Weather Cooler today; showers in afternoon. ig Bt itgau EIaiti Editorial National Solution Of Migration Problem , VOL. L. No. 150 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS Shirley Silver To Be General Head Of JGP For Next Year Rosebud Scott Will Head Costumes; Betty Bailie Is PublicityChairman Radford Selected Dance Chairman Shirley Silver of Chicago was named general chairman of the 1941 production of JGP, coincident with the appointment of 17 sophomore women to posts on the central com- mittee. Other central committee appoint- ments announced by Doris Merker, '41, president of Judiciary Council, are: Elaine Fisher, Canton, Ohio, property committee; Rosebud Scott, Ferndale, chairman of the costume committee; Margaret Dodge, Detroit, assistant costume chairman; Mil- dred Radford ,Brooklyn, N. Y., dance chairman; Mary Hayden, Ann Arbor, assistant dance chairman; Margaret Sanford, Cleveland Hgts., chairman of finance committee; Phyllis Waters, Toledo, music com- mittee; Veitch Purdom, Ann Arbor, make-up; Louise Keatley, Bowling Green, Ky., bo'okholders; Rosalie Smith, Dayton, O., patrons; Betty Bailie, Detroit, publicity; Phoebe Power, Washington, D. C., assistant publicity chairmen; Margaret Gard- ner, Portsmouth, O., tickets; Virginia Frey, Toledo, scenery; Pearl Brown, Jelico, Tenn., recorder; Jean Goudy, Lakewood, O., chairman of ushers, and Virginia Drury, Ann Arbor, pro- grams. A general meeting of all members of the central committee at 3 p.m. today in the League has also been called by Miss Merker. Miss Silver began her career on campus as assistant, chairman of Frosh Project and worked on the records and ticket committee. This year she has served on theeStudent Book Exchange Committee, Soph Cabaret ticket, finance, publicity and hostess committees, and League so- cial, merit system and publicity com- mittees. Miss Silver has also worked on the candy booth committee, the Theatre Arts publicity, box office, make-up and usher committees, is a member of the German Club, and a reporter on the Michigan Daily. Miss Silver has accumulated the highest number of league points of the sophomore women. She is affil- iated with Alpha Epsilon Pi. Frosh Project dance chairman, Miss Fisher served on the Soph (Continued on Page 5) Golfers Crush Purdue Team Unbeaten Michigan Squad Chalks Up Eighth Win (Special To The Daily) LAFAYETTE, Ind. April 29.-An undefeated band of Michigan golfers rolled on to their third consecutive Big Ten victory here today as they crushed Purdue University, 14%/2-9%/2. Led by the sensational play of sophomore Goodwin Clark who alone accounted for six of the Woverine points in his two singles matches and who shot the medal score for the day, a 71, the Maize and Blue chalked up their eighth straight win of the season. Clark's mediocre 80 in his morn- ing match against Bud Goldstein was still good enough to sweep all three points as teammates Bob Palmer and Bill Black took 21/2 points from Pur- due's Capt. Bob Hoffer and Ed Dahle in their best ball match. Captainr Palmer shot a 77 while Black carded a 75. Tom Tussing and Dave Osler shot a 77 and 78 respectively to shave but one-half point from the Boilermaker duo of C. T. Curran and Doug Mc-, Daniels who carded rounds of 80 and1 76 to take 212 points, making the score at the end of the morning ses- sion, 6-3 in favor of Michigan. f Breezing through his afternoon (Continued on Page 3) Institute Hears Dr. Park Predict U.S. On Road To Japanese War Education Institute Continues Discussions Today With Defense, Mexico, Dictators Under Scrutiny Biting off his words in the clippe English of the Oriental, Dr. No- Yong Park, noted far-eastern au- thority, predicted yesterday in the featured address of the first sessions of the Eighth Adult Education In- stitute that America is driving inex- orably toward a Japanese war be- cause of its refusal to embargo war materials. Dr. Park described the vicious cy- cle being set into motion by the U.S. Government as it bows to the wishes of a willful minority of tprofiteers who are more interested in their "blood money" than the national well being of the country. America sells scrap iron to Ja- jan, he explained. Japan melts it{ into armor plate for her new super- navy. She grows overweening with power and allies with members of ASU Will Take UnitedRoll Call Against Wars Petitions May Be Signed At