Weather Generally Fair ig 5k igu :3aitt Editorial The Third Voter ~Who Does Not Vote ... VOL. LI. No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Newsom Will Pitch Very Tough, But Oh So Gentle! For Tigers Today London Girds For Winter As Germans Pound Isles; ExcessProfits BilPasses In Series Opener Detroit Is Favored- On Batting Power McKechnie Is Expected To Start Paul Derringer For Cincinnati Reds CINCINNATI, Oct. 1.-R)-Big, blatant Buck Newsom of the Detroit Tigers will be in the firing box to- morrow in the first "game of the World Series, with equally big Paul Derringer probably doiig the rifle{ Work for the Cincinnati Reds. Fans already were camping out-1 side the bleacher entrance to Crosley Field tonight to make sure of seeing the spectacle that starts at 1:30 p.m. (EST) tomorrow, but the proximity of the first battle did not disturb Manager Bill McKechnie. The se- cretive Sept kept his starting lineup locked up in his mind. But the hopes of the crippled Na- tional League champions for giving the American . .League its first squelching since =1934 were bound up in Derringer, and no one had any doubt that he would get the call, if indeed McKechnie had not already told him. ', Derringer Is Hope Aside from the starting time, which is fixed by Commissioner Ken- esaw M. Landis, and the size of the crowd, 33,000, which is controlled by the structural capacity of the park, almost every aspect of baseball's great autumn classictwas surrounded by minor mysteries, The Tigers were rated as betting favorites with bookmakers reported quoting '7 to 10 against their win- ning and even money on the Reds. But Tiger Manager Del Baker, while definitely naming. Newsom for the important opening assignment, would notddecide definitely on a right- y fielder. Lombardi May Not Start McKechnie didn't know whether the injured catcher, Ernie Lombardi, and second baseman Lonnie Frey would be able to go and the best guess was that they could not. Thes Series shaped up as a test of pitching against power and the same experts who usually trod a limb with- out hesitation were hemming and hawing in unprecedented fashion. The Tigers will take the field with no fewer than five .300 hitters in the lineup. t ; In Detroit's workout today, Green- berg belted four balls over the cen- ter and leftfield fences of Crosley Field and made it look so easy that National Leaguesupportersquaked at the sight. Their only consolation was that tomorrow the Bengals will be batting against Derringer instead of the fat-flinging of Clay Smith, John Gorsica and their like. Derringer, who finished the season with a record of 20 won and 12 lost, had been groomed carefully for the opening assignment, with Bucky Walters, Gene Thompson and Jim (Continued on Page 3) State Newsmen Will Convene Here Oct. 17 Michigan journalists representing every part of the state are expected to gather here for the 22nd Annual Convention of the University Press club of Michigan which will be held October 17 through 19 in the Union. America's position in current world affairs will hld the center of the stage in sessions scheduled for Thursday afternoon and Friday morning, October 17 and 18. First speakers to address a general assembly of the Convention will be Professors Lowell J. Carr of the so- ciology department and PaulHenle of the philosophy department, dis- cussing problems facing this nation today, at a session scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. Thursday. Kenneth Downs, former chief of the International News Service's Paris bureau, and President Ruthven will be featured speakers at the 6 p.m. banquet arranged for the first day. Scheduled to open with a genera |Choice Lecture Series Tickets Still Avalable Students and townsfolk greeted the opening of the over-the-counter sale of tickets for the 1940-41 Oratorical Lecture Series with an overwhelming response yesterday. Many season tickets were sold, as well as tickets for the individual lectures, but choi e -eats are still available in all sec- tions. For the first time last year, the policy of opening the second balcony to students at a special rate was in- augurated. More than two thousand student tickets were sold during the season. This year, the lecture series committee has decided to repeat the special student offer. To avoid the confusion which re- sulted in the rush for seats, all seats: this year will be reserved including special student tickets. Students may still reserve seats in other sections of the auditorium. Such headliners as Dorothy Thomp- son, Leland Stowe, and Warden Lew- is E. Lawes will appear during the Series. Ruth Draper, monologist, who writes her own character sket- ches, will open the series, Oct. 29. Harry E. Yarnell, Wendell Chap- man, Julien Bryan and William Beebe complete the list of varied lecturers who will appear in Ann Arbor dur- ing the current season. Miss Thompson