The Weather Fair today; tomorrow cloudy, snow flurries in north; no de- cided change in temperature. L Lt igaul ~Iat Caibinet Crisis in Franee. Campds Periodicals.. . VOL. XLVIII. No.81 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JAN. 15, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS Bonnet Seeks To Form New, Popular Front Government Former Finance Minister Confers With President Lebrun And Chautemps Guardsmen Patrol Streets Of Paris PARIS, Jan. 14.-()-Georges Bonnet, diplomat and financial ex- pert, tonight tried to pull together the shattered remnants of the People's Front and form a new government to solve the labor and economic prob- lems that forced Camille Chautemps out of office. Bonnet, Finance Minister in Chau- temps' cabinet and like him Radical- Socialist, promised to give President Albert Lebrun his answer tomorrow. He conferred late into the night with political leaders of the govern- ment coalition which collapsed early today. Two Refused Post At least two other persons refused the post before Bonnet accepted the task of whipping the Communists, Socialists and Radical Socialists once again into the People's Front that ruled France for 19 months. The still-spreading wave of strikes and the threat to France's prestige among her already wavering allies in Central Europe hastened Lebrun's ef- forts to obtain a new government. In the "red region" of northern France, 10,000 workers demonstrated their "vigilance" and support 'of the Communists outside ' Valenciennes metal factories. The Communist sup- port of strikers and insistence on for- eign exchange control was the im- mediate cause of Chautemps' down- fall. Mobile guardsmen, armed with car- bines, patrolled the streets of Paris. The Bank of France suspended for- eign exchange trading and gold and silver dealings. The National Committee of the People's Front adopted a resolution saying : "In face of the domestic, and for- eign fascist menace, only a govern- ment of the People's Front deter- mined to apply its program can reply to the clearly manifested will of the country." Bonnet Goes To Chautemps Bonnet went straight from his in- terview with Lebrun to a conference with Chautemps. Bonnet, 48 years old, was ambas- sador to Washington until last June when he was recalled to take the finance portfolio in the second Peo- ple's Front government. He would not disclose any plans he might have to replace the Coi- munist support of the Chautemps re- gime in the event that extreme left wing of the People's Front refused to follow his opposition to control of foreign exchange. Exchange control is a Communist objective. Bonnet's consultations with Lebrun were understood to have been predi- cated on maintenance of freedom of foreign exchange. The President tried unavailingly to have Chautemps reassume the pre- miership, and then tendered the in- vitation to Chautemps' war minister,' Edouard Daladier, another Radical Socialist, who likewise declined. Soph Officers Modify Plans Unable To Revamp Student Government Completely Modification of the plans for a1 complete revamping of student gov- ernment which featured the sopho- more literary college Washtenaw Party's platform has been necessary but the basic idea has not been for- gotten, Phil Westbrook, class presi- dent, announced yesterday. The plan, which called for student government under a bicameral stu- dent legislature, proved impossible, Westbrook said, adding that a tenta- tive program to replace it has been completed, announcement of which I will be made later. At the same time Westbrook an- nounced class committee chairmen for the year. They are: Stan Con-' rad, finance; Stan Swinton, publicity; Don Treadwell, cooperatives; Jim McDonald, student government and Bob Mix, minstrel show. A picnic committee chairman will be appoint- i i i ;i J I E I t t t 1 1 c No Basw Split It Popular Front In France, Prof. Heneman Says Mutual Suspicion Among mand a majority in the Chamber of Deputies. Component Parties Is The immediate cause of the fall One Reason For Break early yesterday morning of the Pop- ular Front cabinet under Camille By S. R. KLEIMAN Chautemps, a Radical Socialist, was the refusal of the Communists to Pressure of interest groups on the agree to vote confidence in the Cab- three lOlitical components of the inet, he said, explaining that the French Popular Front, coupled with Premier in seeking a vote of confi- increasing tension growing out of mu-dec rcomndatinoed tual suspicion, is more responsible for strikes by compulsory arbitration, and the fall of the Chautemps cabinet opposed exchange control attributing yesterday than a fundamental split the weakness of the franc to labor over policy, in the opinion of Prof. difficulties. Harlow J. Heneman of the political It is generally assumed that Chau- science department. temps' attitude toward labor is dic- He said that a knowledge of French tated by Finance Minister Bonnet, politics in the past makes it seem who comes from a business family probable that the result of the present and believes in orthodox