io Weather Cloudy. Y r Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication I jiai Editorial Haisley's Dismissal. Is Unjust Action . VOL LL No. 16 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS 4 Trackmen Qualify Nineteen In Events At Big Ten Contest Haisley ToMake Appeal After Protest By Citizens Community Will Give Support To Educator's Hearing On Local Decision Before State Tenure Board Britain Takes Offensive Against Axis Near Suez; FDR 'Surprises' French Archle Harris Of Indian Nears World's Discus Record With First Toss Piel, Thomas Place In Dash Trial Heats By BOB STAHL (Special to The Daily) MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., May 16.- Placing at least one man in every qualifying event at Memorial Stadium here today, except in the discus throw, a powerful Wolverine track team, rated the underdogs until this afternoon, replaced Indiana Hoosiers as favorites in the Big Ten Outdoor Track Meet and gave evidence that it will have an excellent chance of copping its fifth consecutive Western Conference crown. ' Archie Harris, Indiana's great weight man, turned in the most spec- tacular feat of the day. Putting all of his 210 pounds behind his first trial in the discus throw, the mighty Hoosier haved the plate a distance of 174 feet 1 inch to beat the Ameri- can, Intercollegiate, Big Ten, anA Memorial Stadium records, falling short of the world record, set by Schroeder of Germany in 1939 by less than a two inch margin. Balance And Power But it was the Michigan team, dis- playing balance and power for which it has become famous, which took the honors today. Starting off in the first event of the day, the high hurdles, in which both Frank McCar- thy and Neil McIntyre qualified, until the last race, the 880, the Wol- verines had at least one man in every event and gave notice that fans on hand for tomorrow's finals will at least see plenty of Michigan jerseys.- Michigan's two Als - Piel and Thomas, both qualified second in their heats in the century-Thomas finishing behind Northwestern's great Myron Piker and Piel chasing Illi- nois' Jack Turner to the tape. Piker had the best time for the 100 of :09.9. George Franck, Minnesota's All-American half back and sprinter, barely qualified in his heat, giving evidence that the leg injury which he received in the Drake Relays is still causing him some trouble. Piel, Thomas Qualify Piel and Thomas also qualified for Michigan in the 220, this time both of them finished first. Starting on the curve of the track, both' Pie and Thomas took an early lead and held it all the way to the tape, Piel turn- ing in the best qualifying time of :21.9. However, Piker also finished first in the last heat and is still con- ceded a slight edge over the rest of the field. Three men qualified for Michigan is the 440 yard dash. Bobby Bar- nard finished third, Jack Leutritz (Conutnued on Page 3) Wedding Bells To Ring For Ex-Daily Editor Ye ex-city editor is getting hitched. The goodl news of the coming mar- riage, which will take place lateathis month, was announced in Sault Ste. Marienyesterday by the bride-to-be's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Folkner, The bride is Dorothy; the groom Paul M. Chandler, '41. Rumor has it that several of The Daily's city editors - past and pres- ent -- may attend. Miss Folkner, a former student of Oberlin College, is now attending Moser Business College in Chicago, Chandler is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Chandler,. also of Sault Stc. Marie, Inquest To Be Held For Torch Victim Six men were sworn in as a coron- er's jury yesterday for an inquest into the mystery of Hazel Briggs' death, whose body was found in a dump near Manchester last week. BOB UFER Linksmen Face kIllinois 'Team ~At Champaign Golfers Plan Chanmpions, Eye Big Ten Crown; Snmith Leads Varsity By LYONS HOWL~AND Entertaining inspiring thoughlts of a possible Big Ten championship, and boasting one of the best records Iin the conference, Michigan's ma- rauding golfers invade Champaign, Il- linois today to meet Illinois' Western Conference Champions for the first match of a two-meet trip. Curiously enough, last year an all- veteran Michigan team trounced the Illini in dual meet competition, 23 to 13, but in the conferencetourna- ment took a second place behind the Illini. And so, this year observers will watch with interest the Michigan-Il- linois meet for a preview of what the conference tournament