Weather CGenerally Fi LY t ' Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication jgai1i Editorial the Fight M~ust Not End At he Snore-Linea VOL. LL No. 139 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Auto Workers' Mass Meeting Approves Plany For Settlement Empower Union Leaders To Act On Modifications Sought By Company UJAW Heads Study Added Proposals DETROIT, April 10-(P)--A mass meeting of United Automobile Work- ers (CIO), acting on proposals for settlement of the strike at the Ford Motor Company, tonight approved Gov. Murray D. Van Wagoner's plan and authorized union negotiators to act on modifications sought by the Company. Union negotiators were empowered by the rank and file to continue con- ferences, and eventual settlement of the strike, now in its ninth day, re- mained uncertain as to time. An estimated 16,000 unionists, crowding the State Fair Grounds Coli- seum, approved by acclamation a mo- tion put to them by Michael F. Wid- man, Jr., chairman of the UAW-,CIO Ford organizing drive, in these words: "We accept the proposal of your Governor, then refer the matter the Ford Motor Company raised tonight -just a bugaboo--to your negotiat- ing committee." Proposal Set Forth Gov. Murray D. Van Wagoner had set forth a three-point proposal for ending the strike, and the company asked for certain modifications. R. J. Thomas, president of the union, told the meeting the Com- pany requests were "not counter-pro- posals, but additional proposals." He said he and other union negotiators would reach a decision on the modi- fied peace plan "perhaps tonight or tomorrow morning. , Thomas, Widman and other union leaders left the mass meeting to re- sume conferences at mediation head- quarters in downtown Detroit. During the day the union officials had accepted Van Wagoner's plan for settlement of the strike in the big Rouge plant "without further de- lay" to aid national defense, but the Company asked modifications. Harry H. Bennett, Ford personnel director, announced late in the af- ternoon that the Company was pre- pared to reopen its huge Rouge plant on the Governor's terms, except that "it is impossible to return all em- ployes to their jobs at once."! House Passes Bill The Company also insisted that' certain complaints filed with the National Labor Relations Board here by the union and other NLRB hear- ings affecting the Rouge plant "be deferred and held in abeyance" un- til after an election, ordered recent- ly by the NLRB to, be held within 45 days. The Governor's plan, which had the support of Federal Conciliator James F. Dewey, called for all em- ployes to return to their jobs with- out discrimination, the reestablish- ment of grievance procedure used before the strike, and cooperation of both sides in holding an election ordered by the National Labor Re- latiotis Board. Eddy Analyzes Recent Trend In Latin Music The recent nationalistic trend of modern Spanish music constitutes a reaction against the Italian taste of the 18th and 19th centuries, de- clared Prof. Nelson Eddy of the Ro- mance Languages Department in a lecture sponsored yesterday by La Sociedad Hispanica. "This movement," Eddy explained, "is especially prevalent among the younger composers and is lead by Felipe Pedrell. Pedrell believes that each nation has its own idiom and should develop and expand upon it. Thus, the Spaniards are building pop- ular dance tunes out of age-old folk rhythms peculiar to their country." In illustration of his talk, Professor Eddy played several typical record- ings. These included "Polo" and "El pano moruno" by Manuel de Falla, "Farruca" by Joaquin Turina and "La maja y el ruisenor" by Enrique Gran- ados. I -~- - - -~ University 's Allotment Greeks Dig In Against Germans Bill Submitted To House Nowicki Raises Current Budget $100,000 -Falls Short Of Regents' Request As Italians Push Into Yugoslavia; A provision that $4,575,000 be pro- vided for the operating expenses of the University of Michigan for the year 1941-42 was introduced into the state House of Representatives yes- terday in an appropriation bill draft- ed by State Budget Director Leo J. Nowicki. The proposal would increase by $100,000 the amount received for op- erating expenses of the current year. It provides, however, $227,000 less than the request formulated b the Board of Regents and introduced in a bill sponsored by chairman Reid of the Senate committee on Univer- sity affairs. Officials