,... x Weather Cloudy Wi.th Local Showers Y Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication uix Editorial A Common D een. VOL. LI. No. 180 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1941 Z-323 U PRICE FIVE GENTS Strike Causes Split In Ranks Of CIO Union On West Coast Senate Leaders Approve Bill To Let President Confiscate Factories 'Work Or Fight' Plan Considered INGLEWOOD, Calif., June 7.-(1)- The CIO International Auto Workers' officialdom and its local at the North American Aircraft Crop. plant split wide open tonight over returning to work in the face of a Presidential threat to move in with the army Mon- day Richard T. Frankensteen of Detroit, head of the UJAW's Aircraft Division, emerged from a four and one-half hour conference to announce: "I am going to recommend that all the workers go back to work Mon- day morning." Freitage Retorts But Elmer Freitage of the Union's negotiating committee retorted: "It is the unanimous opinion of the Union's negotiating comnittee that the workers stay out until the 75-cent (per hour) minimum wage and the 10- cents an hour general raise are obtained." The clash in views threw the whole Situation of voluntary reopening at the big plant - which has nearly $200,000,000 in unfilled orders and turns out 10 planes a day for the United States and Great Britain - WASHINGTON, June 7.-(P)- Several high Administration offi- cials were reported today consid- ering a joint recommendation to President Roosevelt for a policy statement along the lines of Presi- hent Wilson's famous "work or fight" rdr in 1918. The proposed recommendation, It was understood, would call for. immediate steps to have local draft boards review and cancel defer- ments granted to men who are on strike in defense industries. The President has authority to ordersuch reviews under the Selec- ive Service Act, which makes no provision for automatic deferment. into a mass meeting tomorrow of the workers. .: Even prior to the conference, there were indications all was not harmony between national and local groups. Frankensteen's announcement came after President Roosevelt in Wash- ington had said the plant would be reopened by the government Monday if the employes did not return to work. J. H. Kindelberger, North American President, issued an order, meanwhile, for all -employes to report for their regular shifts Monday. Frankensteen, who flew here - from Detroit, said in part, in an address broadcast by CBS: Statement Continues "The strike . . . was called by the leaders of the local union completely without authorization of the United Automobile Workers union or the CIO. "The strike was called by local leaders while negotiations were still in progress before the National De- fense Mediation Board. It was called in direct violation of the agreement made by local leaders to keep the plant in operation until the board had completed its findings, and de- spite the fact that -the company had agreed to make all wage adjustments retroactive to May 1. aThe irresponsible, inexperienced and impulsive action of local leaders in violating their own agreement will find no suppOrt from myself or our organization. We have vigorously con- demnecd ,clh action before. I condemn it now." Senate Leaders Agree On Confiscation Bill WASHINGTON, June 6.-UP)-Sen- ate Democratic and Republican lead- ers have agreed, authoritative sources said today, to rush enactment of leg- islation which would permit the gov- ernment to take over a manufacturing plant if the Secretary of War or Navy Shaw Comedy WillOpeni TuesdayA tMendelssohn 4')- - -____ _ __ Drama Season To Present 'Man And Superman' As Fourth Offering Offered as the fourth play of the 1941 Dramatic Season, "Man andi Superman" will bring to the boards of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Gloria Stuart, noted Hollywood ac- tress. The production, which will open Tuesday and run through Saturday, June 14, is one of George Bernard Shaw 's most provocative comedies. The eccentric English playwright is here at his best in debunking roman- tic traditions. Hiram Sherman, who appeared here as the cynical and humorous' bache- lor of "Skylark," will return again to take, the part of Jack Tanner, the panic-stricken guardian of a young English heiress who is bent on get- ting her man. When Ann Whitefield, played by the beautiful Miss Stuart, discovers that her guardian is trying to foil her marital intentions by rushing off to Europe, she pursues and finally overtakes him in the mountains of Spain. The romantic illusion that women do not take the initiative in the game of love is thus hilariously deflated, and man, according to Shaw, is no longer like Don Juan, victor in the duel of sex. Matt Briggs, who has appeared here this season both in "The Male Ani- McKay Named In Graft Ring SBy FBI Agent Committeeman Is Accused Of Secret Partnership In LiquorSale Agency DETROIT, June 7. -(/P)- Testi- mony that Republican National Com- mitteeman Frank D. McKay "might be the real partner" of Flint's former Mayor William H. McKeig- han and John H. Marolf in one of the liquor sales agencies the govern- ment describes as the front for a $500,000 graft shakedown went into the record of their mail fraud trial today. The testimony was that of a Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation Agent, Robert T. Ross, and was related as part of a conversation with Marolf concerning the operations of the Duo Sales Engineering & Service Co. in 1939. It came on the heels of the testimony of another