Weather Mostlym cloudy; light snow. LL Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication :4ia iti Edtorial Avoid Economic 'Headache' After War VOL. LI. No. 53 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Rumanian Crisis Reported As Iing Flees , - . Housing Plan Group Opens' First Session Of Conventionr Government Alone Is Ablef To Undertake Program To House All Workersr fi Defense, Stein Says Banker Considers Finance Question Government agencies alone cant carry out a housing program for na- tional defense workers on the scale and with the speed required to se- cure 100 percent industrial produc- tion, Clarence P. Stein of New York,t declared before the first Conference on the Expansion of Industrial Com- munities which convened its two-day1 meeting here yesterday. "The public knows private businessl cannot and will not supply homesĀ£ for the lower income workers," Stein1 said, and cited World War instances in which discontent because of un- satisfactory living places caused a1 labor turnover dangerous to the ef- ficiency of industry., Alludes To World War Alluding to housing experience- during the World War, Stein suggest- ed that lessons valuable to modern planning could- be learned. One of these lessons is that housing prob- lems should be based on adequate surveys, he said. "Industrial Communities should be planned for permanent use and for the needs of- the future, he stated, and observed that communities are an essential part of industrial plants. Speed in developing a program, he said, depends on knowing what to do. Private enterprise cannot providet sufficient capital for the expansion of industrial communities during the defense emergency, Ernest Fisher of! the American Bankers Associationj told the Conference in a dinner talk. Mr. Fisher, a former professor in the School of Business Administra- tion, pointed out that since financing1 for housing expansiop must be on short terms, the government should assume a role in providing the neces-1 sary capital.1 Community Expansion The basic question in industrial community expansion, he stated, is the minimizing effects of industrial community decline at the end of the emergency. The problems of readjust-' ment following the emergency will be greater than the problems confronted during the emergency. In a talk on the economic back- grounds of housing and planning, Prof. Edgar M. Hoover of the econ-' omics department stated that a rise from 130 to 150 in the federal re- serve index is not ridiculous and' that this rise will be noticed chiefly in industrial communities producing durable goods. Prof. Hoover pointed out the fac- tors which determine the location of new defense enterprises as conven- ience to existing management, labor supply, site and climate, war risk (a probability of invasion or sabotage), transportation and existing utilities. Law Authority To Speak Here' Lauterpacht Will Discuss Post-War Problems Prof. H. Lauterpacht, lecturing un- der the auspices of the Carnegie En- dowment for International Peace, will give a University lecture on "Prob- lems of Post-War International Re- construction," at 4:15 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Lecture Hall spon- sored, by the political science de- partment and the Law School. As Whewell Professor of Interna- tional Law at Cambridge University and lecturer at leading Continental RenovatedHockey Team To Open Season Tonight War Carries Into ThA Caribbean By ART HILL Two greatly improved hockey teams will meet on the ice of th" Michigan Coliseum tonight at 8 p.a when the Michigan puck squad face., the London A.C. outfit in the Wol- erines opening contest. Eddie Lowrey's Wolverine squad which has been sunk in the depths ow. mediocrity for the past two seasons. will present a " rejuvenated lineurI flashing added speed and offensive strength. On the strength of 'this, Michigan hockey fans are counting on Lowrey's lads to come through with a victory and break the jinx that the Canadians have held over them for the past three years. Chief basis for the optimism dis-C played by Eddie Lowrey and members of the squad is found in the pres- ence on the team of several promising newcomers, three of whom will start tonight's encounter. Bob Kemp and Max Bahrych are both sophomores and will start at the left and right wing positions. Both areagressive, speedy players and should add considerable scoring punch to the Wolverines' attack. Playing between Kemp and Bah- rych on the starting forward wall will be Paul Goldsmith, veteran center, The third new face in the Wolver- Gamoron Sees Religion Joined To Democracy Educator Draws Parallel Between 'Spiritual Aims And Democratic Tenets Democracy should encourage relig- ious education on the part of all groups that constitute the nation, Dr. Emmanuel Gamoron, Education- al Director of the Hebrew Union Con- gregations of America, said at the first of a series of conferences on re- ligious education held at Lane Hall yesterday. Religion' teaches