0 The Weather Snow and colder; fresh windi and cloudy Friday night. LI . A6Fa n ailj Editorias The Presidential Message .. . Gentleman's Agreement ... VOL. XLVII No. 74 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS G.M., Unions Fail To Yield; New Strikes, Fights Appear Union And Non-Union Men Clash At Flint; Seek To Oust Judge Prospect Of 19,000 More Idle Foreseen General Motors, union refusal to yield on "sit-down" stand bloc1 s strike settlement negotiations. Fist fights between workers mark change of shifts at Flint Chevrolet plant. Tie-up of General Motors plants widens with 75,000 to be idle by Fri- day night. New "sit-down" strikes called at Briggs Body Plant, Detroit, and at Walker Ajax Company, Racine, Wis., accessory manufacturers. Four Federation of Labor craft unions request reopening of strike- closed Fisher body planttat Cleve- land so they may return to work. Governor Frank Murphy active in conferences to bring union and Gen- eral Motors leaders together; reports "satisfactory progress." G. M. anti-strike injunction case transferred from Flint judge who owns General Motors stock. Former Flint mayor organizes "al- liance" to combat strike sentiment. REFUSE TO RETREAT DETROIT, Jan. 7.-1P)-General Motors Corporation and the United Automobile Workers of America re- fused to retreat from their stands on "sit-down" strikes tonight in the face of impending further plant shut- downs and the appearance of coun- ter-strike activity. Fist fights broke out at the person- nel gate of the Chevrolet Motor Com- pany plant at Flint late today, in- volving union and non-union em- ployes, but the disorder was of brief duration. The fights started when someone pulled down a sound amplifier which was carrying a speech by a U.A.W.A. organizer to employes leaving the plant. Police sent to the scene said they were told non-union workers were angry because the factory will he shut down Friday night. Governor Frank Murphy of Mich- igan joined federal department of labor conciliators without success to- day in efforts to bring leaders of the corporation and the union together. Their efforts broke down on this point: "Should sit-down strikers occupy- ing Fisher Body Company plants withdraw without assurance the com- pany will not resume operations or remove equipment?" The union demanded such assur- ance; General Motors refused to give it and insisted strikers must vacate plants before any settlement negotia- tions start. General Motors said 51,803 of its employes now are idle because of strikes and parts shortages, and its Chevrolet Motor Company division announced further shutdowns in Flint, Saginaw and. Bay City, Mich., will increase this total by 19,801 by Friday night. DETAIN TWO MEN FLINT, Jan. 7 -(A)- Police de- tained two men tonight as an after- math of fighting this afternoon be- tween union members and non-union employes of the Chevrolet Motor Company, who had just been in- formed that their plant would close tomorrow because of strikes in other General Motors Corporation plants. Inecustody were Roy Slee, identified by Detective Lieutenant Ray H. Mar- tin as organizer for the United Auto- mobile Workers, from Toledo, 0., and Harold Hubbard, a union member employed by the Fisher Body Com- pany at Flint. The lieutenant said the two men were fighting with each other and that one of them, he was not certain which, was using a screwdriver as a weapon. They were held incommuni- cado tonight. SEEK TO OUST JUDGE DETROIT, Jan. 7. -(/P)-Although injunction proceedings in the Flint motors strike were transferred today from the court of Circuit Judge Ed- ward D. Black, counsel for the United Automobile Workers said the union would press its petition for the im- peachment of the 83-year-old jurist. The petition, charging Judge Black with "corrupt conduct in office and misdemeanor" for granting a Gen- eral Motors Corporation petition for an injunction when he was a stock- Betty Baker Describes Her Love For Schneider, Tells Of Killing Iem. Forces Murphy Will SWill Support Support New New NRA Bill, Deal Policies KillingWas Unintentional, Defense Seeks To Show Husband To Take Stand N ---- By FRED WARNER NEAL Seeking to prove that comely Betty Baker loved Clarence Schneider so intimately that she would not have killed him intentionally, Attorney Frank B. DeVine drew from her yes- terday the story of her friendship with the man whom she is accused of murdering. Mrs. Baker'spoke in a low, hesitat- ing voice as she told the 14-man jury how she quarreled with "Cub" (Schneider) and sought to scare him by waving the revolver of her policeman-husband, Albert Baker, at him while in a car near the Huron River, June 29, 1936. .I Patrolman Baker will testify in his Board Retains Present ]Policy On Athletic Tax Georgia Ruling Will Not Mean Ticket Levy Here, Prof. AiglerSays By BUD BENJAMIN A ruling by Federal Judge E. Mar- vin Underwood of Georgia enjoin- ing the federal government from collecting taxes on admissions to football games