Weather Occasional thunderstorms today and tomorrow. L tflir iga 'I :43 at ij Editorial Wa biiiton's Fight For Public Welfare .. VOL. XLIX. No. 176 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS Grade School Blast Injures 57; Building Is Demolished Four Adults Are Included Among Casualties; Three Fatalities Are Expected Disaster Blamed On Gas Explosion BARBERTON, O., May 31.-()- A roundup tonight of victims of an explosion which shattered a school building here in mid-afternoon totalled 57 persons injured-53 grade school children and four adults. Three were not expected to live, hospital attendants reported. They were Dorothy Young, 6; Frances Fish- er, 7; and P. S. White, 59, janitor. Two teachers injured were Miss Mabelle Miller, 38, who suffered fractured leg and ribs as she was buried beneath a piano, and Miss Al- bertine Mills, 44, with possible frac tured back. All Suffer Shock H. P. White, an electrician working nearby, also was hurt. Thirty-one remained in hospitals tonight, several suffering fractures, many burns, and all shock. The explosion, which all concerned said undoubtedly was from gas, liter- ally tore the two story frame struc- ture apart. It was a former house being used as a school while a new building is being built. The outer walls flew out. The center partitions remained upright. The a upper floors slanted downward, shoot- ing children out, sliding down like a toboggan. Dozens of tots on the first floor dropped into the basement and were covered with debris. The roof fell upon the mass of children and wreckage. A carpenter foreman, John Ruhl- en, working on the new building sent his men for help and went to the rescue. He said: "I was on my hands and knees when I heard the explosion and the screaming. As I ran to the building the sides fell out and the roof came down with a second roar. Many Slide Out "Most of the bured children were caught under lath and plaster and desks which were not very heavy. Many of them slid or were blown out of the house. "There were about 20 on the second floor and I believe some of them fell clear to the basement. "I pushed a piano off a teacher and carried her and another teacher out. I took out about 15 little fellows. "One of the worst parts of this is that some of the little girls probably will be disfigured for life." Before Janitor White lapsed into unconsciousness because of burns, he said he had been burning papers in the basement when the blast let go. "The whole basement must have been filled with gas," he said before lapsing into unconsciousness because of burns. "I'm sure it was a leaky main." Senate To Plan Student Parley July Series Will Parallel Annual Spring Session A Summer Parley on the lines of the Spring Parley will be held during the coming Summer Session by the Student Senate, in cooperation with Dr. Blakeman's office. The Parley, the subject for which has not yet been decided, will be held the first or second week of the Ses- sion. It is hoped that these parleys will be held four times a year, the summer, fall and winter parleys all leading up to the Spring Parley. All Student Senators who expect to attend the Summer Session are asked to contact Tom Downs, '40L, pro- visional chairman of the committee or one of the other committee members, James Dusenberry, '39, or Jack A. Sessions, Ed. Tragedy On The Huron! Canoeists Find Corpse Three University students canoeing on the Huron Tuesday saw "some- thing that looked like a man's body" floang inthA current nd naimmedi.. Moseley Warns Dies , Group Of 'Revolution' WASHINGTON, May 31. -(y)- Maj.-Gen. George Van Horn Moseley, retired, spent five turbulent hours before the Dies Committee today, al- ternately insisting that Jewish-led Communist revolution is about to overwhelm the country and protest- ing that he harbors no anti-Semitic prejudices. Several organizations are known to be looking to Moseley for leader- ship in the fight against the alleged "revolutionary activity." Moseley said today that it was unfortunate that Robert E. Edmondson, identified with a "patriotic organization," re- cently published an article entitled "Hail Moseley." Plans To End Briggs Strike To Be Offered Proposals Will Be Made By J. F. Dewey Today After Lengthy Meetings DETROIT, May 31.