will bring. Coach Ray Courtright has chosen an eight-man squad to take the trip. Playing in number one position will be "Sub-par" Ben Smith, lanky sopho-' more from Florida. One of the sea- son's outstanding golfers, the soft- spoken ace has come through with a consistent sub-par brand of golf, his crowning achievement being his two- time defeat of Ohio State's Big Ten individual champion, Billy Gilbert. Captain Fred Dannenfelser is scheduled to start in number two slot. "Old Faithful" has been a leader in the,~ true sense of the word, scoring more than his share of points in all of the season fpastreet;e and will lead Michigan in its last out-state trip of the year. Ann Arborit b res Dave Osler and Johnny Leidy are also on Illinois' "danger ahead" list. Osler's mirac- ulous putter and Leidy's power in the (COntirued on Pg e 3) By HOMER SWANDER and MORTON MINTZ A rising storm of protest gathered force here yesterday as Ann Arbor citizens voiced vigorous disapproval of the Board of Education's five to four decision dismissing Otto W. Haisley, Superintendent of Schools for 17 years. Encouraged by the support of a Citizens' Committee, spontaneously formed after the Board meeting Wed- nesday night, Haisley declared his intention to seek an immediate hear- ing on his ouster before the State Teacher Tenure Commission. Request Is Duty He indicated that in view of the sympathy which he has received from the public in the form of peti- tions and expressions of resentment it was his duty to make this request. "If I did otherwise,".he said, "I would be letting the people of Ann Arbor down." Haisley's position was strengthened by Senate passage yesterday of the already House-approved bill (amend- ing the 1'937 Tenure Act) which gave to boards .of education the power to exclude school superintendents from the provisions of the teachers' ten- ure law. With this action the legis- lature has indicated that prior to the amendment superintendents were sub- ject to the statute. Legal authorities are of the opin- ion that now the members of the board will be forced to renew Hais- ley's contract or, at least, give more adequate reasons for the dismissal before an official open hearing. Indignation Rising Indignation has been steadily ris- ing since the Board meeting Wed- nesday night when petitions bearing the signatures of 1,046 of the 2,480 qualified School Board electors were presented demanding retention of the Superintendent. Five of the trus- tees, however, chose to ignore this, action of the citizens and voted to oust Haisley-, Boos and groans greeted the deci-, Naval Regatta Will Be Held NROTC Platoons Will Vie For 'Iron Man' Trophy More than thirty members of the campus naval unit are expected to take part in the first Inter-Platooni Regatta of the N.R.O.T.C. which willt get under way at 2:30 p.m. today.c The feature event will be one morer leg in the scramble for the "IronI Man", trophy, which will be awardedc May -22, to the platoon scoring the most points in athletic, drill and scho- alstic competition. The "Iron Man" represents the highest praise which any platoon of naval cadets can re- ceive., Bill Lapworth, '41E, will compete for the Quarterdeck Trophy tomorrow as the starting gun begins the sec ond of the intra-club competitions which starter two weeks ago. Hottest, competition is expected from :RogerI McAleer and Al Donkin of Massachu- setts, who were barely edged out in the last race. sion and it was at this time that the Citizens' Comni'ttee was formed. Most of the Board members were reluctant to give reasons explaining their stand against Haisley. In the informal discussion following ithe 'meeting, however, Trustee Mrs. Mar- tha Huss charged the Superintend- ent with coercing teachers, over-rid- ing the School Board in the choice of the site of the Slauson Junior High School, and "protecting" a former School Board treasurer, Groveeay, who was found guilty of misappro- priating school funds. At the meeting Wednesday, how- ever, assistant superintendent of schools, and Mrs. George Walter- house, who was a member of the School Board at the time of the Slau- son incident, denied that Haisley had overridden the Board in the (Continued on Page 2) Petitions Due For Congress, Union,. Boards Signatures, Qualifications Deadline Is Announced By Judiciary Council Petitions for six Michigan Union vice-presidencies an~d posts on the boards controlling student publica- tions and athletics must be filed in