the basic worth of the individual and the value of free- dom, Dr. Gamoron declared. He pointed out that there are cer tain fundemental ideas stressed by both Judaism and Christianity which form the basis for political Democra- cy.. Religion, Dr. Gamoron said, stres- ses the value of each individual, the sacredness of the human personality and the equality of all in the eyes of God. Democracy, he added, stresses these same fundementals in a different way, thus making it to Democracy's best advantage to encourage relig- ious teaching within the states. who is a fine stick-handler and play maker and works well with the two youngsters. ine starting lineup will be supplied by Hank Loud, who will don the pads and take over in the nets for Mich- igan. He has a big 'pair of shoes to fill, for Ann Arbor hockey fans will not soon forget the almost miraculous feats of Eldon (Spike) James, cap- tain of last year's squad, who was undoubtedly one of the greatest col- legiate goalies in the game. Out in front of Loud at the defense oosts, Capt. Charley Ross and Bert Stodden, the old reliables of the (Continued on Page 3) I Talk Reported Of Tax Raise To W ThE'klligms WASHINGTON, Nov. 29. -{ - Talk that $10,000,000,000 may be set as the "goal" for Federal revenue col- lections in the next fiscal year was heard tonight in some administra- tion quarters as President Roosevelt and his advisers studied means of in- creasing Federal taxes. No official confirmation was avail- able immediately. The $10,000,000,- 000 total, if achieved, would be the largest ever collectedi in peace-time, and would exceed the largest expendi- tures in any peace-time year before the present defense program began. Unofficial estimates are that the current year's spending will run about $13,000,000,000 to $13,500,000,000. Re- venues are expected to approximate $7,000,000,000. Mr. Roosevelt called Secretary Morgenthau,. Congressional fiscal leaders and others into conference to- night to consider additional taxes in view of the defense program. Student Center Talks Planned Roundtable Will Discuss Economic Democracy World affairs will be center of in- terest for students participating in the week-end program offered by the International Center, Prof. Raleigh Nelson, its director announced. The weekly Saturday afternoon roundtable will discuss "What Econ- omic System Is Comparable with the Principles of Democracy" from 3 to 5 p.m. today in the Center. Ivor Schi- lansky, Grad, will lead the discussion. All foreign students are urged to take part in the program and to present the viewpoint of their homelands. Tomorrow Prof. Haywood Keniston of the romance languages department will speak on "Cultural Relations be- tween the United States and Hispan- ic America" at 7 p.m. at the Center. (By The Associated Press) TAMPICO, Mexico, Nov.29-In face of reports that British and Ca- nadian warships await them in the Caribbean, the German merchantmen Idarwald and Rhein sailed today from their haven here with Spanish ports on the- other side of the Brit- ish Atlantic blockade as their de- clared destination. On the Eastern horizon as the freighters nosed out of the Panuco river and into the Gulf, hugging the shore, could be seen the silhouette of three foreign warships, toQ far dis- tant for identification, but believed to be United States neutrality patrol vessels. United States destroyers were in the vicinity two weeks ago when the Idarwald and Rhein, with two other merchantment, the Phrygia and Op- inoco, made a luckless attempt to brave the British blockade. Seamen of the 4,137-ton Phrygia, believing they saw Briitish warships, fired and scuttled her; the 9,660-ton Orinoco developed engine trouble and returned for repairs to her moor- ing in the Panuco, where she still lay today, and the Idarwald, 5,033- tons, and the Rhein, 6,031, also put back to port to await a more pro- pitious day. Today's departure was not wiithout mishap. The Idarwald, it was learned, ran aground on a sandbar outside the harbor but refloated herself un- assisted. U. S. Recesses Fraud Charge Against McKay Federal Jury Postpones Investigation To Dec. 12 As EightAre Indicted DETROIT, Nov. 29-0P)-Arraign- ment of the remaining eight indi- viduals indicted Wednesday and Thursday on mail fraud charges brought to a temporary halt today the federal government's investiga- tion of men high in political and business circles in Michigan. The special Federal Grand Jury was in recess until Dec. 12, and O. John Rogge, chief of the criminal division of the Department of Jus- tice, was in Springfield, Ill., for other investigations. Rogge, however, said that he would be back before mid- December to take up other matters uncovered in the recent momentous session of the jury. The Grand Jury's four indictments named 17 individuals and one cor- poration. Three of the indictments listed charges of mail fraud against Frank D. McKay, Republican Na- tional Committeeman from Michi- gan. Swi~m Show Draws Crowd Of 1,000 