finance, Pro- crisis merely will be a new Popular fessor Heneman said. Bonnet hopes1 Front cabinet headed by another to frighten the country by pointing Radical Socialist. (The Popular Front to the flow of gold out of France is a coalition of Communists, Social- and the fall of the franc, Professor= ists and Radical Socialists, reading Heneman believes; in order to elimi- from left to right politically.) nate strikes.0 Professor Heneman does not think TherSocialists and Communists it likely that the Socialists will sup- propose to stop the flow of money port a new coalition eliminating the out of the country by exchange re- Communists and substituting the strictions, claiming that the subse-1 group immediately to the right of quent stabilization of the franc would the Radical Socialists, the Left Demo- be sufficient to restore business' and crats. The one other possibility, that (Continued on Page d)t of a coalition of all parties to the -- right of and including the Radical So- - 3Qi te cialists without either the Commu- aist ihu ihrteCmu hsts or the Socialists, he deems very remote. To FaceVarsitvt "It is hard to imagine the Radical.Y Socialists, the party of storekeepers ("n "ard Battle and farmers, cooperating with big U.S. Protests JapViolation Of Property) 1.00,000 Communists Fight Japs In North. WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-(P)--The United States has protested to Japan once more against violation of Amer- ican property rights in China. The State Department announced today that Consul John M. Allison at Nanking had notified the Japanese Embassy in Nanking that Japanese soldiers continued to enter American property there and remove goods arid employes of American institutions, despite a previous American, protest. Allison cabled that the soldiers did this without giving notice of. or rea- sons for, their action.! Japs And To Recapture Tsining Drive Southward Lunghai Railway Plaiywrijght (lips Cit l'For Rem11arks 1Unlkind NEW YORK, Jan. 14.-(IP)-The physiognomy of Jack Kirkland, the playwright, bore evidencetoday- though slight-of the vigor with which friends of Richard Watts, Jr., defend the integrity of his dramatic criticism. Kirkland wrote the stage version of John Steinbeck's "Tortilla Flat," which opened here Wednesday night. Watts, who is critic for the New York Herald Tribune, saw the play, didn't like it and said so in print. So, encountering Watts at dinner time last night, Kirkland clipped him on the jaw, but he made the error of choosing the artists and writers restaurant for his arena. The place seemed to seethe with Watts' par- tisans when the critic dropped to his knee. iAccounts are that Kirkland caught his share of flying fists. Michigan Team Defeats Gopher Roosevelt Demands The Abolition OfAll Holding Comipanies Insuxrgents omb C o Rern men t' r ain HENDAYE, France, At the Spanish Frontier, Jan. 14.-(P)-Insurgent bombing planes today were reported to have destroyed an entire train bringing up Government reinforce- ments to the Teruel front in eastern Spain. The Insurgent dispatches said the Government was moving new troops into the hotly-contested sector in anticipation of a new Insurgent of- fensive. Teruel was captured by the Government late in December in a drive that caught the Insurgent gar- rison by surprise. The Insurgent offensive, border ad- vices indicated, was likely to get under way as soon as the rains let up. There were also reports of aplan for a direct assault on Madrid, the long-besieged capital 135 miles west of Teruel. It was generally admitted, however, even by the Insurgents, that considerably more than 100,000 men would be necessary for such an at- tempt. UAW Pledwed Sextet, l 2l To] business," Professor Heneman said, pointing out that their main principle is opposition to bigness, wealth and privilege. Both coalitions, he com- mented, are mathematical possibili- ties, however, since either could com- Strik~e Settled At New Haven UAW And Foundry Owner Reach Agreement NEW HAVEN, Jan. 14.-()-A la- bor dispute at the New Haven Foun- dry, marked by three outbreaks of violence, was settled tonight with an announcement that an agreement "satisfactory to both parties" had been reached. The announcement was made by Sumner D. Lamkins, owner of the foundry, and Burt Harris, organizer for the United Automobile Workers of America, at the conclusion of a peace conference which opened at' ndon. The company said it would reem- ploy 14 workers the union contended were discriminated against when the foundry reopened Tuesday after a' layoff. The UAWA charged that sen- iority rules were violated in recalling employes. French Editor To Speak Here Prevost Lectures Monday On Work Of du Gard Jean Prevost, prominent French1 journalist who is touring the United States, will give a University lecture at 4:15 p.m. Monday in the Natural Science Auditorium on "Roger Martin du Gard, His Life and Work." The lecture will be given in French. Prevost has been editor of "L'In- transigeant," influential Paris news- paper, and of "Europe," international