-G'P)-Recom- mendations designed to end a week- old strike that has closed seven plants of the Briggs Manufacturing Co. and affected more than 70,000 workers will be submitted to a joint confer- ence of management and officials of the CIO-United Automobile Workers' Union here today. Federal Conciliator James F. Dewey, who spent today discussing with both sides 28 grievances which the CIO-UAW blamed for the strike, said he hoped acceptance of his recommendations would bring about "immediate" reopening of the plants. Both management and union offi- cials have agreed to accept Dewey's decision on the grievances. After the verdict has been accepted, Dewey said, discussion of an agreement for reopenmng the plants will begin. Meantime, estimates of the number thrown out of work by the shutdown ( continued to grow. It was an accepted fact that the strike has made idle more than 70,000 Briggs, Chrysler and Ford employes in Detroit, and one reliable source predicted that the shutdown soon might force an addi- tional 130,000 out of work in the steel, rubber and glass fields. Approximately 700 employes of the Bay Manufacturing plant. at Bay City, Mich., were sent home today after the Bay City Plant of the Elec- tric Auto-Lite Co. failed to resume full production following the week- end shutdown. Officials blamed the shutdown on the Briggs striked Cubans Expect Refugee Revolt Ship Captain Fears Mutiny Of Jewish Passengers HAVANA, Cuba, May 31. -(AP)- Capt. Gustav Shroeder of the Ger- man liner Saint Luis, informed auth- orities today he feared a "collective suicide pact" among his 917 German Jewish refugee passengers, who are scheduled to sail back to Hamburg with him tomorrow after being de- nied entry to Cuba. He reported there was a "state of mutiny" aboard which he could not control and threfore he feared "open mutiny" when the ship left Havana harbor. The Captain made his statement after Capt. Juan Estevex Maymir, Chief Aide of President Laredo Bru, had spent several hours aboard the ship investigating reports that hun- dreds of the refugees, denied admit- tance to COiba, were threatening to take their lives if the ship sailed back to Germany. Twenty-five police were sent aboard the liner to guard others from any attempted self-destruction after Max Loewe, one of the refugees, slashed his wrists and jumped overboard yes- terday. He was rescued and is recov- ering. Congressional Leaders Seek July 15 Close Neutrality Bill May Block Prompt Adjournment, Chiefs Tell Roosevelt Date Affects Plans Of President's Trip 'WASHINGTON, May 31. -(A)- Leaders sought today to speed up the legislative pace so that Congress could adjourn by mid-July, but one major "if -neutrality legislation-prevent- ed them from promising President Roosevelt that the session would end by that date. The things Congress has done and left undone were canvassed at a White House Conference attended by Vice President Garner, Speaker Bankhead, Senator Barkley, (Dem.- Ky.), the majority leader, and Repre- sentative Rayburn of Texas, the House Democratic leader. The leaders advised Mr. Roosevelt they would check on the progress of major legislation through committees this week and give him next Monday their best guess on when Congress would adjourn. Will Determine Departure Their forecast may decide the date on which the President will start his projected trip to the San Francisco Fair. Mr. Roosevelt has said that if it appears possible Congress will ad- journ by July 15, he will delay his trip until after that date. If Con- gress is unlikely to adjourn before Aug. 1, however, he probably will leave Washington June 15. The Congressional leaders reported to Mr. Roosevelt that adjournment prospects were tied up with the prob- lems of neutrality and tax legisla- tion. A tax revision measure is expected to reach the House week after next. Thus, leaders said, cebate-provok- ing neutrality legislation is the main barrier to a July 15 adjournment. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee today postponed until June 14 con- sideration of neutrality proposals ad- vanced by Secretary Hull. Hull Bill Asked The committee agreed to ask Hull for a bill embodying his suggestions, which include proposals to repeal the existing ban on arms shipments to belligerents and to prohibit American vessels from traveling through com- bat zones in war time. There have been reports that the Administration would seek action first in the House on the Hull propos- als and then would ask Senate ap- proval if it appeared possible that action could be obtained without long delay. Senator Nye (Rep.-N.D.), told re- porters he thought that a filibuster against repeal of the arms embargo would be justified but would not be necessary. "The more time Congress will spend here on the job in Washington be- tween now and next January," Nye asserted, "the surer will be the chance of America's staying out of European entanglements." Local Resident Succumbs After Automobile Crash Thirty-five minutes after he drove his car into the guard rails on U.S. 12, John D. Brown, 945 Wall St., Ann Arbor, died in St. Joseph Hospital Tuesday night from a heart attack. Driving east about one-half mile from Dixboro, witnesses reported, he had been driving all over the road before he finally crashed off the right side. When deputies from the sheriff's office arrived he was unconscious; he was then taken to the hospital where he died a short time later. House Plans Pension Bill VoteToday, Act Called 'Recovery Plan,' 'Heresy' In Hot Debate. On Townsend Proposal; Author Of Measure Predicts Its Defeat WASHINGTON, May 31.