from state-supported universities will not immediately af- fect the course of action of the Uni- versity of Michigan, Prof. Ralph W. Aigler, Chairman of the Board in Control of Athletics, disclosed last night. "We will continue as we have for the past two years," Prof. Aigler stated, "and refuse to collect the tax under the assumption that it is un- constitutional. Until this case reaches the Supreme Court of the United States," Prof. Aigler continued, "the matter is unsettled as far as we are concerned." "We cannot say that because a federal district judge in Georgia de- clares an act unconstitutional it is so. Until this act reaches the Su- preme Court of the United States no one can say whether or not we are right or wrong in our assumption." Prof. Aigler declared that the gov- ernment would undoubtedly carry the case to the Circuit Court of Appeals. The losing side here would appeal the case to the Supreme Court. Prof. Aigler emphasized that the Univer- ity has no litigation pending, but will wait until a final decision is readhed in the Georgia case. Regents of the university system filed suit to prevent the Collector of Internal Revenue from collecting $4,180 in back admission taxes for the 1934 season. Another suit asking return of $20,148 collected in 1933 is still pending. Judge Underwood ruled in his de- cision that operation of athletic pro- grams and contests for which ad- mission was charged to be "under the decision of the Court of Appeals (from whence the case was returned to the point of original jurisdiction) an essential governmental function of the state of Georgia." The future of this entire case is expected to hinge on whether the courts are to consider football as a business or a part of the educational system of the state. Counsel for the University system contended athletic associations were a function of the state institutions and therefore en- titled to exemption. Wisconsin Regents Remove Dr. Frank In Stormy 8-7 Vote wife's behalf today, after her cross- examination is concluded. "I wanted to scare him," she said tremulously, "so he would stop lying to me and get out of his ugly mood that was making me so nervous. I though I would die. He smiled when I pointed the gun at him. To make him think I was in earnest, I pulled the hammer back--I had heard Al and Cub talking about how impor- tant the hammer was. Surprised At Explosion "Suddenly there was an explosion. I thought it had come from behind me. I turned and was surprised to find nothing. I turned back. There was a lot of smoke and powder between me and Cub. "He was lying down on the back seat (Mrs. Baker was in front and had driven) but was lying so grace- fully I thought he was only trying to scare me-scare me so I would never try such a thing again. "And then I saw blood. I was so shocked and stunned. I don't know how I got the car back ... " "Mrs. Baker," Mr. DeVine asked, slowly and impressively, "did you in- tend to shoot Schneider that, eve- ning.", "No," her answer came, firm and audible. "I never dreamed of such a thing." Testified To Previous Threat Mrs. Baker previously testified to Mr. DeVine that on two other occa- sions when Schneider was "mean and tried to make out he didn't love me," that she had threatened him with her husband's empty revolver. At those. times, she said, his affections were like the "winds of the seven seas, at one place at one time, at another at a different time." The day of the killing, she said, she had tried to get another policeman to remove the bullets from the gun, but failed to do so. She told the packed court room first that she did not know, at that time, what a trigger was. Then she (Continued on Page 2) Seek To Halt U.S. Vointeers In Spain's War Justice Department Will Investigate Recruiting For Foreign Service WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.-(P)-Jus-- tice department agents plunged to- day into an investigation to deter- mine if armed forces were being re- cruited unlawfully in this country for service in Spain. Attorney General Cummings or- dered J. Edgar Hoover's men to "in- vestigate thoroughly" complaints filed with the United States district attorneys at San Francisco and New York. He declined to disclose details but said the complaints charged viola- tion of a federal law forbidding en- listments for foreign service. Efforts to recruit men for the Spanish loyalist army have been re-] ported in both coastal cities in the past ten days. Prior to that, an official of the So- cialist party of New York announced formation of a contingent of Amer- ican Socialists to fight against Span- ish Fascists. He said it would join the international brigade defending Madrid. There have been proposals in Con- gress, one by Senator Borah (Rep., Ida.), that Americans who go abroad to fight in a war in which this coun- try is not engaged be deprived of their citizenship. Unwieldy Code Authorities Will Be Scrapped For 'Streamline' Act President Outlines His Ideas Broadly