The Weather Cioudy, continued cold today: tomorrow becoming unsettled, slowly rising temperature. L r e A& A6F 4iltr 4t g an Datt Editorials Little Flower vs. BrowN Shirt . . Things To Come. VOL. XLVII No. 118 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS RobinsonHas Compromise OnCourtPlan Democratic Senate Leader1 Favors An Amendment After Bill's Passage Proposal May Add To Senate Support WASHINGTON, March 15.-("Y)- Sen. Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas, the Democratic leader, produced to- night the first compromise suggestion to emanate from the administration side of the turbulent debate over President Roosevelt's court reorgani- zation bill. After predicting the passage of the Roosevelt measure before the session closes, he held out the possibility that at the same time, a constitu-, tional amendment may be proposed to the states, of a nature still to be determined. Leaders Favor Amendment While Robinson would not discuss its possible contents, it became evi- dent that some administration lead ers were favorably disposed toward an amendment offered today by Sen. George-. W. Norris (Ind., Neb.) to limit the terms of federal judges, including those of the Supreme Court, to nine years. Some administration backers of the President's proposal to increase the Supreme Court to a maximum of 15 justices if incumbents over 70 years of age do not retire expressed the thought that the Robinson sug- gestion for an amendment might in- crease the support of the White House measure. They expressed hope it might make a favorable impression among those senators-roughly a third of the Sen- ate-who have not yet committed themselves on the issue and some of whom are backing constitutional amendments. Expect Congress Approval "There is no inconsistency in the President's proposal and in certain amendments to the constitution that have been proposed,' Robinson said in a statement carefully dictated to reporters. "I expect the plan of the Presi- dent will be approved by the Con- gress. It is by no means certain that amendments will not also be con- sidered by the two Houses of Con- gress for submission to the states. "Certain amendments that have been proposed would undoubtedly be received by the public with favor. These amendments, however, do not have direct relationship to the in- crease in the Supreme Court mem- bership which is contemplated by the President's plan. "The latte ris gaining ground steadily and I believe will be passed by both houses during the present session." Train Hits Car; Two Killed, 20 Others Injured INDIANAPOLIS, March 15.-(I)-' A railroad fireman and engineer were injured fatally and 20 other persons were hurt, two critically, when a seven-coach Big Four passenger train plunged from its tracks after crash- ing into an automobile late today at New Augusta, Ind., 10 miles north- west of here. Although the coaches weaved diz- zily during the quarter-mile which the train traveled after the impact, they remained upright. Miles Noggle, 43, of Indianapolis, fireman of the locomotive, was crushed fatally when the, engine ov- erturned. E. J. Andrews of Kanka- kee, Ill., the engineer, died a few hours after being admitted to the Methodist Hospital here. Andrews was scalded by escaping steam. Warren Adair of Indianapolis, a traveling fierman, was also riding in the locomotive cab and likewise re- ceived severe burns from the steam. Hospital physicians described his con- dition as "fair." Federal Theatre Accepts Prize Play Child Labor Struggle Continues In Face Of Defeat In New York Proposed Amendment In 1924; Must Overcome PowerfulOpposition By TUURE TENANDER Despite the defeat of the proposed Child Labor amendment to the Fed- eral Constitution in the New York Assembly last week, three states have already added their names to the growing list ratifying the proposal that may someday be a part of the supreme law of the United States. For 13 years the issue that has transcended traditional party lines has been before the states, and when Kansas a few weeks ago decided to ratify the proposed amendment, it became the 28th state to place its name on the roll. Kansas was no easy victory for the proponents of the ban on child labor, for on five previous occasions Alf M. Landon's home state had rejected it. Proposed In 1924 The amendment was proposed by Rep. L M. Foster of Ohio in 1924 after Congress had failed to get child labor legislation past the ju- diciary. "Following two decisions of the Supreme Court