-()-Thej Townsend old age pension bill was described in the House today both as "a national recovery plan" and as "economic heresy." At one point in the hours of debate preliminary to tomorrow's vote, Chairman Doughton (Dem., N.C.) of the Ways and Means Committee said it would impose "the heaviest tax ever levied in all our history." He as- serted: "The issue is-shall we continue in effect the principles of social security which we have tried and tested, or shall we accede and surrender to the demands of cock-eyed, crackpot, sel- fish economists and accept a plan never before tried by any nation on earth, and one which violates every sound economic principle." Simply Taxation Plan Representative Hendricks (Dem.,-' Fla.), the bill's author, said the measure was "not simply a taxation and pension plan." "It is essentially a national re- covery plan or it is nothing," he de- clared. He added that the bill pro- poses "to continue spending to bring back prosperity." Hendricks reviewed briefly the bill's provisions to levy a graduated one- half of one per cent to two per cent tax on business and services to pro- vide pensions up to $200 a month to elderly persons. He also noted that the measure would compel immediate spending of the pensions. New Purchasing Power "It is our hope," Hendricks said, "that with the spending of this money and the resulting new purchasing power-with the factory wheels turn- ing and industry humming-the re- maining millions of unemployed can get jobs and the government be re- lieved of this problem." With the leadership and even Hen- dricks saying the bill would be de- feated, the debate droned on for hours. Decree Closes Pearl Harbor FDR Bars All But Navy Ships FromKey Base WASHINGTON, May 31.-()- President Roosevelt closed the waters near the naval base at Pearl Harbor, N.J., today to all vessels except those with special authorization to enter. Officials said the order, an execu- tive decree, created the most exten- sive closed military area in United States territory. It is indicative, they said, or the strategic importance of the harbor, the Navy's principal Pa- cific outpost, and is in line with the government's policy of tightening re- strictions protecting military prop- erty from prying eyes. The order forbids all "vessels, craft and persons" from entering the area except "public vessels of the United States" unless specifically authorized by the Secretary of the Navy. Even fishermen will be barred. Violators will be punished under the criminal code. Pearl Harbor has long been closed to "commercial sea traffic" except by special permit.I Manager Names Ensian Business Staff Members Business Staffappointments for the 1940 Michiganensian were an- nounced yesterday by Richard T. Waterman, '40, the new Business Manager. Ellen E. McDonald, '40, Women's Business Manager, will be in charge of the lower staff. The new Sales and Advertising Manager is John W. Cory, '41; Accounts Manager is Myron Gins. Edward A. King, '41E, is the Organizations Manager. A complete sellout of Ensians was reported by Charles L. Kettler, '39E, business manager of the 1939 Ensian. A few of the copies sold to Ann Arbor book stores are left, and about a hundred copies ordered by stu- dents have not been picked up. Many wishing to buy Ensians over the counter have been disappointed. Next year's seniors are urged to place their orders early in the fall to insure themselves of a copy of next year's Ensian. Netmen Win Third Place In Conference Jim Tobin Paces Varsity As Chicago Captures Top Position At Meet Molotoff Rejects New Pact; Doubts Britain's Sincerity i t: r tl e: fl t: CHICAGO, May 31.-Paced by Jim1 Tobin, the only player to take an a individual title away from Chicago, the Michigan Varsity tennis team up- set the early season dope by scoring 8Y2 to capture third place in the 9 Conference tennis meet. e The University of Chicago swept to its third straight team title, carry- ing off all three doubles finals ands all but one singles crown. Northwes- tern was in second place. The Maroons scored 25 points, while the Wildcats o tallied 16. Tobin, who had beaten Ken John- n son of Illinois and Tom Neilson of Wisconsin, in the early rounds, 1 reached the finals by way of a de-n fault from Chet Murphy, Murphy, favoring a lame back wrenched in i play last week, decided to forego 1 singles competition in order to be at- i top strength for defense of the num- ber one doubles. Harrison O'Neill, Northwestern ace, was Jim's opponent in today's match, and had already met and de- feated Tobin earlier in the year. At first it looked as if he were going to repeat the victory, as he captured the first set 6-4. However, Tobin rallied and finished going away as he took the next two sets 9-7, 6-0. The other Wolverine to reach the finals, Sam Durst, was unsuccess- ful in his search for top honors as heb was defeated by James Atkins of Chi-a (Continued on Page 7)a Harlan DisputeI Still Unsettledt Operators Refuse To GrantI Union Shop Contract r HARLAN, Ky., May 31.