Weather Fair and warmer. LY Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication tit Editorial Co-Op Conference Convenes Here . . VOL. LI. No. 129 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 30, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Swimmers Capture ighth Straight Title Reports Say Yugoslav Coup Contested By Croat Leader' Win Over Yale Team :. Vice-Premier States Loyalty To Axis Pact Revolts Branded As Serb Plot Against Croatia; Autonomy Demanded ZAGRE,;, Yugoslavia, March 29. -(R')-Dr. Vladimir Macek, leader of millions of Croats, was reported au- thoritatively tonight to have insist- ed that Yugoslavia's'new government publish a declaration affirming this kingdom's adherence to the Axis al- liance. The Croat peasant leader was said also to demand a declaration guaranteeing Croat autonomy. Macek, who was Vice Premier in the overthrown cabinet of Dragisa Cvetkovic which signed the Three- Power Pact for Yugoslavia, was car- ried over in the new government of Premier General Dusan Simovic. n osition Not Clarified (His position, however, has not been clarified. What course Macek decides to take-whether to revert to the opposition or stay in the govern- ment-is expected to weigh heavily on determining Yugolslavia's home and foreign policy.) The leader of the Croats, who buried their differences with the Serbs only in 1939 in a Croat home rule agreement, was expected, mean- while, to remain silent on all over- tures that he be active in the new regime at least until he can go to Belgrade Tuesday or Wednesday andI investigate the situation at first hand. An important member of Macek's intimate circle asserted that the "new government has decidedcly won .the confidence of all Serbs but has lost 'Right About There . Engineering New efense Alumni,Dean Board Settles I Stretch Drive Gives Skinner Jialiory By 61 -58 Are Honored citation Work Other For Distinguished Given Governor; Awards Are Made First Strike Unionists Vote To Continue Allis-Chalmers Walkout Despite OPM Requests Federal Mediation Openis .ersev Plant Cooley And~Campbell Receive Recognition - Daily Photo by Will Sapp W.A.A. President Jane Grave, '41, tells Dr. Margaret Bell all about it. The "it" is the site of the proposed women's swimming pool. Proceeds from Elsa Maxwell's Tuesday evening lecture will go to Sthe fund for the pool. Elsa Maxwell Will Give Talk Here Tueday the confidence of all Croats." Coup A Serb Stroke Croats say there is a widespread feeling that the coup was a Serb stroke directed more against Croatia than against the Tri-Partite Pact. Neither Macek nor other Croat peasant party officials attended the thanksgiving service cele brating young King Peter's assumption of power. Croat suspicions are said to have strengthened extremists who long have wanted an independent Croatia and have contended that autonomy was a fiction. TypicalCoed Tio Be Chosent By S'Ens ian Poll' Who is Michigan's ,most represen- tative girl? That's what the campus at large will decide at nominations next Wed- nesday and at the final polling April 9, according to Jack Cory, business' manager of- the 'Ensian. And this typ- ical girl will be sent, expenses paid,! to the Drake Relays in Des Moines,I Iowa, April 25 and 26, as the guest of Quax, Drake.University Yearbook. What's this all about? Well, next Wednesday you'll be given a ballot at any one of the three polling places, Angell Hall, Main Library or Engin- eering Arch-and you'll be asked to place your nomination. The editors of the Drake Yearbook set the follow-E ing qualities by which the most repre-t America's No. 1 party-giver will set off her verbal fireworks at 8:151 p.m. Thursday on the vastly import- ant subject: "The Science of Laugh- ter." Her avowed goal in life is to getj a big laugh out of it-in her ownj words. "I loathe bigotry, prejudice, intolerance and hatred. I believe in laughter and hate to see it go out of the world. Dictators," she contin- ued irrepressibly, "snuff out laugh- ter-and give you hysteria." The vivacious and original Elsa is internationally known for her fab- ulous parties and the mixtures of celebrities that make up her "cafe society." Included among her list of "most amusing" are names which would make the Hall of Fame lookf bleak by comparison. ,Dorothy Thempson, James Cagney, Arturo Toscanini and Walter Chrysler are only a few of the "names".that would put over any party without the aid of the former Californian's versatili- ty and brittle wit. Her amusing anecdotes, which she can relate to hilarious extent, include the tales of how she rode into Eng- lish society on the wrong end of a horse and how she accompanied John Hay Whitney on the ride to the Pied- mont Hounds--sitting astride a donkey! . Citations for