'WVeather L Continued Rai Today And Tomorrow Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication ijattE Editorial Loca CPT 1Group Loses Perfect Record.. p VOL. Ll. No. 160 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Student Nominees Named For Posts AnticonvoY" Fight Halted In Congress, Vaiitleriberg Says Handing Axis Ships To England. Woulldi ieadiTo War' Hess On Personal Peace Mission To Duke Of Hamilton, British Say; English Claim African Successes On Control Board Nominating Committee Accepts Nine Petitions For Campus Election General Balloting To Be Next Week Nine students were nominated yes- terday for the three student posi- tions on the Board in Control of Student Publications - posts on a board which at this moment faces a structural revision by the Board of Regents which would increase fac- ulty membership from four to six men and give votes to the two alumni members.' Vying for the seats in next week's all-campus election . are Webster Cook, '42; Robert W. Gilmour, '41; Thomas Goodkind, '42; Harold Guetz- kow, Grad., Charles M. Heinen, '41E; John A. Huston, '41; Eugene A. Kane, '42; Karl Kessler, '41; and William E. Muehl, '41. Committee Chose Nine Cook, Kane, Goodkind, Kessler and Gilmour have worked on student pub-: lications during the past year. Guetz- kow is the head of the Intercoopera- tive Council, Muehl the president of the Student Religious Association and Huston has worked on the publi- city committee of the SRA. Heinen is retiring ,secretary of the Union. A nominating committee composed of the. retiring editors and business managers of The Daily, 'Ensian, and the Gargoyle and the three present student members of the publications board, chose the nine men. Failure of the committee toname a student does not preclude his chances of placing his name on the ballot. Eligible Students Must Petition Any eligible student who will be a senior or graduate student next year, and desires a position on the board, may resort to an extra pro- cedure which requires that he pre- sent a petition, signed by one hun- dred students, to the Men's Judiciary Council before an established dead- line, which will probably be early next week. The Judiciary Council will de- cide the deadline date at its meeting today. r The new student members will be chosen in a general election next week, at a time and by a procedure' to be decided by the Judiciary Coun- cil, along with the one student mem- ber of the Board in Control of Physi- cal Education and the six class vice- presidents of the Michigan Union. Board Appoints Staff The Board in Control of Student Publications appoints the senior and junior members of the editorial and business staffs of the three stu- dent publications. At present it is composed of three students and four faculty members, all voting, and two alumni men, who serve in an advisory position. Members of the nominating com- mittee are Hervie Haufler and Irv- ing Guttman of The Daily; Jack Cory and Charles Samuel of the 'En- sian; David Donaldson and Bernard Bloom of the Gargoyle, all seniors, and the student board members, Phil- ip Westbrook, '43L, James Tobin, '41, and Albert P. Mayio, of Detroit. Students Can Still Buy Fifty Michiganensians Only 50 copies of the 1941 edition of the 'Ensianremain available for student subscription at the price of $5, according to Jack Cory, '41, busi- ness manager. When these have been sold, stu- den'ts desiring copies will be able to obtain a limited number from the bookstores at the time of distribu- tion, within two weeks from today. Although the yearbook's 2,500 copies were sold out previously, the additional books were made available by their forfeiture by students who have never paid up the balance of the subscription price. Wishing to protect those who have called and expressed a desire for Ensians,Cry urges these to act im- Tennis Squad Drops Match ToIrish, 6-3 (Special to The Diy) SOUTH BEND, Ind., May 14.-- Michigan's powerful tennis team, un- beaten in Conference play, was stunned into defeat yesterday as an underrated Notre Dame team whip- ped them, 6-3. Playing in a high wind which seemed to bother the Wolverines more than Walt Langford's Irish net- ters, Notre Dame won four of the six singles matches and two of the three doubles matches. Leroy Weir, Michigan net mentor, was f'orced to change his line-up be- cause of the illness of Jim Porter, regular number three singles player, who was left in the Health Service at Ann Arbor with a case of laryngitis. Wayne Stille moved up a notch as did Tom Gamon and Alden John- son. Roy Bradley took over the sixth singles spot. In doubles, Stille teamed with Gerry Schaflander, competing in his first Varsity match for Michigan, to play in the second spot, while Gamon played with his usual partner, Howie Bacon, in the last doubles position. In the first three singles matches, the Notre Dame players emerged vic- torious in straight sets. In the first singles match, Jim Tobin, Wolverine (Continued on Page 3) Defense Board Tries To Avert Strife At GM Knudsen, Davis Confer; Attempt To Halt Walkout Affecting 160,000 Men WASHINGTON, May 15.