political and social encyclopedia. He is studying social life in the United States as the first recipient of the Jesse Isador Straus Traveling Fellow- ship. This is a permanent fellow- ship established under the will of the late ambassador to France and its purpose is to bring well-known French' leaders to America for study. Martin du Gard, a personal friend of Prevost's, has come into public prominence as a recent winner of the Nobel Prize for literature, for his book, "Les Thibault." The first volume of this work was published in the 1920's and the last has just come off the press. "Les Thibault," dealing with one family and all of its psychological and social ramifications, has been translated in- to English. It is the best-known modern example of the French serial- novel.{ Ickes Attacked By Soth In Anti-Lynch Bill Debate' WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-(W)- Some Southern Senators fighting the Michigan Hopeful Of 3rd Straight Big Ten Victory; Nine Men Make Trip j Undefeated Michigan hits the rocky ' Big Ten basketball trail again tonight1 as the title seeking Wolverines tangle with Minnesota's slightly tarnished co-champions at Minneapolis. Nettled by two defeats in as many starts, the Gophers will strive to annex their initial Conference win against the high riding visitors, twice victorious in Big Ten strife. The Wolverines have chalked up victories over Illinois and Ohio State in impressive fashion while Wiscon- sin and Indiana have whipped the Gophers. The Michigan squad departs im-I mediately after the game tonighti bound for Madison, Wis., and a sec- ond week-end tilt with Wisconsin; on Monday. Nine men left at 5:20 p.m. yesterday in the team's firsi, invasion of the opposing Big Ten camps. The follow-' ing made the trip: Captain John Townsend, Jim Rae, Herm Fishman, Ed Thomas, Leo Beebe, Russ Dobson, Charley Pink, Dave Wood, and Dan Smick. Absent from the roster was Bill Barclay, the reliable senior, whose practice injury of Wendesday will probably incapacitate him for the remainder of the season. Wood, speedy Detroit sophomore, substituted for Barclay on the squadt list, but it is unlikely that he will see1 duty. Coach Franklin C. Cappon, Wolver- i ine mentor, refused to predict the re- sults of the two game trip. "If we get by Minnesota, we'll have a good chance against Wisconsin," was all he would say. The Gophers are a better team than the averages show. They won high praise from Eastern critics in their pre-season games during the Christmas holidays, and are recog- nized as one of the leading threats forc the Conference title again this year. Leading the home squad will be John Kundla, the brilliant Minnesotat forward. Generally recognized as oneP of the outstanding men in the loop, Kundla tallied 106 points in his soph- omore year last season to finish fiftht among the Conference scorers. He1 has been off form as far as scoring is (Continued on Page 3) i. 1 f' ij4 I { , 1 I l 1 , I Y f 1 1 7 t ' J Z C The employes of American institu-j tions mentioned in Allison's dispatch Allen Scores Two Goals today were belD:ved to be Chinese. The American property referred to lies Unassisted; Mariucci And outside the Embassy compound. Smith Start Fist Fight SHANGHAI, Jan. 15.-(Saturday) MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 14.- UP) - -P)-Japanese announced today Michigan evened its series with M.- their forces in Shantung Province had nesota last night, defeating the Go- driven through strategic Tsining phers, 2-1. The contest was marked southward toward the Lunghai Rail- by a fist fight in which players of way and had occupied/Tangchiakuo. both teams participated. They said the Chinese 29th Army Michigan lost no time in scoring which had defended Tsining was re- in the first period, but Minnesota treating toward Kinshan, 27 miles to evened the contest a little more than the south. a minute later. The third period was Chinese press dispatches conceded only two minutes old when the vic- the Japanese were in possession of tors counted their second goal. Tsining which was reported deserted Smack Allen, center, scored both by civilians and virtually destroyed Michigan goals unassisted. In the by gunfire. first period he took the puck on a The Chinese have been recruiting solo dash, dashing through the Go- new troops in the central provinces pher defense to beat Petrich. at a hectic pace and were reported The Gophers sent four men down to have enrolled 750,000 in the past the ice immediately, and Mariucci six weeks. These men, with only the took a rebound to give Wallace a scantiest training are being put into pass in front of the net, and the lat- action against the some 100,000 ter counted at 16:53. trained Japanese troops in southern I The second period was devoid of Shantung and northern Kiangsu scoring, but a fight enlivened the pr ovinces.stands. Mariucci and Bucko Smith PEIPING, Jan. 14.