Weather Fair and colder today, with northwest winds. Y Lit igan VOL. XLIX. No. 107 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1939 1 ' Foreign Policy, Defense Issue Hotly Debated In Washington Nation Would Be Shocked To Hear Facts Of Secret Meeting, Lundeen Says Republican Defends Roosevelt's Action WASHINGTON, March 2.-(A)- With a Republican Senator, Austin of Vermont, vigorously defending the Administration's course in facilitating the French plane sale, the Senate heard'a heated assertion today that the nation would be "shocked and stunned" to learn what President Roosevelt secretly told a Senate Com- mittee about defense and foreign policy. The statement was made by Sena- tor Lundeen (F-L., Minn.), who, with Austin, is a member of the Military Affairs Committee which investigat- ed the sale of planes to France. It emerged from a boiling debate which was but one of the many develop- ments produced during the day by the current controversy over rearma- ment and foreign affairs.- Elsewhere: 1. Secretary Hull reiterated his op- position to a proposed constitutional amendment under which the declara- tion of a war to be fought on foreign soil would be submitted to a referen- dum of the people. The proposal, de- feated last year by the House, was revived yesterday in the Senate. 2. The House Appropriations Com- mittee approved a bill providing $499,- 857,936 for the War Department in the fiscal year beginning next July 1. 3. Testimony before the Appropria- tions Committee, published during the day, also disclosed that the army has developed civilian gas masks to be produced at a. cost of $1.25 each. 4. Senator Chavez (Dem., N.M.) de- manded that the United States fol- low the lead of Great. Britain and France and recognize the Franco re- gime in Spain. 5. The Senate had before it, with ultimate passage conceded, the House- approved measure to authorize an outlay of $358,000,000 for an expan- sion of the army, including $300,000,- 000 to bring the air force to a total of 6,000 planes and increase its person- nel. As on yesterday and the 'day be- fore, however, the Senate debate turned quickly to foreign affairs. Shortly afterward Lundeen made this statement: "We may some day give publicity to what happened at that secret con- ference at the 'White House, for I happen to know a record was made of it," he shouted. "And if the American people ever learned what was said there-if the Senators want to know that-the nation would be shocked and stunned by the secrecy and what wasvsaid there." Sink Announces Tentative Plan Of May Festival Swarthout And Symphony Orchestra To Inaugurate Varied Programi May 10 The annual May Festival, which, coupled with the Choral Union Series, has made Ann Arbor one of the major musical centers in the country, this year will present 12 solo artists and three ensemble groups fiom May 10 to 13. The tentative program of concerts, as announced yesterday by Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the School of Music, is as follows: Wednesday evening, May 10=-x Gladys Swarthout, mezzo-soprano, and the Philadelphia Symphony Or- chestra, with Eugene Ormandy con- ducting. Thursday evening, May 11, Selma Amnsky, sopiano, Jan Peerce, tenor, Rudolf Serkin, pianist, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Uni- versity Choral Union, Earl V. Moore conducting. Friday afternoon, May 12, Ezio Pinza, bass, and Young People's Fes- tival Chorus, Juva Higbee and Or- mandy conducting. Friday evening, Marian Anderson, contralto, male chorus and Philadelphia Orchestra. U AW Seeks To Prevent Martin Parley In Detroit Supporters Of CIO Expect 54 Favorable Majority Ofn Executive Committee To Oust Rebels Papal Choice Begun Today By Cardinals IDETROIT, March 1 --()- The CIO-supported executive board of the United Automobile Workers Union plotted a flank move today designed to prevent Homer Martin and his factionof the UAW from staging a convention here Saturday. The CIO group announced that the nine members of the UAW executive board who have not been suspended by Martin had been summoned to a meeting here Friday. Five of the nine now are opposed to Martin's policies and his convention. R. J. Thomas, head of the CIO- UAW group, said the non-suspended executive board members would be asked to cancel Martin's plans for the convention, terminate legal action instituted by Martin and his follow- ers, rescind Martin's "alleged suspen- sion" of 15 executive board members, and discharge Martin's legal counsel. In announcing the CIO-UAW strat- egy, Thomas asserted that "we do not agree with Martin that this nine-man group is the official UAW executive board, but if he wants to contend it is, we thought we would try func- tioning throtUgh his board on this matter.". The five unsuspended members who have thrown their lot with the CIO-UAW group are Walter