Decline Comment University officials declined to comment on the action, except to point out that the appropriation bill has no relation to the recommenda- tion of the Regents that a General Service Building be erected to replace University Hall and the adjoining wings.' The request of the Regents for $4,802,000 to cover operating ex- penses for 1941-42 was derived from computing a mill rate of .83 per dol-' lar on the estimated general property evaluation as compiled by the State Board of Equalization. In 1935 the state government abandoned a state tax on real property, but the request of the Regents has continued to be, based on a state-wide property eval- Regional Meet Will Be Staged By Flying Cub Several Midwest Schools To Take Part Saturday, Sunday At Ypsi Airport I The Flying Club will be host to student pilots from several midwest- ern colleges and universities in the regional inter-collegiate flying meet to be held tomorrow afternoon and all day Sunday at the Ypsilanti air- port, Leslie J. Trigg, '41E, president of the club, announced yesterday. The meet wil feature such events as "bull's eye," spotlanding and "bomb" dropping competitions. Navi- gational races may also be held. Invitations have been sent to pilots at Detroit, Purdue, Toledo, Duke, Ohio State and Wisconsin univer- sities, and to Kenyon, Akron, Butler, Mt. Union, Evansville and Michigan State colleges. Detroit Tech, Goge- bic Junior College and Lake Erie Col- lege, a girls' school, have also been invited. Thedhost club, which will defend its title of national inter-collegiate champion, will use its own plane, a 65 horsepower monoplane, in the meet. Miani Train Overturns VALDOSTA, Ga., April 10.-(A3)-- Four cars of a -Miami-bound stream- lined train, the "Southwind," over- turned into a ditch near Dupont, Ga., today, injuring a score of passen- gers. The train, drawn by a steam loco- motive, was enroute from Chicago. Railroad officials declined comment on the cause of the wreck, but ob- servers at the scene about fifteen miles from here said a broken rail was blamed. uation, and is then appropriated from the state general fund. The provision for the University was included in a general education- al appropriation bill, submitted by Nowicki to the House, which also contained a recommendation of $2,- 1600,000 for Michigan State College. NLRB Awaits Election On the same day the House passed an appropriation of $2,725,000 a year for that institution - $125,000 more than Nowicki had proposed. That measure went to the Senate for con- currence, and adjustment was possi- ble in that branch to meet Nowicki's recommendation. Churches Plan Tre Ore Union Service Today Local Ministers Announce Crucifixion Observance; Catholics To Have Rites ' Ann Arbor will observe the Cruci- 'fixion at Tre Ore union services to be held at the Methodist Church and at the Liturgical celebration of the St. Thomas Catholic Church today. Thirteen Protestant ministers will take part in the three-hour service which will include meditation, prayer, and music. Rev. Edward Lantz of the First Methodist Church will give the invocation to open the program be- ginning at 11:45 a.m. Prayer will be offered by Rev. Theodore Schmale and Rev. H. P. Marley of the Unitarian Church will give the scripture reading. Marjorie Hollis will sing "Hymn of the Last Supper" while Mir- iam Westerman, '43, and Jean West- erman, '42, will sing "There Is A Green Hill Far Away" as a duet. Geraldine Watts will sing "Were You There When They Crucified My Lord." Rev. C. H. Loucks of the First Baptist Church will speak on "The Meaning of the Cross to Christians Today." Rev. Howard C. Buching of the West Side Methodist Church will speak on "The Cross as the Hope of the World." The first part of the liturgy of the St. Thomas Church will preserve the ancient form of the Mass Catechu- mens. The second part of the service will consist of prayer, while the third part will be the adoration of the Cross. The last part of the service will be the Mass of the Pre-Sanctified. Nordmeyer, Wiley Will Attend Meeting Four members of the German de- partment will travel to Chicago soon to attend conventions. Profs. Henry W. Nordmeyer, Wal- ter A. Reichart and Werner F. Stried- ieck expect to attend the annual meeting of the Association of Modern Language Teachers of the central, western and southern parts of the country which will be held April 18 and 19 in Chicago. Prof. Norman L. Wiley, also of the German department, will read a paper on Ibsen's Medical Studies for the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Studies May 2 and 3 in Chicago. Nazis' British Start Prepara For 'Battle Of Gre Blitzkrieg Slows I Fascists Penetrat On Two Front ATHENS, April 1l.