-MP)-Foreign started it, both clinching and rolling observers today estimated 100,000 on the ice. Then other players on Chinese Communist and irregular each team joined. The two starters troops were operating against the were given major penalties. Japanese armies attempting to con- After two minutes and 13 seconds solidate their conquest of North of the third period, Allen again took China. the puck in mid-ice, and dashed These troops-Japanese admit they through the Gopher defense to score number at least 30,000-have been unassisted. concentrated mostly in Shansi Prov- The Gophers had chances to score ince but some have approached to when Michigan had three penalties within a few miles of Peiping, seat of called in the first nine minutes, but the Japanese-inspired "provisional they were unable to cage the puck. government of China." (Summary on Page 3) One unit of the Red Army fought a - five-hour battle with Japanese troops Hull A nswers Tuesday near Mentoukou, 20 miles they w driven off. Protest OfTv s Unofficial Japanese advices said the Communists killed a train guard and wounded several Japanese, including Says Dodd Has Civil Right two newspaper correspondents, yes- To Criticize Hitler terday by dropping grenades from high cliffs on a train travelling on WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-I')- the narrow gauge railroad from Shih- Secretary Hull met an official Ger- chiachung, Hopeh province, to Tai- man protest against a bitter anti- yuan, Shansi province capital. Hitler speech by former Ambassador William E. Dodd today with an ex- MSC (Geets Large planation that American citizens en- C Ge Ijoy the right of free speech. Rackham Fund Gift Hans Heinrich Dieckhoff, the Ger- man Ambassador, visited the State EAST LANSING, Jan. 14.-UP)-. Department to tell Hull that Dodd, Michigan State College officials dis- who recently resigned from the dip- closed today that the college has re- lomatic corps after five years as ceived a $500,000 trust endowment for American envoy at Berlin, had in- agricultural and elm i sulted Hitler in an address in New, To Acceptance Of Wage Cuts Ford To Return 10,000 Men To Work Monday,' More In Near Future DETROIT, Jan. 14.-UP)----Cooper- ation-even to the point of accepting wage cuts-with managements of au- tomotive plants forced to "extreme position" by competitive conditions was offered today by Homer Martin, president of the CIO-affiliated United Automobile Workers of America. Commenting on wage reductions ranging from 5 to 20 per cent an- nounced by Gar Wood Industries, Inc., Martin said the union would not oppose such actions when manage- ments "can show that they have to cut wages to meet competition else- where." Wood officials said the company's employes had voted to accept the re- ductions which return wages to 1936 ,levels after they were informed the only alternative was to break up the) company's Detroit business and move portions of it to lower wage centers. The Wood plant here was said to be employing 250 of a normal 1,000 work- ers. A boost in automotiveemployment came when the Ford Motor Company today notified 10,000 men who were laid off Dec. 23, to return to work Monday. Company officials said -ad- ditional groups will be called back "from time to time as soon as the assembly line gets into shape again." Assemblies at automobile plants in the United States and Canada this week were estimated at 65,735 by Ward's automotive reports, an in- crease from 54,084 in the preceding week. The survey said "the general belief in automotive circles now is that spring will see a definite upturn in general business conditions." ' 'S- Asks Death Of All Such Financial, Industrial And Utility Combinations Stalement Startles World Of Business WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.- ()- President Roosevelt startled the busi- ness world today with an emphatic call for the abolition of holding com-, panies in all lines of industry and finance. He told his semi-weekly press con- ference in unmistakable terms that his ultimate aim was the elimination of such, concerns not only among the power utilities, as now partially pro- vided by law, but in banking and oth- er business and industrial fields. Wall Street was amazed. Experts on corporation finance were quick to say that more than half the compan- ies whose securities are widely held are holding companies, in some de- gree at least. Wall Street Objects Of the latter, they said, many ac- tually are operating companies own- ing outright control of subsidiaries, and thus differ from the pyramided type of holding company to which Mr. Roosevelt has objected in the past in the utilities field. Regarding the President's criticism of holding companies in the baking field, and his attack upon "remote control" of local banks, they estimat- ed that four companies control banks having assets of nearly $3,000,000,000. When or how Mr. Roosevelt pro- posed to carry out his idea was left to conjecture. Some thought he might touch up- on the subject in his forthcoming message to Congress on "harmful" business practices. The message on business practices may be expected in about 10 days, the Presid2LQ jjt dicated. Asked if he intended to