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News Review of Curre#t
Events the World Over
General Strike in San Francisco Area Collapses—North
Dakota’s Hot Political Row—Mrs. McAdoo
Divorces the Senator.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
© by Western Newspaper Union.
in the state charged with execution
of the act's provisions.
LJOUSING conditions In the United
*■ States amply demonstrate the
need for new housing. Acting Secre¬
tary Dickinson of the Commerce de¬
partment said In making public results
of a national “real property Inventory,”
now being conducted by the Commerce
department.
Sixteen per cent of 1,811,402 dwell¬
ings in tiff cities are in crowded condi¬
tion An additional “or worse,” 10.0 Mr. Dickinson in said, need j
per cent are
of structural repairs and 44.7 per cent
need minor repairs. The incomplete
returns show 32.442 houses, or 2.34 per
cent of the total, as “unfit for human
habitation.”
VTOltTmDAKOTA was in a state of
* polim-nl chaos, with two men bat¬
tling for the governorship and the con
trol of tlie state government and Na¬
tional Guard. William
H. hanger, according
to a ruling of the
State Supreme court,
was no longer entitled
to hold tlie office of
governor because of
his recent conviction
on charges of con¬
spiracy to defraud
the federal govern¬
ment. The court de¬
Ole H. Olson creed that he must
give up his office to
Gov. Ole II. Olson, hanger defied tlie
court, refused to move out of office, .sum¬
moned tlie National Guard to support
him and called a special session of
t lie* legislature, which lie dominates.
Olson countermanded these orders,
and Adjt. Gen. Earle It. Sarles seemed
to side with him, though he kept two
companies of tlie National Guard on
duty in Bismarck to quell possible dis¬
orders. It was reported that thou¬
sands of farmers were on their way
to tlie capital city determined to sup¬
port hanger in whatever action he
might demand. It was believed tlie
legislature would vote wholesale im¬
peachments of state officials, possibly
including the members of the Supreme
court, who voted to oust hanger.
State Sartor A. B. Bonzer, in an
address aWBisnmrck, declared the
Jurists had “pretended to base their
decision as though interpreting the
constitution of this state.”
“The Supreme court of this state,"
lie said, "lias linked Itself with tlie
federal courts in an endeavor to con¬
tinue tlie persecution of one who has
dared to lie a le;«*.’er for the common
people—namely, Gov. William I .anger,”
hanger and several co-defendants
were convicted in June. The federal
government charged that tlie hanger
group forced federal employees to con¬
tribute to a political fund. This fund,
it was said, was collected supposedly
for a newspaper. The government
contended that the money eventually
went into tlie campaign chest, hanger
soon afterward was re-nominated by
an overwhelming vote, and following
this he was sentenced to 18 month in
prison.
OBNATOK WII.hlAM G. McADOO
’J of California was too fond of pol¬
ities and travel to suit his wife, whose
Interests were in sculpture, painting
and home life. So the former Eleanor
Wilson, daughter of the war-time
I’resident, went before a Judge In Los
Angeles with her complaint and in
42 minutes had been granted an inter¬
locutory divorce decree. “Mental
cruelty" waP tlie charge, and Mrs.
McAdoo testified that the senator had |
been living almost entirely in Wash¬
ington for two years, and that it was
impossible for her to reside in the
National Capital because the climate
there was injurious to her health.
Senator McAdoo did not contest the
divorce, and there was a property set¬
tlement tlie details of which were not
made public. The custody of the two
children was vested in both parents.
It was revealed that the McAdoos have
been separated since last December.
JNAYS mountains of torrential of southern rain Poland in the
re¬
sulted in raging floods that poured !
through the valleys, drowning perhaps
as many as three hundred persons, j
More than 55,000 were without food
and shelter. Tlie property loss was
tremendous, all the crops Just har¬
vested being ruined.
Many popular resorts crowded by
summer vacationists were cut off.
Eighty-three camps of Roy and Girl ,
Scouts were evacuated, after the j
youths experienced harrowing difficul¬
ties.
EN>K several hours earthquakes shook
* all Panama and Costa Rica, but the
Panama canal was unhurt. The most
serious damage was at David, Panama,
not far from the Costa Rican border.