N. Wells, vice-president, Detroit; Russell Mer- rill, South Bend, Ind.; F. J. Michel, of Racine, Wis.; Charles E. Madden, Pontiac, and Loren Houser of Detroit. Michel, who believed he had been suspended by Martin, discovered re- cently that his suspension notice ap- plied only to his job as regional direc- tor for Wisconsin. Martin has his own vote and those of Lester Washburn, Lansing; Frank Tucci, New York, and Irvan Cary, Los Angeles. Thus the lineup at Friday's "execu- tive board" session would be five in favor of the CIO-UAW group and four for Martin. No one expects Mar- tin's supporters to attend, however, and nothing prevents Martin from suspending one or two of the pro- CIO members to create an alignment favoring his faction. Meantime Martin and his followers went ahead with the task of prepar- ing Moose Temple here to receive the expected delegates. Tables to accommodate 750 persons have been arranged and the gallery has been thrown open to admit four hundred who wear guest badges. The elected UAW president ex- pressed confidence that his conven- tion would attract delegates from "local unions representing more than a majority of the entire UAW mem- bership." A list of locals sending delegates would be issued Thursday, he said. Entire , College To Decide On For Deceased Convenes Successor Pius XI. Toronto Beats Hockey Team By_4-2 Score L'Heureux Scores Twice For Visitors; Hillberg, Cooke Varsity Snipers By NEWELL McCABE With experience and numbers favoring the visiting team, Michigan's faltering hockey sextet was served with its fourth loss in as many starts, when a strong University of Toronto squad handed them a 4 to 2 defeat last night at the Coliseum.- , The potent Blue and White team kept the puck over the Wolverine blue line for the majority of the game and at the same time kept peppering "Spike" James from all corners of the arena. Turning in the .best performance of the year, James, by virtue of his excellent Job of net minding, was the main reason why Ace Bailey and his ~Toronto sextet didn't win by a much higher score. Although playing without the serv- ices of their two leading 'scorers after the first ten minutes of play, Toronto -left no doubt as to which team would remain 4he master of the'arena for the next two periods. Several times Michigan's forward line of Cooke, Chadwick, and H- berg broke into Toronto's danger zone but either a body check by a Blue and White defenseman or a hurried shot on the Wolverines' part would bring to an end any potential scoring threat. Starting out slow in the first period Toronto had difficulty in penetrating (Continued on Page 3) Ensian Tryouts Called A meeting for second semester freshmen and sophomores interested in trying out for the advertising, sales, or accounts staffs of the Michigan- ensian is scheduled at 4 p.m. today in the Student Publications build- ing. Arts Academy To Hold Annu l Meeting Here Dean Of Rochester Medical School And, Prof. Boak To Talk To Educators Dr. George H. Whipple, dean of the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, will be guest lecturer at the 44th annual meeting of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters to be held here March 16, 17 and 18. Dr. Whipple will speak on "Anemia and the Build- ing of Hemoglobin in the Body". at 4:15 p.m. Friday, March 17, in the Rackham Auditorium. 1 Prof. A.E..R. Boak of the history de- partment, who is president of the Academy, will give the presidential address on "The Role of Taxation in the Decline of the Roman Empire" at 8 p.m. Friday, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. 'The program, which annually at- tracts several hundred scholars from the State's colleges and universities, features symposiums and speeches in 15 fields of academic work. Chairmen of the 15 sections of the Academy are: anthropology, Horace Miner, Wayne University; botany, Prof. William C. Steere of the botany department; economics, H e r m a n Wyngarden, Michigan State College; forestry, Karl Dressel, Michigan State College; geography, L. A. Wolfanger, Michigan State College; geology and mineralogy, 0. F. Poindexter of the State Department of Conseryation; history and political science, Bruce M. Raymond, Hope College; land- scape architecture, T. Glenn Phillips of.-Detroit. Language and literature, Prof. C. D. Thorpe of the English department; mathematics, Prof. William M. Ayres of the mathematics department; phi- losophy, William M. Trap, Wayne University; psychology, Prof. W. B. Pillsbury of the psychology depart- sment. Voting Takes Place In Secret Conclave VATICAN CITY, March 1.