use the taxing power, the President replied that he had not arrived at that point yet. However, he said, there were various ways of doing away with hold- ing companies without forcing them into bankrupty. Held 'Peace Conference' Mr. Roosevelt's views were given in connection with a detailed analysis of ,A memorandum left with him Nov. 23 by Wendell L. Willkie, President of the Commonwealth and Southern Corporation. His talk with Willkie was the first of a series of so-called "peace" conferences with utility heads, designed to bring about ex- tensive private utility construction. Referring to his Jackson Day speech, the President said the utili- ties want the "four-inch tail" legal- ized for all-time, and that can never happen. He reiterated that owners of $600,- 000,000 of electric utilities securities controlled most of the total of $13,- 000,000,000 of such securities oustand- ing. . A reporter asked if he was leading up to elimination of all holding com- panies. He replied that he was. Utility Head Protests NEW YORK, Jan. 14.-(P)--C. W. Kellogg, president of Edison Elec- tric Institute, tonight branded as in- accurate the statement of President Roosevelt that utility holding com- panies are "a 4-inch tail wagging a 96-inch dog." "The statement has been made by the President (as reported in the press) that ' 600,000,000 of holding company capital controls a $13,000,- 000,000 public utility industry' where by 4 per cent thus controls 96 per cent," said Kellogg. "This statement is incorrect in two respects. "In the first place, the $13,000,000,- 000 total includes all of those proper- ties to a vast total which are not I owned or controlled by holding com- panies. In the second place it gives a false impression of the balance of the industry." Item Veto Power Attacked By House WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-()- Angry members of the House Ap- propriations Committee joined today in an almost unprecedented "post mortem" rebellion against legisla- +., ~nnl nnu uluua, lluunuurglc research from the Horace H. Rackham and Mary R. Rackham Fund! Robert S. Shaw, president of the college, said the gift would establish the Horace H. Rackham Research Endowment of the Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Science. York last night. Life n Fay rCeature In particular, he was aroused by V 'St S*mTe Dodd's statements that under Hitler S i eam "almost as many personal opponents were killed in five years as Charles II. (King of England) executed in 20 years of the 17th century," and that Hitler is "now more absolute than any mediaeval emperor of Ger- ". many.- Labor Has Right To Adequate Hull replied that Dodd had re- signed his ambassadorship, was now a private citizen and therefore en- ef'curity Pa inntsU6H:1 er Savsjoyed the freedom of speech guaran- teed him by the Constitution. Asserting that unemployment was the inevitable result of competitive enterprise, Prof. William Haber of the economics department made a strong plea for social security reforms which stress adequate payments to workers rather than abstract principles, in a radio address over Station WJR yes- terday. Presented by the "University of the Air" as a part of its forum on the World Today, the talk was read by J. J. Josephs, Professor Haber's as- sistant. Professor Haber is in Wash- ington over the week-end taking nart It is not five months, but eight years House C omnittee old." Of these unemployed, Professor Uroes TaxCh Haber declared, it seems unlikely that Changes 5,000,000 will ever be absorbed by in-' dustry now or at any other' time. WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.- (P)- These men, largely the carry-over Newly-completed tax revision recom- from the last depression, are mostly mendations should stimulate busi- unemployable, he said. "They are too ness substantially without lowering old, they have been on relief too long, the government's income, a House tax they are handicapped by injury or sub-committee declared today. they have lost their skills. This It handed to the full House Ways 'hard core,' more than twice the hu- and Means Committee 63 recom- man wreckage produced by any other mendations for tax changes, includ- anrcoi-nmm xWill f 1 h ing pronosals for extensive modifi- Possibiilty that "Life" magazine will run a feature on Michigan's long- time champion swimming team de- veloped yesterday when Joseph Kast- ner, associate editor, informed David Zeitlin, '40, Daily sports writer, that a photographer would be sent from Chicago to get pictures within two weeks. Zeitlin has been in contact with the magazine for a month and finally "sold" them on the idea of a feature) on the teams and its training meth-1 ods. "Life" will probably also fea- ture the team's record, Zeitlin said, for what Kastner called "outstand- ing" performance among U.S. col- leges. Michigan's team has won the National Intercollegiate Title for 10 out of the last 14 years. Prof. Moser To Preside At Speech Meeting Today Prof. Henry M. Moser of the speech n-r orn-an ni- na, ii cti a. -,nn 4 n#.-1