Weather Partly cloudy and warmer. L iA1FrA 4Iaittj Editorial Michigan Forum- - Is It Going Too Far?.. Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication VOL. LI. No. 10. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS 'Future President A Businessman?' Is Forum Subject Young Republicans, Huyett And Huston, Will Dispute Liberals, Muehl And Suits, In Initial Meeting Of Debate Programs Two young Republicans, Dan Huyett, '42, and John Huston, '41, will defend the proposition, "Resolved, That the President of the United States Should Be a Practical Businessman," when they meet campus liberals Dan Suits, Grad., and William Muehl, '41, in the first meeting of the Michigan Forum at 7:45 p.m. today in the North Lounge of the Union. Today's Forum meeting will inaugurate a series of public debates that will feature student leaders disputing current economic, political and social issues in regular bi-weekly sessions throughout the year. Prominent public leaders will also be invited to participate in the Forums at various times during the year to debate students on issues. Sponsored by the Student Senate in conjunction with the League, Union and Daily the Michigan Forum is- Faculty Vote Will Be Held By Congress BallotingFor Presidency To Last From Saturday Until 4 P.M. Wednesday Blaustein To Head Voting Committee Dr. Dykstra May Receive Top Draft Job U. Of Wisconsin President Confers With Roosevelt, War Department Head Senate Passes Home Guard Defense Bill To Meet Eastern Crisis; Pacific Fleet Reinforced Krupp Works Set Ablaze Munitions Plant By RAF; Nazi Strike Back At Bombed Airmen London Band Entrains - guided by a non-partisan sponsoring committee comprised of Robert Reed, '41, Virginia Lee Hardy, '41, Douglas Gould, '41, and Hervie Haufler,,'41, respective officers of the sponsoring organizations. Dusenberry Is Chairman James Dusenberry, Grad., js pro- gram chairman and will also act as the chairman of today's Forum. Har- old Osterweil, '41, is executive secre- tary of the Forum, and Prof. Arthur Smithies of the economics depart- ment is an honorary member of the sponsoring committee.% The embryo of an institution for frequent airing of all shades of thought on the Michigan campus has been forming for some time in the discussions of the Student Senate. Last May a trial in this direction drew a capacity crowd of 600 to hear the Witt, Preuss and Smithies debate on the question, "Can America Keep Out of the War." Forum Similar To Oxford Plan The organization of the Forum, it- self, will closely approximate the fa- mous Oxford Union at Oxford Uni- versity. Two or more main speakers will open debate on the question be- fore each Forum meeting, and, after rebutals are made, the chairman will entertain questions and remarks from the general public. During and following the floor discussion the vote on the debate will be tabulated by having all those members of the audience ,who favor the affirmative depart on the right of the exit post while those whose inclinations lie with the negative are to leave on the left. The doorman will count the heads. Phrasing of questions for future meetings will be decided by the spon- soring committee with the aid of the program chairman and executive secretary. 'Up until the time of the national election on Nov. 5 the Forum viill consider questions that revolve about national issues. After that time current issues will form the sub- ject for Forum discussions. Speakers will also be selected by the sponsoring committee so as to encourage the articulation of every possible opinion on the campus. Any- one interested in speaking at future Forums are requested to contact the executive secretary, Osterweil, as soon as possible. Law School Award Is Given To Ritchie Stark Ritchie, '41L, has been named recipient of the Henry M. Bates Award by the Law School Scholar- ship Committee, it was ,announced yesterday by Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Law Schobl. The scholarship, valued at $200 a year, is awarded each year to a high ranking student of the senior class. It is awarded not only on the basis of membership on the student board of the Law Review, but the qualities of leadership, integrity and scholar- ship-are also evaluated in deciding the recipient. The scholar.ship is given by an anonymous donor in honor of Dean Emeritus Henry M. Bates. Perspectives Publication Is To Come Out Oct. 27 Tentative publication date for the first issue of Perspectives, campus literary magazine, is Sunday, Oct. 27, Ellen Rhea, '41, editor in chief of the publication announced yesterday. All those interested in working on the staff as editorial assistants or as ROTC Armory Board Awaits Washington OK With the attention of University military and naval training officials focussed on the proposed ROTC ar- mory, planning work is virtually at a halt, awaiting advice from Washing- ton, D.C, on the proper procedure in submitting tentative plans and re- questing an appropriation of funds for the building. Money for the armory is expected to come from an emergency fund recently awarded the War and Navy Departments. Advice of these bodies and of an organization of college and University representatives on procurement methods is expected within a week. A meeting will be held at 5 p.m. today in the Student Offices for all sophomores and second-semes- ter freshmen who are interested in trying out for the Union staff, Douglas Gould, '41, president of the Union, announced yesterday. Preliminary plans and sketches of the proposed armory have been