FBI agent that McKeighan told him, in a similar statement, that he regarded Duo Sales as "more or less of a racket." Because of the nature of the state- ments, U.S. District Judge Arthur F. Lederle instructed the jury of nine men and four women in advance of the testimony that any admissions it contained might be considered evi- dence only against the defendants quoted, since they alone had been apprised that their stories might be used against them. Ross, today's G-man witness, said Marolf told him McKeighan alone handled the money taken by the agen- cy, and that he also kept the books of the company. Since he was a Democrat, Ross quoted Marolf as saying, he (Marolf) might have re- mained in the dark concerning any political tie-up that might have ex- isted under a Republican Adminis- tration. GLORIA STUART .gets her man mal" and "Skylark, will enact the blustery, self-made American bus- inessman, Malone. Another member of "Skylark's" cast who will act in "Man and Sup- erman" is Philip Tonge, the blase bachelor of the former play. In his new role he will portray the baff le( and slightly crotchety Ramrsden. Dorothy Blackburn, who is making such a suiccess of her role as the debris-gathering lunatic sister in "Ladies in Retirement," will also be a member of the cast of the fourth play, as will TIornZ McDermott. Robert Scott, Harry Wilson and Richard Kendrick. Miss Stuart, star of such Hoallywood films as "Roman Scandals" with Ed- die Cantor, "The Prisoner of Shark Island," with Warner Baxter, "Re- becca of Sunnybrook Farm" with Shirley Temple and "The Old Dark House" with Charles Laughton, hzas long wished to play the part of Ann in Shaw's play. She claims "Man and Superman" as her" favorite drama and the production should offer a fine opportunity for Ann Arbor aud- iences to see her at her delightful MadgeEvans was originally sched- uled to play the part of Ann, but ser- ious streptococcus infection prevent- ed her filling her engagement. Ford I~aetories Resume Work Motor Shortage Is Blamed For Lay-OffOf 12,000 DETROIT, June 7.-UP)-Final au- tomotive assembly lines at the Ford Motor Company's River Rouge Plant and a dozen branch assembly plants throughout the country .will resume production Monday, Company spokes- men said, after shutdowns caused by a shortage of motors. The shortage - which Ray Rausch, Rouge Plant Superintendent, attribu- ted to a "slowdown" - made idle an estimated 12,000 employes, half of them in the Rouge Plant. Rausch said the reduction in motor production had been most noticeable since settlement of the CIO United Automobile Workers strike at the Rouge Plant in April. He estimated the shutdowns as variously from one to five days. A UAW statement denied knowledge of any slowdown and attributed the motor shortage to "curtailment of manpower" in the Rouge Plant. Meanwhile, resumption of nego- tiations bet'een Ford and the UAW- CIO, scheduled to resume Monday af- ter a week-end recess. Draft Limit Of 21 To 24 Is Proposed Republicans Assail Change; Lowering Of Top Age Is FavoredBy Army sevision Of Law Asked By Reynolds WAS5HINGTON, June 7.-(IP'-Re- parts that military leaders favor lim- iting army conscription to men from 21 through 24 years old circulated at the capitol today. For this reason, Administration leaders said they favored amending the Selective Service Law to leavej President Roosevelt a free hand in deciding the top age limit at which men would be inducted. Their propos- al would mean revision of a bill1 approved by the Senate Military Com-1 mittee which would permit the Pres- ident to defer from active service only those draft registrants who had reached or passed their twenty- eighth birthday. Asks Authority1 Originally, the Administration had asked authority for Mr. Roosevelt to defer any age group, but its measure was rewritten by adoption of a Re- publican-sponsored amendment. Chairman Reynolds (Dem-NC) of the Military Committee said he would urge that the Senate return to the original draft of the bill as submitted by the War Department. On the other hand, Senator Gurney (Rep-SD), author of the committee- approved amendment, said most Re- publicans and many Democrats were interested in seeing that a definite age limit was written into the bill. "The War Department's bill cn- tains the same old story of writing a blank check for the President," Gurney declared. "We want to speci- fy the age imit in the bill so that, draft registrants can know what to expect."' Cites estimny He said that testimony before the committee had been to the effect that only 10 per cent of those selected for Army service were more than 27 years old, adding that "90 per cent of the trouble" over operation of the draft. law came from the older brackets. Appeals from decisions of draft boards, the committee was told, came principally from older men. Reynolds said, however, that he believed the President ought to have a free hand in fixing the age limits, guided by recommendations of mili- tary experts. In any event, Reynolds said, men up to 36 years old who already have, registered still would be subject to a call frsservice later if any emer- gency arose. Quakers Plan For Dynamic' World Peace PHILADELPHIA, June 7.-(AP)-A six-point "dynamic peace" was pro- posed to President Roosevelt and other national leaders by a Quaker organization which called for "some kind of a cessation" of the war. Reaffirming the traditional Quaker opposition to war, the American Friends Service Committee urged de- velopment of an international or- ganization "capable of providing both order and change in the relations among nations." A ' a step toward a "world govern- ment," the committee advocated the establishment of an international emergency commission "to deal at once with the problems sure to be- come urgent as soon as the war stops."