Two Campus Points Today And Tomorrow A roll-call for peace will be held by the American Student Union from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and to- morrow in the Main Library and University Hall, Ellen Rhea, '41, president of the ASU, announced yesterday. The purpose of the roll-call, Miss Rhea explained, is to give concrete expression to the desire for peace evidenced by 3,000 students who at- tended the All-Campus Peace Rally April 19, at which Senator Gerald P. Nye warned the audience of the steps likely to involve the United States in war. Copies of the following statement which, together with the signatures' will be sent to President Roosevelt, will be available at tables in the Library and University Hall where students who are interested in keep- ing the United States out of war may sign the roll call for peace, Miss Rhea pointed out. "We, the undersigned, hereby pe- tition the President of the United States, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, to express in words and action the desire of the American people for neutrality. We affirm our determin- ation to keep America out of war; to build in this nation a mighty example of forward-moving democ- racy; to understand the character of war as a struggle for markets and colonies and not in defense of de- mocracy or small nations; to com- bat the main danger of the peace of the United States arising from the search for profits and financial advantages." Ratcliff To Give Speech Prof. R. U. Ratcliff, director of the Bureau of Business Research of the School of Business Administra- tion, will address a real estate con- ference today at the University of Indiana in Bloomington, Ind., on "Real Estate Evaluation." the totalitarian nations to test the might of America . . . or the naval race precipitated by the U.S. sup- plying her with scrap iron ends in war. And yet, despite these eventual- ities, Dr. Park pointed out-and de- spite the obvious sympathy of 83 per cent of the American people- the American government permits the export of war materials to Ja- pan. Favorite reason of the profiteers for continuing their "blood" trade, according to Dr. Park, is the widely circulated story that a frustrated Japan would lash out in war in a supreme effort to cow the United States into supplying her needs. Such stories are "sheer bluff." If the Japanese fight the United States, Dr. Park said, they will be stabbed in the back by China or Russia. But what is more important than such possibilities which are tenuous as best is the realization that with- out the very war materials she would be fighting for, Japan would be powerless to wage war for any ap- preciable period of time because her1 totalitarian friends are unable to supply her. And when the situation is anal-f yzed more closely, Dr. Park stated, a cause of the present European con- flict is perceived. In 1931, Europei and America stood idly by while thet Japanese, violating every canon of international law, marched in on China. By their very inaction, Dr. Park concluded, they left the door open: for Hitler and his totalitarian com-{ (Continued on Page 2)f 'State' Countest Today Renews SharpRivalry Spartan Team Is First Foe In Four Game Week; Evashevski Will Start The age-old rivalry between Mich- igan and Michigan State, dating backl to 1887, will be renewed for the 82ndt time today when the Varsity plays host to the Spartans from East Lan-e sng at Ferry Field at 4 p.m. - The game will be the beginning of a busy week for Wolverines who are slated to play four contests in thef next five days. Notre Dame follows State to the Michigan citadel to- morrow, and Friday and Saturday will find the Varsity in Champaign,+ Ill., for a Conference double-header with Illinois. In order to meet this increase in activity Coach Ray Fisher intends to split the pitching assignments be- tween four hurlers so that his aces, Jack Barry and Lyle Bond, will beK available for the Illini series. Fisher's plans call for Barry to pitch the first six innings of today's game and Mickey Stoddard to take over the mound chores for the final three. Likewise, Bond will start the game with the Irish tomorrow with Russ Dobson relieving him in the seventh. The rest of the Michigan lineup will (Continued on Page 3) Court Upholds Administrative AgencyRights Walsh-Healey Act Case Decision Hits Against JudicialSupervision Wages -Hours Act Amendment Passed WASHINGTON, April 29.