com- pleted by the Advisory Committee on Military Affairs and theprofessors of military and naval science and tactics. . Cost of the building has been esti- mated at $750,000, according to Com- mittee Chairman Prof. Lewis Gram. This sum, he said, should provide ROTC units with adequate housing, including drill floors, class rooms, offices, an arsenal, an ammunition magazine and a rifle range. The armory will, according to pres- ent plans, be a three-story brick structure, located on Washington Street between the Health Service and the University laundry building. It is planned to cover a ground area of approximately 31,000 square feet. Planning work on the armory be- gan shortly after a recent statement by President Ruthven that present ROTC housing facilities had long been considered inadequate for the size of units at the University. With increased military training enroll- ment and the advent of naval work this yreasrhe emphasized,dthe need for increased housing was made pro- portionately greater. The faculty will have a register its preference for -)f the United States this bert P. Blaustein, '42, Co tivities Chairman and chi the voting, announced at first tryout meeting last n Union. Following the procedur gress' All-Campus Straw during registration week, Faculty vote will proceed tomorrow. It is expected faculty members will rec ballots by Saturday noon. Plan Is Describe Under the plain each n was requested to con tact department or college and proper ballots. After face bers have marked theirl the ballots wi'l be colle deadline for voting will1 Wednesday. The organizational m Congress last night in the S room of the Union, drew a l ber of independent men w] to participate in the activi Independent Men's Associa liam H. Rockwell, '41, pre the meeting. Blaustein a! Andrew, '42, delivered shor which they explained the of Congress. Willkie Led In Congress' All-Camp Vote registration week, Wer kie was victorious by a th majority, having attained2 over 1,825 for President' Only 48 per cent of the stu registered their choices in tion, Blaustein commente is hoped that we will do mi than that in the facuayX complete ovve cast inr t vote was 4,889. Minority Thomas and Krueger rec votes, Browder and Ford and Babson and Moorman tion) 18 ballots. Father, Son Suici Follow Same P Waldrenmer Rentz, the 4 son, was found vesterdav chance to WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.-(A)-Dr. president Clarence A. Dykstra, president of the week, Al- University of Wisconsin, took under consideration tonight the question ngress Ac- whether he would accept the job of airman of draft director. Congress' Dykstra conferred with President ght in the Roosevelt and Secretary of War Stimson during the day. Talking to e of Con- reporters afterward, he did not say Vote held the post actually was offered him, the All- but asserted the President had dis- beginning cussed it with him. It was a matter that the requiring "some consideration" he ceive their said. Should Dykstra be appointed before Oct. 16, he would supervise d ,he registration and conscripting of zew tryout men of the ages of 21 through 35. a snecific Oct. 16 has been fixed as the regis- supply the tration date. ulty mem-ji Home Guard Bill Passed preference On another defense front, the Sen- cted. The ate passed a bill authorizing "Home be 4 p.m. Guards" in states whose National Guard units are in Federal Service. eeting of The legislation goes back to the Small Ball- House for action on Senate amend- large num- ments, one of which would place the vho wished Home Guard units under supervision ties of the of the Secretary of War. This change .tion. Wil- was designed to meet complaints by sided over organized labor that the House-ap- nd Gordon proved measure would have made rt talks in possible the formation of "vigilante" functions groups to suppress unions. Other defense developments: President Roosevelt signed the Ex- us Straw cess Profits Tax Bill. Besides placing ndell Will- levies on profits in excess of "nor- ree to two mal," the measure carries provisions 2,676 votes to encourage industrial expansion in Roosevelt. the production of defense materials. udent body It permits manufacturers to deduct the elec- from their taxable incomes over a d, "and it five-year period the entire cost of uch better facilities completed for defense pur- poll." Te poses after June 10, 1940. he student Negroes Discussed candidates 2. Mr. Roosevelt directed the War ceived 204 Department to go ahead with a pol- l°99 votes icy of utilizing the services of Ne- (Prohibi- groes on a "fair and equitable basis" in the defense program. 3. The Navy announced. 15 manu- facturers had been authorized to des construct, with government funds, additional shipbuilding and ordnance Pattern facilities at a total cost of $96,961,146. The government would retain title 0-year-old to the new facilities, but they would in a corn be privately operated. Nazis Concentrate On Railroad Lines (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Oct. 9. -Britain's night bombers have set ablaze the center of the great German Krupp Works at Essen, left the oil refineries in Hamburg a ring of spreading fire and pounded the naval base of Wil- helmshavenwith more thand15tons of bombs, the Air Ministry disclosed tonight. Sweeping in over the glowing, new- ly-bombed "invasion coast," waves of Royal Air Force bombers struck deep into Germany last night for a series of assaults that rivaled any previous foray. First of all, the bombers swept in from the North Sea on Bremen. Of- ficials said the raid began at 8:15 p.m. and "for the next hour and a half the whole area was systemat- ically bombed with nigh explosives and incendiaries." "The docks were repeatedly hit. Fourteen fires were started in the first part of the attack," the official narrative said. At the sprawling port of Hamburg, the raiders attacked in waves. The invasion ports, particularly Calais, got it hard. The harbor at Calais was bombed for eight hours; quays at Flushing, The Netherlands, were attacked heavily; direct hits were reported scored on the docks at Le Havre; Boulogne's searchlights were smashed. Germans Smash Railway Lines BERLIN, Oct. 9.