-()-The Defense Mediation Board worked in- to the earjy hours today to settle a threatened strike of 160,000 CIO workers at some 60 General Motors Corporation plants before the Union's 7 a.m. deadline. William S. Knudsen, director of the Office of Production' Manage- ment, conferred at midnight with William H. Davis, chairman of the Mediation Panel and when asked for his view of the situation, said'short- ly : "Damn serious." Meanwhile the Union telephoned instructions to local presidents in 26 cities to "stand by for word." Any strike order, a spokesman said, would come from here. Management representatives, head- ed by C. E. Wilson, GM president, conferred in their hotel suite for four hours, presumably on a peace formu- la advanced by Davis. They returned to board headquarters but instead of resuming negotiations, went into pri- vate conference with panel members. Terms of the proposal, advanced by vice Chairman William H. Davis, were kept secret. It was reported to have followed complete disagreement on a proposal and counter-offer drafted by repre- sentatives of the CIO United Auto- mobile Works and the management. Smith Paper Is In Review' The May issue of the Michigan Law Review, published today, features among fie leading articles a paper by Prof. Russell A. Smith of the Uni- versity Law School on "The Evolu- tion of the 'Duty to Bargain' Con- cept in American Law." Prof. Hessel E. Yntema of the Law School has contributed an article entitled "Jurisprudence on Parade," n which he seeks to review and anal- yze recent trends and developments Seniators <+? Await n, Roosevelt Speech WASHINGTON, May 14.-(P)-A Senate fight on the convoy isspe was postponed today when a group of Senators favoring a ban on U.S. Na- val escorts for war supplies decided against trying to tack such a prohibi- tion on the pending ship seizure bill. The antisconvoy Senators reported a general feeling that it would be better to wait until Mr. Roosevelt makes his speech of May 27. They would prefer, they said, that the is- sue be raised first by the administra- tion. Gives President Power The ship seizure bill would em- power President Roosevelt to take formal possession of foreign ships idle in American ports and put them to use as he sees fit. During debate on the measure, Sen- ator Bailey (Dem-NC), Chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee and advocate of the pending bill, con- ceded that if Axis ships were trans- ferred to England, such action might invite war-like retaliation from Ger- many. The administration, he add- ed, had no intention of making such a transfer. Senator Vandenberg (Rep-Mich) presented an amendment to forbid the transfer to one belligerent of the ships of its adversary. Such a trans- fer, he said, would be a "needless and provocative act of war." Vandenberg And Bailey Vandenberg asked Bailey what he thought the consequences would be if the Axis vessels were put to the service of England. "Unquestionably, we would not on- ly have gone beyond the bounds of International Law, but would have in- tervened to the point where the bel- ligerent might take steps for revenge," was Bailey's answer. "In other words," Vandenberg said, "it would be a provocative act of war." Constitution Expert Will Give Address At Honor Banquet Constitutional problems in the world of today will updergo close scrutiny when Prof. Edward S. Cor- win, '00, of Princeton University ad- dresses the annual initiation ban- quet of Phi Beta Kappa at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. Nazi And Italian Legions Retreat From Salum; Tobruk Defenses Hold Vichy Government Accepts Nazi Pact (By The Associated Press) CAIRO, Egypt, May 14.-German- Italian troops have been thrown back 40 miles to positions south and west of Salum and are under the continual harassment of British Imperial forces, the British Middle East Command said today. (The Germans contended they and their Italian Allies had advanced 45 miles east of the border village of Salum in a surprise attack begun Monday.), In addition, the British communi- que said the Imperial garrison be- sieged at Tobruk, 80 miles within Lib- ya, inflicted "many casualties" and destroyed two German tanks in a "limited offensive operation." (The Italian Iigh Command said Italian troops "bravely repelled" a= strong British tank attack at Tobruk, inflicting losses in men and machines o*i the British.) French Pact Assumed Warning To U.S. (By The Associated Press) VICHY, -France,' May 14.