The Weather Snow, probably heavy, today; continued cold, northerly winds. poll AJW d,& t Batt Editorials An Important Decision . I VOL. XLVII. No. 138 ANq ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS Blum To Buck Hostile Senate On Money Bill Loses Radical Socialists' Support To Minorities Opposing The Measure Johiaux Promiises SupportOf Labor- PARIS, April 6.--(A)-Premier Leon Blum, despite a split in the People's Front majority when his financial control bill staggered through the Chamber of Deputies today, resolved tonight to carry his almost hopeless fight to the hostileSenate. Failure of nearly half of the mem- bers of the Radical Socialist Party -one of the pillars of the People's Front coalition-to support Blum's radical bill led the Premier and his Socialist Ministers to consider resign- ing. Promises Suppot Depties, however, said Leon Jou- haux promised Blum "full support" of his General Confederation of Labor and urged him to go on with the battle to the Senate. Jouhaux is secretary of the Labor Confederation and says he has 5,000,000 followers. Blum will take his demand for power to the Senate Friday, although he knows he faces almost certain de- feat. The Blum bill scraped through the Chamber 311 to 250, but the vote was the smallest on record for Blum's People's Front Cabinet. Nearly half of the Radical Social- ist membership in the lower house de- serted Blum to vote with the Rightist minority or, by abstaining from vot- ing, deprived the Premier ostheir sup- port. Rightists Charge Dictatorship Rightists c.arged that the bill would "lead to establishment of a regime similar to those of Hitler and Mussolini." Among the criticisms hurled at it was former Premier Pierre Flandin's accusation that Blum's demand for decree powers was "a copy of Presi- et . evelt's -'expriment which has failed" "The American experiment must show us that the controlled economy the Premier proposes will not work," Flandin declared. The Premier's bill would give the Government power until July 1 to take by decree any action deemed necessary to provide funds for the expanding national defense program, stabilize the franc and protect the national economy. Detroit D S R Strile Is Called At 4A.M.Today Union Threatens Violence As Special Details Of Police Are Summioned DETROIT, April 6.-(4')- -A strike which would tie up operations of De- troit's Municipal Railway and Bus System was called tonight to begin at 4 a.m. tomorrow. The walkout was voted by Local 26 of the Amalgamat- ed Association of Street and Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employes of America. A standing vote was taken at a closed meeting said to have been at- tended by 700 members of the Union, which claims a membership of 3,300. The Municipal System serves De- troit and some suburbs, although most outlying communities have indepen- dent bus service. The principal cities affected besides Detroit are Highland Park, Hamtramck and Dearborn. The Union ordered carmen to "take their cars to the barns at 4 a.m. and see that no cars pull out." Some members of the union oper- ate city buses, while other bus drivers lbelong to a rival union, the Motor Coach Operators' Association. The strikers said that if members of that Union attempt to drive buses there might be violence. At midnight extra forces of police patrolmen and detectives were ordered to report for duty at once. Rockefeller Award Granted Instructor A fellowship of approximately $1, 500 has been awarded by the Rocke- feller Foundation to Oren Parker Insurgents Capture Government 127 Students Taken Hydrl c Ce rAt Blginto hi Kappa Phi Ijyroelectric entter t alaguter _ . v . .._..... '" 1 i 1 1 wo- Is Barcelona * .ADJI Gave"riYnLArea z- v + ORDOBQ ________ CAD~tMediderranean Sea Loyalist 'Suicide Squads' Hold Approach To Tortosa; Rightists Driven Back In Hand-To-Hand Fighiting As Both Sides Rush Reinforcemtents Eighty-two undergraduates and fifty-nine graduate students were elected to membership in Phi Kappa Phi, senior all-campus honor society. Prof. R. S. Swinton, of the engineer- ing college, secretary, announced last night. Names of those selected for mem- bership in the society will not be made public until the Honors Convo- cation April 30. Students selected from the under- graduate body comprise the upper four per cent of their class, and those selected from. the graduate school include the upper five per cent of their group. An initiation banquet for the new members who have been notified of their selection will be held April 19 in the Union. The speaker for the