0 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TRURSDAY, JAN. 14, 19 G.M. And Union Officials Are To C onfer With Gov. Murphy Today Strikers Blocked By Tear Gas Attack Of Flint Police EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS (Continued from Page 1)t these not be served, too. The warrants were issued, Prose- cutor Joseph said, "for unlawfully; assembling with intent to damage property." 'hree hundred "John Doe" war- rants for strikers suspected of ac- tively participating in the riot were also issued, only to be pigeon-holed at Governor Murphy's suggestion. At a mass meeting of the U.A.W. tonight, Powers Hapgood, one of the chief organizers of the CIO, exhorted more than 300 union men to "keep up the battle, even though the con- ference tomorrow fails to settle the strike. "If money is necessary to prolong the strike until it is won, you can safely count on the CIO to provide everything necessary," he stated. National Guardsman Drunk "Corporations recognize one thing,' and one thing only," he maintained, "and that is power. We will be re- spected only in proportion to the power we possess." 1 Following his speech, Genora John- son, 23 years old, a mother of two children, was introduced as "the, modern Joan of Arc," who "fought with the best of them" at the riot Monday night. Outside in the cor- ridor of the union headquarters, two national guardsmen were observed,1 one of them obviously drunk, the lat- Local Woman Tells Of Madrid In War, (Continued from Page 1) piled four or five high showed the mercilessness with which the govern-' ment soldiers were stamping out' fascists, monarchists and other sus- pects in Madrid, Mrs. Green declared. It was not long before soldiers came around to demand the Green's auto- mobile. They were told by Green that the keys were at the United States embassy and that if they took the car it would be against his will. They ripped the top, cut holes in the seats, and disconnected the wiring when they heard this and in several days came back and towed the car away, Mrs. Green declared. As Franco's forces approached Ma- drid's water reservoirs, the populace became apprehensive over the loss of their water supply, and Mrs. Green added that milk, either canned or fresh, had been exhausted before they left. Mrs. Green, admittedly neither a politician nor military strategist, de- clared that she was surprised at the duration of what had seemed to her a minor squabble. She expressed the belief that the combination of weath- er and Russians might prove suffi- cient to impede Franco's drive. The Moors who are crack soldiers in Franco's forces are not accustomed to the cold weather they are now suf- fering, Mrs. Green explained. a Classified. Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-3241. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in Advance nie per reading line for one or two insertions. loc per read- (on basis of five average words to line) ing line for three or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Telephone rate - 15c per reading line for two or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. 10% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. WANTED WANTED: Two single rooms in same house. Rent $2.50 to $3.50 per room for second semester. Phone 7235. During evening ask for Mr. Gutter- man. Mr. Gutterman, 301 N. In- galls. 263 WANTED: Someone to share apart- ment with two girls in apartment near campus. 1106 Willard St. Tel. 2-3421. 254 CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY: Any old and new suits, overcoats at $3, $5, $8, $25. LADIES FUR COATS, TYPEWRITERS, OLD GOLD, and musical instruments. Phone Sam. 6304. 78x LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at a low price. 6x FOR RENT FOR RENT: Clean comfortable room. Approved for Jewish women stu- dents. Two bath rooms, showers, hot water day and night, laundry facilities. Tel. 7672. 266 VERY NICE double room for girls next semester in approved house. Telephone 8671. 256 WARM single room near hospital. Also double room. Available second semester. 1331 Washtenaw. 262 NICE comfortable rooms for stu- dents. $2 up per week, Jennings 4House, 1142 E. Catherine. 