-()-Fed- eral and state conciliators stepped out of contract negotiations between Harlan Soft Coal Operators and the United Mine Workers (CIO) today with the announcement conferences had been suspended indefinitely. John L. Conner, labor department conciliator, left for Charleston, W. Va. He said conferees were subject to recall by either side. Today's three-hour conference, which ended with no statement of progress made, climaxed a week of efforts by Conner and Emmett Dur- rett, state conciliator, to reconcile the views of union leaders and operators on contract differences. The Harlan County Coal Operators' Association, controlling 42 mines, opposes a contract embracing the "union shop" clause included in pacts signed by operators in every other major field in the 'Nation since the April 1 general shutdown. George S. Ward, association secre- tary, said half the association mines now were operating without con- tracts. ASU Announces Winners Of Raffle Holders of the five winning tickets in the American Student Union raffle were announced after the drawing which was held last night in the Royal Visitors Leave Pacific Coast Province CHILLIWACK, B.C.,.May 31.-(IP)- King George and Queen Elizabeth maid farewell to Little England on he Pacific today, leaving behind the royalists of bustling Vancouver and sleepy Victoria to live with the mem- ries, the Queen's smile and the King's royal demeanor. If there is any truth in the old story that Englishmen stand up in their >aths when the national anthem is layed the patriots of old Victoria, vho look on London as an outpost of .mpire, were able to take their tubs or the first time in 36 hours. The trains of "God Save the King" ran ike a theme song through the town while the royal couple was there. At Vancouver the British sover- figns were publicly proclaimed King nd Queen of Canada for the first ime since their arrival in the Do- minion. At Victoria the visit was a triumph of successive appearances n a seagirt setting like their island home 6,000 miles away. Skylarks, old oaks, golden broom growing as rank as in Scotland, rooked lanes scented with blossom- ng May trees, even road signs like "teas with Devonshire cream" added o the illusion of the English country side. Only an occasional "hot dog" stand or freshly painted cryptic "Bar-B-Q" sign for the American tourist horde relieved the spell of the old country. So far as was known, Queen Eliza- beth, who took the royal suite pic- nicking after their engagements end- ed, didn't stop at a hot dog stand for a practice bout with the fare they may get at the Hyde Park picnic in their honor. Union To Open Book Exchange Travel Bulletin Is Offered For Departing Students The Student Book Exchange will be conducted during the Spring Ex- amination period, according to an announcement made yesterday. This re-opening will headline a list of Union activities for the remainder of the school year, including an "Exam Dance" and the establishment of a travel bulletin. The Book Exchange, headed by a committee of Union, League, Daily and faculty members, will be open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. from June 7 to the end of the examination period. The Exchange will be held in the South Lounge of the Union. Those on the Book Exchange Com- mittee are: Dean Walter B. Rea, Dean Jeanette Perry, Robert Ulrich, '39, James Palmer, '39, Harriet Sharkey, '39, Roberta Leete, '39 and Robert Bogle, '41. Dances, held both Friday and Saturday nights will feature a "Get- ting Away From Finals" theme. Berlin Welcomes 4,500 Nazi Soldiers Returning From Franco' s Forces Premier Addresses Russian Parliament MOSCOW, May 31.