There many buildings fell and scores
of persons were injured. Considerable
losses were sustained also at Puerto
Arnmelles. ttie United Fruit company’s
Pacific side banana headquarters. One
American soldier was killed by jump¬
ing from a barracks window at Fort
Davis.
wore It has been demon
strated that the general strike Is
not a successful weapon in the hands
of organized labor in Hie I'nited States
in industrial disputes.
T h e San Francisco
unions, dominated for
the moment b.v radi¬
cals, undertook to use
this weapon, and with-
i n t w o d a y s were
forced to admit their
failure. Governor Mer
riant, Mayor Itossi
and o t h e r officials,
strongly b a eked by
Harry Bridges public opinion, were
^etcM-inined that Sun
Francisco and the surrounding com¬
munities should not be deprived of
tin- necessities of life, lli.it Hie em¬
bargo on food shipments should be
broken and that transportation should
not lie stopped. Nearly 8,000 members
of the National Guard were mobilized
to aid the (Milice, and their efforts
were seconded by hastily formed bunds
of vigilantes which raided the head¬
quarters and gathering places of the
Communists. The central committee
In charge of the strike soon realized
tlie movement was collapsing and the
conservative members, regaining con¬
trol, relaxed the restrictions, and made
an offer of arbitration under certain
conditions.
On Thursday the general strike was
formally called off and the men or¬
dered back to work.
General Johnson, NRA administra¬
tor, acting as spokesman for the fed¬
eral maritime dispute board there, was
on hand determined to bring about a
peaceful settlement. The Pacific coast
maritime strike, on behalf of which
the mass walkout was called, re¬
mained a difficult problem, for the
longshoremen and maritime workers
were insistent that the main dispute
in their case, control of the “hiring
halls,” should not be subjected to ar¬
bitration.
To the average person the whole
thing looked unreasonable and unnec¬
essary. The longshoremen, like their
fellow workers all along the west
coast, have been on strike for changed
working conditions, and were Joined
by the marine workers and teamsters.
Then Joseph P. Ryan, national presi¬
dent of the longshoremen, signed an
agreement that the men would return
to work pending arbitration and a
labor disputes board was appointed
by President Roosevelt, tint Harry
Bridges, an Australian radical who is
head of the local maritime workers,
gained control of the situation and
absolutely blocked the move for arbi¬
tration, persuading the men to repudi¬
ate the Ityan agreement. In the unions
of the San Francisco metropolitan
area It is said the conservatives out¬
number (tie radicals, but the latter
are trained in the tactics of intimida¬
tion and are seeking to wreck the
trades unions for the benefit of the
cause of Communism.
Mayor Angelo J. Rossi announced a
pledge to run every “Communistic ag¬
itator” out of San Francisco. The
pledge, announced through an emer¬
gency citizens’ committee, said:
“1 pledge to you that 1, as chief ex¬
ecutive In San Francisco, to the full
extent of my authority, will run out
of San Francisco every Communistic
agitator, and this is going to be a con¬
tinuing policy in Sun Francisco."
'tCIKJIK was disquieting strike news
i from many parts of the country.
The unions of Portland, Ore., were
pushing their plans for a general
strike, and their officials said nothing
could now be done to prevent it. The
truck drivers of Miuneapoiis and their
helpers voted for a renewal of their
strike which In May tied up trans¬
portation and resulted in fatal riots.
Representatives of 40 out of 42
locals of the United Textile Workers
in Alabama decided on a state-wide
strike which will effect 18,000 opera¬
tives. The date was not announced.
Demands made to the employers in¬
clude: Thirty hour week with .$12 min¬
imum pay, abolition of the “stretch¬
out" system, reinstatement of all Jobs
abolished under the stretchout sys¬
tem ; re-employment of all workers
discharged for union activity and rec¬
ognition of the textile workers' union
for collective bargaining under provi¬
sions of the NUA.
Employees of Walter ,1. Kohler In
Kohler village, Wisconsin, are out on
strike and began picketing the plant,
though it has been closed down since
July 4. Tiiese wotkers for whom Koh
lor built and maintained an “ideal”
industrial town and who have been
treated with remarkable generosity by
the company, demand recognition of
their union, a minimum wage of Co
cents an hour and a 30-hour week.
The company has Its own employees’
union, a minimum wage of 40 cents
an hour, and a 40-hour week.
pONSTITUTIoNAl.lTY head cotton act is to of lie the tested Rank-
in
the federal courts. Gaston Thorrell of
Columbus. Miss., tms served notice
that he will bring the suit in the
United States district court at Mer¬
idian, directing it against Henry A.