WASHINGTON, Jan. 7. -(P)- In- formed sources predicted tonight the administration would support in Congress a streamlined version of NRA which would omit the cumber- some device of code authorities. Determined to pursue the objec- tives of that outlawed agency, Presi- dent Roosevelt had experts at work sifting scores of legislative proposals and hunting a way to meet the views of Supreme Court in the NRA and Guffey Coal decisions. But if no sure formula is found, advisors ex- pected him to go ahead anyway. Special consideration was being given a plan to invest the Federal Trade Commission or a new agency with powers to regulate inter-state commerce comparable to those in the National Recovery Act. The President has outlined his ideas broadly to some members of' Congress, making plain, however, that he is yet unready to commit himself on details. As outlined by sources working on' the problem and in touch with the White House, the most-discussed plan would have Congress directly set cer- tain standards for businesses in in- terstate commerce and perhaps re- define such commerce. Practices such as false advertising and bribery of competitors would be designated "un- fair" and banned, along with monop- oly in general. Would Have Minimum Wage The statute would assert federal power to establish minimum wages and maximum hours for labor, but only to prevent "starvation" wages1 and overlong hours.' No attempt to regulate wages and hours on all levels would be made. While the trade commission would have direct juris- diction over "unfair trade practices," the determination of the minimum wage and maximum hour standards would be left to a separate agency. This was said to be what the Presi- dent had in mind in his message to Congress when he said of NRA: "It was unwise to expect the same agency to regulate the length of working hours, minimum wage, child labor and collective bargaining on the one, hand and the complicated questions of fair trade practices on the other." Union Demands Overestimated, Dickinson Says G.M. Heads' Chief Fear, Employe Shop Control, Called Exaggerated There are few instances in the his- tory of organized labor that a union has supplanted company manage- ment of any shop, the chief avowed fear of General Motors in refusing to grant sole bargaining powers to the United Automobile Workers, ac- cording to Prof. Z. Clark Dickinson of the economics department. "I think in this case that some of the General Motors executives have exaggerated the demands of the union," Professor Dickinson said. "However, it is rather a nuisance to have a union enter one's shop when one hashhad absolute control over it. "In the automobile industry over- head costs are comparatively high," Professor Dickinson answered when asked if he thought General Motors would ever be forced to settlement by financial loss. "I think, however, that their financial position is with- out doubt a good deal stronger than that of most employers." He does not believe that financial position will play as large a part from General Motors' point of view in set- tlement of the strike as will favor- able publicity. "I have an impression that General Motors is not likely to attempt mere- ly to outwit the union," he said. "I think they will be anxious to get a settlement satisfactory to the pub- lic because of their public relations." Professor Dickinson commented that unions are unusually optimistic in strikes on industry that offers sea- Concurs On Several Points With Recomnimendations Of Fitzgerald Affirms Collective Bargaining Right LANSING, Jan. 7.-(IP)--A far- reaching administration program, calling for liberal enactments in many directions, was submitted to the new State Legislature by Gov- ernor Murphy today.. Standing before silk-robed justices of the Supreme Court, high state of- ficials and an audience that jammed the House of Representatives cham- bers from door to door, the Governor offered his recommendations. First, he pledged the efforts of his office, and bespoke the aid of the Leg- islature, to support New Deal policies. On many points he agreed entirely with recommendations made by for- mer Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald in an exaugural message. Fitzgerald did not attend the ceremony. His mes- sage was read. Consolidate Agencies The two agreed on the need for- consolidations of various state func- tions, notably auditing, tax collec- tions and welfare. They were in accord on increased appropriations for improving the state hospitals, and together they ad- vocated primary election reform to preserve secrecy for the voter. Both urged enactment of the so-called model civil service bill. Fitzgerald recommended that the state "get out of the liquor business," a subject not mentioned by Murphy. Outstanding recommendations from Governor Murphy were: Increased appropriations for old age pensions. Affirmation of the right of workers to collective bargaining. Laws fixing maximum working hours and minimum wages and