-(A')-With Jo- seph Stalin looking on and applaud- ing, Premier-Foreign Minister Vya- cheslaff Molotoff tonight rejected the latest British-French pact proposals as inadequate. In a speech before the Supreme Soviet-the Russian parliament- Molotoff left the door slightly open for further negotiations, however, if Paris and London are willing to meet Moscow's view. He emphasized that Russia stands for a common front of all peaceful nations. Asserts Moscow Independence He asserted vigorously, however, the complete independence of Moscow's foreign policy. It was his first speech since succeeding Maxim Litvinoff as foreign commissar on May 3. "It is impossible," he said in a caus- tic reference to British-French efforts to build a bloc of nations to counter- balance the Rome-Berlin axis, "to think now whether they want to end aggression." He also mentioned a possible re- newal of trade negotiations with Ger- many, clearly indicating that Moscow is not leading any anti-Hitler boy- cott. These .negotiations, he said, "may be resumed." Molotoff described the British-Po- lish mutual aid agreement and a like British-Turkish understanding as a "good sign," but declared Russia wanted more. Soviet Conditions The conditions of Soviet coopera- tion include, he said, a mutual as- sistance pact covering not only those countries guaranteed by Britain and France but "all neighboring countries of the USSR." Britain and France have "remained silent as to three countries on Soviet Russia's northwestern frontier (ap- parently Latvia, Estonia and Fin-. n)land) which may be powerless to de- fend their neutrality," he said. Brit- ain and France, he added, "only think of those whom they have guaranteed." As for London's answer to previous Russian objections that the British offer did not include reciprocity, Mo- lotoff said: "It is true that London and Paris have accepted the principle of reci- procity modified by numerous clauses so that it may be purely formal." Germans, Danes Sign Non-Aggression Treaty BERLIN, May 31.--(P)-Germany today welcomed home 4,500 soldiers who helped General Franco win the Spanish Civil War, signed a non- aggression pact with Denmark and prepared to honor Prince Regent Paul of Yugoslavia, due tomorrow for a five-day visit. Field Marshal Hermann Wilhelm Goering, representing Chancellor Hitler, in Hamburg greeted the Ger- mans who were sent to Spain to "fight Bolshevism." At the same time Foreign Minister Joachim von Rib- bentrop in the Berlin foreign office signed the agreement with Denmark. The treaty, of two short articles, was the first of three which Hitler plans as a direct result of President Roosevelt's April 15 peace message, in which Mr. Roosevelt appealed to Hit- ler and Premier Mussolini for a.pledge not to attack 31 specified nations. The official Nazi view was that the approaching state visit of Prince Paul "shows that the Belgrade govern- ment intends to remain absolutely firm against bloc building and follow the friendship and commercial policy that is the most natural and useful for the country." Actress Roos Of White Steed' Believes InEnjoyment Of Life B WTNSTONA _ COX I y W Y7A1 V~Z n. "Oh, it is so nice to get away from' Trappe Miner'sNew York," sighed Joanna Roos as she sat down on one of the campus Body Photographed benches. "It is so nice and peaceful in Ann Arbor. There are so many trees, and the whole atmosphere is TOLUCA, Ill., May 31.-(R)-A pic- full of green wholesomeness. But ture taken with a camera lowered to more than that the serenity of a the bottom of a 421-foot mine shaft college town gives one a chance to tonight located the body of Dominick know himself."a Zalesano, 77, who had been missing Miss Roos is visiting Ann Arbor since May 18. for the second successive time. She Members of Zalesano's family, who played here last year with the Dra- . had feared he might have fallen into matic festival and is back again this the abandoned shaft had been denied year to duplicate her winning per- nrmission to exolore it by state mine formances. She is cast in the femalef , Co-Op Society's New Plant Opens Downtown Today After three years in business at Detroit and Katherine Streets, the Ann Arbor Cooperative Society will open its new business location at 633-37 S. Main St. today. This plant has a large and modern grocery store, a fully-equipped service station and a coal yard served by a railroad spur. A meat market will soon be added.- The store occupies the first floor of a two-story brick building. Room for a meeting hall and offices is provided on the second floor. The property purchased by the society also in- cludes a one-story machine shop, which will continue to be occupied by the present tenant. Painting (inside and out), altera- tions and new equipment will provide a more serviceable place of business for the nietv's 750 memhrs. t E l r i s Engineers To Hear E. A. Stalker Today Prof. E. A. Stalker of the aeronauti- cal engineering department will speak on his recent trip to the aero- nautical laboratories at Langley Field, Va., before the Institute of Aeronau- tical Engineers at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 1042 East Engineering Building. Professor Stalker has just returned