on "Looking Be- yond the Horizon." Prof. Roy S. Swinton, secretary of the Michigan chapter announced yes- terday that 45 students had been elected to membership. The follow- ing were seected from the College of Literature, Science anid Arts: Israel Finklestein, Thomas Wagner, Vivien Greenberg, Adele Gardner, Voltairine Hirsh, Betty Goldstein, Thelma Zwerdling Thomas Fisher, Frances Carney Willis Player, Wil- liam Wilson, Lois King, Alvin Schot- tenfeld, Edyth Turteltaub, Marie Mette, Gretchen Lchmann, Jacob Chason, Geil Duff endack, David Swann. William Fleming, Jeane Mc- Workman, Robert Hatch and Ona Jane Thornton. The following were elected from the Engineering College: William Young, David Eisendrath, John Eng- strom, Frederick Hull, Benjamin Cox, Frank Upson, Clifford Massie, Francis Hamilton, William Findley and Leon Sampson. The following were chosen from the Medical School: Peter Crabtree, Henry Abbott, Mat- thew Bennett, and Darvin Moosman. Jane Ellen Rogers, Richard S. Johnson, and John Krell were elected to membership from the School of Music, while Margaret Behringer and Marguerite Knab were selected from the School of Education. The elections of Robert Harding of (Continued on Page 2) Bursle To Receive Protest Of Workers A complaint was filed with the Men's Council Committtee on Stu- dent Labor last night by employees of the Michig-Inn, and will be for- ,warded to Dean of Student Joseph Bursley today. The students working at the State Street restaurant protested in the 'General Stoppage Under Way,' Declares Martin; Strike Spreads Secretary Perkins Makes Her Report DETROIT, Jan. 5.-(M)-Federal agencies took an active hand today in seeking negotiations to conciliate labor-management differences in au- tomotive plants of the General Mo- tors Corporation, where nearly 50,000 .vorkers are idle. Homer Martin, president of the United Automobile Workers of Amer- ica, said a "general stoppage of Gen- eral Motors is underway," adding a pledge of cooperation to "all govern- ment agencies seeking to conciliate." "Stoppage" In Janesville The "stoppage" spread to Janes- ville, Wis., this afternoon as union members "sat down" at their jobs in thn Chevrolet assembly plant and the Fisher Body Works, halting produc- tion and leaving 2,500 employes idle. One of the workers who left when company officials announced that those who wished to return to their sobs when operations started again should go home, said that about 25 per cent of the workers obeyed. Secretary Perkins carried to Presi- dent Roosevelt reports of labor de- partment field agents on the auto- mobile strike situation, deadlocked more than ever by Gener'al Motors' refusal to recognize "any one union" as sole bargaining agent for its em- ployes. After the White house conference, she suggested both sides could ex- pedite a settlement by negotiating rather than by "trying their differ- ences of opinion" in the public press. She added she had not urged the President to act "at this moment." Neither the General Motors offi- cials nor the automobile workers have "indicated any unwillingness to consider" informal suggestions al- ready made by the labor department, Secretary Perkins said. Murphy Confers James F. Dewey. a department labor conc,iliator arrived in Detroit today to confer with corporation and union officials. At Lansing, Frank Murphy, gov- ernor of Michigan, said he had con- ferred with both sides in the auto- mobile strikes stressing he is attempt- ing to hasten settlement but is not acting as.a mediator. The Special Senate Committee on Civil Liberty Violations at Washing- ton announced it has subpoenaed rec- ords of -General Motors, and that "high officials" of the corporation may be called to testify at hearings beginning Jan. 14. Committee employes said friction between General Motors and agents of John L. Lewis' Committee for In- dustrial Organization had been under inves tig ation for "about three months." The United Automobile (Continued on Page 2) Hung In Effigy Auto Strike Based Upon Fight For Shop Control; Federal Agents Intervene - Associated Press Photo An effigy bearing the inscrip- tion, "G-M Stool Pigeons" is shown dangling outside the Fisher Body plant in Flint, where one of the far-flung General Motors strikes stopped production. Prof. Pollock Awaits Senate Action On Bill. Prof. James K. Pollock of the po- litical science department said yes- terday that he expects to hear very shortly from Senator Augustine Lon- ergan, of Connecticut, regarding the bill that Professor Pollock submitted to a Senate committee investigating campaign expenditures last month. Senator Lonergan is chairman of the committee of five members which is studying campaign finances and intends to recommend legislation to the present Congress for plugging gaps in the Federal Corrupt Prac- tices Act. Professor Pollock yesterday re- fused to reveal tire provisions con- taied in the bil submitted by him. Fifty thousand copies of a booklet prepared by the Michigan Merit Sys- tem Association have been mailed to .citizens throughout the state, advo- cating the passage of the bill pre- pared by the Civil Service Study Commission providing civil service for Michigan. Stay-In Strikers Decare 'Speed-Up' To Be Their Worst Grievance 'They Won't Evict Us,' Workers Say By RALPH W. HURD Interviews yesterday with stay-in strikers at the No. 1 Flint Fisher Body plant, a prominent General Motors Corporation executive and the educational director of the United Automobile Workers in Flint inter- fused to form this conception of the automobile strike: 1. Automobile employers fear a 'closed shop" and its attendant 'union control of production." Con- sequently they are opposed to the "real collective bargaining" demands of the union. 2. Automobile workers believe they have grievances which can be settled only by "real collective bar- gaining" (a national agreement); and a "closed shop" represents to them only a plant composed wholly of unionized workers. 3. The one has its fears, the other its grievances. Compromise is in- evitable; the longer it is delayed, the more unequal and drastic the set- tlement likely will be. Favoring whom -no one can predict. ObJect To "Speedup" Talking through the window with strikers in the Fisher plant, the question was asked: "What are you striking for?" The most common answer: "The damned awful speed-. up." "I can't even take time off to blow my nose, when working on the line," said one. "It's so tough working that I'm so tired when I get home I can't even treat my mother decently," said an- other. "There are eight of us working with 1,800 degree blow torches on each body that comes through," add- ed another. "I'd like to see you work in such conditions. If we worked at anordinary pace, it wouldn't be so bad." Asked "What would you do if police tried to evict you?" one striker said, "Kill 'em!"