243 ter was muttering incoherent words of allegiance to the union cause. From which the rioting occurred late Monday at Fisher Body Plant No. 2, 400 men have refused to move since Dec. 30. Company police pulled down a ladder used by the strikers to go in and out of the building, shut off the plant's heat and water supply and held up a truck bringing food to sit-down kitchens. Engage In Battle Strikers came from the building, argued with the company officials and finally engaged in hand to hand battle with them in an ecort to gain possession of the food stuffs on the truck. At this point, Flint city po- lice, who had been sitting on a bridge across the Flint River, some 100 yards away, took a hand, using tear and poison gas, and rifles in addition to night sticks. Directed by the Ruethers and Travis from a sound truck outside the plants, the strikers advanced, pushing back the police, who, when the wind changed, were engulfed in their own gas discharges. Before it ended, 23 strikers and police were injured and four police cars were wrecked and stripped. Wounded Sent to Hospital The wounded strikers were sent to' the hospital and, as soon as they were released, arrested and taken to the closely-guarded county jail. All persons, with the exception of one party of newspapermen, were refused admittance to the jail during the day. Approximately 2,500 men are sit- ting down in the strike, which, the strike committee contends, was caused first because of discrimina- tion against union men and second because of what is termed an ex- cessive speed-up. About 2,000 men are holding plant number one, where, to date, all has been peaceful. An undetermined minority of Flint automobile workers are actually members of the union, it is evident, but it has proved impossible to as- certain what percentage of non- union men are in sympathy with the sit-downers. The strike committee claims it has the backing of "prac- tically all" Flint workers., while the Flint Alliance, an organization set- up this week to "end this trouble as soon as possible" holds that but a few of the men not sitting down in the plants are sympathetic to con- tinution of the industrial warefare. 26,000 With Alliance The strikers accuse the Alliance of being backed by General Motors, although officials of that body deny the allegation. They say that "roughly 26,000 out of 43,000 work- ers" are with them. The strike committee made it clear, however, that only recognition of the UAW as the sole General Motors bar- gaining organization-the objective of Homer Martin-or an order from Martin, John Lewis, CIO head, or President Roosevelt, will terminate their strike "if we have to stick it out the rest of the year." Directory FURNISHED HOUSE: 5 rooms-se- mester or semester and summer. Electric stove, refrigerator and fur- nace stoker. Fireplace. Double ga- rage. Phone 7587. 251 SINGLE suite or double room for boys. Warm, nicely furnished. Board if desired. 602 Monroe. 265 FOR SALE FOR SALE: Fancy apples, filtered sweet cider, pop corn. Phone 3926. 1003 Brooks St. 264 LOST AND FOUND WILL the student who accidentally picked up a large envelope in the library Tuesday morning please notify Grace Gray. Tel. 6923. 267 i i 6:00- WJR Stevenson News. WWJ Ty Tyson. wXYZ March of Melody. CKLW Dinner Music. 6:15--- WJR Hot Dates in Music. WWJ Dinner Music. WXYZ Fact Finder. CKLW News and Suorts. 6:30- WJR Melody and Rhythm. WWJ Press-Radio: Odd Facts. WXYZ Day in Eteview. CKLW Julie Wints' Music. 6:45-- WJR Renfrew of the Mounted. WW.J Heinrich Pickert. WXYZ Lowell Thomas. 7:00- WJR Poetic Melodies. WW.J Amos and Andy. WXYZ Easy Aces. CKLW Musical Echoes. 7:15- WJR Diamond City News. WWJ Drama: Evening Melodies. WXYZ Un-Sung Champions. CKLW Sweet Music 7:30- WJR Alexander Woollcott-Town Crier. WWJ Radio Extra. WXYZ Grlen Hornet. CKLW News and Music. 7 :45- WJR Boake Carter. CKLW Pleasant Valley Frolics. 8:00- WJR Kate Smith's Bandwagon. WWJ Rudy Vallee's Variety Hour. WXYZ Footlight Serenade. CKLW Bamberger Symphony Orch. 8:30- WXYZ To Be Announced. CKLW Guy Lombardo's Music. 8:45-- y. WXYZ Murray D. Van Waggoner. 