0 The Weather, Mostly clouidy andlcolder taday with mtodera~jte northwest w inds. LI e A6F A6F 1 Editorials Mr.uEistian On Russia .. . VOL. XLVII No. 92 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY JAN. 29, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS GM Renews Effort &..21i NLR.B Seeks To Mediate Writer To Lecture T o ijEc tlerm ectStikers-- Auto Strike Asks St. Louis Court To 'For er E lo s {Vacate Limiting Stay, Raging River Endangers Cairo, Memphis Levees; 333 Is Latest Death Toll Files Petition For Second Injunction; Hearing Will GBe Held NextMonday Murphy Hits Work Of Boysen Alliance Exposes Strike-Breakers' Attempt To Incite Flint Riot, Involve Guardsmen DETROIT Jan. 28.-(AP)-General Motors Corporation, referring to "sit- down" strikers occupying two Fisher Body company plants in Flint, Mich., as "former employes," renewed to- night its efforts to eject them by court action. A petition filed with Circuit Judge Paul V. Gadola of Genesee County by Roy Brownell, Flint attorney for the corporation, requested an in- junction prohibiting the strikers from further possession of the plants. The United Automobile Workers of Amer- ica, whose widespread strikes have paralyzed General Motors production, was directed to show cause at a hear- ing at 2 p.m. (E.S.T.) next Monday why an injunction should not be granted. fDiscloses Plans At Lansing today Governor Frank Murphy, asserting he had informa- tion of plans by undisclosed groups to incite riots in Flint in order to involve 2,300 National Guardsmen stationed there in the strike situa- tion, rebuffed a delegation from the strike-opposed Flint alliance. The Governor declined to answer an al00nce demand that he guaran- tee "full protection" for all workers to and from their jobs, said that set- lement negotiations arranged under his "Lansing Agreement" with oppos- ing leaders were upset "in part" by the alliance, and added: "If that had not happened you might all have been at work now." George E. Boysen, founder of the alliance, said in a statement at Flint that the organization "will continue to demonstrate in every way possible that it expects and demands that the forces of law and order in Michigan be used to permit the great majority . . . to return unmolested to their jobs." Petition Names Martin The injunction petition at Flint named Homer Martin, U.A.W.A. pres- ident, and 29 other persons, including officers of the international union, its executive board, and officers of two Flint locals. It yeferred to Martin as a "Profession 1 Organizer" who never has been ii the employ of Gen- eral Motors, and charged that he and the other defendants instructed union members to cease work Dec. 30 and refuse to leave the Fisher fac- tories. The petition charged the strikers have committed "continuous tres- passes" since Dec. 30 and that by threat and intimidation they have prevented employes not on strike from entering the plants. General Motors on Jan. 2 obtained- from Circuit Judge William D. Black a sweeping injunction ordering the strikers to evacuate the plants and prohibiting interference "in any way" with operations of the factories. After it was learned Judge Black was a stockholder in the corporation the proceedings were transferred to Judge Gadola. Refuse: To Heed Sheriff The strikers refused to heed the order of Sheriff Thomas W. Wilcott that they vacate the premises under. this injunction, in the absence of bench warrants for them. Such war- rants never were served. Today's petition said the corpora- tion was unable to give the names of those inside the plants because the men changed positions frequently. 1 1- V China Declares War In Provinces Ended NANKING, Jan. 28- () -The Chinese government announced to-. day settlement of the seven-week po- litical-military crisis in Shensi pro- vince by an agreement under which communist and communist-inspired armies will withdraw still further in-. to the bleak northwest. Nanking leaders said this agree- ment ended the threat of widespread civil war which has filled Shensi and Kansu provinces with fear and caused the evacuation of about 100 American and other foreign mis- sionaries from other regions. They asserted the national govern- ment would recover control of Sian-, fu, capital of Shensi and center of the long-drawn uprising. Nankin's huge-, scale preparations to subdue the re- bellious areas now would be can- celed, it was stated. Postmasters' Civil Service Aim Of House First, Second And Third Class Office Heads Are' Included In Bill WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.