pro- hibiting the employment of women and children under injuious condi- tions. Will Reform Civil Service Enactment of the model civil serv- ice bill drafted by a special commis- sion appointed by former Governor Fitzgerald. Repeal of the law requiring teach- ers to take an oath of allegiance to the Constitution. A centralized accounting system to. replace the three now employed by the state. New commissions to consolidate welfare activities, operate the prisons. administer pardon and parole activ- ities and supervise correctional and mental institutions. Authorize either the multiple or composite ballot to insure voters se- crecy in primary elections. Protect school teachers against ar- bitrary dismissal. Reapportion the legislative dis- tricts of the state "to insure just representation according to the pop- ulation." Prof. Preuss Is Next Speaker At Forum Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the polit- ical science department will speak on "American Neutrality" at this week's Sunday forum at the Union, H. Mur- ray Campbell, '38, director of the forum series, said yesterday. The forum will be held at 4:30 p.m. in the small ballroom. Professor Preuss will cover recent events touching on the neutrality sit- uation including the Cuse affair and the Inter-American Peace Confer- ence, Campbell said. Honest Citizens Return $100 Bills To Owner JOLIET, Ill., Jan. 7-(P)-Matthew Plese learned more in 15 minutes to- day about the honesty of the human race than he had learned before in all of his 61 years. He sold a bond for $911, and happy over the sale, had set out to buy something to eat. He knew he wanted a hot dog, but what he didn't know was that there was a hole in his pocket. Behind him hurried honest citi- zens, picking up a $100 bill here and chasing fifties and twenties wherever the wind blew them. When they caught up with him, he was sipping coffee in a restaurant. They asked him to guess what he had in his pocket, and it turned out to be the hole. Then they began to give him back his money and asked him to wait for other who were still chas- ing bills. Before he left the restaurant Plese had all his money back but $140, and he said he guessed he'd have that too - just as soon as the finders learned that it was his money they had found. Germany, Italy Ask Outsiders TO Leave Spain Join France And Britain In Plea To Ban Flow Of Volunteers (By The Associated Press) Germany and Italy, in a sweeping proposal to ban intervention in the Spanish civil war yesterday suggested ejection from Spain of all non-Span- ish fighters. Both Germany and Italy in notes to France and Great Britain agreed in principle to French and British pleas for a ban on the flow of foreign volunteers into Spain. Reservations were made by both nations, however. Germany's chief proviso was that all interested pow- ers agree on effective supervision to halt intervention. France, meanwhile, disclosed she will concentrate 34 warships and a number of submarines near Spain within two weeks. Although officials said the move- ments were part of annual maneu- vers, they4 pointed out the vessels would be in "a strategic position" in relation to Spain. French frontier authorities report- ed volunteers from many countries were proceeding across the southern border of France to aid the Spanish Socialist government. Halting of the Norwegian steamer Ibis in the Straits of Gibraltar was reported. Reports from Gibraltar said the vessel was stopped by a Spanish Fascist gunboat and forced to pro- ceedto Algeciras for examination of papers and cargo. Socialist militiamen defending be- sieged Madrid were put on the alert when the insurgents drove forward on the western edge of the capital. Final Session Of Board Causes Wild Disorder Among Students Progressive Bloc Solid For Ejection Educator, In Parting Shot,. Declares He Foresaw His Dismissal MADISON, Wis., Jan. 7.-(/P)-The University of Wisconsin Board of Re- gents voted tonight, 8 to 7, to dis- charge Dr. Glenn Frank, 49-year-old president of the school since Septem- ber, 1925. The vote came after a final stormy session of the board, amid scenes of wild disorder by students who jammed the regents' small meeting room. The students hooted. Two days of bitter argument in the public hearing over Frank's qualifi- cations as an administrator failed to shake the determination of Gov- ernor La Follette's appointees on.the board to seek a new president. The Progressive bloc, headed by Harold M. Wilkie, chairman, voted solidly against retention of the educator. The dismissal will not become ef- fective until the end of the current school year in June, but the board will start looking about at once for a successor, who will take care of the University as soon as he is named. Hold 12-Hour Session The regents, tired and weary after a 12-hour session, with only a brief intermission, cast their votes in the small smoke-filled room from which President Frank, a few hours before, had displayed a big set of charts by