Wallace, secretary of agriculture, and
Internal revenue and extension officials
DADE COUNTY TIMES: JULY 26. 1931
pRESIDjaKJAT. SECRETARY MAR-
* VIN I^PrrYRB announced that j
the President had created a special :
committee to formulate a new fed¬
eral policy concern¬
ing the generation
and distribution of
electricity, and in
Washington this was
looked upon as a
probable move for
tiie nationalization of
tlie power industry.
In a letter to Secre¬
tary ickes asking
him to head the com¬
mittee, Mr. Roosevelt Ickes
said: “Its duty will Sec’y
lie to develop a plan for tlie closer
co-operation of the several factors in
our electrical power supply—both pub¬
lic and private—whereby national pol¬
icy in power matters may be unified
and electricity be made more broadly
available at cheaper rates to industry,
to domestic, and, particularly, to agri¬
cultural consumers.
“As time goes on, there undoubtedly
will be legislation on the subject of
holding companies and for the regula¬
tion of electric current in interstate
commerce. Tills committee should con¬
sider what lines should be followed in
shaping up this legislation. Since a
number of the states have commis¬
sions having jurisdiction over intra¬
state power matters, it Is necessary
that whatever plan i? developed should
have regard to tlie powers of these
various state commissions as well as
of the states in general.”
Besides Mr. Ickes, who is to act as
chairman, tlie committee will consist
of Dr. Elwood Mead, bureau of recla¬
mation; Frank It. McNineh, federal
power commission; Morris L. Cooke,
of tiie I’UM Mississippi valley com¬
mittee; Maj. (Jen. Edward M. Mark¬
ham, chief of army engineers; Robert
E. Healy, of the federal stock ex¬
change commission; David E. Lillien-
fhal, Tennessee valley authority, and
T. W. Norcross, assistant chief of the
forest service.
TZINO GEORGE of England offi-
daily opened tlie Mersey tunnel
connecting Liverpool and Birkenhead,
tlie largest underwater highway of its
kind in tiie world. More than iinAa
mile longer than tlie Holland tunrol
of New York, tlie tube under the Mer¬
sey river stretches 11,380 feet from the
main entrance in Birkenhead. In addi¬
tion to the main tunnel, which accom¬
modates four vehicles abreast, there
are two-lane tributaries connecting the
docks which give tlie whole undertak¬
ing a length of 15,465 feet.
The engineers responsible for the
design of the $35,500,000 tube, chief
among whom is Sir Basil Mott, con¬
cede they owe much to tlie experience
American engineers gained on the Hol¬
land tunnel. They waited until the
American tunnel had been operated
before completing their plans for the
Mersey project’s ventilation plant.
npAMMANY HALL lias a new ehief-
1 tain in tlie person of James J. Dool-
lng, elected at tiie urgent demand of
Postmaster General Farley. He took
ids seat at the head of the once groat
Democratic organization and an¬
nounced that he would undertake to
do two things. The first is to restore
harmony within the society by elim¬
inating factional disputes; the second,
and perhaps harder task, is to change
the New York point of view toward
Tammany.
A LL Germany and most of the rest
** of tlie world heard Adolf Hitler
justify his bloody purging of tlie Nazi
party, Involving tiie violent deaths of
torn 77 persons, and his
defiance of his ene¬
mies within and with¬
out the reieh. The
chancellor in his
speech before a com¬
plaisant reichstag em¬
ployed his well known
gift of oratory to the
limit, and unless the
Berlin correspondents
are mistaken, he won
to his support the
Chancellor great majority of Ger¬
Hitler mans who were wa¬
vering in their allegiance to him.
Hitler not only defended the slaugh¬
ter of the alleged conspirators, but
also gave warning that a like fate
awaits ail other “traitors."
“Every one is to know for all fu¬
ture times," he said, “that, if he raises
his hand for attack against the state,
certain death will be his lot.”
Far from apologizing for the kill¬
ings, he shouted: “1 gave orders to
shoot those who were mainly respon¬
sible for treachery. I gave further
orders to burn out into the raw flesh
the pest boii of our internal well
poisoning and the poisoning of foreign
countries. I was the supreme court of
tlie land for 24 hours.”
His indictment of Boehm and the
circle of perverts that surrounded h^n
was terrific in its details and con¬
vincing to most of his countrymen.