-(PA)- soldiers and their British allies ly dug in on a solid mountai rier in northern Greece today. Greek officials declared the whelming superiority of the G men and weapons' outweigh Greeks in the border regions, bi they resisted to the last bullet The Greeks reported fighti tween the Nazis and isolated forces was confined to the Bul border and a spattering of G air raids on the Athens port raeus and Kozane. Official sources here declar war in Greece definitely had e a new phase. In the first stage, they de the geographical features of the er regions favored the German anized invaders. Now they added, the defende a mountain barrier on whi base themselves - and it is that the forces are making rea the battle for the Greek nenins The Greeks still holding o the Bulgarian frontier are "gi unique example of heroism and gation," said the Athens radi elswhere contact with the Ge - which was not broken off1 the capture of Salonika Wed - has not been reestablished. Italy Admits Loss Of Red Sea Port (By The Associated Press) ROME. April 10.-Italy, adm the loss of the Red Sea port 0 saua to British forces, said t Fascist troops were driving into slavia on two fronts to join th man armies ripping through Balkan nation. The Italian thrusts into Yug were from captured Kranj,i treme northwestern Yugoslavia the Sava Valley toward Zagre from the central Albanian f toward Tetova and Skoplje, r German hands. The air force claimed a more part in the attacks on Yugo Dispatches reported repeated a on seaplane bases and other tives. Among the reports was the inb of Sibenik harbor and r station on the Adriatic, where was reported blown up, and te plane base at Divulje Wrana. Fighting planes machine-g barracks and concentrations c tor vehicles near Podgorica o: northern Albanian-Yugoslav fr Fascist dispatches reported. FDR Requests Right To Sei: Foreign Sh WASHINGTON, April 10. - Lest a, "growing shortage of sh facilities" defeat the armamen gram, President Roosevelt asked Congress for authority t mandeer any foreign-owned lying idle in American waters. "We should have statutory a ity," he said, in a special m "to take over any such vessels needs may require, subject, ofc to the payment of just coml tion." That Congress would comply the President's request, none d( The message and a proposed of the legislation which accoml ti, were referred in the Senf the Commerce Committee. The scope of the proposal7 theless caused some surprise. ious discussions of the subjec to do with the 39 Danish, two GC and 28 Italian vessels which seized March 30. Under the lar of the President's messagei patent the legislation requeste Occupy Croatian y .______ . _ . CIO University I State Board Of, The local union of the State, County and Municipal Workers of America, CIO, has announced that a "labor dispute" exists between it and the Board of Regents of the Univer- sity, and promises "further action" if its requests for collective bargain- ing conferences with the University are not met. The declaration was contained in a letter send by the union to the State Labor Mediation Board noti- fying that board of its intent of "fur- ther action." Under Michigan law a thirty day notice of any strike must be filed with the Mediation Board. The Union's contention that the Board of Regents had given it no reply to a request for an audience was disputed by Shirley W. Smith, vice-president and business manager of the University, who commented thus on the notice of intent to strike filed with the Mediation Board: Smith's Statement "The story is prevalent that the Board of Regents at its last meeting denied the petition of the local for a hearing, the purpose being to dis- cuss collective bargaining, wage in- creases, vacation and other matters. The fact is that the Regents referred the request to the University's labor committee, consisting of President Alexander G. Ruthven; Prof. John W. Riegel, director of the bureau of industrial relations; Regent Charles. W. Hemans and myself. "There is no reason why the Uni- versity should not confer with any group of employes, and indeed, rep- resentatives of the labor organization have met with the superintendent