which he attempted to disprove the charge that his administration has been incompetent. Frank had a parting shot for the regents who opposed him. "This resolution is in perfect keep- ing with the procedure today," he declared, "and brings to a climax an event of which I knew the day I was chosen president. "While going into lunch in a hotel in New York before I took this ap- pointment, George Middleton, a member of the La Follette family, came to me and agitatedly said: 'Don't take that; don't get your neck in that. The family is against it.'" The motion for Frank's dismissal was made by Regent Clough Gates, who with Chairman Wilkie led the fight against the president. The resolution provided that until a successor is named Dean George C. Sellery of the College of Letters and Science shall act as president. Dr. Frank Is Bitter "It is significant," Frank said bit- terly, after he heard the resolution read, "that I had been ordered to dis- charge George Sellery as one of my first duties when I came here 11 years ago." Students jammed in the meeting room and overflowed through the corridors of Bascom hall, hooting, whistling and howling as the vote was being taken. Dr. Salmony Opens '37 Lecture Series Dr. Alfred Salmony of Mills Col- lege, Calif., opened the University Lecture Series for 1937 yesterday afternoon in the Natural Science Au- ditorium when he spoke on "Eastern Animal S&yle," dealing with the an- cient art of Siberia and its influence on Far Eastern and European Art. His talk was illustrated with slides and Dr. Salmony showed examples of art dating from about 3,000 years B.C. to those of the 7th century A.D., dealing particularly with the works of the Scythians. Through the similarity in their art Dr. Salmony points out the relation- ships of various civilizations living in China up through Siberia and the plains district of Russia to the Black Sea. Girl, Asleep 30 Days Is Brought Here Nineteen year old Alma Koppel of Applegate entered her 30th consecu- tive day of deep sleep yesterday when she was brought here for examina- tion by physicians at the University Work Of Three Faculty Members Praised In Murphy's Address Colds Best Cured By A Day tIn Bed, Says Dr. Furstenberg The work of three members of the University of Michigan faculty as heads of State commissions re- ceived special recognition in Gov. Frank Murphy's address to the Leg- islature yesterday. These members were: Prof. Wil- liam Haber of the economics depart- ment and chairman of the Gover- ncr's Special Security Study Com- mission which drafted the Unem- ployment Insurance Bill passed by the special session of the Legisla- ture last month; Prof. James K. Poilock of the political science de- partment, who was chairman of the commission which drafted the civil service bill, and Harold D. Smith. di- rector of the University Bureau of Government and chairman of the commission which recently submitted a report calling for the reorganiza- telligently in a short time with a subject of such far-reaching conse- quences . . . Final consideration should be given by the new Legis- ture." The bill was passed in the special session of the last Legisla- ture before January, 1937, as an emergency un-finished bill to save the state approximately $18,000,000. Professor Haber last night ex- plained that Governor Murphy's rec- ommendations concerning the bill were suggested by his commission and that he hoped the Legislature would change the bill in accordance with these suggestions. He also re- marked that there are other minor changes which could be made, but that the most important were pre- sented by the Governor in his speech. The Governor recommended the By HAROLD GARN Declaring that the best remedy that any doctor can give to his pa- tient who has a head cold is a day in bed, Dr. A. C. Furstenberg, dean of the Medical School, said the medical profession agrees that a period of rest not only tends to pre- vent serious complications, but also definitely shortens the duration of the head cold. "The cause, prevention and cure of the scommon head cold are some of the difficult problems of medical practice. Scientific medicine has nev- er discovered the true cause of a 'cold in the head' nor has the doctor ever acquired a specific means of prevent- ing or curing this exceedingly com- mon disease," he said. upon other parts of the body, he con- tinued. "We cannot accept the theory that a specific germ is the cause of colds, but must admit that infection prob- ably plays an important part in their production," Dr. Furstenburg stated. It requires something besides a virus to cause a head cold, and this is a susceptibility brought about by lowered resistance, he declared. "'Sudden atmospheric changes, ex- posure to drafts, excessive fatigue and indiscretions in diet tend to pro- duce certain changes in the lining membranes of the nose and throat which make the individual suscepti- ble to infections in the upper air pas- sages." Every year there are hundreds of