-German bomb- ers smashed railway communications vital to the job of supplying London today, informed sources declared, in new aerial assaults upon Britain. Hit, too, said DNB, the official German News Agency, was a gas works in an English southeast coastal city; airport near London, and a merchant ship lying in an east coast harbor. At the, airport, it was said, hangars and barracks were destroyed. -4 All this capped an earlier an- nouncement by the High Command that a single German fighting plane had scored several hits on a British troop transport in an attack upon five such _ships, all "fully-occupied," moving about 125 miles off the Scot- tish coast under protection of an armed convoy. The vessel, estimated at 20,000 tons, the communique add- ed, "stopped and lay motionless." Nothing was said as to loss of life aboard the transport. For Eventful Eastern Trip 11 PROF. W. D. REVELLI * * * The University of Michigan Band boarded a special east-bound train at 8:00 a.m. today, starting on the first lap of an event-packed journey that will bring them eventually to the Michigan-Harvard football clash. One hundred and thirty-one musi- cians are making the trip, which is sponsored by the Buick Motor Cor- poration, accompanied by Prof. Wil- liam D. Revelli, conductor. Herbert C. Watkins, faculty manager, Lt. Col. Robert M. Kunz, drillmaster, and as- sistant dean Walter B. Rea. The band will follow one of the mostdstrenuous schedules ever ar- ranged for a football trip. Arriving in New York City tomorrow, the band will play for a Buick dealers' luncheon at the Commodore Hotel. The group will then split number, 40 men continuing on to Boston via the special New York Alumni Club's ex- cursion, boat, with more than 700 alumni aboard. The rest of the band will go directly to Boston by train. Saturday morning the group is to performdat a Buick dealers' breakfast in Boston, and Saturday afternoon make their appearance at theefoot- ball game, where they will exhibit the same formations shown to the campus at the Michigan State clas- sic. Following the game the band will parade through downtown Boston streets to the Copley-Plaza Hotel to take part in the entertainment at a Michigan Alumni banquet. Another :arade will take them after the ban- quet to the Statler Hotel where they are to stay until train time at mid- night. TensionpBelieved Eased As Diplomatic Activity Is ReportedSlackened Sec'y Knox Doubts Immediate Conflict WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.,-(M-The Navy continued today to prepare for a possible emergency in the Pacific, but a slackening of diplomatic ac- tivity appeared to reflect diminished tension generally in administration quarters ove the Far Eastern situa- tion. Secretary Knox announced after talks with high naval strategists dur- ing the week that the personnel of the fleet now in the Pacific would be reinforced immediately to raise it to full strength. He said 4,200 men would join the fleet at once and sail back to Hawaii with the warships now on the West Coast undergoing repairs. War Unlikely Now At the press conference at which he announced the fleet reinforce- ment, Knox answered a number of questions concerning the Far East He said he did not concur in a pub- lished statement that the adminis- tration feared war with Japan in 15 days. "I don't think anybody knows," he added. A number of officials showed less- ened preoccupation with the Orient as a potential danger spot. Responsible in some measure for this was Japan's reaction to the Brit- ish notice that the Burma Road would be reopened for supplies to China and also Japanese reaction to the state department's advice to Americans in the Far East to con- sider coming home. There was no apparent tendency in Japan to magnify the Burma Road decision as an incident likely to lead to immediate drastic reprisals. Americans Flee Far East At the same time the Tokyo foreign office spokesman, Yakichiro Suma, expressed surprise at the American move to get nationals out of the Far East. He said "We can't understand thet necessity of it,' and added that Japan had no intention of advising Japanese in the United States to re- turn home. Secretary Hull was asked at his press conference whether special transportation arrangements were being made to expedite the removal of Americans from the Far East. He replied that the first step was to find out how many wanted to come and that the shipping question would be considered next. Registrars List Is Announced _I Local Draft Registration Plans Near Completion With the announcement yesterday of draft registrars for Washtenaw County by Mrs. Luella Smith, county clerk, plans for the Selective Service registration of all men between 21 and 35 in this area are nearing com- pletion. Separate registration for out-of- town University students under the direction of Dr. Robert L. Williams, assistant