the Union student offices before 5 p.m. Wednesday, it was announced yesterday by Bill Slocum, '42, presi- dent of Men's Judiciary Council. Petitioners for publications board positions must submit 100 signatures, fifty names are required of candidates for the athletic board, and ten en- dorsements are needed by men desir- ing to run for the Union jobs. A short statement of qualifications must ac- company all petitions. The best qual- ified of the students petitioning will be chosen by the Men's Judiciary Council and placed on the ballot for the May 28 election. A Union vice-president will be chosen for each of the following schools: L.S.A., Law, Engineering- Architecture, Medicine, Dentistry, and Business Administration. ProspectiveS nominees for these positions can be endorsed only by members of theirt schools. Ten signatures by independentsj must be submitted with petitions for Congress offices, Slocum also de-1 clared. Only independents will be per- mitted to vote for the four rooming house representatives and the three dormitory men to be chosen. Senate Grants OPM Board New Powers President Misunderstands Need For New Orderi In Europe,_Vichy Says Seizure Of Ships Is Also Questioned By H. TAYLOR HENRY VICHY, France, May 16.-OPY- French government circles expressed the greatest surprise tonight that President Roosevelt's declaration on French relations with Germany "in- terpreted Marshal Petain's broadcast as putting French colonies at the dis- position of Germany." Following hard on these expres- sions, however, a French official statement acknowledged for the first time the British bombing of Syrian airports used by German planes en route to Iraq, but said this was not considered here to be aggression. Roosevelt Misunderstood - Frenchmen close to Marshal Pe- tain's government said President Roosevelt had, as they put it, mis- understood the French necessity oi* entering into cooperation with Ger- many for the establishment of a new European political-economic order. The latest of semi-official French statements which had grown progres- sively stronger throughout the day said the American interpretation con- cerning France's colonies "appears even more astonishing since it is ac- companied by semi-official declara- tions which consider the occupation of French Guiana and Martinique." A strong statement distributed by the French Information Office in-' quired about the "character" of tak- ing over the Normandie and other French merchant ships by armed American guards. Heard On Radio President Roosevelt's statement has not yet been published in the French press but, many Frenchmen heard it by radio. Mimeogra ph machines at the Amer- ican Embassy were busy turning out copies in both English and French which were distributed in official circles.r In reply to the President's state- ment in which Mr. Roosevelt said that the people of the United States could hardly believe that the Vichy gover- ment could "be brought to lend itself to a plan of voluntary alliance which apparently gives the Axis the use of Empire territory, informed Frenchmen stated the Vichy position thus: The French move toward coopera- tion with Germany was completely voluntary insofar as it was free from German pressure. Katz To Attend Meeting Prof. Donald L. Katz of the chem- ical engineering department will at- tend the mid-year meeting of the American Petroleum Institute whicl will convene Monday for five ,days,; Junior Award Day Program. Attracts Sixty High school juniors from Ports- mouth, Ohio, South Bend, Ind., and Owosso arrived yesterday afternoon to take part in the first alumni-spon- sored Junior Award Day today.. Robert Sibley, '42E, president of the Michigan Union, is in charge of arrangements for housing and guid- ance for the visitors, approximately 60 of whom are expected. Program for today will run as fol- lows: 8 to 9:30 a.m., registration, with conducted tours of the campus beginning at 9:15 a.m.; 11 a.m., inter- views with professors and adminis- trative officers; 11:45 a.m. recep- tion by President Alexander G. Ruth- ven in the Regents' Room of Angell Hall. Luncheon at 12:30 p.m. at the Union will feature talks by Sibley; Donald Stevenson, '42, president of Interfraternity' Council; Prof. Carl G. Brandt, director of student-alum- ni relations and Clarence L. Munn, assistant football coach. After short afternoon tours, the students will attend the varsity base- ball game, the national volleyball championships or the interfraternity golf championship matches. