The Weather Lower Michigan : scat tered thundershowers, cooler in ex- treme west today, L C- Sir iga Iaili Editorials Hurrah For The Abundant Life..d A Better Riot Squad .. . Official Publication Of The Summer Session L. XVI No. 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHiGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1936 PRICE 5 CENTS -_ _ _ Wa rrant Is Issued For M.rs. Baker Rapp To Arraign Officer's Wife In Court Today For Murder Of Roomner Accused Reiterates 'Accidental' Stand Charge Made After 2-Day Investigation; Victim Was Clarence Schneider A warrant charging Mrs. Betty Baker, 30 years old, wife of Officer Albert K. Baker of the Ann Arbor police force, with first degree murder in the shooting of Clarence Schnei- der, 24 years old, a roomer at her home, was ordered last night by Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp, after a two-day investigation of the killing. Rapp planned to arraign Mrs. Baker in Justice Court on the charge yesterday, but postponed the arraign- ment until today at the request of Attorney Frank B. DeVine, who has been retained by Officer Baker to de- fend his wife,- because DeVine had had no opportunity to discuss the case with his client. Reading To Arraign Her The arraignment, according to the Prosecutor, will probably take place before Judge Harry W. Reading. Mrs. Baker reiterated yesterday that the shooting was entirely acci- dental, as she had only meant to "scare" young Schneider, a waiter at Davenport's Restaurant, for using; abusive language with her in public,I and her policeman husband asserted that he meant 'to fight the case to a conclusion to clear her name, be- lieving steadfastly in her innocence and her claim that it was all an accident. Victim 'Afraid' Of Her Meanwhile Harold Schneider, the dead man's younger brother, related that his brother had been afraid of Mrs. Baker because, Clarence had told him, she had once before threat- ened him, allegedly for going out with other women. Mrs. Baker, it was learned today,; was engaged by theatres in Detroit for a period of about a year in 1927 and 1928 as a featured dancer, prev- ious to her marriage, and later gave tap-dancing lessons in Ann Arbor. She won a popularity contest at a. local theatre about six years ago. Worked At Davenports Schneider at one time worked for Western Union as a messenger boy, and later at Davenport's, a local beer- parlor, where he was employed at the time of his death. His mother was killed by a Detroit streetcar last De- cember, and since that time Mrs. Baker, . according to her statement has been looking after him in such matters as buying suits. It was to make arrangements to go shopping with him for a shirt that she visited him at' Davenport's at 4:30 p.m. on the day of the shooting, at which time, according to her story, he grew abusive and told her she "couldn't come in there and get hard-boiled with him." Circuit Court trial on the case prob- ably will not be held until Nov. 4 at the earliest, unless the defense and prosecution desire especially to rush the case through, inasmuch as Judge George W. Sample has been ill lately, and is at present resting following the trial of William Pad- gett, convicted yesterday of a police slaying. Jurors for the October term of Circuit Court will be drawn Oct. 1, but will not be called until afterI the national election. Telling Truth Brings Boy Scouts Into Courtj ANGELS. CAMP, Calif., July 1.-OP) -Because a Boy Scout's "honor is his bond," 16 youths will face charges in Berkeley Juvenile Court because of a fire which swept 16,000 acres of grazing land near Copperopolis at a loss of $30,000. Thirty frightened Scouts, occu- pants of a truck from which fire- crackers were tossed, starting the fire Saturday, were confronted by D. S. Seaman, camp director, and Horace Kennedy of Sacramento, state fire# Gets Life "erm WILLIAM H. PADGETT Plan Three-Day Conference On Religion Here Will Begin July 12 Under Direction Of Blakeman; Pauck To Lecture The third annual Conference on Religion will be held during the Sumer Session July 12, 13 and 14, under the direction of Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, counselor in religious education. Prof. Wilhelm Pauck of the Chi- cago Theological Seminary and au- thor of "The Church Against the World" will give a series of lectures1 on "Our Culture and the Outlook for{ Christianity." Other talks will be given by members of the faculty and a series of panel discussions will be held.