Just before tlie delivery of his ad¬
dress, Hitler and his government were
notified by Great Britain and Italy
that they approved the eastern Euro¬
pean security pacts that France is
fostering. These would include Rus-
sia, Poland, tlie Baltic states and
Czechoslovakia, and unless Germany
also signed up tlie result would be the
forging of an iron band around the
reieh.
Hitler alluded to this plan in de¬
fiant language. He said:
“If our trade balance, through eco¬
nomic barriers in foreign markets or
through political boycott, becomes a
passive one, we shall, through our own
ability and thanks to the genius of
our inventors and chemists, find ways
of making ourselves independent of
those raw materials which we our¬
selves are in a position to manufacture
or find substitutes for.”
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Who and Where Are They?
1,000,000 Jumpers
Hitler Keeps Ilis Grip
Baby Lama Is Found
Clarence Darrow, most successful
criminal lawyer, says NRA is led by
amateurs that do not understand polit¬
ical economy.
Who does understand political econ¬
omy 1
Mr. Darrow rebukes tlie President
for “failing to call in men versed in
statesmanship.”
Who are those men in this country?
Mr. Darrow should name them.
You can do things, when you con¬
trol a country absolutely, as Stalin
controls Russia, with all money,
earned by everybody, spent to carry
out government plans.
Having trained millions of young
men and women in aerodynamics, as
preparation for (lying, tlie Russian
government plans to train one million
parachute Jumpers, not ten thousand
or a hundred thousand, but one mil¬
lion, by tlie end of this year.
Russia does tilings in a big way.
That Hitler still retains his power
In Germany and his grip on the Ger¬
man imagination is shown in his latest
reichstag speech. Hailed with frantjc
acclaim in the streets of Berlin, loudly
applauded by the subservient reichs¬
tag, with army and people under his
thumb, it is difficult to see what can
destroy his power short of a collapse
in Germany’s economic resources. The
plot that, according to his own state¬
ment, Hitler punished with seventy-
seven “traitors’ ” deaths, evidently did
not have the people back of It.
Thibetan Buddhists have discovered
the reincarnation of their late lament¬
ed Dalai Lama.
Tlie last Lama, ruling Thibet as
spiritual and temporal head from the
crimson and white palace of Lhasa,
died last December. It then became
the business of Buddhist priests to
find a baby born at the exact minute
of tlie Lama’s death. The baby must
have certain marks on ids head to
prove that lie is the reincarnation of
the dead man and contains his spirit.
The right baby with the right marks
has been found in a humble home far
from Lhasa. A clever Buddhist priest
will rule until the baby Lama reaches
the age of eigiiteen. Meanwhile, tlie
baby will be carefully looked after
and highly honored.
Unlike tlie ancient Buddhist rein¬
carnations, he is not expected to sit
in the air without any support and
deliver a sermon at birth.
The wise merchant tells his clerks:
“Tlie customer is always right.”
James J. Dooling, new leader of Tam¬
many hall, tells those under him, the
entire human machinery of the big¬
gest city; “If public opinion is against
anything there must be changes, be¬
cause public opinion is always right.”
Mr. Dooling as leader of Tammany
Is very young, only forty-one. Tam¬
many has always thought a leader
should be over fifty. Croker and Mur¬
phy were over fifty. Some Tammany
men feel tlint Mr. Dooling is “too high¬
ly educated.” At Fordham college, he
studied Greek and Latin as well as
law.
\Ve have troubles in this country,
but look at China. Her chief wheat
regions are burning up under a tem¬
perature as high as 115 degrees, many
are dead, cholera is killing others.
Locusts in many places destroy what
intense heat and drouth have left of
tiie crop. Widespread famine next
wi.’.ter is Inevitable.
Here, we manufacture our troubles.
To unfortunate China, providence or
nature sends them.
Bertrand Russell says th6 British,
ruling India, “act like Nazis.” For the
crime of desiring self-government, ac¬
cording to Bertrand Russell, Hindus
have been deprived of "the elementary
liberties that make life tolerable.”
You wonder when the Hindus pos¬
sessed any such liberties, except, to a
limited extent, among Hindus of the
highest class. Among them “liberty”
Included the right to inflict horrible
Injustice on tlie miserable outcast un¬
touchables, also the right to marry
little girls ten years old and younger,
and the right to have young widows
burned alive with the corpses of their
old husbands.