is considered by many' to be the nation's leading wo- man journalist. Her columns are syndicated by scores of newspaers. It will be her first An Arbor ap- pearance. The box office at Hill Auditorium will be open from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. daily and from 10-12 a.m. Saturday. Marriage Talk Will Be Given By Dr. Meade Fourth Series Of Lectures Will Be Open To 1,000 Seniors And Graduates Beginning its fourth season on campus, the course in Marriage Re- lations will open on Oct. 18 with Dr. Margaret Meade of the Museum of Natural History in New York de- livering the first lecture. Tickets for the course will be avail- able to seniors and graduates on Oct. 15 and 16 at a time and place to be announced later. Tickets will cost $1.00 and enrollment in the course will be exclusively limited to approx- imately 1,000 seniors and graduates. The course in Marriage Relations is conducted each year under the joint sponsorship of a faculty and a student committee. Members of the student committee include Gordon Andrew, '42, Jean Bates, '42, Philip Buchen, '41L, Betty Fariss, '42, Vir- ginia Lee Hardy, '41, Jane Krause, '41, Blaz Lucas, '41, Doris Merker, '41, Robert Shedd, '42, Don Trad- well, '42L, Robert Ulrich, '41, Philip Westbrook, '43L, and Robert Speck- hard, '42. The following members comprise the faculty committee: Dr. Mary Bell, Mr. W. Lloyd Berridge, Mr. John P. Dawson, Dr. Claire Healey, Dean Alice Lloyd, Prof. Howard Mc- Cluskey, Mrs. Ethel McCormick, Mr. Kenneth Morgan, Theophile Ra- phael, Prof. Arthur Wood and Prof. Clarence Yoakum. Resale Of Tickets Starts On Saturday Only three days remain during which entries in the Gargoyle Var- f sity Vignette contest will be accepted s for consideration in this month's competition, Dave Donaldson, '41, Editor-in-Chief of the campus hu- t mor magazine warned yesterday. The three best vignettes of 250 to 1 300 words submitted to the Gargoyle --Courtesy Ann Arbor News "Hello," said the girl. "Aw, shucks," said the boy. Then off he went to California to splatter Golden Bears. But that's Forest Eva- shevski, Michigan's football captain and the fellow who will lead the Wolverine gridiron gang against Michigan State here Saturday. Michigan Forum. Will Revive Forensics Of LincolnrDouglas Two Young Republican Speakers Will Debate Campus Liberals On Campaign Issues At First Meeting Legislation Also Contains Clauses For Speeding Program Of Defense Government Life Insurance Planned WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. -(P)- Congress sent a compromise excess profits tax bill to the White House and Senate that stillnfurtherrtaxes would be levied early next year. The Bill's draftsmen estimated it would yield $525,000,000 on 1940 in- come, including $230,000,000 from an increase in the normal corporation tax, and from $900,000,000 to $1,000,- 000,000 on 1941 income. In addition to .the tax provisions, the legislation also contained clauses designed to speed up the defense pro- gram. These would suspend existing profits limitations on Government contracts for construction of war- ships and airplanes and permit cor- porations to charge off against earn- ings over a five-year period the cost of new defense manufacturing facili- ties completed after June 10, 1940. Included also was a section under which conscripts and other members of the armed forces may obtain low- rate Government life insurance. Designed originally to hold in check the profits that might accrue to industries engaged in the sale of national 'defense items, the com- pleted legislation also would depend for a substantial part of its revenue upon a flat addition of 3.1 percent to the normal corporation income tax of concerns earning more than $25,000 a year. This change would increase the rate for these corpora-t tions to 24 percent. A tax, of from 25 to 50 perent; would be levied on profits defined in the 'bill as exceeding normal. As it went to President Rooseveltt the bill represented a compromise of House and Senate bills as worked out by a Conference Committee of members from both chambers. , Willkie Seeks Labor'sVoe' Republican Nominee Visits Large Factories ABOARD WILLKIE TRAIN, En Route Through Michigan, Oct. 1.