-... I Weathe Considerable cloudiness, some- what cooler In east and south. L 131k iga ._. _ VOL. XLIX. No. 42 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOV. 12, 1938 p Giant Garment Union Leaves CIO But Urges 'Labor Reunite I L G W U Withdraws Its 250,000 Members From National Organization Wo-ld Not Agree On Permanent CIO WASHINGTON, Nov. I--( )-The International Ladies' Garment Work- ers yesterday withdrew its 250,000 members from the CIO, the organi- zation which it helped form, and an- nounced it would now be an independ- ent union. The ILGWU executive board decid- ed unanimously not to comply with the request of John L. Lewis, CIO chairman, that all CIO affiliates send' delegates to a convention i Pitts- burgh ijext week to form a permanent organization to rival the AFL. The board, declaring that it want- ed reconciliation between the CIO and AFL, said that until that was at- tained it woud not enter either camp. It asserted that the CIO-AFL split was one of the major causes of "the setback suffered by the progressive and liberal forces" in last Tuesday's elections. The action brought to a climax the futile efforts of David Dubinsky, DETROIT, Nov. 1-(I)-Hom- er Martin, president of the United Automobile Workers, arrived here by plane tonight from Pittsburgh a few hours after the union's ex- ecutive board authorized a strike at the Hudson Motor Car Co. and indicated there would be no stoppage of work immediately, at least. Martin, who had gone to Pitts- burgh for the board meeting and other preliminaries to the. CIO convention next week, said he was not present when the board took the Hudson action. Cheer Section To Try Card Displays Again Michigan's cheering section will make another bid for newsreel honors today at the Northwestern game. Three new card displays will be at- tempted by the cheering section of which Ted Spangler, '40, of the Union Executive Council, is in charge. Par- ticipants are urged by Don L. Nixon, '40, Union publicity chairman to hold their cards at eye level and exactlyr iertical, a procedure used by other schools which have successful dis- plays.- Campaign For Funds Started y Red Cross House To House Canva Scheduled For 2 To Tomorrow, Afternoon LSS 5 V ,, ; The Washtenaw County chapter of the American Red Cross will get its Roll Call campaign under way in a house to house membership canvass from 2 to 5 p.m. tomorrow. Booths will be situated at various point, throughout the city on Monday, Tues- day and Wednesday where member- ships may be obtained. 41 Arthur J. Sullivan, credit manager of the University Hospital, is chair- man of the Washtenaw County divi- sion of the drive. Mrs. Albert C. Furstenberg is Ann Arbor chairman with Mrs. George Moe and Joseph Cahill, president of the Junior Cham- ber of Commerce, as vice-presidents. Mrs. Raymond E. Spokes is i charge of the booths. An advisory 'committee of volun- teers, headed by Mrs. Edward A. Hunter, includes Mrs. Wells I. Ben- nett, Mrs. R. B. Canfield, Mrs. Earl Cress, Mrs. Furstenberg, Mrs. Ra- phael Isaacs, Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, Mrs. Arthur W. Stace, George J. Burke, Dr. H. H. Cum- mings, John W. Edwards, Otto W. Haisley, Dr. Harley A. Haynes, C. R. Henderson, C. W. Lighthall, Mayor Walter C. Sadler and Mrs. Harry Towsley. Movies On Spain To Be Given Tonight A motion picture describing the life of American volunteers in Spain will be shown at 8 p.m. Monday in the Union Ballroom at a meeting spon- sored by the Progressive Club. Fred Keller and Canute Franksen, who recently returned from the Spanish front, will relate their experiences at this time.# The film, "American Lafayettes" was photographed in Spain and de- picts the civilian and military activi- ties of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade composed of American volunteers to Spain. Fred Keller was political commis- sar of the Brigade and fought in the front line trenches for over a year, participating in the Belchite and Brunete campaigns. He was cap- tured by Fascist troops, knocked out his guard, swam across the Ebro and, rejoined his battalion. Nazis Jail Jews, Plan A Ghetto To Hold Them Goebbels Says Foreign' Sympathizers Distort The Incidents In Germany, Expect Anti-Semiticit Restrictions' Soon BERLIN, Nov. 11.