ofE the hospital since the Regent's meet- ing. No doubt the labor committee Alumni Plan Get-Togethers' Edmonson Will Address Kansas City Gathering University Alumni Clubs through- out the country are planning "get- togethers" for the students and alum- ni over the Spring Vacation, T. Haw- ley Tapping, secretary of the Alumni Association, announced. In Washington, New York City and Binghamton, New York, the local alumni and students will have an op- portunity to hear the Glee Club per- form. Tapping will speak at the gather- ings in Charleston, North Carolina, and Evansville,'Indiana. Dean James B. Edmonson of the School of Education will be the guest speaker at the annual banquet of the Michigan Alumni Club in Kansas City, Missouri. Rochester,New York, will be the scene of a dinner-dance given by the local alumni for the students and alumni. Chicago, St. Louis, Philadelphia and Portsmouth, Ohio, will also have parties given by the local Michigan Alumni Clubs. Union Notifies Strike Intentions will receive a request for a confer- ence at an early date." The Vice-President would not pre- dict the outcome of such a meeting, but he did explain that the "Regents have always taken the ground, and have so instructed its administrative officers, that we may not bargain collectively." We have met union rep- resentatives many, times but not to bargain collectively, he said, point- ing out that "membership in a union has never been prejudicial to a Uni- versity employe. The attorney-general has supported the opinionof the Uni- versity's counsel that Act 176 of Pub- lic Acts of 1939, making conferences mandatory on employers, is not ap- plicable to the State." Union To Sit Tight Joseph Exelby, president of the local union, said that the union would "sit tight" and await the action of the Mediation Board. All former em- ploye organizations of University workers, both AFL and CIO, have now become unified into Local 269, he said. Petition Results Are Announced Jordan Assistants' Course To Train 25 Students The temporary results of the recent petitioning for student adviserships in Jordan Hall were announced yes- terday by Miss Esther Colton, social director. , Of the 25 upperclass women chosen to take the six weeks' training course, 19 will eventually be selected to act as assistants to next year's freshmen women living in Jordan. Members of the class of '44 who will take the course are: June Anut- ta, Needa Cain, Patricia McDonald, Nancy Frank, Mona. Heath, Felice Schapiro, Charlotte Papernick, Bar- bara Smith and Mahala Smith. The list of next year's sophomores con- tinues with Elva Stokinger, Helen Kressbach, Ann MacMillan, Barbara Robinson, Jean Bisdee, Ruth Rodin- beck and Rita Hyman. Representatives of the class of '43 are Peggy Vickroy, Mildred Stern, Nancy Filstrup, Louise Engell, Betty Newman, Charlie Boyd and Gertrude Inwood. The list is 1completed with juniors Ellen Bates and Gertrude Cohen. At the first of the six weekly meet- ings which will start on April 22, Kenneth Morgan, Director of the Student Religious Association, will speak to the girls. Trade Pact Signed MOSCOW, April 10.-(P)-Soviet Russia tonight signed an agreement with German-occupied Norway for an exchange of 'goods. The ceremony followed more than a month of negotiations with the Norwegian delegation which came here from Berlin. Capital Report Croats Forming Separate Government; Pavelic Called Leader Raiders Drop Bombs Again Upon London (By The Associated Press) BERN, Switzerland, April 10.- German motor troops rolled tonight into Zagreb, the capital of Old Cro- atia, and German news agency dis- patches said the patchwork kingdom of Yugoslavia, had been ripped asun- der by the formation of a separate Croat state. The Croats, long a large and rest- less element of the kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, were de- clared to have established their own nation under Dr. Ante Pavelic and an extremist named Kvaternik, both once sentenced to death for compli- city in the assassination of King Alexander in 1934. Dr. Vladimir Macek, mild, bespec- tacled old Croat peasant leader who only last week accepted Vice Prem- iership of the Yugoslav Government, was portrayed as one of the prime movers of the new Zagreb govern- ment. This is a sensational about- face, if true, for Macek long has been known as an enemy of Pavelic and an outspoken critic of the many assas- sinations and terroristic plots laid