occasion has not yet been announced. Michigan Team Faces Princeton On Labor Issue Wolverines Favor Grant Of Enforcement Power To Strengthen N L R B Maintaining that the Wagner Act as it is now constituted is incapable of keeping industrial harmony, a Michigan debating team arguing with Princeton University last night in the Union proposed that the National Labor Relations Board be given the power to enforce arbitration, but Ghat the contestants should be "induced" to accept the decision by placing the cost of litigation upon the dissenting side. Under the present act the employer and employees need only meet at a conference table and need not reach a decision in order to be within the law. The Michigan team comprised of Harry Schniderman, '39, and Rob- ert Rosa, '39, said that the power of enforcing arbitration must be given to the NLRB in order to put an end to increasing industrial strife. The Princeton team declared that "no forced decision can be truly effi- cacious in a democa1tic countr'y." J. Harlart Qlev(,land and John Van Ess. Jr., of Princeton maintained that the strike situation is growing HENDAYE, France (At the Span- ish Frontier), April 6.-(IP)-Insurgent dispatches tonight announced Gen- eral Jose Moscardo's Insurgent troops raptured Balaguer, in northeast Spain, the town which controls all Catalan hydroelectric power lines. Balaguer, 15 miles northeast of Lerida, is at the northern end of the Government's defense line thrown up to check the Insurgent sweep toward Barcelona and the Mediterranean. Government forces still retained control of the defense line's southern Reorganization1 For Railroads Seen Necessity Sharfiman Claims I"hl ic ' Ownership Is Possible Soltition For Pirollei s end at Borjas Blancas, but the cap- ture of Balaguer would enable the Insurgents to circle around Govern- ment fortifications to the main Bar- celona highway. Reinforced Government troops streamed down from mountain fast- nesses today in flank attack on the Insurgents hammering at Tortosa to reach the Mediterranean Sea. While "suicide squads" of militia- men held, approaches to the walled city, wave after wave of Government troops struck from the heights which hemmed in General Franco's column. They drove Insurgents out of several' positions previously occupied in bitter hand-to-hand fighting. Both sides sped reinforcements to the battle area, where Government resistance to the Insurgent push brought the fiercest fighting since Franco's forces- started their march to the sea March 9. Insurgents sent new motorized di- visions from Gandesa and Alcaniz.' From the Madrid and Catalan fronts the Government rushed artillery bat- teries to aid Tortosa defenders. Insurgient artillery hurled shells Written Labor Daily Gets Honors In Ayers Contest Pact O rdered The Michigan Daily received hon- orable mention for the less than 10,- 000 circulation class in the eighth U nder exhibition of newspaper typography, it was announced today by N. W. Ayer & Son., Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., adver- Inland Steel Co. Directed tising agency. The Daily was the only r , college paper to be given this recog- CCI Draw (Jp Contracts nition for typographical excellence, In Writing With C 1 O according to the Associated Press. The Newark Evening News was rles 1 In Court;JMay chosen as the most outstanding paper s+ lf a in respect to make-up from among Follow Board Rle she 1,438 journals entered. The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times re- WASHINGTON, April 6,-(P-The ceived honorable mention for papers Roosevelt dicta that an employer of more than 50,000 circulation. should be willing to put into writing Winners in the less than 10,000 any agreement he reaches with labor circulation class were the Lynchberg was woven into a National Labor Re- (Va.) News, the Amsterdam (N.Y.) lations Board order today. A court Evening Record and the Goshen test may ensue. (Ind.) News Democrat. The Board directed the Inland Steel Corporation to draw up a writ- ten contract with the Steel Workers ate Organizing Committee (CIO) if itVage easne reached an agreement with that. union. Refusal to sign the docu- W ins Approval ment under such circumstances was declared a violation of the Wagner IE Labor Relations Act. Ofn o-use roip Written Agreements Urged The Board's position was substan- Bill Mak AvP tially the same as the attitude ex-BesAveragePay pressed by President Roosevelt dur- Present Legal Standard ing the "Little Steel" strike last sum- For Fixig Mininun mer. He said he could not under- F stand why an employer who had reached an oral understahding should WASHINGTON, April 6.