-(')-Germany's sudden nationwide outburst of anti- Semitism developed tonight into a series of secret police raids upon Jews of the upper classes amid re- ports that the Ghetto of the Middle Ages was to be re-established in the modern Nazi Reich. Official Germany pushed ahead its anti-Semitic program with a warn- ing to Jews abroad, especially in thel United States, that their "behavior" would affect future treatment of Jews in Germany. Goebbels Annoyed Propaganda Minister Paul Joseph Goebbels, writing for tomorrow's Voelkischer Beobachter an article in- tended to justify the anti-Jewish ac- tions, expressed annoyance at what he termed "misrepresentations and distortions" of happenings here, espe- cially in the reports of "the Jewish press of North America." "This will do no good to Jews in Germany," Goebbels wrote, rather the reverse. The German people are an anti-Semitic people, and will not tolerate having their rights curtailed or being provoked by the parasitic Jewish race. "The anti-German outside world will do well to leave solution of the Jewish problem to Germans. If the outside world wants the Jews, it can have them." Government's Attitude The article constitutes the Govern- ment's official attitude regarding the anti-Semitic reprisals, which began early yesterday with smashing of Jewish property and synagogues throughout the country in revenge for the slaying of a German legation secretary in Paris by a young Polish Jew. - - ' Earlier in a press interview Goeb- bels said future treatment of Jews here "depends both on their behavior' here and that of Jews abroad." There was uncertainty over what would be done with the prisoners. Officials said they did not know. Some sources said they would be placed in barracks as the first move toward re- establishment of the Ghetto, a special section of a city set apart for Jews only, in which all Jews must live and do business. Goebbels announced the expected new anti-Semitic laws would be issued shortly, probably signalling victory in Nazidom's five-year campaign against the Jews. The Nazi view was that the action of the mobs was a "force majeure," (Continued on Page 2) The Union Council will offer campus guide service to all Univer- sity Day visitors from 9:30 a.m. to noon today. Information will be available in the Union lobby. union president, to end labor's civil war, which began three years ago. The garment workers and nine oth- er unions withdrew from the AFL in 1935 to attempt to organize indus- trial labor which the ILGWU said the Federation "neglected." Dubinsky, when he was asked today whether Lewis knew about the step, smiled and said: "The last time we saw each other we agreed to disagree." Taking a firm stand against "dual unionism," the board's resolution said:_ "We do not believe now, and we nevei have believed, that two separ- ate labor movements are required 'to achieve the common objectives of labor. "We believe now, as we have always believed, that one unified. labor or- ganization in this country could and should bring the benefits of organi- zation to all wage earners in the tand whether in the mass production or the skilled industries and protect labor against its economic as well as political enemies." The resolution further declared: "The formation of a permanent national union to supersede the CIO would, in our judgment, sharpen the conflict in the labor movement and would create greater obstacles for ultimate reconciliation." PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 11--P)- Chairman John L. Lewis completed preliminary organization of CIO's first constitutional convention today, apparently undisturbed by the refusal of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union to join in a perman- ent CO. The announcement in Washington (Continued on Page 2) Doctors Hold Final Meeting Wildcat Band May Present Startling Show HO pes For Big T'en Title The University Sand's first com- "etition of the season will arrive at 2:15 p.m. today at the Michigan entral Station when 130 member f the Northwestern University Band unl in from Evanston. When G. C. BaInum, director of he Northwestern Band wrote Wil- iam D. Revelli, director of the Michi- an Band, for permission to use the tadium amplifying system during its ormations, Professor Revelli replied sat he would not only be glad to 11ow it but would insist upon it be- ause several years ago when the Jorthwestern Band was here it made Wildcat formation which was uni- ersally mistaken for a church steeple, .nd Professor Revelli said he hoped ;o clear up any ambiguity which night result from their formations .his year. Gil Phares, '39BAd, man- ger of the band, insists that the two iirectors are great pals. The band will be greeted at the tation by Phares and Louis Van Uanen, president of Kappa Psi, hon- >rary band fraternity, and then will e transported to Ferry Field where it will hold a secret practice session ill game time. New Deal Firm Despite Threats By Big Business Roosevelt Doesn't Expect Coalition Of Opponents To Block His Reforms WASHINGTON, Nov. 11.