to Pavelic in his campaign against Yugoslav unity. It, was Macek, however, to whom the German news agency Interna- tionales Nachrichten Buro attributed announcement of the new Croat state in a radio address from Zagreb. The German high command an- onunced merely that Zagreb was oce cupied and that the Croat population greeted the Nazi troops joyously. This conformed with Macek's as- :erted advice to the public just be- fore the ocupation to hang German and Croat flags in their homes. (Authoritative circles in London immediately called the news "the same old German game of setting up a supposedly independent state in a territory their armies are attempt- ing to subjugate.") According to the INB story, Macek announced that Pavelic would head she government, that he himself would 'participate, and that "at this ery moment' a Croat politician aamed Kvaternik had been appoint- d Vice Premier and was "taking the administration in hand." Raiders Drop Bombs A gain On London LONDON, April 11.-(P)- German raiders attacking soon after the Nazi ress published threats to "avenge a hundred-fold" the destructive raid 'y the British on Berlin, dropped bombs on London for the second time in the last 20 days and fanned out >ver other sections of England last aight and early today. London was under an alarm for ibout five hours before the all-clear vas sounded near dawn. Church Heads To Meet Here April 16 To 18, Unitarian and Universalist minis- ters of this area will convene April 16, 17 and 18 at the Michigan Union for their first localized conclave. Edwin Palmer of Kalamazoo will deliver a paper on "Worship," while the Rev. Merrill Bates of Grosse Pointe has chosen "Pradtical Church- manship" for his topic. "The Experimental Side of Lib- eral Religion" is the field on which Harold Scott of Flint will concentrate, and the Rev. Tracy Pullman of De- troit is also scheduled to speak before the assemblage. Discussion of world events at one of the sessions will be led by Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history de- partment. Also to speak at the meeting are the Rev. Lon Ray Call, secretary of the Western Unitarian Conference, r f , Two One-Act Plays Scheduled By German Club For April_28 Julien Bryan To Discuss War, South America In Talks Here Scheduled for performance by Deutscher Verein April 28, the two one-act plays by Arthur Schnitzler, "Literatur" and "Grosse Szene," are the sixth program since the tradition of putting on a German play each year was revived. Before World War Number One the German Club produced a number of classical and modern plays for the school and public, renewing the tra- dition several years ago with the production of Schnitzler's "Der Gruene Kakadu." Among others shown since are the plays, "Minna von Barnhelm," by Lessing, "Das Konzert," by Hermann 4 ment stress the pedagogical advan- tage play. Students participating re- ceive the benefit of training in pro- nunciation, while the spectators have an opportunity to see the acting and hear German spoken, all of which transcends the benefits of the writ- ten exercise. Taking part in "Literatur," the story of two Bohemian artists, are John Ebelke, Grad., as Klemens; June Larson, '41, portraying Margaret and Fritz Friedlaender, '41, as Gilbert. Gertrude Gunz, Grad., is the won- dering wife in "Grosse Szene," while Julien Bryan, noted photographer, will speak in Hill Auditorium Mon- day, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs- day, April 21 through 24. Speaking here in place of Dr. Beebe, Bryan will discuss on each successive night Argentina, Peru and Chile, Turkey and the siege of Warsaw. He is the chief photographer for the March of Time and in that capacity has been able to enter the danger zones and potential danger zones of the world. Each of the lectures will be illus- trated with documentary films and will show the factors about the coun- tries important in the Dresent crises. endeavors to show what may be ex- pected from this country in the future, where her sympathies lie and what strategy she will probably fol- low. Bryan was the last cameraman or reporter in Warsaw during the siege and so has the pictures showing the latest developments recorded during the period. Patrons holding season tickets in the Oratorical Series may be admit- ted to the Bryan lecture by present- ing their Beebe tickets at the door. Other tickets for the series of four can be purchased for one dollar, 75