- (R)-Followers of Wendell Willkie sought today to gauge the effects of his campaign tour in Michigan, as the Republican Presidential nominee prepared to swing into Ohio. The tour carried him to the gates of great manufacturing plants, in his biggest bid for the support of organ- ized labor in this state. His special train took him to the doors of two plants of the Motor Wheel Corporation in Lansing, where he pleaded with workmen who wore the buttons of the UAW-AFL to "give me a square shake" and to judge him without prejudice. Em- ployers had given the men time off their jobs to hear Willkie's speech. By ROBERT SPECKHARD . Michigan's 10,000-odd students may soon expect to see a revival of the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1860 in their midst as the result of a meeting yesterday of campus leaders at which plans for the Mich- igan Forum were laid. Sponsored by the Student Senate in conjunction with the League, Union and Michigan Daily, the Michigan Forum is the name' of a series of public debates that will feature student leaders disputing the political, economic and social issues of the day. Two young Republicans will carry the burden of the affiriative in be- helf of the question, "Resolved, That the President of the United States Be a Practical Businessman," when they meet two campus "liberals" in the first Forum at 7:45 p.m., October 12 in the Union. The idea for the Forum has been brewing for some time in the sanc- tum sanctorum of the Student Sen- ate. Last spring the Senate spon- sored the well-remembered Witt, Preuss, Smithies debate on the ques- tion, "Can America Stay Out of War?" The debate drew an over-r flow crowd of 600. It is hoped that the Michigan Forum will follow that example ,and become a permanent symbol of free discussion at Mich- igan-an institution that will rival the fame of the renowned Oxford Union of Oxford University. In detail organization the Forum will closely approximate the proce- dure of the Oxford Union. Each week the sponsoring committee will formulate the question and arrange for speakers. After these speakers have delivered "pro" and "con" ar- guments, discussion from the floor is in order, followed by a decision vote. The manner of determining the decision is novel. Those favoring the affirmative will walk out on the right side of the post in the exit; those of negative inclination will file out on the left of the post; the doorman will count the heads. Up to the time of the presidential elections in November it is planned to have questions of the Forum deal with campaign issues in so far as possible. After that time issues will include current problems in econom- ic, political, social and related fields. Three-Fold German Drive Aimed To Keep London From 'Catching Breath' FIELDING H. YOSTI . . . Grand Old Mane le ti Field ingYost E To Be Honored On Broadcast Retirement Fete To Markg Famed Athletic Coach'st Forty Years Of Service "Toast to Yost from coast to coast" will be the theme of the NBC broad- cast to be conducted Oct. 19 at a testimonial banquet markings the re-t tirement and honoring the 40 yearsr service of Fielding H. (Hurry Up)E Yost to the University. Seats for 1,940 admirers will be arranged to form a huge gridiron on the floor of Waterman Gymnasium and tickets to the celebration will1 resemble the football tallies asso- ciated with the "grand old man" of Michigan athletics for almost half a century... Twenty University All-Americans and the members of the 1940 Mich- igan and Illinois football teams will be present'to cheer for the mentor of the famous point-a-minute teams. The affair will be a double cele- bration of Yost's anticipated 70th birthday on April 30, 1941, and the end of a legendary period of service to the University which began in 1901. The University band will ,be on hand to heighten the football atmos- phere with renditions of famous col- lege songs and a portion of the pro- gram will be broadcast over a na- tional hook-up on NBC's blue net- work from 8:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Among the celebrities present to pay homage to the "grand old man" will be: Earl Babs, chairman of the board of the American Sugar Re- fining Co.; Cornelius Kelley, pres- ident of the Anaconda Copper Co.; Frank Murphy, Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court; Arthur Vandenburg, Senator from Michigan; Earle W. Webb, president of Ethyl Gasoline Corp., and Branch Rickey, general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals. loime Circles Doubt pain-Axis Alliance (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Oct. 1.-London sum- coned up tonight the best defenses brains and planes, steel and con- ete against the prospectively worst artime winter in its 20 centuries. Even as these preparations went >rward the Nazis launched their 5th consecutive nightly raid, but receded-so far as visible and udible signs indicated-before mid- ight. Wave Of Raiders However, just on midnight a new ave of raiders approached from the Lst and the anti-aircraft barrage as resumed with a mighty roar. hell splinters fell in the streets of ast London. Then the Nazis withdrew toward ie southwest, instead of continuing i the accustomed route to Central ondon. Official estimates 'of 5,000 persons lled and 8,000 wounded in London i September-compared with 1,075 illed and 1,261 wounded in August- ave a great urgency to the gigantic ask of defense which must be ac- omplished. These parts were fitted into the lachinery of London's defenses to- ay: 1. Admiral Sir Edward Ratcliffe arth Russel Evans-noted for quick pinking and quick action-was Lade "dictator" of London's air raid helters. Sleeping accommodations ,id heating are the principal prob- Mother-Child Removal' 2. The mother-and-child removal lan was extended to the 14 London oroughs hardest hit by the German ttacks. 