-OP)-The House passed a bill today to place first, second and third-class postmas- ters under the classified civil service. The bill, passed by a voice vote, will, go to the Senate. In an uproarious overtime session, the House had approved, then re- jected, amendments to reestablish a system under which the President could choose postmasters from among the three highest candidates certified by the civil service commission after competitive examinations. Some Congressmen complained that this was the' old "spoils system" recently declared abolished by execu- tive orders issued by President Roosevelt. Land Bills Are First Enacted By State House Mortgage Moratoria Bill Also Passed As Part Of Proposed Action LANSING, Jan. 28. -()-The House adopted its first proposed leg- islation of the 1937 session today by passing two bills extending existing land contract and mortgage mora- toria. Approach of the expiration date for the moratoria hastened the House action. The date now is March 1, and the House bill would extend that date to June 1, 1939. Rep. Herman H. Dignan, Republi- can, Owosso, was the only House member to oppose either measure. He said he was opposed to continuing emergency legislation after the "necessity for it had ended," and de- clared the moratoria "penalized thrift." The two bills now will go to the Senate for considerationafter a five- day period. There appeared little chance of opposition. A joint resolution asking a consti- tutional amendment to provide four- year terms for county officers reached the floor of both Houses today. Rep. M. Clyde Stout, Democrat, Ionia, in- troduced the measure in the House and it was sent to the committee on constitutional revision. Senator Earl W. Munshaw, Republican, Grand Rapids, sponsored the same resolu- tion in the Senate. Senator Carroll B. Jones, Demo- crat, Marcellus, introduced a bill which would preclude any member of the legislature from holding a seat if he were unable to attend sessions because of imprisonment. It was an outgrowth of the Wilkowski vote fraud case. G-Men Investigate EspionageCharges WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 - The National Labor Relations Board late today projected itself into the Gen- eral Motors strike. The Board asked that the United States Circuit Court of Appeals at St. Louis vacate its stay of execution, which has prevented the NRLB here- tofore from directly intervening in the automobile strike under the Wag- ner act. The stay was granted by the Fed- eral Appellate Court last June on pe- tition of General Motors, which was refused an injunction against the board by the St. Louis District Court. Court action arose when'the Board started hearings in St. Louis on formal charges of the United Au- tomobile Workers that General Mo- tors was interfering with employes joining the union in GM plants in and around St. Louis. Action Doubly Important The power of the Board to act except on request of a union is doubt- ful, although the Board's statement strongly indicated that it believed it could if the court prohibition was re- moved. The Board's action was of double, significance. Since the strike began, leaders of the Committee for Indus- trial Organization and the UAW have, refrained from making any formal complaints to the NLRB, which is necessary to open up the way for in- tervention of that body. The Board's request to the Court declared:; "The industrial disputes which the National Labor Relations Board sought to prevent and of which it warned in its June complaint now have occurred. "Thousands of employes of these appellants (General Motors) are en- gaged in a strike. "It is submitted that every consid- eration of equity as well as of the paramout public interest indicates that the stay herein should be vacat- ed and the National Labor Relations Board allowed to administer the ap- plicable law of the United States." G-MEN ARE ASSIGNED WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.--(P)- The Government assigned "G Men" tonight to investigate union leaders' charges, that strike-breakers were sent across state lines to the scene of a General Motors strike at Ander- son, Ind. Officials who revealed that J. Ed- gar Hoover's agents had been given the task declared that under Federal law it was an offense to transport strike-breakers from one state to an- other for the purpose of interfering with-peaceful picketing. They said an affidavit had been received here saying that several car- loads of "tough-looking men" were recruited at St. Louis several days ago and transported in trucks to Ander- son. The Senate civil liberties commit- tee, headed by Senator La Follette, also sent an agent to Anderson to inquire into allegations by the Unit- ed Automobile Workers that strikers were victims