--The French Government approved today the Hitler-Darlan collaboration terms in a formal gesture considered by diplomatic circles to be more than anything else a warning to the Unit- ed States to stay out of the war., French informants who usually know what they are talking about acknowledged that the negotiations Conducted by Vice-Premier Admiral Jean Darlan and the German Fuehrer transcend the economic and enter the' political field., Thus diplomatists in this capital of unoccupied France regarded to-, day's approval of the negotiations by Chief of State Petain's cabinet a means of presenting America with a fait accompli of collaboration and thus a measure intended to deter Americans from plunging into the, European conflict. o 150 NORWAY osko .... .. SCOTLAND Z GL ASGCOW NORTH SEA DENMARK LONDON - - - 'S BERLIN -- BEL. - - A JGSBURG 4 ' SWITZ. . ' '' ~VICH Y Rudolph Hess might have followed this direct route in his flight from Augsburg in southern Germany to Glasgow, Scotland, where he was cap- tured by the British. Hess confided that he had made careful plans to land near the estate of the Duke of Hamilton. 'Hess Wil Not Succeed In Starting Peace Plans' Possible Route Of Hess German Deputy Reported Describing Conditions In Defiance Of Hitler Berlin Denounces Any Peace Plans By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) The first glimmering of light on the fantastic and almost unbelievable "Hess mystery" comes in the form of word from both London and Ber- lin that his motive was to talk to the Duke of Hamilton, an old sports acquaintance, and try to bring about some sort of peace parleys. If that was his purpose, there is not the faintest inkling from either' side that he will succeed. Both of 1 ] : 1 Returning to his home campus as one of the nation's leading authorities on constitutional law, and frequent consultant of the administration on constitutional problems, Professor Corwin will speak on "Constitutional Revolution, Ltd." McCormick professor of Jurispru- dence at Princeton, Professor Corwin has frequently been called by the present administration as adviser on constitutional matters. Ithe armed camps in Europe have been vowing war to the death, and Debating Teams there is no sign that either is ready to accept peace on any terms even TO Compete Here remotely acceptable to the other. Time alone will tell whether Hitler's Concluding what may turn out to one-time most intimate Lieutenant be a perfect season, the University is a psychopathic case, as Berlin debate team of William Muehl, '41, makes him out to be, or whether and John Huston, '41, will meet a he is a perfectly sane man whose National University, Washington, D.C. flight indicates schism in the Nazi squad at 8 p.m. today in the North leadership, as London has insisted. Lounge of the Union. The case has led to a fierce battle Presented for the first time in on the nerve front, with both sides the Middle West, the question of the laying down terrific propaganda bar- evening will be "Resolved: That a rages. The world's confusion about permaneNt union of the United States the meaning of the amazing incident and the British Commonwealth of is far from cleared away, and much Nations should be immediately es- remains that is inexplicable on the tablished," the local team upholding basis of present knowledge. the negative. It is, therefore, a relief to turn from the welter of speculation aroused by the Hess flight to other war cir- cumstances much easier to appraise. There is now available a graphic eye- witness story of a British-Axis air and sea power clash in the eastern Medi- terranean that challenges special attention. It came from Larry Allen, war seasoned Associated Press writer who was aboard the British flagship and who tells in detail of the ineffec- tiveness of a sustained torpedo-plane attack on a heavily guarded British convoy. His report specifically refutes Rome-Berlin claims of heavy damage inflicted on merchant and naval units so vitally important to Britain. All arrived unscathed at their Egyptian destination. Engine Council Fills Positions 'Arch' Editors, Committee Heads Are Appointed Thomas O. Poyser, '43E, and Free- man Alexander, '43E, were appoint- ed editor and business manager re- spectively of Engineering Arch, the freshman engineering magazine, at a meeting of the Engineering Council held last night. Selected for the chairmanship of the committee charged with enforce- ment of the engineers' honor system was Alexander Wilkie, '42E, who will head the committee for the coming year. George D. Gotschall, '42E, Arthur W. Dobson, '42E, and Carl Rohrback, '42E, were named to a committee to promote cooperation between the var- ious engineering professionaland honor societies, it being desirable to limit conflicts between the meetings of the different organizations as much as possible. Gotschall will serve as chairman of the group. Engineering Honor SocietyTaps'Ten' Dean Walter B. Rea, assistant dean of students, and 10 junior engineers were tapped for membership in Vul- cans, senior engineering honor soci- ety, last night. The men selected by the organiza- (By The Associated Press) LONDON, May 15.