FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937 FOUR THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937 Frankensteen, Reuther Heard Before NLRB Eight, Most Of Them Ford Employes, Are Arraigned On Assault Charges Union Men Testify DETROIT, July 7. - (P) - Two union officials who led handbill dis- tributors to gates of the Ford Motor Company's Dearborn plant May 26 told a N.ational Labor Relations Board examiner today they were slugged and kicked down a concrete stairway. They name Ford employes as their assailants. Richard Frankensteen, United Au- tomobile workers organizational di- rector, followed Walter Reuther, UAW West Side local president, to the witness stand at the NLRB hear- ing on its complaint charging the Ford Company with unfair labor practices., Declaring he was "kicked on the head until the back of it was as raw as beefsteak," the chunky Franken- steen identified his assailant as Sam- uel Taylor, Ford foundry foreman. Reuther named Theodore Greis, also a Ford employe as one of those en- gaged in the fighting. Arraign Employes Taylor, Greis and six other per- sons, most of them Ford employes, were arraigned before common pleas Judge Ralph W. Liddy today on assault warrants issued in con- nection with the riot. Their exam- ination was set for next Wednesday. Frankensteen and Reuther were the first Union members to tell of the fighting that attended the attempt to disribute Union leaflets to Ford workers leaving the huge River Rouge plant. They occupied the stand most of the second day of the NLRB hear- ing, after plans for a second distri- bution of literature this morning were abandoned. Frankensteen announced the at- tempt was called off "because there was inadequate police protection" and said he had received an unsigned telegram reporting that "Ford serv- ice men plan a riot at Ford gates to lay blame on United Automobile workers." Harry R. Bennett, Ford personnel director, said the report was "ridiculous."< Tells Of Beating Frankensteen testified that at one time during the fracas Taylor told him to pick up his coat which was torn from him. "As I bent to do so,"t he said, "he kicked me and then slugged me again." Reuther said that after a group of men ordered him from a highway over-pass near gate 4 of the Ford plant, "I was pounced on by 10 or 12 men." He said he was "thrown down" one flight of steps and "kicked down" two more.e Louis J. Colombo, Sr., Ford at- torney, was quickly interrupted byt examiner John T. Lindsay when he1 asked Reuther on cross-examination: "Have you any list of persons as- saulted, beaten and bruised by thef CIO and UAW because they refused to join CIO or UAW unions?" F Lindsay told Colombo, "That hasI nothing to do with this hearing."t Bridge Called Public The over-pass, ownership and con- trol of which was argued in the hear- ing yesterday, entered the testimonyt again today when Reuther said, "I went over that bridge every day for three years. I am positive that many who used it were not Ford employes.I Newsboys and all sorts of vendorsI had free access to it." Center Of Women's Atlletwic Activities Education Soft 'Di Maggio And Gehrig Deliver Blows SPedalled, Says, That Killed Golden Goose, Moans Diz Dennis Cooke WASHINGTON, July 7.-(P--This 'Bed Of Roses' Philosophy' is news. Fostered In High School, As the American Leaguers whooped it up in their steamy clubhouse and EIflmentary Students made merry with his name for the first time, the "celebrated" Dizzy The high school and elementary Dean squatted on a bench within ear- school student today gets the idea shot of all the revelry today and fi- that life is a "bed of roses" because nally confessed he had made two big of the facility with which he climbs mistakes by not taking advice. the ladder in the public schools, Prof. Twice in the three disastrous in- Dennis H. Cooke, of the George Pea- nings he pitched against the murder- body Teachers' College said yester- ous hitters of the American League, day in a lecture in the auditorium Diz shook off Catcher Gabby Hart- of the University high school. nett's signal. Gabby ordered curve "The public school student gets the balls to Joe Di Maggia and Lou Geh- idea that life is easy because he does rig, the Yankee fence busting twins, not have to work to advance in but Diz knew better. inning, I fanned him with a fast one, referring, of course, to Dean, and but he pickled the fastest one I've Hubbell. got in the third. We should have Gehrig, like the others, was con- won with the three runs we got." gratulated by President Will Har- The National Leaguers, including ridge of the American League, Man- Carl Hubbell and Van Mungo, who ager McCarthy and the coaches. He said they just didn't have their stuff beamed happily. in the terrific heat, took the defeat "The Lord protects the dumb," in stride, however. They tried to fenced Lou as he wrung his hand laugh off the setback. dry with handshakes. "That Gehrig," shouted Hartnett, Di Maggio, last year's goat, also "should have been a blacksmith. How grinned from ear to ear. Everyone he murders that ball." congratulated him on his great throw "I'd hate to see that Gehringer to the plate in the sixth to nail every day," groaned Mungo. "He's Burgess Whitehead at the plate. ooison." "I was afraid of my power," ex- Lee Grissom, Cincinnati freshman, plained Der Mag. "So I just skipped strangely enough was the only one in that ball in." Palmer Field, situated on Forest Avenue at the east end of North University, offers play and recreational opportunities in a large num- ber of sports. The area of three hockey fields affords plenty of space for golf driving practice. An outdoor archery range is situated at the north end of the field. Roosevelt Menw Hurl Char oes In Senate Row' Claim Foes Of Revamping Court Bill Are Trying To Smash President WASHINGTON, July 7.