distinguished work in engineering, industry, public (By The Associated Press) health, education and public affairs The Defense Mediation Board suc- were awarded to 11 graduates of the ceeded last night in settling the first College of Engineering and a form- strike on which it acted, a 20-day er dean at an Alumni Reunion lun- AFL walkout at the Cornell Dubilier Theon yesterday in the Union. orporation. South Plainfield, N. J., The awards were given to Gov. but CIO unionists voted to continue Murray D. Van Wagoner, Dean- their work stoppage at the Allis- Emeritus Mortimer E. Cooley, Alva B. Chalmers plant near Milwaukee. Clark. Roy S. Campbell, Alexander After negotiations in New Jersey H. d'Arcambal, Ralph A. Hayward, Friday night and in Washington last James H. Herron, John H. Hunt, night, the Board announced an agree- Lawrence V. Kerber, Elmer H. Neff, ment by which the Cornell Dupilier Clifford E. Paine and Henry F. strikers would return to work Tues- Vaughan. day and negotiations would be re- University Graduate sumed on the wage demands of the A graduate of the University in electrical workers union. 1921, Governor Van Wagoner was OPM Officials Accused director of the State Highway De- The Allis-Chalmers strikers, in de-1 partment for seven years before being ciding against ending their 68-dayl elected to his present office. He also walkout in the face of a request from spent some time as Oakland County Secretary of the Navy Knox and Di- Drain Commissioner. rector William S. Km dsen of the The only non-Michigan graduate is OPM, accused the two officials of ' Dean Cooley, an alumnus of the Unit- conspiring to force a "back-to-work ed States Naval Academy, who has 'movement."r been connected with the University In a statement, the Union said its I since 1881. He is a former president members would not go back to work of the Michigan Engineering Society. until they' received the security which the American Engineering Council, "the United States Government has and prsident of the Ann Arbor City promised us." It added that the Of- Council. fice of Production Management had Clark, a resident of Maplewood, promised to force the Allis-Chalm- N. J., graduated from the College of ers management to accept a "union Engneering in 1911 and has been security" provision if the union with the American Teelphone and agreed to other proposed conditions Telegraph Company since that time for returning to work. At present he is Director of Systems Plant Reopens Development at the Bell Telephone About $45,000,000 worth of defense aboratories N orders have been awarded the Allis- Another resident of New Jersey Chalmers Company. The plant re- CAoter resCden of Nw Jhery opened and the management said Campbell of Camden, was in the Class about one-third of the normal day of 1912 and is now vice-president and shift reported. The CIO claimed no general manager of the New York mr than 100 of 7,800 production Ship Building Company. d'Arcambal, workers were on th job. 12E, from Hartford, Conn., is a con- Another government effort to get :ulting engineer and president of the Adefensemachinery wheels turning re- American Society of Tool Engineers, suited in at least temporary failure. Chairman of the Kalamazoo City A spokesman for the International Mlanning Commission for the pastHarvester Company announced the ight years, Hayward, '17E, is also concern had cancelled plans to re- fic-president of the American Paper open two of its four strike-bound fnd Pulp Association. Herron, '09E, plants on Monday. It had found he Cleveland, Ohio, is president of the said, that the strikers "are demand- American Society of Mechanical E- 'innconditions which make their po- gineers and director of the engineer .ition very unclear." ing division of the Cleveland Wa r i'y. fndustries Board. I An official of the CIO Farm Equip- (Contiued on Page 31) Hunt, a resident of Detroit and a member of the Class of 1905, is; ;he director of the New Devices See- llflnoH leelfletits .ion of the General Motors Corp. He was the first president of the Engin-lS-TO B n lering Society of Detroit and presi- SdlC oe 9 lent of the Society of Automotive :engineers, Former chief of the aeronautical Orders Taken lhjs Week Wontnued on Pate " By Senior Engineers JIM SKINNER President Urges Citizens ToBe United In War id ..PORT EVERGLADES, Fla., March 29.