9:00- WJR Major Bowes Amateurs. WWJ Show Boat. WXYZ S.A.E. Annual Meeting. CKLW Gabriel Heatter. 9:15- CKLW Horace Heidt's Music. 9:30- CKLW Al Kavelin's Music. WXYZ America's Town Meeting. 10:00- WJR Adventures with Floyd Gibbons. WWJ Music Hall. CKLW Music By the Sea. German Club Hears Lecture On Austria An illustrated lecture on th3 Aus- trian Alps by Dr. Francis Onderdonk featured the regular bi-weekly meet- ing of Deutscher Verein, held in the League. Dr. Onderdonk first dis- played a map of Austria and then proceeded to conduct the group an a mythical trip of the Austrian cities and mountains. Also included on the program fo the evening was Miss Helen Soof who rendered a piano interpretation of Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue." 10:30--- WJ March of Time. VvXYZ Jamboree. CKLW Leo Reisman's Music. 11:00-- WJR News. WWJ Tonight's Hockey' Sports Review: Dance Music. WXYZHockey Scores. CKLW News Reporter. WJR Mummers. CKLW Frank Daile'y's Music. WXYZ Russ Morgan's Music. 11:30- WWJ Dance Music. WX' Z Bob McGrew's Music. CKLW Ted Weems' Music. 11:5-- WXYZ Earl Hines' Music. WJR Wismer Sports: Red Nichols' Music. 12:00- WJR Carl Kavell's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Henry Busse's Music. CKLW Benny Goodman's Music. 12:30- WJR Vincent Lopez' Music. CKLW George Hamilton's Music. WXYZ Rita Rio's Music. 1:00- CKLW Al Kavelin's Music. Watch Repairing. HALER'Sy State and Liberty I - Associated Press Photo This picture, taken at the height of the automotive strikes in flint, in which 14 men; were shot and a score more injured otherwise, shows strikers trying to get through the clouds of tear gas laid by the police. The riots resulted in an emergency mobilization of several units of Michigan's National Guard by Gov. Frank Murphy. Student Audiences Better Than Given Credit, Stevens Believes Director Describes Ways Of Presenting Globe Theatre Plays By ELSIE ROXBOROUGH College audiences aren't half as bad as is popularly believed accord- ing to T. W. Stevens, director of the Globe Theatre which is presenting four condensed versions of Eliza- bethan plays Saturday, Jan. 16, at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. "There is no difference between a college audience and a good general audience," Mr. Stevens said, "and in some places we have found the college audiences best." Mr. Stevens then recalled with no small amount of humour the Theatre's last experience with a col- lege audience in Iowa where the play- ers discovered themselves in a huge gymnasium seating three thousand with several hundred spectators hid- den completely behind the platform. Acted Splendidly "They acted splendidly, though," Mr. Stevens remembered. "There wasn't a sound throughout! the performance. They treated it as though it were a radio broadcast," this august director said. Mr. Stevens then narrated the group's progress from Iowa which included a stormy journey culminat-1 ing in being snowbound in Nebraska. It seems that they were due at the performance at 8:30 p.m. only to arrive on the scene at 12:30 a.m. to discover that the audience had de- parted at nine with instructions to return the next day for a matinee. Although the company has eliminat- ed properties as much as possible, and has done 18 plays using simply! one stairway and one center door, they have been particular about using lights for nightfall. This time they were playing "Hamlet" and the ghost objected vigorously. Sun In Eyes "I can't play a ghost with the sun in my eyes," he declared as the re- flection on the piles of snow outside afforded brilliant illumination. However, Mr. Stevens assured the "Ghost" that Shakespeare had often done the same play with the sun full in his eyes, bringing about a discus- sion of the structure of the Globe Theatre itself. Documentary evi- .dence was scant for the true design of this famous building. "The real document is the whole, body of Elizabethan plays taken in their earlier edition," Mr. Stevens explained. "If a stage will work with these the stage must be right because the book can't be wrong," he avowed. The Globe Theatre actors have played 