The big telephone company in the
first six months of 1034 earned $61,-
fiffff.OOO, net, after charges and federal
taxes, which seems a good deal of
money. But it is only $3.32 a share
on the company's 18,602,275 shares of
Stock.
Prospects are improving for the tele¬
phones, however, and a net income of
$01,ti00.000 for six months is “some¬
thing.”
Mr. John Jacob Astor, interesting
youth of Newport, cutting short his
travels, returns to New Y’ork unex¬
pectedly and announces that he will
take a job and go to work “just as
soon as the hot weather ends.” Ar¬
riving in New York’s Grand Central
terminal, he was met by “forty rail
road detectives and six private detec¬
tives." This seems a good many de¬
tectives for one young gentleman, who.
so far as the world knows, has never
done anything to make detectives
necessary.
©. King Features Syndicate, Inc.
WNT Service.
Washington.—-Unless all signs fail
there Is going to be a determined
stand by many of the
Fight for country’s business in-
Limit on NRA t rests for a llmit a
tion on the u provis¬ !
ions of the national industrial recov¬
ery act when that question comes up
for congressional action next January
or February. An undercurrent of in¬
formation, to the effect that a move¬
ment to that end Is under way, has
begun to seep Into Washington lu a
growing volume. It Indicates that we
will hear much about NRA during the
coming campaigns. Indeed, some ob¬
servers are convinced that President
Roosevelt already is attempting to get
the administration’s side of the story
to the country by sending General
Johnson, recovery administrator, out
for a tour of speechmaking to sell the
blue eagle to the country.
The President, it will be remem¬
bered, already has declared that NUA
must be made a permanent part of our
economic structure. I have found few
persons who disagree with that. There
is a difference of views, however, and
it is emphatic, as to the extent to
which NUA should go in managing the
country’s business on a permanent
basis. It is upon that question, there
fore, that the battle apparently will be
waged.
From what I can pick up around
here, it is certain that a considerable
portion of tlie business interests is de¬
sirous of a limitation on tlie recovery
act provisions so that they will apply
really just to establishment of maxi
mum hours of labor and minimum
wages, and to abolition of the sweat
shop and elimination of child labor.
They are determined in their opposi¬
tion to retention in tlie recovery act of
provisions that give power to fix
prices, to control production and to
grants of authority that bring private
business books into the limelight when
ever snooping government agents want
to dig into private affairs of individ¬
uals or corporations. Frankly, l think
that feature has done more to discred¬
it NUA than any other phase of tiie
law under which it operates. On the
other hand, only the meanest and
Cheapest of individuals can oppose any
move that Is designed to provide better
working conditions and hours of labor
for those who live by the sweat of
their brow.
While obviously none can foretell
the result of this issue at such an
early date, the opinions that I gather
among observers here make me be¬
lieve chat there is quite a popular ap¬
peal In the argument which is being
advanced for revision of the recovery
act and limitation of NUA control.
Folks generally will go along with
propositions that woPk for betterment,
but which do not at the same time in¬
clude invasion of what they believe to
be their personal rights. The adminis
tratlon contends, however, that exten
sion of the recovery act powers—or at
least, retention of the powers now ex-
istant in NRA—are not an invasion of
personal rights beyond the necessity
for creating greater human happiness.
But the hard-headed business man,
great or small, is going to be hard to
convince, it seems to me, that govern
ment control to the extent of fixing his
prices and doing some of the other
things now permitted is not an undue
messing with his personal affairs.
The lessons of the four-year depres¬
sion have been so severe that there is
little evidence of important opposition
to curtailment of hours of labor. Like¬
wise, sound business leaders cannot
justify opposition to minimum wages
nor can they find a safe ground upon
which to propose use of child labor or
operation under sweat shop conditions.
Politically, therefore, labor will be in
terested only in those four items; the
women vote of the country probably
will be Interested only in accomplish¬
ment of those ends, and business in¬
terests worthwhile will not object.
• • ■
Attention was called above to the
tour which Gsperal Johnson is making
in behalf of the
Johnson Wants blue eagle of the
to Retire NRA > f 11
, be recalled that
some mouths ago I reported on tlie
probability of changes in NUA umn
agement. During General Johnson’s
absence, a board cf five men consti¬
tutes the administrative authority of
NRA. It seems to be in the nature
of an experiment. If it works out sat
isfactorily. we may expect to see the
veteran army officer retire to private
life. He has said as much. He wants
to get back into private business. Mr.