- The conference will open at 8 p.m. July 12 with an address by Professor Pauck on "Critical Issues of Contem- porary Culture." Two other talks will be given by Professor Pauck, one at 8 p.m. July 13 and the other at 3 p.m. July 14. "Religious Conflicts, in Germany" will be the topic of the second lecture and "Present Day Culture and the Outlook for Chris- tianity" is the subject selected for his last talk. Prof. Leroy L. Waterman, head of the department of Oriental languages and literatures, will also deliver two, addresses on the general topic of; "The Bible's Need of Fresh Transla- tions" and "Unrealized Spiritual Re- sources in the Bible." "Epistles of Paul in Third Century Manuscripts" will be the subject of two lectures to be given by Prof. Henry A. Sanders, chairman of the department of speech and general linguistics. His lectures will be il- lustrated with some rare manuscripts from his and others' research. The series of panel discussions will be under the direction of Prof. Theo- phile Raphael of the Health Service, Prof, Howard Y. McClusky of the School of Education and Dr. Blake- man. Topics to be discussed include "The Minister in his Community," "Our Youth and the Church," "Religion and Mental Health." A symposium will be held on the subject of "Com- mon Problems in Religion and Psy- chiatry." Educeation Club Committee Wi1l Plan Program A program committee of seven members was chosen to plan a sched- ule for the Summer Session by the Women's Education club in its or- ganization meeting held last night in the Union. The committee is composed of El- eanor Welsh, chairman, Genevieve Wilkowski, Marjorie Kleinecke, Kar- in Ostman, Claudine Steffel, Irene Morris and Noma Reed, and plans, according to Miss Welsh, to arrange a program of recreational activities and hobbies to carry through the en- tire Summer Session. Some of the ideas which the com- mittee has developed, Miss Welsh said, are finger painting, canoeing, riding, cycling, folk-dancing and a tennis tournament. R n+atn+ th dis iu mm lwa a n-_ Padgett Given Life Sentence In Stang Case Found Guilty Of Murder In First Degree After Only Hour's Deliberation Receives Maxinum Penalty Under Law Judge Sample Gives Killer Hard Labor And Solitary Confinement A Circuit Court jury of eight men and four women yesterday returned a verdict of guilty after less than an hour's deliberation in the trial of William Padgett, alias "Shorty" Hay- den, charged with first degree mur- der for the shooting of Officer Clif- ford A. Stang in a holdup of Conlin & Wetherbee's clothing store here March 21, 1935. Immediately after the verdict Padgett received from Judge George W. Sample a sentence of life im- prisonment at Marquette Prison, under hard labor and in solitary con- finement. This is the maximum sen- tence which can be given under Michigan law. Question Of Identification The trial turned mostly on the con- flict between the identification of Padgett by James Akers, '38, Everett, Pa., a customer in the store at the time of the holdup and shooting, and Herbert T. Wetherbee, part-owner of the store, on the one hand, and the defendant's own statement that he was "somewhere out East" at the time on the other. Padgett produced de- positions placing him in Baltimore March 13, but was unable to prove his whereabouts for the date of the crime. In his charge to the jury Judge Sample advised them first that they did not need to abide by his opinion, and then continued with a declara- tion that the two identifications should be given more credence than Padgett's testimony. 'The only thing this jury has to find is, is this defendant the right man?" Judge Sample commented in his charge to the jury. "The testi- mony of Mr. Akers and M. Wether- bee convinced the court that they were telling the truth and the con- servative truth." Continuing with reference to Padgett's own testi- mony, the Judge added, "I don't be- lieve a word of his testimony unless he just had to tell the truth." Hinted At Severe Sentence He closed his charge by hinting that in the event of a verdict of "guilty," his disposition of the case! would be such "as to make certain people in this state lead different lives." It was Judge Sample who in the summer of 1931 sentenced the three Ypsilanti torch murderers to four life imprisonments each at Marquette, al- so under hard labor and in solitary confinement. In the closing arguments to the jury yesterday morning Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp attacked Padgett's testimony as unreliable, pointing out that he had changed details of his original statements when he was put on the stand, and that his own testi- mony had been broken down in at least two points under cross-exam- ination. Lehman Hits Discrepancies Defense Counsel Arthur C. Leh- man in' his address to the jury stressed discrepancies in the descrip- tions Akers and Wetherbee had made in their identifications of the de- fendant, and claimed that those dis- crepancies should in themselves give rise to a 'reasonable