-UP)- The Supreme Court spoke out to- day against "judicial supervision of administrative procedure" in a de- cision upholding the right of the executive and legislative branches to set up any standards they see fit for Government purchasing. Specifically, the Court said that the 1936 Walsh-Healey Act requiring Government contractors to pay cer- tain minimum wages conferred no litigable rights upon the contractors -that Government officials were re- sponsible only to Congress for any maladministration of it. Injunction Set Aside' The Court set aside an injunction by which the District of Columbia' Court of Appeals had restrained Secretary Perkins from prescribing minimum wages for iron and steel workers engaged in filling Govern- ment contracts. Justice Black's opin- ion, from which Justice McReynols dissented, made this observation: "The record here disclosed the 'confusion and disorder' that canf result from the delays necessarily incident to judicial supervision of administrative procedure developed to meet present day needs of Gov-1 ernment and capable of operating efficiently and fairly to both pri- vate and public interests." "Judicial restraint of those who administer the Government's pur- chasing," Black's opinion said at another point, "would constitute a break with settled judicial practice and a departure into fields hithertot wisely and happily apportioned by the genius of our policy to the ad- ministration of another branch of Government." House Acts On Wage-Hour Law Meanwhile, the House, in its first decision on a long string of sug- gested changes in the Wage-Hour Law, voted 74 to 38 today to make the maximum hours provision more flexible as it applies to regularly- employed, salaried workers. The amendment provides that time-and-a-half pay shall not be necessary for overtime work per-4 formed by a person who has worked at an office or plant for at least ix months on a regular salary, pro- vided that in a 26-week period his average work week shall not exceed the maximum prescribed in the present law. That maximum is now1 42 hours a week.- The effect of the amendment would be that a person might work, say 50 hours a week, for a number1 of weeks but would not have to beI paid overtime if his working time during the rest of the half year wasc so shortened that the average was brought down to 42 a week. 600 Applaud Ger man Club's Annual Drama Before an enthusiastic crowd of 600 people, the Deutscher Verein pre- sented last night its annual dramatic offering at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The play was Lessing's great German classic "Minna von Barnhelm." Complete cast for the play was Ethel Winnai, '41, Kenneth Marble, '41, Betty Ramsay, Grad., Howard Wallach, '43, William Todd, '42, Alex Miller, '40, Mr. J. Stanhope Edwards of the German department, Gordon Avery, '41 and Carl Petersen, '40. Gertrude Frey, '41. was bookholder. Alex Miller, '40, headed the pro- perty committee and was assisted by Mrs. Mary Bachman and Mary Haf- erkamp, '42. John Wolaver of the School of Music provided the musical settings. Robert Mellencamp, art di- rector of Play Production designed the scenery and Miss Emma Hirsch of Play Production supervised the costuming. Frank X. Braun of the German department acted as busi- ness manager. Alpha Nti Speech Society Will Hold Meeting Today Phi Kappa Phi To Induct 140 PledgesToday Annual Banquet Features Talk By Dr. Delgado; Short Music Program Active, Members Invited To Attend The Michigan chapter of the Phi Kappa Phi national honor society will hold its annual initiation ban- quet at 6:30 p.m. today in the main ballroom of the Union, at which the newly elected members will he inducted. The new members will be pre- sented as candidates by the vice- president, Dean Alice Lloyd in the ceremony and will be later intro- duced as members by Dr. Warren Forsythe, president of Phi Kappa Phi. The Society's annual lecture, to be given by Dr. Carlos Delgado de Car- valho, will follow the dinner 'and short musical program. The topic with which Dr. Delgado, noted Bra- zilian geographer and sociologist, will address the 140 initiates will be "Immigration Problems in Brazil." Dr. Delgado, who has been cur- rently delivering a series of talks on his native country here and at various colleges throughout