-(P)- The College of Cardinals went solemn- ly and ceremoniously into secret con- clave today to choose a new Pope, the 262nd occupant of the Chair of Peter. For the first time in many years the entire membership of the College, now numbering 62, was present for the opening of the conclave which will begin voting tomorrow on a new spiritual head of 331,500,000 Catho- lics. At a morning mass the cardinals prayed for guidance of the Holy Ghost and heard a sermon exhorting them to choose as a successor to peace-loving Pius XI a man who might lead the world back to "Chris- tian precepts" despite present-day "social disorders and hatred among nations." In the afternoon the opening cere- monies began. At nightfall, Prince Ludovico Chigi-Albani, Hereditary Marshal of the meeting, turned the keys of two big locks on the outer door -of the Vatican wing in which the cardinals and their attendants were housed. Two other locks on the inner door clicked a moment later as Eugenio Cardinal Paceli, the Camerlengo, completed the sealing of the gather- ing which will remain in its "prison" until a cloud of white smoke from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel announces the selection of a new Pope. Speculation on a likely choice in the voting seemed to veer toward Pacelli, who was Secretary of State under Pius XI, as the conclave opened There were predictions among Itali- ans that Pacelli would get more than 30 votes on the first ballot. Forty-two votes are necessary for election, a two-thirds majority be- ing required. Jap Munition Plant Explodes Blasts Kill More Than 200; Fire Destroys 600 Homes OSAKA, Japan, March 2 (Thurs- day)-R)-Police announced today that probably 200 persons were blown to bits and burned to death and at least 200 others injured in yester- day's explosion of an army arsenal in suburban Hirakata. The police communique said 600 homes were destroyed by the flames which swept through the suburb from exploding muntions. As a result 5,800 persons were homeless. The disaster, unprecedented for its type in Japan's industrial history, occurred at 3:20 p.m. yesterday (1:20 a.m., E.S.T., Wednesday) from an undetermined cause. Windows were broken for miles around -by the force of the blasts, telephone and telegraph wires were thrown down, and railway and street car service had to be suspended. Lydia Mendelssohn Shows Art Cinema Gorky Film Today "The Childhood of Maxim Gorky," a Soviet film which has won the praise of outstanding New York crit- ics, will be shown at 8:15 p.m, to- day, tomorrow and Saturday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre under the auspices of the Art Cinema League. The freedom from all attempts at propaganda in the picture was com- mented upon by professors who have seen the preview. "The portrayal of Gorky's boyhood is free from all at- tempts to either build up the Soviet regime or attack the Tsarist order. Prof. .1. T. Price of the English de- partment declared. Louis Untermeyer To Give Talk Here Louis Untermeyer, noted American poet and anthologist, will deliver a University lecture at 8:15 p.m. Mon- day, March 13, in the Graduate AFOL Official Speas Tonight Declines Bid To CIO Talk Teamster Leader Claims That Work Necessitates Refusal Of Peace Offer Green Is Seekinghv ;. Worthy Successor WASHINGTON, March 1 -(P)- Daniel J. Tobin, the American Feder- ation of Labor's most outspoken ad- vocate of peace in the labor move- ment, declined today to serve as an AFL negotiator in new peace confer- DR. REINH6LD NIEUHR ences with John L. Lewis and his CIO leaders. * * * The chief of the big teamsters' union for the past 31 years informed N ebuhr ers the AFL president, William Green, in a telegram that the "press of work" Final Lecture would prevent his serving. His suc- cessor, Green said, would be namedOn VyO U 111( t tomorrow to keep intact the peace On conference machinery set up by both CIO and AFL at the urgent request of President Roosevelt. Noted Theologian Presents Tobin made a thundering speech Orthodox ProtestanView at the AFL convention last October, pleading that the federation leader- In Rackham Auditorium ship be instructed to take immediate action to terminate the labor split. "I am going to the left in politics During a secret meeting of thea.e.i,, AFL leaders at the convention, Tobin and the right in religion. was reported to have urged, without So Reinhold Niebuhr, noted the- success, that a committee be set up ologian, who delivers the last in the to deal with th peace situation. Student Religious Association series Tobin's convention speech, prompt- on the "Existence ad Nature of God," ed by President Roosevelt's first pub-nh i lic appeal for a settlement of the at 8:15 p.m. today in the Rackham labor controversy, started administra- Auditorium, said of himself four tion officials on a search for a new years ago. basis upon which the warring factions Morgan Comments e could meet. Referring to this statement, Ken While preparations for the forth- Morgan, director of the SRA said yes- coming conference went forward to- terday: "It is interesting to note that, day, two members of the Senate labor while Professor Niebuhr has shown committee suggested that a non-par- himself to be an avowed liberal in tisan mediator be named to sit in at social and political matters, ever will- parley. ing to' change his views if something Senator Ellender (Dem.