- (A) -" Roosevelt men, continuing their fu- rious drive to alter the Supreme Court ,declared on the Senate floor today that opponents of the revamp- ing bill are trying to smash President Roosevelt. The assertion drew immediate de- nials from the Demorcatic opposi- tion, and the ensuing debate brought into the open certain political charges and counter-charges which usuaily are only whsipered in the cloakrooms. Senator Logan (Dem., Ky.) had de- clared that some Democratic Senat- ors who owe their election to Presi- dent Roosevelt have "played the in- grate" by opposing the bill. Hardly had the ?ssertion been made than Senator Wheeler (Dem., Mont.) replied with an accusation that the administration had been guilty of ingratitude in seeking to "destroy" men who in 1932 aban-1 doned their long time political af- filiations to back his candidacy. Logan asserted that the Senate Ju- diciary Committee's adverse .report on the original court bill, signed by eight Democrats, "could be construed only as an effort to destroy the Pres- ident." Some of its signers hastened to assert their loyalty to the Chief Executive. The Kentuckian declared, too, that the report was being widely used by "followers of the golden calf" who are attempting to 'form a new po- litical party which will "take over" the Republican party and bring "dis- aster to Franklin D. Roosevelt." To this, Wheeler replied with a repetition of a previous statement that two close advisors of the Presi- dent had suggested the court reor- ganization to him more than a year ago. Wheeler said it was kept out of last autumn's campaign at his urgent pleading that it would "wreck" the! President. The Montanan added that he did not wish to see the President meet disaster then, and does not wish it now. For an hour and a half, leading' opponents of the measure-Wheeler, Burke of Nebraska, Connally of Tex- as, all Democrats-beset Logan with accusations, with ironic and some- times angry questions. Then, the Senate quit to go to the All-Star baseball game. Previously, Senator Guffey de- livered a prepared address contend- ing that throughout its history the Supreme Court has been "a partisar political body," that "the statesman- ship of President Roosevelt" had re- cently "forced the court to act on behalf of the people." Be s a reful of t he water you drink 0.. as you are of the milk you drink. You wouldn't take a chance on milk of doubtful purity. . . so be on the safe side and drink ARBOR SPRINGS WA- TER . . . It's pure, re- freshing and healthful. ARBOR SPRINGS WATER CO. 416 WEST HURON Phone 8270 for Delivery T E.A F r T school," he stated. "We are soft- pedaling education too much." Some Should Fail Speaking on failures in school, Pro- fessor Cooke went on to say that in view of the fact that the public school is trying to imitate life, a cer-I tain percentage of pupils should be failed if their work not acceptable. "I am not advocating failure as anI end point in education," he declared,J "but those who don't succeed should- not be allowed to advance." Professor Cooke went on to point out that there were four things re- sponsible for failure in the public schools. "Failure is due to the child I himself, it is due to the teachers, itl is due to the school and it is due to + the out-of-school environment," he said. Advises Buckingham Plan He made three recommendations for the reduction of failures.- They are the use of the normal curve, the project type of teaching and the em- ployment of the Buckingham plan,I which leaves the determination of whether a pupil should fail or not to th'e receiving teacher.1 Speaking yesterday morning before{ the second day's session of the League1 Fed 'Em Fast Ones He fed them fast ones, they fed him with a single and a home run. The blows sent Joe McCarthy's men on their way, and they never stopped until they had whipped the National Leaguers, 8 to 3, for their fourth tri- umph in five all-star baseball spec- tacles. "They were the blows that killed the golden goose," moaned Diz, "but those guys were lucky stiffs. They got all the breaks; we got nothing. But Gabby was right. When he asked for a curve against Di Maggio, I shook him off and Joe singled. I was sure I was right on Gehrig. In the first the National League clubhouse who was really sad. "Can you imagine that Cronin and Dickey getting doubles off'n me?" cried the big, gangling Red. "I should hiave struck them both out." A reporter came up, congratulated Grissom, who all but broke the writ- er's hand with his now notorious strong man handshake. Fletcher The Big Noise Coach Art Fletcher was the big noiseamaker in the AmericanLeague dressing room with Lefty Gomez a close second. "The great Dean. the almighty Dean," roared Fletcher, a world's champ when it comes to tossing the raspberry. "He knew how to pitch Trouble On Amur Held Unimportant Recent trouble along the Amur has been characterized as being nothing more or less than the latest in a long series of border engagements by John W. Stanton of the history de- partment during an informal talk be- fore the Institute of Far Eastern Studies. In tracing the history of the recent quarrel Stanton emphasized that war between the countries at this time was very unlikely since neither coun- try was prepared to fight. Both countries look forward to a struggle in the future however, and both are arming behind the Man- choukuo border. Thus while each crisis is not dangerous in itself, this being the 187th, all are indicative of strained relations between the two countries. WINNING PITCHER: DETROIT, July 7.-(IP)-Cletus ,Plwood "Baron" Poffenberger, Tigers rookie pitcher, Wednesday took out a marriage license to wed Miss Jose- phine Brown of Charleston, W. Va. College, Professor Cooke pointed out to those American Leaguers! He'd certain principles of a state system stop "em!' 'Why with me pitching, of taxation for the support of schools. the National League oughter be a 1 He made four recommendations to 10 favorite.'" for the improvement of the taxing Gomez, who now has been the win- system in states. "We should con- ning pitcher in three out of four solidate our taxing units, profession- American League victories, was alize our tax officials, create a state bathed and dressed when his mates tax commission and co-ordinate tax came in. 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