-but was hurriedly quieted by another who said, "We are going to hold the plant at all costs, but with a minimum of viol- ence." (Several of the strikers were seen carrying black-jacks.) The General Motors official (who would comment only if not quoted) analyzed the situation this way: The' whole question is, who's going to control the shop-the management or the union? All other issues boil down to this. Wages Higher Now Wages now are higher than ever before, the management more toler- ant, the working conditions more ex- cellent (you could almost eat off most our floors). The majority of our employees don't want to join the union. Only approximately 8 per cent have. Many are coerced into joining (for instance, union men will slow down in one section, substantially reduc- ing the wages of the non-union men until the latter, submitting to the economic pressure, join the union). We do everything we can for our men, but we can't, and won't, allow union leaders to control and run the shop. Commenting on the stand taken by Anthony Luchek, industrial re- search assistant of the economics de- partment in The Daily yesterday, predicting victory for the General Motors Corporation, Eugene C. Fay, educational director of the Flint Au- tomobile Workers, declared that Mr. Luchek underestimated the potential influence of the steel and mine work- ers. "We do not realize that we are in for a bitter battle," he said "but with the stoppage of automobile produc- tion, General Motors will find itself contending with the united forces of the nation's steel, mine and automo- bile workers." (Continued on Page 2) TEST UNION, SAYS SLOAN NEW YORK, Jan. 5.-(.,P)-The Herald Tribune says that Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., president of General Mo- tors who left here tonight for De- *This may be used as an irregular period provided flict with the regular printed schedule above. Examinations To Begin Jan. 30; Second Semester Starts Feb. 15 Final examinations for this semes- ter will begin the afternoon of Sat- urday, Jan. 30 and extend through the afternoon of Wednesday, Feb. 10 according to the examination sched- ules released yesterday by the secre- tary of the engineering college and Prof. H. C. Carver of the mathema- tics department of the literary col- lege. The - schedules given out include examinations in the College of Lit- erature, Science and the Arts, the College of Engineering, the School of Education, the School of Music, the School of Forestry and Conservation, the School of Business Administra- tion and the Graduate School. Examinations in the engineering college will last from 8 a.m. till noon and from 2 till 6 p.m. Those in the other schools will last from 9 a.m. till noon and from 2 till 5 p.m. Following the examinations, regis- tration will be held from Thursday, Feb. 11 through Saturday, Feb. 13. Classes for the second semester will begin Monday, Feb. 15. Few Welshers' Among Student Borrowers, Loan Officers Say Roosevelt Might Have Become First 'Lame Duck' President By TUURE TENANDER Franklin D. Roosevelt, by winning the election last November, missed the opportunity of becoming the first lame duck president in the history of the United States, Prof. Everett S. Brown of the political science depart- ment said yesterday. "The 20th Amendment to the Con- stitution brought an end to 'lame duck' Congresses but, paradoxically, it made possible 'lame duck' presi- dents," Professor Brown said, "and although attention was called to this contingency when the proposed amendment was under discussion in Congress, little has been said about it since." The first two sections of the 20th Amendment are as follows: "Rpt-linn 1 'Thea terms'ivof t.he' Pres- and such meeting shall begin at4 noon on the 3rd day of January, un- less they shall by law appoint a dif- ferent day." "Should Landon have been elected in November, as well as a Republican House of Representatives, Roosevelt would have served two weeks as Pres- ident with a new and opposition Con- gress, for under the amendment just quoted, the 75th Congress assembled today and the President will not be inaugurated until Jan. 20," Professor Brown said. During this two-week period, Roosevelt would have been the first lame duck executive in history. It is hardly conceivable, Professor Brown said, that he would then have trans- mitted to Congress his annual mes- sage. Reassuring news to the reluctant fraternity brother who is wary about advancing you "five" was given by student loan officers yesterday who described student borrowers as the "best risks imaginable." In the past 39 years $1,221,640 has been given through the University, with collection failures amounting to only eight tenths of one per cent, according to B. C. Stephens, Univer- sity cashier. This per cent of the thousands of loans granted amounts to only 93 failures to pay and one half of these losses resulted from the death of the debtor or his utter inability to pay r'ather than deliber- ate dodging on his part, Mr. Steph- ens said. There are instances of deliberate evasion of loans but these are ex- tremely rare and money lost in this way is more than covered by the in- come from the investment of tem- porarily idle funds, Mr. Stephens stated. This record is even more remark- able when the procedure for grant- ing loans to students is examined, ac- cording to Dean of Students Joseph' Payment of the loans by the stu- dents usually begins four or five months after graduation Stephens said, and averages $10 at a time. The present time and distance record is held by a Japanese who borrowed1 $50 in 1910 and repaid the principal; last June, another notable instance1 was that of a South American who received $100 in 1914 recently re- turned $300. Last year 2,600 loans were granted to 1,300 students according to the Dean of Students Office, and the maximum per year is $200 to a stu- dent with a limit of $400 set for each person. Juniors, seniors and. graduate students are given prefer-I ence in granting the loans and loans are rarely granted to students unless they have been in residence a year. Requests for loans are varied in their underlying motives, for some are humorous and some pathetic, according to Stephens, one that de- served both of these adjectives was requested by a young man who wished to pay off some gambling debts that were impeding his aca-