which held in- valid attempts of Congress to regu- late child labor through its powers over commerce and taxation, respec- tively," Prof. Everett S. Brown of the political science department said yes- terday, "the Child Labor Amendment was proposed by Congress in 1924. "Despite the seemingly popular de- mand for this amendment," Profes- sor Brown said, "there was no rush on the part of the state legislatures to ratify it. On the contrary, by Feb. 1, 1925, 13 state legislatures had taken adverse action and others did so later, leading to the-belief that the amendment had been defeated." Arkansas First To Ratify Arkansas, on June 28, 1924, be- came the first state to ratify and was followed in 1925 by California, Arizona and Wisconsin. Two years then elapsed until Montana approved a resolution of ratifying in February. 1927. In 1933, only six states had rati- fied and 32 had rejected the amend- 'merit. However, in the latter part of (Continued on Page 2) Gen. Johnson Terms Hitler, 'War, Danger' Former Chieftain Of NRA' Denounces Communism And Fascism NEW YORK, March 15.-()- Hugh S. Johnson, in a speech pre- pared for delivery before thousands in a Madison Square Garden dem- onstration against Nazism, said to- night "Adolf Hitler and his imme- diate staff of Nazipathics have be-] come a sort of monster, threatening the peace of the world." But, said the former NRA ad- ministrator, they menaced peace "only a little more than Stalin and his crew of primitives." "There is," he added, "little that seems normal or human about eith- er., "There is no great difference," he went on, "between the totalitarian state of Hitler and the Empire of the Kaiser, except the cut of the mus- tache of supreme authority." "This country," he said,. "does not presume to tell other peoples how they should be governed, but we have a right to stand here on our shores and tell other peoples how we will not be governed." Johnson attacked communism as heatedly as fascism, saying: "Since the day the Kaiser tore up the scrap of paper which was his solemn obligation to defend Belgium and not attack her, there is not one of these fascist or communist powers, that has not repudiated its most sol- emn agreements under the plea cf necessity." Township Officers May Get Increases LANSING, March 15.-(P)-The House of the Legislature passed and sent to the Senate tonight compan- ion bills permitting salary increases for township officers and members of county boards of supervisors. This legislation permits maximum pay of To Lecture Tonight MRS. MARTIN JOHNSON Mrs. ,Johnson's Talk To Include Motion Pictures Famous Woman Explorer Will Give Final Program Of SeriesToday Mrs. Martin Johnson, widow of the famous explorer whose 26-year part- nership with her was ended by a tragic airplane crash in December, will present the last of the season's Oratorical Association lectures at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auidtorium. Mrs. Johnson will present a mo- tion picture, "Jungle Depths of Bor- neo," taken on their last trip of ex- ploration together. She will give a 20-minute introductory talk before the picture is shown. George Tilton, photographer on the Borneo ex- pedition, will describe the pictures. Mrs. Johnson left a Los Angeles hospital three weeks ago and has been lecturing since March 1. She will give her talk from a wheel chair. The Johnsons were originally sched- uled to appear here together. The Johnsons lived in Borneo a year during the making of the pic- ture. They brought back many un- usual camera "shots" which make up the picture to be shown here. In more than 20 years as motion picture explorers they recorded hundreds of thousands of feet of wild animals in remote places. More Italians Claimed Taken By Loyalists MADRID, March 15.-(P)-The government's war communique to- night asserted 58 more Italian sol- diers had been captured by govern- ment troops in the Guadalajara sec- tor, making a tdtal of 266 Italians taken since Insurgent Generalissimo Francisco Franco began his drive northeast of Madrid. Most of the Italian prisoners have been brought to Madrid, the com- munique said. It announced that two insurgent airplanes had been shot down near Guadalajara as airforces of the two armies clashed in late afternoon ac- tivity. The Madrid newspapers published what they said was a proclamation issued to his troops by the Italian General Annibale Bergonzoli at Sal- amanca Feb. 2. The alleged procla- mation contained the following pas- sage addressed tohis corporals. 