5,000 performances to a pay- ing clientele of two million people, Mr. Stevens said. Their apparent' success with Shakespeare he attribut- ed to the cutting of the versions, based upon obscure and irrelevant passages. In Marlowe's "Dr. Faus- tus," appearing on the Ann Arbor card. Mr. Stevens confessed he had the most trouble with his women members. Each one of them wanted to play the part of "Helen of Troy," to be referred to as "the face that launched a thousand ships!" Add Math To Fish, Result Is Statistics, Math Club Will See Mathematics will go "fishy" to- night, and that's no tall story either. According to William R. Eschmey- er, of the University Museums, and Prof. John D. Elder of the mathema- tics department, the fish will become tangled with numbers, the result be- ing a compilation of statistics for the Institute of Fisheries Research. All this will take place at a meeting of the Junior Mathematical Group, 8 p.m. today in Room 3201 Angell Hall. These statistics, the collection of which is a mathematical problem, will be accomplished on the Hollerith sorting machines in the basement of Angell Hall, where the meeting will adjourn for the second half of the program. Turn Thy Cheek' Edict Ill-Received MARIETTA, O., Jan. 13.-OP)- Some Marietta College students used paint and placards today to express disapproval of a "turn the other cheek" edict laid down for athletes by the administrative council. The regulation decreed that a pio- neer athlete found guilty of hitting an opponent, whether justified or not, should be declared ineligible in that sport for the remainder of the season. A second offense, the council said, would result in all-time ineligibility in all sports. Today found the sidewalks and li- brary adorned: "No sluggin'; just huggin'." "Turn thy cheek." 4 [II, Old Globe Theatre Players LYDIA MFNTWI SSOIIN THEATRE January 16. 1937 Matinee 3:15 COMEDY OF ERRORS . MIDSUM4MER NIGHT'S DREAM January 16, 1937 - Evening 8:30 DOCTOR FAUSTUS TAMING OF THE SHREW LII Prices: Matinee $1.00, 75c, 50c Box Office Open Monday, Jan. 11 Evening $1.50, $1.00, 75c Mail Orders Now. Tel. 6300 '4 .: r ' I ".+. f A 4 .4~* ...4*- 4"" I 4 P rip W' ~ . to safeguard vision and HE'S PUNCH DRUNK-- STROH'S PABST BLUE kIBBON FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 NOTICES NURSERY SCHOOL: Morning only, for children 212 to 4 years. Call Frances MacNaughton. 5837. I THE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION presents BRUCE BLIVEN EDITOR, "THE NEW REPUBLIC" speaking on "The Press - Truth, News, or Propaganda?" TONIGHT - 8:15 p.m. Prices: 50c and 35c Tickets at Wahr's preenttired eyes toweA hme to enhance the charm of your living room The new 3-light lamps accomplish a twofold purpose: They provide beauty for your living room, introducing a fresh and charming decorative note, and causing your drapes and furniture and pictures to glow with new life and color. But more important, (2) they serve as a tonic to tired eyes, guarding against strain and headache, against the tense lines that are etched prematurely in young faces through reading under poor light. These lamps are no substitute for the services of your eyesight specialist: You should see him regularly once a year. But a 3-light lamp will insure safe, adequate illumination for your home . . . lighting far superior to that furnished by your present lamps. Under the modern standards of lighting, probably ALL YOUR LAMPS are out-of-date! Stop in and j see the new 3-light lamps today .. . and ask about the difference they make in your home lighting. THE NEW 3-IGHT LAMPS are available in a wide selection of attractive styles, reasonably priced. I ________Today Shows At 2:00 - 4:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 NOW PLAYING -__ 1937's GRAND NEW FUN SHOW! GIVE THEM A SHOW AND THEY MAKE IT A CELEBRATIONI Adolph Zukor presents P olleqe 7(Holiday I LftiaI DDFFUSING BOWL THROWS PART SIX DEGREES OF LIGhT OF LIGHT TO CEILING A single'lamp bulb furnishes three Adiffusing bowl under the shade different degrees of light-1[00, 200 and thrwsnar. f he light ..~.onadto the-.300 watts.together xwith, the three I