I cooler today; eraliy Ifair. re 5k gan 1aiti Public And Pu °4 snip Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPT. 29, 1939 PRICE I o-British tv Hinted 'In Moscow Parleys strop tinue Police Work To Halt Pool Action Here St. Louis Syndicate Uses Mails In Attempt To Get Business In Ann Arbor n In Powerful In Domination And Balkans Challenge Sea Power t. 28.-(P)-An auth- said tonight that oviet ambassador to ured the' British Gov- ,ussia was willing to ns for a war-trade 'ned while the Ger- inister, Joachim von in Moscow engaged which have excited speculation. significance was at- indication that the g to negotiate with ontraband and war , even though at the inducting talks with quarters said that xpected some "peace ny in the immediate roach yet had been ectly or through any uch as Italy. Information Sent Foreign observers considered it significant that German Foreign Minister Joachim Von Ribbentrop of Germany should time his jour- ney to Moscow to coincide with that of Turkish Foreign Minister Sukru Saracoglu (above). Object of speculation was the possibilitiy of a joint German-Soviet request that Turkey act as intermediary in a peace effort in Western Europe. CIO Triumph In Auto Plants Is Announced Campaign Issue Is .Based On Exclusive Bargaining In ChryslerCorporation To Postal Officials Ann Arbor police today took action in an effort to keep a football pool syndicate with headquarters in St. Louis out' of Ann Arbor this year. The St. Louis pool, offering to pay winners amounts of money at vary-, ing odds according to the game re- sults predicted accurately, was at- tempting to do business by mail, the police announced. Police Chief Norman E. Cook was informed Thursday that the pool was attempting to do business here. Chief Cook assigned Detective Sgt. Eugene J. Gehringer to investigate the case. Detective Gehringer has forwarded the information to the chief postall inspector in St. Louis * for whatever action the post office department may decide to take against the con- cern mailing the "football parley handicap card." The cards which reached the cityl yesterday list 16 football games for Saturday, Sept. 30, and offer to pay odds ranging from 4 to 1 for three games guessed correctly to 1,000 to 1 for 16 correctly guessed games. Several students reported that they. had received these cards., Michigan Coeds Of Athenia Fame To Arrive Home NEW YZORK-(AP)-Tiwo University of Michigan coeds, Barbara Bradfield, Grad., Grand Rapids, and Joan Outhwaite, '41, Bennington, Vt., sur- vivors of the Athenia' disaster, were en route home after arriving here yesterday aboard the liner Orizaba. Both girls were returning from a tour of Europe when the Athenia was tor- pedoed. The Orizaba was carrying 532 passengers, 240 of them Athenia sur- vivors. The trip was marred by a false torpedo alarm, resulting in gen- eral hysteria throughout the vessel. The ship's bells rang in early morning, awakening most passengers. Prison Break Probe Begins In, Marquette' Governor's Investigation Is Completed By Read; No Report Given Yet MARQUETTE, Sept. 28.-(P)-Ed- ward G. Heckel, head of the State Department of Corrections, arrived here today to open the second in- vestigation of conditions at the Mich- igan Branch Prison, scene Monday of one of the most fantastic breaks in the State's history. Meanwhile Attorney G e n e r a 1 Thomas Read completed the first in- vestigation, ordered by Governor Dickinson. Read devoted much of his time to- day to a study of methods used in searching cells. The four convicts, who abducted. the warden, deputy warden. and two members of the State parole board carried daggers -and a wooden pistol. Thomas McCarthy, one of the con- victs who took part in the break, said the daggers were made from table knives filed down.. "They didn't find my knife because I hid it in the prison yard," he said. Read gave no indication of what his report to the governor would say. However, he commented at one stage that it was "the first time in the history of Marquette prison that escapees ever went through the prison's main gates." (Roosevelt Ties Seen 29. (Friday)-P) bentrop, German was expected to r today or tomor- im of agreement g Reich, into even DETROIT, Sept. 28.-('P)-The CIO-United Automobile Workers, campaigning for exclusive bargaining rights in the auto industry, won its third major triumph by being re- turned the victor tonight in 10 of 13 plants in the huge Chrysler Corpora- tion poll. Only in one instance--at Evans- ville, Ind.