~ In a pamphlet, entitled "A Call to Persons of Good Will" and mailed to Washington, the committee said the present conflict is "not yet a world war" and added "we are asking for some kind of a cessation of strife and the beginning of construction before the greater flood gates open." Hepwod Prze-Winner Picked As Opera Script U.S. Aid Is Vital To .Suez IFC Alters Rushing Regulations To Help Freshmen Selections House presidents- voted to change several Interfraternity Council rush- ing rules at their last meeting, at- tempting to set regulations which will facilitate rushing and generally make it easier for freshmen to get a fair view of all fraternities. It was decided to hold a compulsory lecture for all freshmen planning to pledge a fraternity Friday evening of Orientation week, in the lecture hall of the Rackham Building. Rushees Must Register Registration for rushing must be done before the lecture, and only those freshmen attending will be per- mitted to pledge, unless a valid ex- cuse is offered to the executive com- mittee of the Council. The rule relative to summer rush- ing was reworded so that this was made legal, but absolutely no dates may be made for the fall rushing dur- ing the summer, it was stressed. When actual rushing is beingt car- ried on, no freshman will be allowed more than eight dates with any one house. A "date" was defined as any contact over one hour, excluding the time when meals are'served. 'Dates' Limited Under this revision, fraternities will not be able to keep a rushee the en- tire day and claim only one date since there was no interruption. The duration of a date after meals was limited to 3:30 in the afternoon and 8:30 in the evening. It was point- ed out that chance street meeting, under this rule, would not be count- ed as a date. The executive committee of the Derease Seen In Enrollment President Bases FigureI On Effect Of Draft Working on figures for next year's enrollment at the University, Presi- dent Ruthven approximated the num- ber at 10,000 students. The President based his figure on an expected 10 per cent decrease, due to increasing military preparations, but pointed out that it is impossible to be accurate this far in advance of fall registration. Hardest blow will be struck, he be- lieves, at the medical, dental, pharm- acy and engineering schools, while the liberal arts college with .most of its students under the draft age limit less affected. Topping the list of col- leges most seriously affected by the se- lective service act is the law school, where a majority of the students are of draft age. Estimates of registration have run from a three per cent increase to a thirty per cent decrease, the Presi-, dent said, and added that the Uni- versity expects an increased enroll- ment of women. Council was authorized to impose fines of not less than $10 and not more than $100 for infractions of any rush~ng regulations. Other meas- ures which the committee may take include social probation or refusal to allow pledging for a set period. Don Stevenson, '42, president of the Council, asked that all fraternities turn in a list of the men in their house at once so that a rushing direc- tory can be printed for use of fresh- men in the fall. Senior Nurses To Be Honored InoCeremonies Awards To Be Presented At Breakfast Thursday; Annual Reunion Planned Outgoing senior nurses and alum- nae members of the School of Nurs- ing will be honored this month at two major events in the school's pro- gram. Honors will be awarded graduating nurses at a Senior Breakfast at 8:30 a.m. Thursday in the small dining room of the University Hospital. Breakfast chairman is Fannie Blakley, '41SN, president. Senior awards will e announced, as will the annual class gift to Couzens' Hall. Margaret Moore, '41SN, editor, will distribute copies of "Scalpel," the nursing school annual. "Magna Cum Laude" Pins Featured, also, will be the presen- tation of the "Magna cum laude" pins, by Miss Rhoda Reddig, director of theschool. Two are given each year to the nurses who have attained the highest scholastic averages. Also celebrating the school's 50th anniversary, the nurses' Alumnae As- sociation will hold their annual re- union here Friday and Saturday, June 20 and 21. Dinner Is Highlight Highlights of the meeting will be a dinner Friday in the League ballroom, at which Prof. Stuart A. Courtis of the School of Education will be the principal speaker, and a luncheon Saturday at the University Hospital. Miss Reddig will address alumnae at the Saturday affair. Following the luncheon an alumnae meeting will be held at Couzens Hall. This celebration has been planned to coincide with the general Univer- sity alumni reunion. Registration of the nursing school alumnae will take placeboth Friday and Saturday, at Couzens Hall. NOTICE With this issue The Daily ceases publication until July 1, on which day The Summer Daily will com- mence publication. Announcement By Fuehrer Is Awaited To Clarify Relations With Russia Britain Holds Speed Dominant Element (By The Associated Press) Soviet Russia was thrust sharply to the fore in the rapidly develop- ing Middle East crisis last night by a British radio report that Adolf Hitler is expected to make a momen- tous