-La.) told more logical presents itself, yet his reporters he saw little possibility of views on theology 'are not in the liber- the warring factions reaching an al Protestant tradition, but rather agreement unless an outsider were modeled after the protestantism of present. Each group has named three Karl Barth and Soram Kierkegaarde." negotiators. Born in 1892, Professor Niebuhr "If it's just the 'members of the was e d at Ers Colegr was educated at Elmhurst College two committees," Ellender said, "they (Ill.), Eden Theological Seminary are likely to just sit there and hold (St. Louis) and the Yale Divinity rigidly to their.positions. ) School. He was pastor of the Bethel Senator Pepper (Dem.-Fla) took a Evangelical Church in Detroit from similar view, asserting that an ur- 1915 to 1928. Since then, he has been pire with a detached point of view at Union Theological Seminary as would certainly increase the chancesasitnprfsoofhlspyad of success."' assistant professor of philosophy and Way was clearing for the negotia- professor of applied Christianity. tions yesterday when John L. Lewis, Niebuhr An Author chairman of the C10, named a three- Professor Niebuhr 1 the author of man committee, headed by himself, numerous works, among them: "Does to meet with the AFL representatives. Civilization Need ReligionZ", "Leaves From the Notebook of a Tamed Cynic," "Moral Man and Immoral Drive To Collect Unpaid Society," "Reflections on the End of Senior Dues B Today an Era," "An Interpretation of Chris- tian Ethics" and "Beyond Tragedy." A two-day drive to collect unpaid The SRA series, which has present- senior class dues will be begun to- ed Bertrand Russell givig the ag- day, it was announced yesterday by nostic point of view, and the Rt. Rev. Leon Kupeck, class treasurer. Collec- Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen presenting the tion posts will be established in An- orthodox Catholic arguments, has gell Hall lobby, University Hall, the drawn capacity crowds and it is ex- main library and the League and pected that today's lecture will like- Union lobbies. I wise be well attended. Economics Professor Stresses -A " --t - ---- W 7 _ R - - 1 1 Blame For Guild Strike Placed On Hearst's Contract Violations By JUNE HARRIS The necessity of a strong labor movement with a united CIO and AFL to insure economic security was stressed by Jack Weeks, president of the Detroit Newspaper Guild, and Paul Porter, editor of the Kenosha Labor, at a forum sponsored by the labor committee of the American Stu- dent Union held yesterday afternoon in the Union. After sketching the growth of the American Newspaper Guild, a CIO affiliate, Weeks explained the signifi- cance of the three-month old Guild strike against the Hearst-owned Chi- cago Herald-Examiner. Within 11 jacking were common occurences,. thugs were hired to molest strikers at their homes and an injunction was secured severely hampering the ac- tivities of the pickets. In spite of these efforts, Weeks as- sured, the Guild will eventually win the sti'ike. Already they have suc- ceeded in cutting the circulation of the Herald-Examiner by 250,000 and the advertising by a million dollars. The Guild is in a strategic position, having the active support of or- ganized labor which realizes the im- portance of a strong newspaper union. A strong labor movement to insure worker control of industry is a neces- sity if we wish to reverse the ecAnomic (Editor's Note: This is the first of twoarticles dealing with the machinery of the Fair Labor Standard§ Act.) By JACK CANAVAN The difficulty of fixing a minimum wage for industry which guarantees the worker a decent standard of liv- ing without "curtailing employment," or handicapping small enterprise was stressed by Prof. Z. Clark Dickinson of the economics department on his return from Washington. Professor Dickinson is a public member of Industry Conmittee 1-A, appointedi by Wages and Hours Ad- ministrator Elmer F. 'Andrews to recommend a minimum hourly wage for the woolen and worsted industry under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The committee, representing the public, employees and employers, in- cludes such notables as Prof. George W. Taylor of Pennsylvania, noted labor arbitrator; Donald M. Nelson, vice-president of Sears and Roebuck Co.; and Sidney Hillman, president of Amalgamated Clothing Workers and vice-president of the C.I.0. The committee's recommendation of a 36 cent minimum hourly wage is the first to be made by an industry committee under the new law. If accepted by Mr. Andrews, it will