of violence. Secretary Perkins dispatched an investigator to the same city to look into charges that General Motors in- stigated raids on a union meeting and union headquarters. ROBERT P. T. COFFIN Robert Coffin To Give Talk! On His Poetry 'What Poems Are And How I Make The ' Is Hist Topic; Won '35 Pulitzer Robert P. Tristram Coffin, Ameri- can poet and novelist, will lecture at 8:15 p.m. tonight in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre on "What Poems Are And How I Make Them." The lec- ture will be given under the auspices of the Hopwood Committee. Coffin has already published 15 volumes of writing of all kinds, in- cluding six of poetry. His book of verse, "Strange Holiness," won the Pulitzer Prize for 1935 for its author and contributed greatly to bringing him international fame. Other vol- umes of poetry he has published in- clude "Ballads of Square-Toed, Americans." Known For Biography Besides his poetry, Coffin is best remembered for his biographical works about his family, "An Attic Room," and others. Last spring his first novel, "Red Sky in the Morn- ing," appeared, and immediately be- came a best seller. Aside from his writing, Coffin is professor of English literature at Bowdoin College, his alma mater. Previously he served as professor of English at Wells College, whose teaching staff he joined on his returnj from the war, in which he served with an artillery regiment in the American Expeditionary Force. Studied At Princeten After his graduation from Bowdoin, Coffin studied at Princeton for a year on the Longfellow Scholarship, and took degrees as Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Literature at Trinity Col- lege, Oxford, as a Rhodes Scholar. William Rose Benet recently said of Coffin's writing that "there are poems of his already that will be remem- bered in the years to come, and he is only in the middle of a stalwart career." Prof. Clarence D. Thorpe of the English department, who heard Cof- fin speak at the Thanksgiving Day banquet of the American Council of English Teachers, praised his simple but keen and brilliant style and com- pared him in his manner of speak- ing and reading to Robert Frost. SIT-DOWN IN RUBBER PLANT AKRON, O., Jan. 28.-(P)-A "sit- down" in the compounding depart- ment of the B. F. Goodrich Company, tire manufacturers, caused execu- tives to order all operations suspend- ed indefinitely tonight. The concern employes approximately 10,000 per- sons on four shifts. T. G. Graham, company vice-president, claimed 31 employes participated in the "sit- down" Citizens Of New Albany Evacuated In Outboards As Waters Stay At Peak Harsh Treatmenta Given To LootersE Correspondent Finds PoorV People Cling To Homest In SpiteOf Perili By BONTI WILLIAMSC NEW ALBANY, Ind., Jan. 28.- (Special to The Daily)-Dense foga settled down over thilittle town here tonight as the dirty yellow waters ofe the Ohio River remained at peak levelc and the work of evacuating inhabi-v tants in the lower parts of the villager was carried on in outboards andt small skiffs.t The entire town here is under strict military control. Soldiers brought in two looters who had collected a boatt load of stolen goods. They are liable u for a 20-year sentence when court- martialed tomorrow, officials say. Eight hundred uncontacted people are still clinging to life and hope in this town of 13,000, while rescue work, hampered by an absence of all light and heat, is severely handi- capped. In the poor section of the town, it was necessary to use force to get some of the old folks out of their two and Three room shacks. One old man said1 "If this house goes I better go with it, and an old woman refused to leave until the rescue workers went in and brought out all she owned in the world-five cats. One of the most pitiful sights ofc the flood here is livestock swimming I helplessly with only their nostrils outc of water. The national guard hasv orders to shoot any swimming an-a imal. Communication with Louisvillec across the river is confined to radio. One of the boatmen here said that he has not heard from his wife and daughter in Louisville since last week.