-(P)-A be averse to putting it on paper. revised Wage-Hour Bill, designed to Written agreements were a para- make present wage averages the in- mount issue in a strike, involving itial legal standards and establish Inland Steel and three other "Inde- gradually a 40-cent minimum hourly pendent" companies. The strike wage and a 40-hour week, won ap- started after - the companies an- proval of a House Labor Sub-commit- nounced they would sign no pacts tee. with the "irresponsible" SWOC Democrats on the subcommittee Board Finds Violation drafted the measure without Repub- The Wagner Act, the companies lican aid because they had failed for stated, did not require written agree- weeks toreach an agreement with the ments. They said they would deal Minority members. with the SWOC as representative of The bill would prohibit employers its members in their plans. That, engaged in interstate commerce from they said, was as much as the law paying wages lower than the average required. in their industry. But the Labor Board decided oth- Independent Board Created erwise. It would create an independent "Coming to the question of a board empowered to, increase the signed, written agreement as dis- minimum wage not more than five tinguished from an oral agreement, cents an hour. The board could fix we cannot find any justification for the length of the work-week any- drawing a line between the two and where between 40 and 48 hours. holding that an unwillingness to en- The bill would prohibit interstate ter into a written agreement is law- shipment of the products of child ful, but that embodying understand- labor, defined as those made by chil- ing in an oral agreement is an em- dren under 16, or under 18 in hazard- (Continued on Page 6) ous occupations. Rules Committee Decides SU. . Co cedes Chairman Norton (Dem., N.J.) said that the measure would come before Austria's Death the entire House Labor Committee U~ft next Tuesday..- Most members said that even if approved by that group, the Bill'sfate would be decided large Requests Germany Assume ly by the House Rules Committee which has refused consistently to give Austrian War Debt wage-hour legislation the right-of- way to the House floor. WASHINGTON, April 6.--(A)-A As approved by the Labor Subcom- note reluctantly recognizing the con nittec, the Bill would require ap- crete fact that Germany has annexed pointment of the five-member board Austria went from Washington to on a territorial basis-one member Berlin today, accompanied by a bill each from the Northeast, Northwest, for $64,493,480. Southeast, Southwest and Central The bill took the form of a demand Sections. that Germany assume Austria's debts The Board would be required to re- to the United States. port to the President through one of The Washington Government dis- the regular Cabinet members, to be played no enthuiasm in accepting the designated by the President. fact that Austria has disappeared -_ from the ranks of independent na- tions. "The Government of the United lloffnian Attacks States," it told Germany, "finds itself NLRB Personnel under the necessity, as a practical measure, of closing its Legation at Vienna and of establishing a Consu- WASHINGTON, April 6.-- (P)- late General." Representative Hoffman (Rep.,Mich. State Department officials hastened charged today the National Labor Re jto spread the word that the note did lations Board "aided by the Senate not mean recognition in the legal Civil Liberties Committee" is "tyran- sense, but merely acceptance of some- nically destroying industry." thing that had occurred. In a statement for the congression. It was said the acceptance marked al record, Hoffman suggested amend- no departure from American policy. ment of - the Wagner Law and "a The United States, by proclamation housecleaning in the NLRB, purging and teraty, is committed to the prin- it of that type who physically re ciple of withholding recognilton from semble and who intellectually enter the acquisition of territory by armed tain the views of the wire-haired forces. Russian Communists." Sumners Hits i i i i i f I e gl Si , Executive Bill; Asks Changes But Not Defeat House Judiciary Chairman Advocates Amendm ent As Curb On President Opposition Revises Stand On Measure WASHINGTON, April 6.