- (AP)- Both President Roosevelt and Rep- representative Rayburn of Texas, the Democratic House leader, expressed he opinion today that Tuesday's election had given the administra- ion no reason to worry about "coali- Lion opposition" to its legislative rogram. However, the Chamber of Com- nerce of the United States .suggest- ed the election results would lead 'o closer study and greater opposi- ion in Congress to "ill-advised and astily drawn" bills affecting busi- ness. Since Republicans made heavy in- roads Tuesday into the Democratic majority in Congress, speculation had risen in the Capital that Republi- cans and Conservtive Democrats would team up in next session in at- empts to block New Deal legisla- ive proposals. Asked at his press conference whether he thought his legislative T program would encounter "coalition opposition," Mr. Roosevelt replied t with an emphatic negative. He said he believed the program would re- ceive exactly the same treatment as heretof ore. Europe's Surgeon f Of .Financial Pains Is Dr. Van Zeeland Let a European nation nation suffer serious financial ailments. and the chances are that sooner or later Dr. Paul Van Zeeland who will speak here next Tuesday will be called in to examine the patient and prescribe remedies for a cure. Regarded as perhaps the world's top-ranking specialist in economic disorders, Dr. Van Zeeland has been a practicing economic physician for over 15 years. His results have been such that Walter Lippman, news- paper columnist, has called him "per- haps the most efficient, the least con- fused, and the most surefooted of the statesmen who dealt with the depres- sion." In 1922, Dr. Van Zeeland began hiss career as the representative of the Bank of Belgium at the World Econ- omic Conference. His work concluded ' at the Genoa Conference, he went on a special economic mission to Czechoslovakia, and then to Greece as an adviser to the Ministry of Finance. He was one of the founders of the Bank of International Settlements at Geneva, which was established to re- move the congestion created in inter- national exchanges by the German reparations payments. His work in international finance was recognized by King Leopold of Belgium, who, in 1935, removed him from his position of Deputy Governor of the National Bank of Belgium, and personally urged him to assume No Fear Of A Fascist Invasion Of South America, Says James By JAY McCORMICKo The United States need not fear1 an "insidious fascist invasion' oft South America, particularly Brazil, asg far as political dominance is con-t cerned, Prof. Preston E. James of thei geography department, authority ont Brazil, said yesterday.P The thing most to be feared atn present in Brazil is the increased vol-b ume of trade between that country and Germany, an increase which is 1 attributable to commercial reasons 1 only, despite a recent book by Carltont Beals which implies that a battle isf being waged between democracy anda fascism in Latin America, he con-c tinued.s Recent moves such as subsidizations of "goodwill" ships for South Ameri-a can trade by the Unifed States gov-t ernment have brought this countryt back to the top of the list of coun-t tries trading with the South Ameri- can countries, but Germany, Italy, Portugal, Spain and Japan are allc anxious to build up a flourishing trade with the rich areas such ask the coffee regions of Brazil, he said.t Germany succeeded for a short timel in surpassing the United States in trade relatinnshins hut her success, only three million of the people are literate, and only a million or so of that number take any interest in the government of the country. Al- though, Professor James pointed out, if a vote of the entire nation could be taken, Vargas would probably be sup- ported by the people, the fact re- mains that he is held in office now by the strength of the army and navy. On two occasions when there has been an uprising of the people against the government, Vargas has labelled the ringleaders "communists" in the first revolt, which took place in 1932, and "fascists" in the latest, which oc- cured in May of this year. Profes- sor James was in Brazil during the second revolt, and has thus been en-' abled to make first hand observa- tions concerning its causes. He stated that the revolts were not begun by the elements named by Vargas, but were the results of resentment born in the important coffee-growing state of Sao Paulo. When the 'world economic crisis broke over the weak financial struc- ture of the country in 1930, the peo- ple of the other states revolted against the Sao Paulo dominance of +V-.r vrvt ra f -Un-e m - e - - ia nn Allergy, To Be Sulfanilamide, Studied Today After debating the pros and cons of the thymo. lymphatic constitution as a cause of infant death, last night, the University Pediatric and Infec- tious Disease Society turns its atten- tion to studies of allergy, sulfanila- mide, and antigen in the final ses- sinn of its 1r7th annu1 meetinc- tn- I