-RP)--President Roosevelt sum- moned Americans of every political creed tonight to stand united in a [determination that "with all our re- zources and all our power, we shall help those who block the dictators in their march toward domination of the world." Arising from an "alliance of dictat- or nations," the President warned, is a threat to America, its union, its .democracy, and its cardinal princi- ples of freedom-a threat which draws more tightly around us day by day."" No Party Politics+ But, speaking to fellow-Democrats attending party rallies throughout the country, Mr. Roosevelt declared that to meet the threat nearly all Americans had risen above the con- siderations of party politics and had remained devoted to cbuntry and democratic ideals. The chief executive spoke by radio from the officers' wardroom of the I - ____ ~_ - ~~- - ~ ~ ~ ~ - - ~ - - - ~ ~ ~ ~ newed promise of American help for nations resisting them, the address was in many ways repititous of other presidential speeches in recent months. The very repitition served to em- phasize blunt words. The address was delivered at the ccnclusion of a week's fishing trip among Britain's northern Bahama Islands. Senate Begins To Plan Parley Vote For Student Offices To Be HeldMay 2 Activities of the Student Senate will highlight the school week on re- turn from vacation-the annual Spring Parley opening a two-day run Vicious Bulldog Challenge Barely. Misses Victory; Skinner Takes Honors Barker Declared Best Swimmer By WOODY BLOCK EAST LANSING, March 29.-Un- -oaten but bowed, Michigan's great swimming team fought off a vicious hallenge from Yale University in he Jenison Field House pool tonight o retain, for the eighth consecutive vear, its National Collegiate tank itle. Piling up 61 points in the two-day ,ompetition, Matt Mann's undefeated natators barely edged out Bob Kip- huth's Bulldogs who were able to score the amazing total of 58, with -I stunning victory in the final 400- }bard free style relay pulling them so close. Wayne, OSU Tied Wayne and Ohio State had a feud of their own far in the background with 19 points each, Minnesota fol- .Owing with 10. It was strictly a dual affair with both the Wolverines and the Bulldogs fighting it out tooth and nail all the way. Surprisingly enough, despite the degree of competition, the hard- fought races throughout, and the superb condition of all entrants, there were no records erased from the books-Charley Barker's '23 flat in the 50-yard sprint coming closest and it merely tied an existing mark. IBesides taking the team cham- pionship, the Wolverines walked off with another honor-probably as great as winning the huge team tro- phy- when it was announced just before thefinal relay that the coaches had chosen Michigan's Charley Bark- er as the most outstanding swimmer of the year, supplanting Al Patnik, Ohio State's wonder-diver of last year. Welsh, Skinner Win White House yacht Potomac to on April 25 and the Senate's spring The Wolverine margin of three "Jackson Day" dinners held to raise elections scheduled for May 2. points was provided when the big money for the Democratic Party. At yesterday's meeting of the Par- guns of the Wolverine attack started The en'emies of democracy, M. ey Continuations Committee a call booming with Jim Welsh's first vic- Roosevelt asserted, are "trying to de- was issued to all campus organiza- tory of the meet i the 440 yard free stroy our unity," using as their chief tions to send representatives to a 'tyle. weapon a propaganda of increasing meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the He was followed to the victory quantity and violence. Union, to suggest names of students stand by Jim Skner who npped na i cand members who would be Ned Parke, Princeton's top-notcher, Nazis Act As Pacifists ilty in a thrilling race. Blanked without un- willing to participate in the Parley'sto any points in the high board dive, witting helpers, he said, have at- pathe Wolverines had the final relay to tempted to exploit the natural love Ruth Basy, '42, of the Senate elec- [go and a comfortable, though shaky of Americans for peace. tion committee announced that pe- lead of five points. titions will be accepted for candi- Jack Patten led off and pulled in 'They have represented themselves dacy April 21-25 for 18 Senate posts,ascntwfethadoTmBr- as pacificist," he said, "when actually d pi 12 or1 eaepss a scant two feet ahead of Tam Brit- Prospective candidates must have eli- ton, Yale's first man. Dobby Bur- they are serving the most brutal gibility cards to petition for candi- Contid P warmongers of all time. They have dacy. (C inueonPage 4) preached 'peace' in the same way the This semester a $.50 filing fee will devil can quote scripture. F t c ie devl cn qotescrptue.be charged all those seeking a place IF "Of course, the purpose of all this on the ballot. One dollar will be re- has been to spread the terror among turned if the candidate is not suc- ePo us. The effect of it has been only cessful. Otherwise the dollar will betNyProposal to fortify our determination," Iapplied towards a Student Senate Coupling together a denunciation