the United States is sent as a goodwill envoy for Brazil and is an accred- ited Visiting Carnegie professor un- der the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The lecture, which begins at 8:30 p.m., is open to the general public.' All active members of Phi Kappa Phi are invited to attend. Those desiring reservations should notify R. S. Swinton, secretary, university phone, extension 649. Of the 140 elected, 76 were under- graduates and 64 graduate students. This represented four percent of the total undergraduate seniors and not over five percent of the enrolled graduate students. Selections were based on scholarship, character and leadership of the individuals. Seven Women Win Barbour Sl German Columns Test Pilot Speaks Today -Courtesy Ann Arbor News Effect Five-Forked Drive In Norway MA.JOR J. H. DOOLITTLE IA S Banqluet Today Honors Prof. Stalker Test Pilot Major Will Headline At Meeting In D oolitle Speakers League Prof. Edward A. Stalker will be honored on his tenth anniversary as head of the aeronautical engineering department at the annual Institute of Aeronautical Sciences banquet, featuring an address by Major James H: Doolittle, at 6:30 p.m. to- day in the League. Other highlights of the program will include a short address by Ma- jor Lester D. Gardner, executive vice-secretary of the Institute, and a sound motion picture, "Conquest of the Air," to be presented after the banquet. National president of the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, Major Doo- little has won distinction both as a speed and stunt flyer and for his achievements in the field of re- search. Starting point of Major Doolittle's flying career was his enrollment in the United States Army Flying Corps in 1917. After a period as in- structor, engineering officer and pilot in the Army, Major Doolittle turned to speed flying and test pi- loting. I Alnntual EIectrical1 Strategically Placed Allies Defend Gains With Light ArtilleryAnd Gun Nests Nazis Seek Seizure Of Allied Railways STOCKHOLM, April 29.-()-- Germany's lightning legions struck in a five-forked attack-four from the south and one from the north- against Allied positions along vital railway lines in central Norway to- night. The Allies were described as stra- tegically-placed, however, with ma- chine gun nests and light artillery defending their positions. Up the Gudbrandsdalen, a valley lying northwest - southeast across Norway, the Germans were reported in Norwegian dispatches reaching here to have occupied Kvam, 35 miles southeast of the British-held railway junction of Dombas. Farther east, where the Osterdalen (east valley) roughly parallels the Gudbrandsdalen, a German column smashed northwestward from the re- gion of Alvdal to the vicinity of Hjerkinn, where they came upon strong Allied positions. Fighting was reported in progress there, with the British battling to defend the railway which links their forces at Dombas and Storen to the north- ward. Norwegian troops were reported fighting a third German contingent tonight at Kvikne, on the snowy highway about two-thirds of the way from Tynset to Ulsberg. This battle began last night and was reported still in progress in exceedingly rough mountain country. (German dispatches said the in- vaders had pushed to Inset, a mile or two from Ulsberg and within striking distance of the railway.) The fourth German column from the south sought to push on from Roros, on the Osterdalen railway, to Storen. Nazi Bombers Attack Allied Troop Bases LONDON, April 29.-( )-Damag- ing attacks by low-flying German bombers on the Allied troop landing bases of Molde and Andalsnes em- phasized in British minds today the belief that control of the air will be the decisive factor in the major battle which slowly is developing in central Norway. Aware that German planes also are harrying British lines of com. munication and protecting the Ger- man columns moving swiftly from the south toward the garrison in Trondheim, London was gloomy af- ter a week of indifferent news from the north. Meanwhile, however, Britain ap- peared determined to plug any pos- sible gaps on the diplomatic and economic fronts. Relief Concert Tickets On Sale Student Group To Perform For Chinese Benefit General ticket sales for the Chi- nese relief concert and opera to be given Sunday and Monday in Pat- tengill Auditorium, Ann Arbor High