doubt" that Padgett had committed the crime. In his redirect argument Rapp branded Padgett as a "demon" with "murder in his mind," and again at- tacked his veracity by pointing out that he had failed to tell the truth about "the smallest possible matter," his birthplace. In passing sentence Judge Sample complimented the jury on their ver- dict, and declared that there was "not a millionth of a chance" that Pad- gett was innocent of the murder charge. The 35-year-old ex-convict will probably be held here for further questioning about his two accom- plices before being taken to Mar- quette to begin his sentence. Al- though eligible for parole in 17 years under Michigan law. he has 11 years '35-36 Deficit Total Exceeds Four Billions U. S. Operating Expenses For Year Just Ended Set Peace-Time Record Gross Government Debt Is 34 1a lions Recoverable Assets Offset Debt Total To Extent Of $8,750,000,000 WASHINGTON, July 1.-(/')- Speaking in round figures, Secretary Morgenthan tonight placed' the treasury's deficit for the fiscal year ended last midnight at $4,400,000,000 --the largest such red ink figure in the nation's peace-time history. His statement, made in a nation- wide radio address and couched in. the simplest, non-technical terms al- so fixed the public debt at the fi- nancial year-end at $33,750,000,000. Against this, he listed figures termed an "offset," or "recoverable1 assets," which added to $8,750,000,000. Apparently, important items are to+ be revealed on the treasury's daily statement tomorrow-as of the close+ of business June 30. Today's state-! ment, dated June 29, showed a deficit+ of $4,727,000,000, and a gross in- debtedness of $33,841,000,000.' One possible explanation was of-1 fered tonight by a responsible treas- ury official. He said that Morgen- thau had excluded debt retirements' from his list of expenditures on the' ground they had no place in the op-' erating deficit of the government. Ordinarily, these expenditures are carried on the treasury's daily state- ment under the heading of general' expenses, and through June 29 had amounted to $403,000,000. Morgenthau likened his speech to the chairman of a board making his, annual report to stockholders. The plans of government as well as, business, he asserted, are "subject to unforeseen a n d extraordinary events." In this connection, he de- clared at a later point that if the funds for paying the bonus were left out of consideration, the deficit for! the fiscal year would be $2,700,000,- 000. "We may derive real encourage- ment and satisfaction from these facts," he said in conclusion. "lna- tional income is rising; as a result Federal revenue is increasing; Fed-! eral expenditures are on the decline, and the nation's business is continu- ing to show steady improvement." After noting at the outset that events that could not be foreseen had thrown the budget estimate made nearly two years ago out of line, he continued: "Scarcely had the present Con- gress met last January when two events completely changed the bud- get outlook. First ,the prospective revenues were cut down as a result of the decision of the Supreme Court that the Agricultural Adjustment Act was unconstitutional. This meant a loss to the treasury, in 1936, of near- ly half a billion dollars. City Community Fund Budget Is Cut 10 Per Cent, Necessitated By Failure Of Last November's Drive To Reach Goal At a meeting of the Board of Di- rectors of the Ann Arbor Community Fund held Tuesday night it was de-, cided to make a ten per cent cut in the budget for the last six months of the fiscal year, according to Everett R. Hames, Executive Secretary of the! Community Fund. The decision to make the cut, which will be apportioned among the va- rious Fund agencies on a pro rata basis, was reached following recom-1 mendations of the move by the Boards of Directors of the agencies themselves, and was necessitated by the results of last November's drive, which fell $7,500 short of the goal of $55,000. The budget has now been reduced by a total of 15 per cent for +he vpnor Weller To Lecture On Knowledge Of Cn cr' Dr. Carl V Weller, head of the department of pathology at Uni- versity Hospital, will give the fourth in the series of Summer Session lectures at 5 p.m. today in Natural Science auditorium, on "WhatbEvery Layman Should Know About Cancer." Dr. Weller came to the Univer- sity as an instructor in surgery in 1911, was made assistant professor of pathology in 1916, associate pro- fessor in 1921, and later full pro- fessor and head of the depart- ment. Law Professor FromHarvard To Speark Here G. G. Wilson Will Again Open International Law Series Of Lectures Prof. George Grafton Wilson of Harvard will again open the series of public lectu'es annually