-(P)-An ace card went into play in the gov- ernment reorganization contest today when Representative Sumners (Dem., Tex.) arose to demand drastic altera- tions in the bill empowering Presi- dent Roosevelt to revamp executive agencies. If attempts to amend the bill fail, it should be killed outright, said Sum- ners, who is the influential chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. However, supporters of the present measure, found some satisfaction in Sumners' speech today, in that he did not go along with those who fa- vored killing the measure forthwith. Opposition Rallies The opposition had been rallying its strength for an effort to defeat the bill without proceeding to the stage of amendments. But Sumners said: "I feel now it would be a mistake not to consider this bill. Let's do the best we can to amend it, and then if we can't amend it. as we think it ought to be, let's have the nerve to beat it." Sumners indicated he favored curb- ing the powers the bill would confer on the chief executive. The people, he said, were willing to grant emer- gency authority in emergency periods, but now they instinctively are moving "in the opposite direction." O'Connor To Move Representative O'Connor, (Dem., N.Y.) previously had announced he would move tomorrow to "strike out the enacting clause," a parliamentary maneuver which would strip the bill of all force and effect. O'Connor added that even if the measure were amended and then ap- proved, the amendments-which he called "bait" for opposition votes- could be thrown out in the ensuing conference between House and Sen- ate which would determine the final form of the bill. At the start of today's session, the opposition receded from its stand against anylimitation of debate and 'agreed that general discussion of the measure should close upon adjourn- ment for the night. iaaata cau [NaVa4'%- .. s %s : A. XQ less serious an([ they proposect strong Immediate reorganization of the I into the narrow, winding cobblestone unioizan LUbY iustria aU- railroad industry and possible trans- streets of Tortosa and along the unionization to obtain industrial ac- fer to public ownership were en- coastal highway running south from I c.The ad th at ext visaged by Prof. I. L. Sharfman, Barcelona to the rest of Govern- of capital and labor, so often at ex- chairman of the economics depart- ment Spain. tremes, would not accept an outside ment, in a radio address yesterday decision when they are unable to come entitled "Government and Railroads." I to an agreement themselves. Professor Sharfman served twice =aEd lc To p ey said SLast year on Federal emergency boards 1O L' I Judlit;iprcessbardCean performn lapponed by heeraemrgency b d ~ Oil pointing out that the NLRB cannot, appointed by the Prusdent in. con- F rO lb i u e aaquasi-judicial committe be im- nection with . threatened railroad I For 0 * eiziire asaqai-udilcomtebi- partial. The Princeton team said strikes in New York and California.-tthat the resolution empowering the Pointing out that "the railroad in- ,prom E ports To Board to enforce arbitration would dutry is in the midst of a grave lead either to fascistic compulsion, or crisis" as a result of the depression Go For Settlement will be totally ineffective. and growing competition from other The Michigan team insisted that transportation agencies, he declared ME1ICO CITY, April 6.- T) -Thethe strike situation is growing more that broad reorganization measures Mexican Government announced to- serious. There were 4,600 strikes in were essential t:, a renascence of the day that 20 pei cent of gross receipts 1937 and 28 million work days were industry. from sales abroad of its excess crude lost. they said. The sear'c'li for new avenues of r- oil would be used towarid payment for lief has been intensified, lie said, by proerdties it expropriated from the large number of lines in receiver- American and British companies h 18. or Relations ship and reorganization and the in- Marh 18. nemn ae st creasingly discouraging results of The announcement caie as two current operation. foreign promoters- -Francis W. Rick-!I Ie Cle ett of Great Britain and Bernard E i'he pedommr it facto s in te. Smith, New York stock broker, were plight of the railroads ar te negotiating with Mexican officials toSlihter e o A "These factors,," he said. "are, first, buy a part of the Government's oil I "the drsticcrtal.entidfaeonomic; I output. Com feruance Tomorrow the drastic curtailment of economic Unconfirmed reports were that; activity as a result of the depression, Iiclet and Samit wre near an Dr. Charle, P. Niell, former Secr- and, second, the growing impact of agreement with tie Mexican Gyov- tary of Labor under Presidents Theo- tc cop itnueod oalternave trans- ernment for purchase of some of the