School, will open at 9 a.m. tomor- row at campus stations. Tickets for the program which will include the appearance here of Prof. Wei Chung Loh, famed Chinese musician, are priced at 50 cents, and will be sold at the center of the Diagonal, the Engineering Arch, the Union, the League and on the steps of Angell Hall, The program, sponsored by Chi- nese students to provide medical re- lief for China, will also feature a Chinese opera, a Chinese fashion show and a demonstration of Chi- nese shuttlecock and diabolo. Cooperative Society Hears Monsignor Ligutti Today The Rt. Rev. Monsignor L. C. Lig- utti will address a meeting of the Award Committee Annual Merit For Women Of Reports' Prizes Orient Seven recipients of the Barbour Scholarships for 1940-41 were an- nounced yesterday by Prof. W. Carl Rufus, secretary of the Barbour Scholarship Committee. Created by former Regent Levi L. Barbour to increase educational op- portunities for women in the Or- ient, the awards amount to 650 dollars each per year, and are given annually on a basis of merit. The students honored are: Miss Chungnim Choi Seoul, Korea, at present a resident of the Martha Wilson House in Northampton, Mass., Miss - Jai Hornusji Dastur, Bombay, India, now at the Amer- ican University of Beirut in Leba- non, and Miss Ging-mei Kang, Ti- entsin, China, now a member of the nursing staff of Grace Hospital, Detroit. Others honored are: Miss Chao- Ian, Yunnan, China, now an in- structor in Lingnan University, Hong Kong, Miss Yuilan Yeh, Macua, Chi- na, at present of East Lansing, and Miss Masako Yokoyama, of Japan, now a student at Mt. Hoyloke Col- lege, South Hadley, Mass. Engineers' To Hear 'Dinner Dlrumm .L 'Grand Old Man' Of Michigan Celebrates 69th Birthday Today By DON WIRTCHAFTER J -.__\__t. In a quiet, peaceful, typically Yostian manner, Michigan's Grand Old Man will celebrate his 69th birthday today. There will be no parties, no cakes, no special attractions around the modest home of Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost as he draws within one year of the University's required retirement age. There isn't much time ahead until the Grand Old Man must give up his much-loved desk, his activities and services for the University of "Meechegan." And while friends and admirers all over the nation pay tribute, Yost will spend this celebration day justf like any other day in his life. A! speech at a Detroit luncheon club, a quiet afternoon around the house, dinner with the family and an early retirement will fill his 24 hours of birthday. Originator of tne word "field house" and inventor of the idea of t 3 t R 7 i i Prof. John L. Brumm of the De- partment of Journalism will be the featured speaker at the annual ban- quet of the student chapter of the American Institute of Electrical En- gineers at 6:15 p.m. today in the Grand Rapids Room of the Mich- igan League. Speaking on "New Intellectual Landscapes," Professor Brumm will attempt to analyze the position and significance of the engineer in mod- ern society; his role in contributing to and building human values, over and above his more mechanical apd technical services to mankind. Enthusiastic Capacity A udience. Attends . Of M. Night' Revival (Special) To The Daily) DETROIT, April 29.-A capacity crowd of 5,500 students and alumni jammed Detroit's Masonic Auditor- ium to the rafters last night to wit- ness the gala revival of traditional U. of M. Night. From the first tremendous ovation given the 100-piece Michigan Con- cert Band to the final strains of "The Yellow and Blue," the audience enthusiastically applauded the var- ied program. Feature presentation of the Band's concert was Claudius G. Pendill'sr with other membhers of the original cast- presented several highlight acts from 1, 1940 Union Opera "Four Out Of Five." The acts were given in the setting of "El Wolver- ine," a fictitious night club along the banks of the Huron River. Both alumni and students gave hilarious approval to these proceedings. Sponsored by the University of Michigan Club of Detroit "to bring about a closer relationship between the University and its Detroit alum- ni," U. of M. Night had been a real Michigan tradition until allowed to lapse 10 years ago. The revival last Pre-Medic Society Today For Union Meets Smoker The newly-formed Pre-Medical Society will present its first smoker FIELI TNG HflVIVRT I