sponsored as a part of the five-week program of the Summer Session on Teaching In- ternational Law at 8 p.m. Monday, July 6 when he speaks on "Twentieth Century International Law." Professor Wilson, who is a teacher of international law at Harvard Uni- versity, is now serving on the coun- cil of the international law parley, which is under the auspices of the Carnegie Endowment for Interna- tional Peace, for the fifth consecutive year. This lecture series will be continued on succeeding Monday nights by other members of the teaching staff of the international law session, who will discuss varied aspects of the sub- ject. Internationally recognized as an authority in his field, Professor Wil- son has on numerous occasions rep- resented this country at international conferences including the Interna- tional Naval Conference of 1908-09 and the International Commission of the United States and the Neth- erlands in 1928. 39 Enroll For Kellogg Course In Child Study Camp At Pine Lake Jointly Sponsored By University' And Foundation Another phrase of the University Summer Session opened activity Tuesday when 39 students' registered for the two educational courses of- fered at the W. K. Kellogg Camp at Pine Lake, near Doster, which are jointly sponsored by the Summer Ses- sion and the Kellogg Foundation. The courses deal with the psychol- ogy of child development and the education of young children, and the students enrolled have been specially selected for the work from the area served by the Michigan Health Proj- ect, and from each college and uni- versity in the state. Approximately 500 children, in three shifts of three weeks each, will attend the camp during the summer, and the students will act as coun- sellors in the camp, giving them an opportunity to integrate theory and practice. The first group of children arrived Monday. About 600 books relating to the work have been made available at the camp library for reference and re- search reading. Prof. Willard C. Olson of the School of Education is in charge of organ- ization and instruction at the camp, and Miss Esther Belcher and Fred Miller will be resident instructors. E. H. Martindale is camp director, and Gerald Bradley will act as sen- ior counsellor for boys, with Miss Ruth Sherwood senior counsellor for girls. The course will run for 10 weeks. Students To Tour University Today The first University excursion for the Summer Session, to begin at 2 p.m. this afternoon, will be a con- ducted tour of the campus for new students attending school this sum- mer and there will h no charge Yale Professor Will Speak At Luncheon Prof, E. H. Sturtevant, visiting pro- fessor of linguistics from Yale Uni- versity, will be the speaker at the first luncheon meeting of the Lin- guistic Institute, to be held tomorrow noon in the UnionProf. CharlesC. fries, director of the Institute, an- nounced yesterday. Professor Sturtevant, who is as- sistant director, will speak on "Do We NeedStricter Methods inthe Treatment of Analogy?" ollowing his speech, there will be a discussion meeting. This is the first of a series of luncheon meetings which will be held every Tuesday and Thursday noon in conjunction with the Institute lec- tures. Tiger Slugfest Brings Victory1 Over White Soxt Tigers Gain Second Place, Score 21 Runs, Continue Winning Streak CHICAGO, July 1.-(,?)-The pent- up fury of two idle days exploded in. the biggest Tiger slugging rampage of the season today as the champion Detroit baseball team took Chicago's White Sox apart in a 21 to 6 scoring spree and seized second place in the League by a single percentage point. Wielding their war clubs with deadly effect, the Tigers pounded the ball to all corners of Comiskey Park. The veteran Ted Lyons, knocked off the mound in the second inning, and his successors, Red Evans and Italo Chelini, gave up 25 hits including two doubles, a triple and Gerald Walker's third home run of the sea- son. Walker Leads Attack Tommy Bridges was the only Tiger held to a single safety. Walker, who batted in seven of the runs, Charlie Gehringer and Goose Goslin had four apiece. Bridges, steadying af- ter a shaky start when the Sox touched him for four runs, won his ninth victory of the season. The Tigers, stretching their win- ning streak to five games, slipped into second place with a percentage of .536, a single point ahead of the Bos- ton Red Sox and Cleveland Indians, but ten and a half games behind the pace-setting New York Yankees. Schoolboy Rowe will be called on to hold the advantage tomorrow in the finale of the series here, against Johnny Whitehead. Rosenthal Gets Hand Lawrence Rosenthal, hard-hitting oufielder recently obtained from St. Paul by the Sox, gave some 5,000 Chi- cago fans their only cheering