University registrar, were announced yesterday. City clerks, assisted by supervisors from the cities, will conduct regis- tration in Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and Saline. A school for the instruction of all those assisting in the registration work will be held 8 p.m. tomorrow in the council rooms of the City Hall, Fred C. Perry stated. A. B. Cook will be chief registrar in University Hospital and Dr. O. R. Yoder will direct registration in Ypsi- lanti State Hospital. Registrars for Ann Arbor are as follows:; City clerk, Fred C. Perry; super- visor, first ward, Fitch D. Forsythe; second ward, Harold J. Finkbeiner; third ward, Fred J. Williams; fourth ward, Lewis C. Rhoades; fifth ward, William C. Manchester; sixth ward, Herbert P. Wagner; seventh ward, Jesse E. Coller. house on the farm of Oscar Weber, his guardian, near Saline. He was hanging by a rope suspended from the rafters, the top of his head blown off by a shotgun lying at his feet. Dr. Edward C. Ganzhorn pronounced him a suicide. The father, Christ Rentz, set him an exact suicide example the early part of this year. Waldrenmer had twice been committed to the Ypsi- lanti State Hospital, and twice re- leased. British Warning Ignored MOSCOW,, Oct. 9.-(R')-Winston Churchill's declaration in the British House of Commons yesterday that the Japanese-German-Italian Alli- ance was in a secondary sense "pointed at Russia" was ignored to- day by the Soviet Press. Prof.White Heads Research Group In Metals For National Defense Nature Of Man2 To Be Subject Of SRA Talks; Varied Theological ViewsE To Be Given By Four In Third Annual Series Outstanding in their respective fields, a scientist, theologian, philos- opher, and rabbi will present their viewpoint of "The Nature of Man," topic of the third annual lecture series on religion sponsored by the Student Religious Association begin- ning Oct. 17 in Rackham Auditor- ium. Appearing first on the program will be Dr. Martin Fischer, who as. a professor of physics at the Univer- sity of Cincinnati is noted for his research on colloidal structures. In addition to his radical hypotheses he is known for his distinction in paint- ing. Following this colorful medical lec- turer, Dr. Robert Calhoun, professor of historical theology at Yale's Di- vinity School, will express the views of a liberal protestant Oct. 22. Dr. Abba Hillel Silver, whoehas been Rabbi of the Temple of Cleve- land for the past 23 years and a lead- er in current social movements, will appear Oct. 30. Known as a pioneer in unemployment insurance and civil liberties, he is a member of the Na- tional Child Labor Commission and of the American Civil Liberties Union. Concluding the series will be Fa- ther Slavin of the Catholic Univer- sity of America, who has attracted attention in educational circesn for In an attempt to coordinate all re- search activity in the country that has any connection with war, the. the metallurgical engineering de-i partment as chairman of the sub- committee on metals.1 Serving directly under Dr. James' B. Conant, president of Harvard Uni- versity, Professor White will work at organizing all the research in his field throughout the nation and pre- senting the results to the main group from time to time. It is believed that' this type of work will be of great aid' in speeding up defense both in the army and navy. Director of the University's Engi- neering Research Department, Pro- fessor White will devote his time mainly to those problems which do not have to be solved immediately. "The army and navy will have to get Conscription Act Involves Threat To Minorities, Prof. Fuller Says By CHESTER BRADLEY No matter how well-intentioned the administration of the Conscrip- tion Act may be, it is certain to in- volve hazards for minority groups in the United States, Prof. Richard C. Fuller of the sociology department declared in an interview yesterday. r Professor Fuller predicted that probably only conscientious objectors who base their petitions for exemp- tion on adherence to a belief in de- nominational religion will be ex- cused from serving in the draft army. Personal conscience or objection to conscription on the basis of one's political philosophy will no doubt be considered inadequate cause for ex- emption by the local draft boards, he said. Draft Will Upset Family The disturbance to traditional family and neighborhood relation- ships, which is certain to result from the setting up of a conscript army, will undoubtedly contribute to com- munity instability, Professor Fuller asserted. To offset this probable develop- status of labor in the conscription program include speculation aboutl the ultimate fate of the recent gains made by organized labor, Professort Fuller pointed out. "Will it be un- patriotic to demand fair wages, fair hours and collective bargaining pro- visions?" Professor Fuller stressed the diffi- culties of working out a practical, program to fulfill clauses providing for the reemployment of conscripted men by their employers. "Since the Act's present proviso seems to1 amount to merely a statement of ideal policy, labor may encounter a number of obstacles in its attempts to regain employment." Provides Reemployment The Act provides that an employer restore a worker; to his job if he is still "qualified" and if the employer's "circumstances" remain unchanged, Professor Fuller pointed out. "What this will mean to labor in the future is at best problematical." The conscription of industry, as in the first World War, will probably be } I