-did the rival American Federation of Labor emerge ahead in results announced by the National Labor Relations Board,.and in all but ohi off 1tSVitories the CY0 majority was heavy. Russell Miller, elections examiner for the Board, announced tlat 51,303 of an approximately 54,000 eligible votes-greatest in the Board's record -had been cast, with the CIO ac- cumulating 40,564 to the AFL's 4,744. A total of 4,426 employes voted for neither union. Homer Martin, president of the AFL-UAW, had ordered his follow- ers to ignore the election, charging it was impossible to obtain a "fair" vote because of labor board "bias toward the CIO." The'Detroit Plymouth AFL local, Oratorical Neutrality Lecture Reaches Floor Of Sen Legion Announces St, at sea con- ous, many- have been an 24 hours the creation in Russia 22 hiese negotiations to answer the >urse Russia will Tickets Still Remain A t Hill Auditorium In spite of unprecedented opening day sales, there are still many tickets available for the 1939-1940 Oratorical Association lecture series, it was an- nounced Monday. The ticket office will be open every day except Saturdays and Suhdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4 pm., the business office Chas an- nounced. The office will also do business from 10 a.m. to 1. p.m. Sat- urdays. .Ticket seekers jammed into the streets surrounding Hill Auditorium when the sale opened Thursday morning. Among the lecturers who, will appear this year are Mrs. Frank- lin Roosevelt, H. V. Kaltenborn, Jan Masryk, and others. 1 . Tickets are still available in all price ranges, both main floor and balcony. Ralph Heikkinen Released By Dodger Football Team NEW YORK, Sept. 28.-UP)-Ralph [eikkinen, an all-American guard on the University of Michigan's 1938 football team, was released tcday by the Brooklyn Dodgers of the Na- tional Professional League. Club of- ficials said they had asked waivers on him,., had received no offers and released him outright. New Commander Kelly Demands Government .Shun European Conflict Detroiter Acclaimed Leader In Wild Vote CHICAGO, Sept. 28 --P)- Ray- mond J. Kelly, 44-year-old Detroit attorney, was elected National Com- mander of the AmerL:an Legion to- day and pledged himslf to do every- thing possible to keep the nation out of war. A lieutenant of artillery in the World War, Kelly was unanimously acclaimed in the closing session of the Legion's 21st annual convention. So obvious was the sentiment for Kelly among the delegates that the names of but two others of the six exepeted candidates were placed be- fore the convention. Milo Warner,, Toledo, Ohio, and Lynn Stambaugh, Fargo, N.D., withdrew in' behalf of the favorite. Even before a successor to Stephen F. Chadwick, Seattle, had been offi- cially announced, enthusiastic Le- gionnaires rushed upon the stage brandishing their state standards. which they clustered fanwise behind the man of their choice. Wild Cheering Amidst wild cheering and arm-wav- ing, Kelly stood with Chadwick in fraternal pose. The new commander responded:- "The voices of more than 1,000,0001 American World War veterans united1 in a common chorus that America must maintain a real neutrality," he; asserted, adding "that under no con- ditions shall it be distorted into a .deceptive and misleading attempt to1 take sides behind the scenes. "The American 'Leion says that our country must stay out of armed conflict overseas. It believes the neutrality policy of our country should be a highly realistic one. It believes that the attempt to cloak our neutrality with a biased bellig- erency will surely draw us into the conflict. Peace Through Deliberation "It believes that only through sane, thinking by our individual citizenry,' the absence of hysteria and' the de- liberate consideration of the problems of maintaining the peace can we feel reasonably certain that war involve- ment will not be our lot. "It says to the American people, be cool and deliberate in your pro- nouncements and actions. If you must become partisan, let it be solely an aggressive partisanship for the American way of life. "The Legion urges all right-think- ing citizens to join with it in the effort to make unmistakably plain to our chosen leaders and represen- tatives within th9 nation's capital that it is their job to see to it that the best means of keeping America out of war are followed." Ministry Of Information In Britain Faces Shakeup LONIYON, Sept. 28.