< His case is typical of hundreds of others.E The people here have developed at stoic and at the same time heroicu philosophy of doing their share andi more where they are and sacrificing all personal matters for the common good. According to the local tele- graph operator here, this is the firstI dispatch to go out from New Albany.r Contest Entriest For Freshmen3 Are Due Todayf Entries for the freshman division, of the Hopwood Awards for creative1 writing are due in the EnglishOffice by 4 p.m. today. The freshman Hopwood contest is< open to all first-year students regu- larly enrolled in an English course in either the College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts, or the College of Engineernig. The contest is divided into three fields: essay, prose fiction and poetry; and entries in each field are limited according to the rules established by the Freshman Hop- wood committee. Three prizes of $50, $30 and $20 respectively will be awarded in each of the three fields. The manuscript will be judged by' Prof. Roy W. Cowden of the English department, director of the Hopwood Awards; Dr. Frank E. Robbins, as- sistant to the president and manag- ing editor of the University of Michi- gan Press; and Prof. J. Raleigh Nel- son of the English department of the College of Engineering. To facilitate i their work the manuscripts will first be read by the freshman contest committee and unacceptable material will be eliminated. Mooney Fails Again In Freedom Battle SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 28.-(P)- Thomas J. Mooney lost the first round of his new battle for freedom and vindication today when a state Supreme Court referee held the form- County Sends $5,000 To Flood Sufferers Citizens of Washtenaw County, aided by the University's contribution- of $913, last night swelled their Red Cross flood relief fund to an un- expected high of $5,654. Organization of three shifts of workers to pack clothing and food to be shipped for the flood areas was -lso announced yesterday by officials of the local Red Cross chapter. The headquarters at 205 S. Fourth St. will continue to remain open to receive contributions daily, opening at 8:30 a.m. today. Cots and bedding are greatly need- ed in this devastated regionaaccord- ing to officials and donations of clothing and bedding supplies will be welcome. Foods contributed should not be of a perishable variety in order that they can be shipped with no trouble. Wyvern, junior women's honor so-t ciety, will continue today their drive to secure food and clothing for the needy. Marriage Here Of Piatigorsky Is Made Known Russian Violoncelljst Wed Jacqueline de Rothschild Of Paris At Sink Home Gregor Piatigorsky, Russian violon- cellist, was secretly married here Tuesday to Jacqueline de Rothschild, of Paris, it was revealed yesterday when the marriage license was filed at the county clerk's office by Justice Jay H. Payne, who performed the ceremony. The ceremony was performed Tuesday morning at the home of Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the School of Music, at 1325 Olivia Ave. A special marriage license was ob- tained by the couple to avoid the usual five-day wait required by Mich- igan law. Mr. Piatigorsky was here to play a Choral Union concert Monday in Hill Auditorium. The couple informed Dr. and Mrs. Sink of their intended marriage at the intermission and were invited to hold the ceremony at the Sink home. Mr. Piatigorsky gave his age as 33 years old and the bride gave her age as 25. Mrs. Piatigorsky is believed to be a member of the de Rothschild family of France. Present for the ceremony were Dr. and Mrs. Sink, Roscoe O. Bonisteel of Ann Arbor, president of -the State Bar of Michigan, who made the legal arrangements, Mrs. Bonisteel, and Prof. Hans Pick of the School of Mu- sic, a friend of the famous cellist's. The couple left Tuesday for Phila- delphia where Mr. Piatigorsky was to play with the Philadelphia Sym- phony Orchestra. Canadian Social Insurance Laws Are Not Legal LONDON, Jan. 28.-(P)--Canadian legislation for unemployment insur- ance, minimum wages, limitation of working hours and regulation of mar- keting was declared unconstitutional today. The ruling came from the judicial committee of the Privy Council, high- est judicial body in the Empire. The committee upheld measures to regu- late some trade practices and to help indebted farmers. The legislation was adopted by the Canadian Parliament in 1935 and 1935, when the conservative govern- ment of Premier R. B. Bennett was in office. Only two of the laws, however, have been put into effect-that to aid farm debtors, which was upheld, and that giving farmers the right to combine Set Up 30( Levee In To Avert 0-Mile Last Attempt Disaster Flood Waters Make 1,000,000 Homeless Forecast More Snow And Rain; Doctors, Nurses Fight SpreadOf Disease (By The Associated Press) The nation's record flood crept forward Thursday toward the next danger area-levees between Cairo, Ill., and Memphis on the Mississippi -as army and civilian corps piled sandbags and gumbo mud on 300 miles of set-back levee walls in a desperate effort to avert disaster. The Ohio River-a vast lake 50 miles wide in places