key. Petitions will be accepted in For R ush ng of dictators and Naziism with a re- Room 304 of the Union. E i Development And Organization Discissed At Co-op Conference sentative girl is to be judged: in- I -- telligence, personality, poise, activi- I ties, beauty and scholarship. I "Development and Implications of labor. The keynoting speech of the1 Each college participating in the Cooperatives" and "Specific Problems convention was delivered by Edward relays has been invited to send a con- in the Organization of Cooperatives" Fried, '41, Chairman of the Inter- estant, and the winner in a grand were the main problems discussed Cooperative Council, after the dele- contest will rule over the Relays. yecterday during the first day's meet- gates were welcomed by Miss Zunk,i In Wednesday's election, ten nom- ing of the first annual Michigan Co- Inter-Cooperative Education Chair- inees will be chosen. From these nom- operative Conference in the Michigan man, who is in charge of the con- inees three winners will be selected in Union. ference. the final April 9 vote. Michigan's The ecnference, which is sponsored At 4 p.m. there was a panel dis- representative girl will then be judged by the University of Michigan Inter- cussion upon the relation of the co- from these three by a group of repre- Cooperative Council, is a state-wide operative method to expansion. Par- sentative Michigan men, named by parley on the problems besetting all ticipating were Betty Guntley, '41, the 'Ensian. consumer cooperatives. Jean Fairfax, '42, and Joshua Doma- R Lshevitzky, Grad. Rev. H. L. Pickerill, local coopera- Today's programs will include re- Tickets To Go On SAe tive leadei', gave the address on the ports and summaries from the discus- Tickets for Plav Production 's nres-, development and implications of co- son -rou ts. frefnifiono ft he *Orders for commencement an- nouncemnents are being taken by sen- iolr5 in the College of Engineering to- morrow and Tuesday on the sec- ond floor of the West Engineering Building above the Arch and Thurs- day and Friday in the lobby of the East Engineering Building. The announcements, which will be sold by all schools and colleges be- fore graduation, contain a schedule of commencemerr activities, a list of University officers and a list of those students who are graduating. The an- nouncements are not invitations to the June ceremonies. Two announcements are being sold, one of which is only for students in the School of Dentistry, the Law School and the School of Medicine. This second book, in addition, lists the members of the faculties of these schols By A. P. BLAUSTEINI Denouncing "buck-passing" andl partisan government, Gov. Murray D. Van Wagoner declared at an Alumni Reunion luncheon here yesterday that if certain flaws in the state's governmental structure were not eliminated "it would be because a certain few influential legislators were putting partisanship ahead of the needs and desires of the whole people." "There is a need," the Governor asserted; "to adopt a centralized tax collection agency, to revise our ab- ominable intangible tax law, to take politics out of the department of agri- culture, to provide a fair educational a 11tmpvnts a d a.hiima-a-. itian-, nrl Governor Flails B uck-Passing' In Alumni Luncheon Address real issue in labor controversies "is whether or not one side is sharing the burdens and advantages equally with the other side" and added that the approach to the problem was the en- gineering approach, "the search for facts before making statements." "We sorely need in public life to- day men whose ethics are high, and who can make the factual, planning approach to governmental problems," he said, adding that the engineer was the man trained to fill these quali- fications. Claiming that tIle modern world was an engineering world, Governor Van Wagoner praised the University's engineering faculty for realizing the Michigan fraternities may have a new rushing system next year if the Interfraternity Council accepts a resolution prepared yesterday by an assembly of fraternity meri in Greek Week's rushing panel. The new plan calls for "split ses- sion" rushing. According to Norman Call, '42, who headed the panel, rush- ing would begin with a two-day open house period at all fraternities. This would be followed by a week o; "re- stricted" rushing during which each rushee is to be allowed only a cer- tain number of dates with each house. A two-day silence period would follow, in which time fraternities would send invitations to well-liked rushees -who would then return dur- ing the second week of rushing, a concentrated rushing period, similar to the system now existing. During this second week, there would be no r~trnfnnn +a tihr f -nP