op- portunities by slamming out a single and triple and scoring three of the Sox runs. Jack Burns singled, advanced on two infield outs, and scored the Tig- ers' first run in the initial inning on Walker's single. A foretaste of what was to come, the Tigers poured five runs over the plate in their half of the second. Marvin Owen was safe on Manager Dykes' error, Hayworth singled and was forced at second by Bridges, Burns singled scoring Owen, and Ro- gell walked, filling the bases. Geh- ringer's single brought Bridges and Burns home, Rogell scored on GL - lin's single, and Walker greeted Ly- ons' relief, Evans, with a long liner scoring Gehringer. Gee Hits Homerf Walker lifted his circuit clout into the left field stands 352 feet from the plate in the fourth to score Gehringer who had walked and Goslin who had singled, ahead of him. A walk, a hit, and error and a long fly ball brought two more ''igers across the plate in the sixth, and Gehringer and Goslin scored in the seventh on two singles, a double, and Al Simmons' long fly. The biggest single outburst of the Tigers came in the eighth. Hayworth, 'Only Miracle Can Prevent Us From Being Involved In A MajorConflict' Claims Americans Are Iso lationists Says This Attitude Opposes 'Cooperation' Policy Of Official Washington Only a miracle can prevent the United States from entering a war, providing it is a major conflict, with- in a relatively short time, Prof. Law- rence Preuss of the political science department said yesterday afternoon in the third of the Summer Session lectures given in the Natural Science Auditorium. Professor Preuss outlined the policy of the United States regarding neu- trality down to the present day in his talk, the subject of which was "The American Neutrality Policy." "The American public is now thor- oughly wedded to the newer isola.tion- ist point of view," Professor Preuss said in speaking of the United States' attitude toward keeping out of a European conflict. Restrict Commerce Those who hold the isolationist viewpoint, he explained, maintain that commerce should be restricted to a certain degree during time of war, in order that the state of neu- trality is afforded less chance of be- ing interrupted by the almost in- evitable interference by belligernt nations into commerce. Professor Preuss added that belligerent na- tions are practically necessitated to interfere with trade connections of their opponents because were they to allow commodities to go through to their opponents it might mean the difference between victory and de- feat. The isolationist position . differs greatly from the "tradionalist" view formerly held by most Americans, Professor Peruss stated. The tradi- tionalists have held that freedom of seas should be maintained and that America should be allowed to trade with all nations, belligerent or other- wise during any war that she her- self was not engaged in. Position Abandoned This position has been almost en- tirely abandoned, according to Pro- fessor Preuss, for the isolationist view. However, Professor Preuss continued, despite the fact that pop- ular feeling seems to be with the isolationists, the present Adminis- tration has clung to a stand that is entirely different than either the iso- lationist or the traditionalist posi- tion, that of international coopera- tion. The Administration's interpreta- tion of the neutrality legislation of August, 1935 and February, 1936, which was essentially isolationist in its philosophy, Professor Preuss stat- ed, has been that of cooperative ac- tion with the other great powers of the world. He further explained that whereas on the surface of the Admin- istration's application of the embargo on munitions trade to both Italy and Ethiopia seemed to agree with the spirit of the neutrality legislation, it did, in reality, express the Adminis- tration's desire to cooperate with the League of Nations. Status Of League Professor Preuss felt that much of the United States' future policy depended upon the status of the League, which has suffered, he said, a terrific decline since the Italo-Eth- iopian campaign. One of the lead- ing factors which brought about pop- ular disfavor against the League was the Hoare-Laval plan for the settle- ment of the Ethiopian problem. Al- though this plan was later repudiated by the League, the feeling against the League had already set in. Therefore, Professor Preuss con- tinued, much depends upon the re- forming of the League which is be- ing discussed at the present time. If the League succeeds, the United States will probably continue its pol- icy of passive cooperation with the League. If the League fails, Profes- sor Preuss said, there will be no nos- Preuss Maintains U.S. Cannot Stay Out Of Next War w ''