1"Who can reproach you, o little- great commander, if when the battle is over you, too, at the head of your victorious unit feel somewhat a little corporal, like Napoleon; a corporal like Vittorio Emanuele II (the mili- tant king under whom Italy was united), a corporal of honor like Benito Mussolini. "On foot or on cars, with musket or bomb, with machine-gun or artil- lery, with tank or flame-thrower, with squadron or battalion, with you State AcademyI Will Meet Here March 18-20 Sciences, Arts And LettersI Will Be Represented In Annuialt Convention Prof. Lee R. Dice I To Direct Meeting Workers and students in a wide array of man's scientific, artistic and C literary endeavours will gather hereE Thursday, Friday and Saturday forf the forty-second annual meeting ofa the Michigan Academy of Science.- Arts and Letters.n The meeting, which is expected to draw more than 400 residents of thev state as well as many visitors fromc other states, will include 14 sectionsn on subjects from anthropology toc zoology. All section meetings will bev open to the public.a Dice Is President Prof. Lee R. Dice, curator of thet mammal division, Museum of Zoolo- gy, is president of the Academy for the 1937 session, and Prof. Leigh J.1 Young of the forestry school is act-c ing as secretary. Other officers are Prof. J. 0. Veatch of Michigan State College, vice-president, E. C. Pro-v phet of Michigan State College, treas-t urer, Prof. Alfred H. Stockard of the zoology department, editor and Dr. William W. Bishop, librarian. v Features of the three-day meeting will be the annual reception at 8 p.m.,r Thursday in the University Museums and the annual dinner for members at 6:30 a.m., Friday, in the Union.r To Open Thursdaya An address on "Some Inherited Variations of North American Mice"l will be given by Professor Dice after the dinner Friday night. This talk will be illustrated by slides and mo- tion pictures. Opening of the Academy will take place at 2 p.m., Thursday, with the first meeting of the anthropology sec- tion under the chairmanship of Dr. James B. Griffin of the anthropology department. The section will con- vene in Room 3024, University Mu- seums. Further meetings of the antiro. (Continued on Page 2) Storms Cause Earhart Flight Postponement' Pro jected 27,000 Mile Jaunt Around Equator .uffers New Delay OAKLAND, Cal., March 15.-()- Stormy weather, the bane of fliersk everywhere, caused a second post- ponement today in the start of Ame-J lia Earhart's projected 27,000-mileJ world-girdling flight. Between 500 and 600 miles west- ward, directly on the 2,400-mile route to Honolulu, centered the same storm area that caused a delay in the flight yesterday. E. H. Bowie, U. S. Weather Bureau official, said the depression area was moving westward "very, very slowly,"' while winds probably varying from 35 to 50 miles an hour howled in its center.' "It would be impossible for Miss' Earhart to go through or above that area in a heavily loaded plane," said Bowie. "She should wait until the condi- tion is completely cleared up which may not be until Wednesday." The same storm area caused post- ponement of the flight of the Pan American seaplane Hawaii clipper Honolulu enroute to Manila, and the start of a survey plane for Australia. Delaying of the flight, which will take Miss Earhart around the world as close as feasible to the equator, found the famous aviatrix ready in every respect for the adventure, on which she seeks data that might be used in new commercial air routes. "Miss Earhart's plane is ready to' go," said her husband, George Pal- mer Putnam. "She's packed. All that remains to be done is to arrange some lunch and fill the vacuum bot- tles." Mother Leaves Baby In Carr During Movie Means of action against Mrs. Glad Higher Taxes For Balancing BudgetUrged Eccles Says Wage Raises Not In Public's Interest At Present Time Plans To Continue 'Easy Money' Rates WASHINGTON, March 15.