-(P)-The Bri- tish Press Association said tonight that "drastic reorganization" of the much-criticized Ministry of Infor- mation may be considered by the cabinet at its next meeting. Sir John Simon, chancellor of the exchequer, told the House of Com- mons today an investigation of the ministry already was under way Asks Powers Defined Repeal ( To Aw Before In te in a qt t ac SENATOR VANDENBERG Council Meeting Plans Activities For Engineers New Freshnan Yearbook Announced; Arnual Ball Will Be Held Nov. 17 Plans for engineering activities to be held this fall were discussed it the second meeting of the Engineer- ing Council, James E. Brown, '40E, president of the Council announced" yesterday. The Arch, freshman engineer's yearbook, will be on sale in about three weeks, it was. announced. A. new publication launched this year, The Arch, will contain pictures of a'l yearling engineers with accompany- ing information on the high school record of each freshman. Also in- cluded will be a description of en- gineering honor societies and tradi- tions. Senate itself, or read, rathe up further in There was_ ate, which b velopments: (1). Sena Mich.) read a resolution ney Genera: what emerg President ur tion of-a sta velt and Secr But, befoi group appr strengthen t credits to be ease its effe steamship li United State America. No There was the comnitte versial issue repeal of the ,l however, went ahead and gave the CIO its tively close brush,' against 5,585. with the vote, only compara- polling 2,771 the e right to mnian wat- Base Mrs. Roosevelt Speaks PASSAIC, N.J., Sept. 28.- (P) - Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt called on an audience of 1,200 persons tonight to take seriously their responsibility to their community, saying that with- out such citizenship in the United States civilization might vanish' from a war-torn world. 28.-(P)-Germany ention tonight on to British sea power n to checkmate Bri- a visit to the Wil- t base gave his per- 3 the submarine and a Germany asserts essful in damaging tish fleet. c offensive against g carried on by For- achim von Ribben- under conditions studies at the Ber- e said were highly Gilbert Stephenson Is Named Band Drum Major This Year Gebert Ex plains Russian Status Says Soviets Made Hitler Move More Cautiously One must understand develop- ments since the beginning of the Sino- Japanese War to understand Russia's position in the present war crisis, William Gebert, Polish-American ex- pert on the Polish national question, told an audience of more than 150 last night at a meeting sponsored by the Young Communist League of Ann Arbor at Unity Hall. Russia is not an imperialistic coun- try, he said. By taking part of Po- land she prevented Germany from acquiring the whole by aggression. With the borders of Russia closer to Germany, Hitler may be more cau- tious as to his next move, Mr. Gebert explained. Russia's proposal to the powers of Europe of collective security against all aggressions was rejected, he de- clared. The Soviet Union wants peace and will do all it can to keep Hitler out of the East, he asserted. In his talk, "Youth and the Sec- ond Imperialistic War," Joseph Clark, executive secretary of the YCL in Michigan, stressed the importance of the youth of America knowing the cause for which they may be called' upon to give their lives. An open dis- cussion period followed the two talks. Canadians Prepare Overseas Division Pan-American Body ApprovesNeutrality PANAMA, Panama, Sept. 28.-(P) -The neutrality sub-committee of the Inter-American Conference to- night approved proposals for a gen- eral neutrality declaration and an appeal to European belligerents for humanization of war. The sub-committee's action left the questions of the form; of neu- trality and belligerents' war, contra- band lists yet to be disposed of be- fore putting its report into final shape for submission to a plenary session of the conference. Senior class elections will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 17, it was an- nounced, and petitions containing 15 signatures must be turned in by can- didates for office before 5 p.m., Fri- day, Oct. 13. Petitions must be turned -i to the office of the dean of the engineering college. Date for the annual Engineering' Ball has also been set for Nov. 17. The dance will be held in the Union Ballroom from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Plans were discussed for an En- gineering Smoker welcoming fresh- men and transfer students. Philip E. Newman, '40E, was appointed chair- man of the committee in charge of the smoker (2). Senator like Vandenberg troduced a reso special seven-m mnittee to investi any persons, co acting on behplf ment with the in ly or indirectly, tral position of At Barkley's s Clark's acquiesc was referred to t Committee. While all was mittee room, tl outside its door men and phot many sightseers milled about aw meeting. 