from Pittsburgh to Cairo-eased its pressure along its upper stretch. At Cincinnati the waters slowly be- gan to recede. Louisville, Ky., still was largely in- undated, but the crest was past and headed for isolated Paducah. The known dead exceeded 333. More than 1,000,000 were homeless in 11 states. Damage' mounted above $400,000,000. Rain And Snow Threaten Threat of more rain and snow along the Ohio River came from wea- ther forecasters but they added the cheering note the precipitation would not affect flood conditions. Days will pass before the Ohio is back in its channel at Cincinnati and Louisville but already rehabili- tation was begun. Appalling stories as yet unrealized apparently were in store for residents of vast sections. Cairo, its women and children mostly evacuated, settled down be- hind a three-foot bulkhead atop its 60-foot seawall and gaited for the 62-foot crest on the Ohio predicted for Sunday or Monday. Most pathetic was the plight of 6,- 000 farmers and fishermen driven from the 131,000-acre tract in the Bird's Point Floodway on the Mis- inches of frozen sleet. The reservoir sissippi. They fled-mostly on foot -over rutted roads covered with six filled rapidly, bringing the levee crisis near. Three Thousand Flee Three thousand refugees were at Charleston, Mo., where facilities were taxed to the utmost. Others were at Sikeston, Mo., crowded and jammed into relief headquarters. These-as at New Madrid, Mo., at the lower tip of the floodway-cast anxious eyes toward the set-back levee. Would it hold? A levee break would put New Madrid under six feet of water. All but 110 who live in the spill- way were thought safely out. These clung to room and tree tops and awaited rescue boats, hampered by ice cakes, cold rain, and shallow water in stretches of ground between them and the refuees. Army engineers along the Missis- sippi speeded reinforcement of the billion-dollar levee system. Com- manding generals from Cairo to New Orleans stood ready to move out up- ward of 500,000 dwellers if broken dikes brought danger. Crest At 48 Feet Meteorologist F. W. Brist at Mem- phis predicted the Mississippi will crest there at 48 feet, five feet lower than the estimate of Lieut. Col. Eu- gene Reybold, army district engineer. Brist added that since a 48-foot stage "is about three feet higher than any previous stage, all possible pre- caution should be taken to protect life and property." Memphis' gauge was 44.3 Thursday. The river still was rising. More than 2,500,000 acres of Mis- sissippi bottom land.was flooded and at Mellwood, Ark., the levee was threatening collapse, endangering two more counties. The threat of disease continued unabated. Except for a coast guard report of influenza of epidemic pro- portions at Paducah, Ky., no wide- spread outbreaks were prevalent. 200,000 For U.S. Aid WASHINGTON, Jan. , 28.-(P)-- Two hundred thousand persons-per- haps more if the Mississippi levees do not hold-may go on Federal re- Setback Cause And Aftermath Of Flood Discussed Byv James, Jamison Riots outside the Fisher No. 2 plant on Jan. 11 when strikers clashed with police brought injuries to 27 persons and concentration of several National Guard units in Flint to preserve order. Six Injured In Wreck Of Train Near Trenton TRENTON, N.J., Jan. 28.-(P)--An estimated half dozen persons were injured tonight when three cars of the Constitution, Pennsylvania Rail- road flier, were derailed, near here. The present unprecedented flood{ stage in the Ohio River valley district is the result of too much rain on ground that was already water- soaked, Prof. Preston James of the geography department declared yes- terday. Prof. Charles L. Jamison of the School of Business Administration said that the rehabilitation of Louis- ville, Cincinnati, and other cities, will not retard business activity in that region or throughout the nation. Professor James said that while the weather maps would show this condi- tion afterwards, there is no way to forecast a flood beforehand with any will be of some benefit to the land on which it is deposited." Prof. James stated that while there is a temporary evacuation of the flood district now, the land is far too rich and fertile in the river dis- trict to countenance a general exo- dus. He said that this is probably the worst flood that ever occurred in that district. The spring crop will not be affected by this disaster, how- ever, he said, since the seeds for the next crops have not yet been planted. "Replacing fixtures in stores, fac- tories and dwellings will create a demand for goods which would not otherwise have existed," Professor Jamison said, "and the banks will be I ..,.., _.,. E