-(P)- Chairman Marriner S. Eccles of the Federal Reserve Board called tonight for "A prompt balancing of the fed- sral budget" through the imposition of higher income and proits taxes if necessary. In a statement, Eccles detailed his views on prices and credit, pledging continuance of the board's "easy money" policy and said that in- creased wages and shorter hours which restrict production "are not at this time in the interest of the public in general or in the real in- terest of the workers themselves." Officials said the statement was issued to put an end to various mis- eading rumors regarding the Board's credit policies., 'Monopolistic Practices' (A slump in government bonds, which developed last Friday, was at- tributed by some officials here to would become tighter. The selling "dopesters" predictions that money wage of last Friday was followed to- day by widening losses in the govern- ment bond list, dispatches from New York said.) Eccles said today that with large numbers of people still unemployed any move to tighten money rates "would not only be anti-social but uneconomic." He attributed sharp price rises re- cently to "non-monetary factors," including foreign armament de- mands, strikes, and "monopolistic practices by certain groups both in industry and organized labor." Expand Production Eccles declared that "the upward spiral of wages and prices into infla- tionary price levels can be as disas- trous as the downward spiral of de- flation." He said that the remedy for price inflation was a broad expansion of production rather than a tightening of money rates. "Under present conditions of ac- celerating recovery," he added, "a continuing easy money policy to be successful in achieving and main- taining a balanced recovery must be accompanied by a prompt balancing of the federal budget and the sub- sequent retirement of public debt." The reserve board chief said he was not in favor of budget balancing at the expense of "the destitute and the unemployed" but added he did sanction the volume of relief and at the same time bring the budget into balance." Duke May ]Buy U.S. Dwelling In Near Future PARIS, March 15.-(P)-A confer- ence somewhere in France between the Duke of Windsor, Mrs. Walhis Warfield Simpson and Sumner D. Parker of Baltimore, Md., at which the former king of England and Mrs. Simpson may consider purchase of an American home, tonight appeared a possibility of the near future. Parker, landing from a trans-At- lantic liner at Cherbourg today, as- serted he was negotiating with the Duke for sale of an estate at Brook- landville, Md., and indicated the transaction was near completion.' Parker and his wife left Cherbourg by automobile for Paris and tonight were stopping somewhere in the prov- inces, but friends expected them to arrive here tomorrow for a three- week stay to continue the negotia- tions. Truck Drivers' Strike Ties Up Freight Here Transportation of factory products between Ann Arbor and Detroit by truck was stopped yesterday by a strike of truck drivers carrying into and out of Detroit. All freight intended for the inter- City Trucking Co. for transportation to Detroit had been halted by the strike. This company handles truck shipments for the Hoover Ball Co. the King-Seeley Corp., Ann Arbor 'ants Injunction -Associated Press Photo Circuit Judge Allan Campbell (above) granted Chrysier Motors an injunction yesterday against the 5,000 sit-down strikers who have cccupied the corporatio'n's plants eight days. Bishop To Give Fifth Guidance Lecture Today Profession Of Librarian Is Subject; Dean Griffin To SpeakThursday Dr. William W. Bishop, University librarian and director of the library science department, will give the next lecture in the vocational guidance se- ries sponsored by the literary college at 4:15 p.m. today in Room 1025 An- gell Hall. Dr. Bishop will address students on "Library Science as a Profession." At the conclusion of the lecture students will be given an opportunity to ask questions on the subject. Dr. Bishop will be the fifth lecturer in the series, which is designed to give students in the literary college an opportunity to become acquainted with a number of leading professions, as well as with the facilities availabl in the University professional and business schools. Dean Clare E. Grif- fin of the School of Business Admin- istration will speak on present day opportunities in the field of business at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, also in Room 1025 Angell Hall. Henderson Due Here On April l For Conference DETROIT, March 15.