-Rudolf Hess broke away from Germany as a hope- ful missioner of peace, it became known today, with the British dis- closure that his unauthorized flight out of the Reich was aimed at a ren- dezvous in Scotland with his old English sports acquaintance, the Duke of Hamilton. It was hinted, too, that Hitler's runaway deputy was describing in- ternal conditions in Germany to the British Government as a basis of the need for his solo mission of peace.b Well-informed British sources said this most amazing "good-will" flight of all timewas undertaken in dfi- ance of Hitler, with Hess banking on his friendship with the Duke "to bring about some peace negotia- tions. " Hess and the Duke were long acquainted and this ripened to a semblance of friendship at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, where both were officials. The friendship was trustful so far as Hess was con- cerned, for it was disclosed that he wrote a letter - presumably a peace feeler - to the Duke some time ago. The Duke turned the letter over to the government and on its ad- vice he did not reply. What the gov- ernment did about it remained a mystery but Hess came parachuting down on a Scottish moor near the ducal estate - seeking his answer. Wednesday night this German- language broadcast went out from London: " . ..we agree with the German propagandists; Hess desires peace. We also agree that he is in the pos- session of secret information. But isn't it more likely that the Nazis are worried more about the fate of Germany than of Great Bri ; tain?" Nazis Claim Hess Has 'Messiah Complex' (By The Associated Press) BERLIN, May 14.-High Nazi sources declared tonight that Deputy Fuehrer Rudolf Hess was a political incompetent who flew to Britain un- der the spell of a messiah complex, believing he could end the war and fly home to Germany in about two days. Berlin will disavow any peace pro- posals he might make in England, it was asserted, but on the other hand the Nazis denied that he carried any documeits likely to disclose German state or military secrets and insisted he was not a traitor. That he was no turncoat was in- dicated by his action in permitting his Messerschmitt 110 fighter plane to crash while he parachuted to earth in Scotland at dusk Saturday, the Nazis said. Had he landed the plane, it might have given the English some Messerschmitt construction details, it was asserted here. Entries Made For Fraternity Sing Program Twelve fraternities will enter the finals of the annual Interfraternity Sing Wednesday on the steps of the Main Library. Each of the fraternities is to have a sorority sponsor "rooting" for them, and Pi Beta Phi will again provide an all girl selection for the program. Eliminations will be held Monday, May 19, in the Union and the League. At this time the 12 fraternities chos- en by the judges will be named for final contest Wednesday. Accommodations for 1,500 people :_ r r ..:., .!. ,, a. " :. 4 I .r t E .a; i r .. ' :.... r -e ;._ .. '. 5 .II . . ' i 1 . '!, s . ,,.,' ; :a>,' Ruthven Lends Support To Tag Day, Urges Contributions To Student Drive By BILL BAKER President Ruthven placed the stamp of official commendation on the University Fresh Air Camp Tag Day tomorrow in a statement released to The Daily yesterday expressing wholehearted approval of "the efforts of the student body to secure the necessary funds for this enterprise." The text of the statement is given here:4 "In the 20 years that the University Fresh Air Camp has been maintained, the University of Michigan has be- come very proud of the enterprise. It is my opinion that the Camp turns young lives in the direction of physi- cal, mental and spiritual health. "It is hoped that those who can- not actively participate in the Camp's the official "go-ahead-signal" in a statement issued by Ann Arbor's Mayor Leigh J. Young, who is also a member of the, Fresh Air Camp committee. Terming the drive "one of the 4 t i t d that make possible this four weeks vacation for these boys are secured through the Tag Day drive and from private contributions. Prof. H. N. Menefee, of the mech- anical engineering department, direc- tor of the camp, has set a goal of $1,500 for this year's drive. Various student organizations have been requested to aid in the cam- paigning by providing volunteers to man the various posts on campus and in' the downtown districts. The names and posts of student volunteers will be announced in tomorrow's Daily, along with instructions to those par- ticipating in the collections. The Fresh Air Camp has been in existence for 20 years, every summer providing a vacation for boys who