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m., at which time Prof. Arthur Van Duren, Jr., chairman of academic counsel- ors in the College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts, and Robert West- fall, '41, will be speakers. With the principle aim to intro- duce high schoo; juniors to the Uni- versity before they have completed their secondary school training, the University of Michigan Clubs sending delegates undertook to choose out- standing students as recipients of the trip awards, U.S. Aid To Japan, Prolongs Asia War, Yakhontof f Claims By giving aid to Japan the United States has furthered the Chinese- Japanese war, Gen. Victor A. Yak- hontoff, retired officer of the former Russian Imperial Army, declared yes- terday in a talk sponsored by the American Student Union at Unity Hall. If America is truly interested in the cause of democracy she should cooperate with the soviet Union in giving aid to China, he continued. General ¢Yakhontoff :pointed out that the strength of Japan's navy is four times that of this country, For that reason, he said, the United States is in no position to engage in a war 10,000 miles from home. English Troops Recapture Key Egyptian Town; Libyan Drive Planned Germans In Syria AttackedBy RAF (By The Associated Press) CAIRO, Egypt, May 16.-Britain's forces have taken the offensive aground and .in the skies today both west and east of the Suez Canal - in Egypt and Libya, Iraq and Syria - against coordinated Axis thrusts aimed at that vital waterway of empire. In Egypt, the key town of 'Salum - lying just within the frontier from Italian Libya - was stormed and retaken by British troops, along with Halfaya ("Hellfire") Pass, and there were some indications that a second offensive into Libya was in the mak- ing an offensive to reoccupy ter- ritory taken in the first British suc- cesses in Africa and subsequently lost to an Axis counter-offensive. Axis casualties ,includingprisoners taken, were said by the British to aggregate several hundred. Supported By Air Force In French-mandated Syia, through which Nazi panzer forces supported by warplanes were reported moving toward Iraq to support that govern- ment in its war with Britain, British -pilots opened a violent aerial offen- sive. German planes, it was officially announced here, were bombed Thurs- day at Rayak, at Palmyra - and at Damascus. At least three Nazi planes were declared damaged at Palmyra. All the eastern Mediterraneanex- cept the territorial waters of Turkey were declared by the British to be dangerous to shipping. This meant the British have acted to obstruct Axis seaborne military traffic to Syria by mines and other means. The Nazi movement across French Syria into Iraq apparently was devel- oping into a major action. Whole fleets of Nazi long-range bombers and troop carriers were said to be descend- ing on Syrian airfields. The report of the panzer movement came from the British News Service Reuters, which attributed its infor- mation to an independent French agency.- The British officially said they could not confirm it. Nazis In Syria From Turkey, however, there were similar reports that one or two Ger- man air squadrons and light tanks had arrived in Syria. German activity in Syria was termed "an occupation" by some British informants. Informed persons here expressed the belief that the Germans had introduced their me chanized equipment into Syria by air and boat from the Italian Dode canese Islands in the Mediterranean. In Trans-Jbrdan, which borders Syria and Iraq, British forces under command of General Sir Henry Mait- land Wilson appeared to be stirring. The Iraq government announced that it had protested to Emit Abdullah of Trans-Jordan against "hostile activ-' ities." Speech Group Head IS Named I I Hoosiers Whip Varsity Nine 6-5;p Stoddard Loses First Contest - - - - - - - -- - - - - - _ _ By MYRON DANN Curly-haired Mickey Stoddard was handed his first conference defeat of the season yesterday afternoon when a fast-stepping Hoosier nine nosed out the Varsity, 6-5. Big Don Dunkan gained his fifth Big Ten win by being able to come through in the pinches after ie had become too lenient with the Wolverine batters. In the seventh inning with the visi- tors one run in the lead, 4-3, lanky The Wolverines will meet Indi- ana at 2:30 p~m. today on the Ferry Field diamond in the second of their two game series. Cliff Wise