-()-The United Automobile Workers of Amer- ca abandoned tonight a plan to have 5,000 sit-down strikers holding Chry- sler Corp. automobile plants here for the eighth day to vote on obeying a court injunction ordering them to leave. Homer Martin, union president who flew here from the national ex- ecutive's meeting in Cleveland, made the announcement at a U.A.W.A. rally. The injunction, issued in cir- cuit court today, ordered the strikers to evacuate the premises by 9 a.m. Wednesday. No Discussion Of Plans Circuit Judge Allan Campbell, act- ing on petition of the Chrysler Corp. against the strikers and officials of the United Automobile Workers of America and the Committee for In- dustrial Organization, ordered the men to evacuate the plants by 9 a.m. Wednesday and fixed a penalty of $10,000,000 to be levied . on their "lands, goods and chattels" for fail- ure to comply. "We did not put the men in the plants and we are not going to take them out," Martin told the meeting. "We are not going to vote on that question." It had been said earlier that the strikers themselves would vote to- night upon whether they would obey the injunction, Martin and other union leaders r wouldnot discuss twhat plans they were making in a series of confer- ences. Maurice Sugar, attorney for the UAWA, said the :union president hurried back to Detroit primarily to consult with his legal advisor. Obey Court Orders Gov. Frank Murphy, opening a meeting with prosecutors of four Michigan industrial counties and representatives of the national guard at Lansing this afternoon, said: "There should be no wilful disobe- dience of court orders nor defiance of public authority." Homer Martin, UAWA, president, attending an executive board mheet- ing of the union at Cleveland, said the decision on vacating the plants is "up to the 5,000 strikers who are in them." Martin is a defendant in the injunction suit, as is John L. Lewis, CIO chieftain. Union shop stewards planned for a vote by the strikers in the Dodge, Chrysler, Plymouth and De Sota divi- sion plants tonight. The buildings were occupied a week ago to enforce demands for recognition of the UAWA as sole collective bargaining agency for the corporation's 67,000 employes. Negotiations Continue The strike and its effects have left 60,000 Chrysler workers, and 19,400 employes of the Briggs Manufactur- ing Co., body producers, idle. Other automotive strikes in progress have affected more than 10,000 employes of the Hudson Motor Car Co. here, some 2,200 Reo Motor Car Co. work- ers at Lansing and several hundred Bohn Alumninum Co. employes in Detroit. UAWA negotiations with Chrysler executives continued, in downtown offices occupied by the corporation since strikers took over its adminis- tration, despite the injunction. STRIKE AT STATLER DETROIT, March 15.-()-Serv- ice employes of the Hotel Statler, one of Detroit's largest hostelries, Struck late today, inconveniencing .800 guests. On other labor fronts, 3,000 drivers (Continued on Page 2) Marooned By A Strike, Lily Tries One Herself DETROIT, March 15.-(P)-Lily Pons, songbird of opera, screen and radio, marooned on the 12th floor of a downtown hotel by a strike, tried out the sit-down tecinique herself tonight. When photographers asked her to pose as a dancer-she has a dancing UAW Officials Abandon Plan To Hold Vote On Evacuation Chrysler Strikers Facing Fine Of $10,000,000 If Not Out Wednesday Gov. Murphy Talks With Prosecutors Robert Henderson, director of the Dramatic Festival which is schedtled to open here May 17, has announced that he will be in Ann Arbor April 1 to confer with the Festival com- mittee. He will then proceed to New York City to complete negotiations for the Festival program. At present Mr.E Henderson is engaged in directing a Shakespeare's "Merchant of Venice" in Hollywood, Calif.I Although none of the plays for principles of the coming Festival have9 been announced, it is understood that the season already includes one of the three outstanding hits of the cur- rent New York season. It is also, understood that the list of stars will include several Hollywood personal- ities. Economists Agree On Director's Plan' NEW YORK, March 15.-(P)- Leading economists and bankers to- night hailed with satisfaction the proposals of Federal Reserve Board Chairman Marriner S. Eccles to bal- ance the federal budget but were less enthusiastic about the methods proposed. Col. Leonard P. Ayres, vice-presi- dent of the Cleveland Trust Co., and one of the country's widely known economists, said : "Chairman Eccles is right in asking that steps be taken to balance the federal budget. But if it is to be done, it will require a lowering of expenditures and not merely an in- crease in taxation. Seymour Harris, associate profes- sor of the economics department, Harvard University, said: "I agree that balancing the budget "They Too Arise," the prize-win- ning play by Arthur A. Miller, '38, was accepted in its present form for production in Detroit by Fred E. i