Roosevelt, however, likes the fighting
qualities of General Johnson, and it
is still possible that he will remain
on the job. He Is responsible for the
general plan of NRA administration
and the theories embodied in the va
rious codes. It would seem, therefore,
that the man who worked out tiie
codes should stay along and sift
them down to the permanent level, if
permanency be the goal.
Whether General Johnson continues
at the helm, or whether the manage¬
ment of that work is entrusted finally
to General Johnson's hand-picked
group of five, it is certain that the
summer and autumn will witness eiiui
lnation of many petty features of
codes that have proved to be only an¬
noyances. I believe there is agree¬
ment among unbiased thinkers that
development of codes at the rate nec¬
essary to make the initial drive for
'“J -rauy upset the
good that was obviously going to
suit from fair re
practice agreements
The job the five-man board has to do
if it remains as a successor to Gen'
eral Johnson, is to go through tha
codes with a fine-toothed comb and
eliminate all of the questionable and
useless provisions. My opinion is, if
this were done, there would be much
less opposition to the codes and con¬
sequently to continuation of the In¬
dustrial recovery act.
The prevalent thought In Washing,
ton, then, Is that as a result of the
annoying features contained In the
codes, the administration Is likely to
pull hard to revise as many of them as
is possible before next winter. Much
of this work obviously will have to be
done before election and such political
effect as may be will be reaped in the
ballot boxes.
• • *
It always has been true that an In¬
valid who is convalescing passes
Invalid through a stage on
the way to recovery
Perks Up where he develops a
genuine grouch. Ev¬
erything hits him wrongly. Food is
not right and medicines are no good,
and a thousand and one other things
furnish grounds for complaint. This
condition nearly always precedes the
time when the patient gets out of bed
and takes a few steps again.
The circumstance to which I have
referred is such a common oceurrenct
that it seems to me there is no better
illustration of the condition in which
American business now is represented
to be. It Is highly significant. In the
first Instance, it shows, according to
tlie experts, that business has enough
new life blood to start fighting back
against administration plans and pol¬
icies that cramp its style, and, sec¬
ondly, vigorous opposition never has
failed to be a healthy thing for the
country as a whole.
From the information I get in many
quarters, it is yet too early to tell
whether commerce and industry is go¬
ing to be a unit in any one course of
its opposition. The strictly recovery
phases of the New Deal are not going
to be attacked, even by the Republican
national committee. That question ap¬
parently is settled. But business in¬
terests apparently and quite logically
are distinguishing between recovery
and reform. Take the legislation that
created the commission for control of
security sales and policing the stock
exchanges, as an example. I frankly
do not see how the Republican leader¬
ship or business interests can expect
to get far in criticism of that, even if
it Is solely a reform proposition. On
the other hand, business interests can
and will attack such projects as the
government manufacture and sale of
electric power in open competition
with private plants, such as is taking
place under the experiment in the
Tennessee valley.
• • *
the least of the problems that
ising out of Hie work so speed¬
ily done in creating
*egal NRA and other re-
covery agencies are
estions the horde of legal
ms now on the horizon. One of
stands out. It relates to the
of citizens after they have
the codes of fair practice, and
lights tell me it runs straight
;o a base Hi tlie Constitution ot
nited States. .
an old legal maxim that after a
has accepted benefits trom a
regulation, which means a
s or J
action, that person may a0
ary validity 0
ird to question the
yvision from which those benen s
d. Now, business men signe
ideS under what NRA
was a voluntary act. Having
w. .
however, that there j
, the law-
,f opinion between afth-
tA and the lawyers
of Justice. Many la".' er
t un
the government are
gathering up all of
e tnd
tegument they can
e positions of the two =
Erltand it, lawyers forth rjPj “
e signers have put
hat the signing was n
They contend that
action. codes,
the making of consistent
n and his aides t
i point that unless those
e
strator would write boundW
nd they would be
heard it us«i as a h
’
is fact tha i
rtheless a wttb
,ho had dealings
afraid they would - jf
leensing of their plant
to sign tlie codes. ^
chnicalities may J I’l the
ial, but they There are jf
portanee. 0 f
tests of some author^
y act and the
NBA. The consensus ^
,e that these tea „
its that ought ne
■ 8U
brought as we,