is slated to pitch for the varsity. Dick Wakefield hit a tremendous triple into deep center field to send Whitey Holman across the plate with with the local lads and pushed two more runs across in the eighth inn- ing to giventhemselves a six to four lead and ' eventually the bcall game. In this frame Stoddard was lifted for Lefty Muir. The Wolverines almost had a strong enough last inning punch to win themselves the game. Dave Nelson led off the ninth frame with a ring- ing triple along the left field foul line. The stands were quick to catch the tempo and began clamoring for the home team to score some runs and take the game. Holman reached first base when he was hit on the shoulder by one of big Don's fast balls. With a man on first and third and none out it looked as if the fans would go home happy. But Dunker settled down and forced Wayne Christenson to ground into a fast double play. Nelson scored on the twin killing to make the score 1 J 1 I 1 I t I I WASHINGTON, May 16.--_/P)- Without a dissenting vote, the Senate approved today a measure giving the Office of Production Management broad statutory authority to channel United States resources into the de- fense program and to fix the seqluence in which armaments orders may be filled. Before passing the bill on avoice vote, the chamber str~uck a section which would have established a sep- arate priorities division outside the OPM and under the Munitions Control Board. Defense officials had opposed this provision and Senator Hill (D-Ala), floor sponsor for the measure, pro- duced a letter from Secretary of War Stimson declaring that it would "cause confusion and slow up" the production program. Leaders hoped the I ouse, which inserted toe proviso as a last-minute amendment when it passed the bilF several days ago, would accept the Senate changes early next week and rush the measure to the White House. The Senate made only one other al- ternation in the bill, an amendment by Senator Danaher (R-Conn) re- quiring issuance of search warrants before any private dwelling could be entered in the quest for production information the OPM would be au- thorized to obtain. By BILL BAKER Questioning whether we have gained the political sagacity to exist under our new democracy, Prof. Ed- ward S. Corwin, '00, Princeton' pro- fessor of jurisprudence yesterday told the new Phi Beta Kappa initiates at their annual banquet that the New Deal has guided us toward the goal of our real democratic policy. Changes under the New Deal's "constitutional revolution" have ex- tended to the two tenants of Ameri- can constitutionalism, dual federal- ism and the separation of powers, he explained. The former prior to 1935 was con- sidered under the competitive con- ception of state and national govern- ment relationships. The New Deal has adopted the cooperative concep- xtion, as evidence in the Social Secur- ity Act, the Lindbergh Law and other similar acts. It has heen riwd thnt the adon- Prof. Corwin Claims New Deal Ieads U.S. To Democratic Goal fore, and it is unlikely these added powers will eyer be surrendered. "It has been considered expedient to grant such powers to the rPesident in war times, but the need is even greater in times of peace." The new Roosevelt supreme court has seemed deliberately bent on min- imizing its own constitutional func- tion, Professor Corwin stated. Government regulation is a natur- al corollary of democratic govern- ment. Citing the recent FCC deci- sion that has been decried by the radio companies as outrageous, Pro- fessor Corwin contended that with- out governmental regulation radio would be a confused rabble o? noth- ingness. Thus has grown our American, democracy, he concluded-from a laissez faire democracy to a govern- ment that through federal control can secure the measures most desired by the masses. And all through the Athena After Chooses Williams Initiating Eight Anna Jean Williams, '42, was elect- ed president of Athena, oldest cam- pus speech sorority recognizing ex- cellence in forensic and literary ac- tivity, following initiation and pledg- ing Thursday. Eight new members were initiated. They included Grace Proctor, '43, Jane Cayia, '42, Louise Keatley, '42, Joy. Wright, '4, Katherine Ruddy, '42, Marjorie Teller, '42, Mary Morris, '43, and Agnes Gilbert, '43. Marcia Chown, '42, Leanor Gross- man, '43, and Pat Stelle, '43, were pledged to membership. Miss Williams, a member of Chi Omega, is secretary of the Women's