3. All adults with no vital reasons or remaining were urged by Special ousingCommissioner Harry Willing o leave. 4. Food Minister Lord Woolton 6nnounced that 58 emergency feed- ng centers have been opened for the ity's homeless. 5. "Official assurances" were given hat a new defense system is being leveloped to combat the Nazi night ttacks. German Bombers Fo Continue Drive (By The Associated Press) BERLIN, Oct. 1.-The German air rce, day and night, is out to keep Condon from "catching its breath," n authorized source said tonight n outlining what was described as he three-fold purpose of Germany's aerial offensive against the British [sles. The other primary aims were stated to be: Interference with British war pro- duction. Blockading the import "of essen- tial goods." The outline appeared to- fit pre- cisely with the German reports on the latest bombings of Britain. The high command said massed formations and individual raiders ifn the last 24 hours centered their at- tacks on London and on the seas around the British Isles. It claimed: Sinking' of a 10,000- ton merchantman by air action off Ireland; scattering of a convoy off Scotland with two ships aflame; hits on air plants, airports and harbors in the south and west of England and the sinking of 49,760 tons of shipping-eight vessels in all-by submarines. Rome Circles Doubt Spain-Axis Aliarce / ROME, Oct. 1.-(P)-The likei- hood of Spain entering the war or even joiningthe Axis powers at this time in a vformal alliance against Britain was virtually discarded by political circles today as General- issimo Francisco Franco's minister of government, Ramoi Serrano Su- ner, conferred with Premier Musso- lini. Spain, said Virginio Gayda, au- Barnstorming Wilikie 'Special' Found Exciting But 'Very Tiring By S. R. WALLACE . Joe College boarded the Willkie Train Monday when it pulled out of' Ann Arbor, and dug his nose for the first time into big time, high-press- ure, scotch-and-soda politics. Have you any idea what a Cam- paign Special is like? Listen! Your Daily representative, carried away by reportorial excitement when Willkie's train arrived, innocently decided to ride to Detroit with the Republican candidate and interview him. "Can't Be Done" "Can't be done!" said the Ann Ar- bor party heads, the plain clothes men, the veteran newsmen and the husky colored porters blocking every entrance to the Pullman cars. The organization was apparently air- and I double-timed after him. No-t body walks on that train. That's' another way they work.< Swaying precariously through one of the three club cars I almost stepped on Governor Dickinson's' feet. He was about the only passen- ger who sat quietly and had nothing to say. Even a porter volunteered the in- formation that Willkie likes mashed potatoes and gravy and cherry pie, and "nuthin' fancy like you'd think." Then, somewhere in the whirling midst of typewriters, mimeograph machines, tall glasses, wistful poli- ticians and muttering journalists, I remember meeting Wendell Willkie and shaking his hand. He hardly smiled. And that was all. But I still had no special message Bu srn hack to Ann Arhor .James tween Haggerty and the Chicago Tribune man, I felt like a goldfish on display. But that's the way they live. The cars continued to Detroit, and when- the long line slowed up we knew that Willkie was standing up in his -open convertible and bowing. When we sped along we left Roose- velt cheerers and Willkie booers be- hind. Rain Of Paper They rained paper on us in a De- troit square, and a newspaper bas- ket thrown at Willkie from one of the hotels injured a woman in the crowd. The Book-Cadillac Hotel was the last stop-for me. Cigarette smoke, siphon bottles and exhausted men filled the three suites reserved for journalists. Autograph hunters be- EDITORIAL STAFF TRYOUTS All sophomores and second se- mester freshmen interested in t working on the editorial staff oft The Michigan Daily will meet at 5 p.m. today on the second floor of the Student Publications Build-t ing on Maynard St.I Gargoyle Contest Closes In 3 Days The Michigan Union's Football Re- sale will be open for business from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the travel desk in the Union Lobby, ac- cording to an announcement made yesterday by Robert Sibley, '42E, ofl the Union executive staff.- The Resale will buy and sell all] ducats other than student, faculty or "M" Club stamped tickets. Tick- ets will be sold at full price only and the brokerage service of the, Union is complimentary. Persons wishing to sell tickets must bring them to the travel desk where