7U 0 R Show n i his Informed quarters intimated Von Ribbentrop, would come home with an accord not only freezing England out of Eastern Europe but affecting English interests in far-flung quar- ters of the world. City Requires Bike Licenses Students Are Cautioned On Other Regulations University students owning bicycles were warned today by the Ann Arbor police department that they must ob- tain license plates and comply with certain neher nrovniions of the city By JAY McCORMICK1 When, the 1939 Varsity Band marches down the field for the first time this year at the Michigan- Michigan State game Oct. 7, that1 prancing, strutting figure at the head of the big blue square will be Gilbert Stephenson, '41E, who was named yesterday as drum major. Stephenson, who has been with the band for two years, has served his apprenticeship as twirler and as as- sistant drum major. He also drum majored the band at Kalamazoo Central High School, and at Western State Teachers' College in his fresh- man year there before he transferred to the University as a special student three years ago. He replaces another Kalamazoo student, Robert Fox, who held the drum major's job here for four years. Assistants Appointed Named as assistant drum majors were John, C. Sherrill, '40, who will also act as Stephenson's alternate, and Ward Fearn. '41SM. Sherrill. those appointed, Clair Heatly, '42AE, and Gene Sherry, '42SM, have been' reporting at South Ferry Field every afternoon from 4 to 6 p.m. since the opening of school. - Concerning the men who, tried out, Major Walter B. Fariss, drillmaster of the band, said, "Conpetition was very close this year. The turnout was the largest1 and the material some of the best we' have ever had. Any one of the boys named as assistants or twirler would' be capable of handling the job of drum major." Revelli Praises Appointees Prof. 'William D. Revelli, director of the band said, "These boys are worthy of the recognition they have earned by qualifying for the posi- tions. The major and myself recog- nize the tremendous amount of work that each- boy has done in order to gain the honor of leading the 1939 Michigan Band." "I hope I can fill the boots," said Stephenson, who has been twirling for five years, when asked how he felt about the appointment last night. Pollock Approves Erench Action In Suppression Of Communists OTTAWA, Sept. 28 - (Canadian Press)-The first overseas division of the Canadian active force, now being organized, will be made up of men from all parts of Canada, Defense Minister Norman Rogers announced tonight. The active force, he said, will in- clude a reserve force of two divisions with a quota of ancillary troops. From this force, one division will be 'Fraternity Aided Reg France's decision to outlaw its Communist Party was a necessary step and should cause little internal trouble, commented Prof. James K. Pollock. of the political science de- partment in an interview yesterday. The one disturbing element in the order, he explained, is, of course, the possibility of complete suppression of free flow of public opinion; however, that measure is not necessary to carry on the war successfully. Professor Pollock pointed out that Daladier decided to suppress French Communists obviously on the grounds clared, and on the grounds of pro- tecting its own war interests I con- done the French government's recent drastic suppression measure. The order should cause no serious or widespread internal repercussions, Professor Pollock observed, as French nationalist feeling has overcome party sentiment in the great majority of French Communists. Although the Communist party in France until recently had the largest membership outside Russia, he pointed out, its ex- istence has been fraught with dis- content, and it now appears doomed. Registration for fn increased this year b over last year's figur son, '40, secretary o ternity Council, annc Registration was a an additional booth Gym on University n Davidson said, and ternity night" at1 helped to awaken in men. The'figures f last were 708 and 59'7 Outside of a specia rushing rules with re residence halls, Da' practically no rule v dent this year. The phones have been halls as yet makes i fraternity represent: pective rushees per ually forbidden. War Postpones