declaration, probably Monday, on German-Soviet relations. The government-controlled Bri- tish Broadcasting Corporation in a French language broadcast further quoted a Zurich, Switzerland, dis- patch to the effect that Hitler also might "give the outlines of his peace plan." There was no clue as to the nature of the Nazi Fuehrer's expected declar- ation and there was no confirmation from Berlin that he even contemplat- ed any such move. Ankara Reports Pressure The report, however, recalled dis- patches Thursday from Ankara, Tur- key, that Germany was putting heavy pressure on the Soviet Union for ac- cess to rich wheat granaries of the the Ukraine, by concentrating 155 German and Rumanian divisions for a joint German-Rumanian invasion of the' Soviet by mid-June. A quick denial came from Berlin the next day, an authorized Nazi spokesman declaring: "Be assured of no political earthquake in that re- gion." Furthermore, there came reports from Vichy, France, last week that in-. stead of getting ready to fight Russia," Hitler had met secretly with Joseph Stalin and agreed upon a program of collaboration by which Russia would undertake to deliver bread to a Hit- ler-dominated Europe. A hint that something might be stirring in Southeastern Europe was seen in a Bucharest announcement of a drastic curtailment of passenger train service, effective this Sunday, to clear the tracks for heavy freight traffic. Military Action Hinted The need for heavy movement of freight was given as the reason for curtailment, but observers speculated on the possibility of important mili- tary movements-either against Rus- sia or through the Black Sea against the British in the Middle East-which might .require the utmost use of rail facilities. A Reuters, British News Agency, dispatch from Ankara reported to- day that German troops were mov- ing from Bulgaria into Moldavia in Eastern Rumania and occupying posi- tions on the Russian frontier. Possibility of another Axis declara- tion this week came from Rome with the summoning of the Italian Cham- ber of Fasces and Guilds, which has replaced the Chamber of Deputies in the Fascist regime, to meet in special session June 10, the first anniversary of Italy's entrance into the war. Amidst all this behind-the-front activity, French-mandated Syria has become a precarious chip on both British and German shoulders. Harriman In London To Expedite Aid LONDON, June 7.-(P)-British sources expressed belief tonight that the speed of shipment of United States war materials to Britain's mid- dle East Armies had become a dom- inant factor in the defense of Egypt and the vital Suez Canal. Italian newspapers reported that American-made tanks were in ac- tion this week in the vicinity of To- bruk, British-held Libyan port. Reliable adices said that W. Av- erell Harriman, here to expedite the American Aid-to-Britain program, would leave soon for Cairo to make an extended survey through the Middle East. The report of the Harriman trip alone was sufficient to convince most Britons -that the United States is srneding help to the Middle East com- British Expect Statement On Soviet-German Crisis; Board Seeking Recruits Flying Cadets Retui rn To Form University Student Fli ht Units Conference On Serology: Andreson Proposes Program aFor Venereal Disease Control By EUGENE MANDEBERG Plans for the formation of Uni- versity flight units were disclosed yesterday by Dr. C. M. Dixon, of the Junior Chamber of Commerce, and head of the tri-unit airport commit- tee of Ann Arbor. The Flying Cadet Medical Board will return here today, landing at the Ann Arbor airport at 3 p.m. after flying in formation over the field at 2:30 p.m.f The Medical Board hopes to re- cruit about 100 students as flying ca- dets during its week visit. The first among those present to greet Mrs. Floyd Showalter, head of the Board, and those with himn. Three to six P-36's (pursuit planes) are expected, and their maneuvers will be explained through a loud- speaker system from the main stand. All students interested can meet in fromnt of the Union from 2 to 2:30 p.m. today. They will be given trans- portation out to the airport and back by members of the JCC who have volunteered their cars for this ser- vice. They can be identified by stick- By HOWARD FENSTEMAKER A nine-point program for the con- trol of venereal diseases among work- ers in industry, to be adapted for use as a guide in the development of a uniform plan for the cooperation of local health units and industrial plants, was proposed by Dr. Otis L. Andreson, Venereal Disease Control Officer of the United States Public Health Service at the conference on serology and syphilis control yesterday at the Union., The program should be on a com- munity basis, Dr. Andreson declared, closely integrated with the activities of state industrial hygiene units. So long as treatment would be kept up regularly, he emphasized, all work- ers with syphilis in a non-communi- cable stage would be retained on duty. An educational program should be developed; he asserted, to show the employer and employe the benefits 'which would be derived from such a program aid to teach the facts about venereal disease. The only reason for segregating industrial workers as a separate en- tity, Dr. Anderson explained, is to take advantage of the case of exam- ining a group at one location. The workers in defense industries, he de- Plans for the 1942 Union Opera took more concrete form today with the announcement that the Hopwood prize-winning drama of Ray Ingham,