dore Roosevelt and Taft, and Prof. _ oil which has been collecting in stor- Sumner H. Slichter of Harvard I I 1 i ®, t, JJI I L ;E l I age tanks since President Lazaro Car- SPANISH SOCIETY MEETS denas issued his expropriation dc- Puerto Rico before 1898 was dc-' creea scribed by Herman Ortez of Ann Ar- The Government press department bor at a meeting of the Sociedad His- disclosed that the President himself panica held last night at the League. had ordered the Government core- Mr. Ortez was formerly in business in pany formed to handle export oil Peurto Rico. Recitation of poems by sales to deposit 20 per cent, of re- members of the club followed his ceipts in the National Bank of Labor lecture. Credit.l University, author of several text- books, ore two of the noted econo- mists who will address the annual Conference of the University Bureau of Industrial Relations to be held to- morrow and Saturday. Other speakers on the program will be Clarence J. Hicks, chairman of the New York Board of Industrial Re- lations and Don H. Taylor, secretary Edwards Talks At Peace Rally Americans Must Conquer Fascism Here, He Says Deprecating reliance on the capital- istic governments of "democracies" to pursue a real peace policy, George Edwards, United Automobile Workers organizer and former student leader, told a meeting of the Michigan Anti- War Committee yesterday in Natural Science Auditorium that workers, farmers, professionals and students must be organized to prevent Ameri- ca's entry into a war by fighting fascism within the United States. Florence Meyers, member of the national executive committee of the American Student Union, told the group that students must clearly in- dicate now that they will not fight in a coming war, instead of following EPresident Roosevelt in his armament expansion. Edwards recalled the attacks upon American imperialism, the munitions industry and yellow journalism that were so popular in the radical peace ,movement a few years ago. He said that the desire of many students today to fight foreign fascism may mean that the freedom of the Ameri- can people will disappear in a blind attempt to secure fredom for workers in other lands. Student's Radio Success Leaves Bostonians Cold They're still stoic in Boston! Myron Wallace, '39, whose cultured tones won him the announcer's job on the Glee Club's broadcast over the Columbia Broadcasting System I Unending Marel Is Swelled By CARL PETERSEN . They come into Ann Arbor, receive a free maneal and a might's lodging, and are on their way to the next town be- fore another day has rolled around, unknown except to Major A. J. Rob- erts, head of the Salvation Army. Each year some 21000 homeless, friendless, penniless men and wonwmt present themselves at Army head- quarters on Washington Ave. for free of Harvard University. Dr. Niell will discuss "Experiences ile ess! in Collective Bargaining," and Mr. Taylor will speak on "The Technique j iI [ of Collective Bargaining." Current Indta-g _'I- o 1.I ' economic conditions and their ef- feet upon industrial relations will be said, the number of transients taken| discussed by Professor Slichter. care of by the Army has more than . tripled. Where in normal times five.c to ten of these unfortuantes enter Scandinavian Countries Ann Arbor each day, he said.25 to it Agree To Avoid Alliances per day have been taxing the facih- ties of the Army to care for then OSLO, Norway, April 6.-(")-The "These nn, who have come to us four Scandinavian countries agreed since the recession," Major Roberts tonight to stay aloof from "all group- said, "have been of a higher charac= ings of powers which might be formed ter generally than the average tran- in Europe" and, in case of war be- Government Credit Expansion Caused By Business Pressure WASHINGTON, April 6.--t'-The recent "Little Business" Conference,I for all its turbulent scenes, can beI credited with inducing a Congress torn with factionalism to vote all but unanimously for a billion-and-a-half dollar expansion of Government, credit to meet the business recession. The Glass Bill authorizing the Re- construction Finance Corporation to make long-termnloans for states, cities ate didn't bother to make even anI audible record of its approval. What many political observers see in the size of that vote is an answer of a sort to President Roosevelt's ef- fort to center the Congressional cam- paigning on issues of broad national policy. He is held to be seeking a new public test on his New Deal Reform- and-Recovery Platform. It is an almost accepted rule of the . 1