Fans By WOODY BLOCK Barnum and Bailey were put to shame last night at the Sports Build- ing pool as Matt Mann gave an en- thusiastic crowd of 1,000 Wolverine fans the funniest, most entertaining Swim Gala they had ever seen. From event number two on, the spectators were sitting on the edges of their seats waiting for the next surprise to pop. If someone wasn't dropping out of the ceiling, there were comics roaring off the high board. And if the comics weren't busy- Matt's swimmers and a gang of rol- licking faculty men were. They gave their all and then some to put over the sixth annual Gala, the receipts of which the Women's Athletic Asso- ciation shared. Sandwiched in between the horse- play, though, was some top notch swimming turned in by Michigan's: world champion team. Jim Skinner, National AAU champ in the breast stroke, fell short of the 100 yard pool record as he raced home ahead of Charley Fries, Bruce Allen and John LaFontin in 1:02.9. His (Continued on Page 3) Prom Tickets To Be Sold To General Public Today Soph Prom tickets will go on sale to the general public from 10 a.m. to noon and 2-4 p.m. today at the Travel Desk of the Union, Bernard Hendel, '43, chairman of the Prom' announced. Tickets have been selling very fast and very few remain, Hendel warned. o o MIAMI ' *ATLANTIC OCEAN .'.. * '- ~ DOMINCAN ". REPUBLIC ILANDS - " PUERTO 41CA RICO S c 1 ESEA MARTINIQUE a , ,. . e ' ._ " // O7.li'iS: :..- " pGUA CURACAQ t ".. fr, """ to "," Htt" PANAMA .r.' .:.... TRINIDAD CANAL. '"... .. . . !..... - .'.'','.a..'.".0..... ..0...**.0.*.ff .'.f# .'.'..'.!.*'.t.'..*.i*t ..*.'. * '' CCMSTA:.. ".i....1'.A,+. The New York World Telegram reported that a Ian ding force from a German raider was repulsed by the British at Curacao, Dutch West Indies. The same sou rce said the raider was believed to be the one which sunk two British freighters 240 miles northeast of the Virgin Islands. WWI N :"* """ "" "..* ,t0 ftii0* tll .t~ftt0 lt t Deaths Mount In Iron Guard BloodPurges Hleavy Loss Of Life Results From Fighting In Three Cities In Transylvania Nazis, Rumanians Mass In Bucharest (By The Associated Press) At the Hungarian-Rumanian Fron- tier, Nov. 29-Flight of boy king Mi- hai, heavy loss of life in fighting at three Transylvanian cities, a mount- ing death list in the Iron Guard's blood purge and a massing of Ru- manian and German troops in Buch- arest were reported from Rumania onight. These advices, barred from ordinary channels of news by Rumanian cen- sorship but filtering across the bor- der into neighboring Hungary, filled in the sparse lines of Bucharest-to- Budapest dispatches passed by the censor. Maniu's Aid Sought (A dispatch reaching Budapest, slashed by the censor, said: "Premier Antonescu, struggling to keep control of turbulent Rumania, sought to- day the aid of Juliu Maniu, respected peasant leader, and army corps com- manders while rampant Iron Guard- sts continued the purge of their en- emies. ("During the day Maniu-six words censored-had a long talk con-. ference with Antonescu. The general also conferred with army corps com- manders-6O words censored. ("Antonescu was said to have con- sulted most of last night and today with Iron Guard leaders throughout, ahe country, appealing to them to re- store order. Tatarescu, Ghelmaganu, Ralea and Argetoianu are still living in Antonescu's own office." (The reference is to former Prem- iers Gheorghe Tatarescu and Con- stantine Argetoianu and Mihai Ghel- meganu and Mihai Ralea who were respective ministers of transport and labor in Argetoianu's cabinet, which succeeded Tatarescu's and resigned Nov. 23, 1939. Total Dead Is 67 (The government set the total dead in Bucharest at 67, and denied re- ports reaching the border of street fighting in several provincial cities. The government specifically denied a report circulated abroad that 2,000 persons had been killed in such riot- ing. ("The German legation denied re- ports that Dr. Wilhelm Fabricius, German minister to Bucharest, al- ready had left for Berlin after confer- ring with Antonescu, but German cir- cles said he would go immediately after the fueral tomorrow for Cor- neliu Zelea Codreanu, disinterred Iron Guard leader.") British Navy Claims Supremacy LONDON, Nov. 29-(P)-The Brit- ish Navy's Mediterranean offensive apparently has broken an Italian"at- tempt to establish new lines- of com- munication with the Fascist African forces, informed Britons declared to- day, and has put Britain in substan- tial control of the whole of that stra- tegic sea. This evaluation of the meaning of the Battle of Sardinia~ officially said here to have damaged six Italian war- ships, offered one of the first direct suggestions as to the reason for the presence in that area of a Fascist fleet of such considerable size. When the British fell upon' them last Wednesday, these experts said, the Italians were attempting to cre- ate an alternate sea route to reach Libya-perhaps by way of the French territorial waters of Tunisia. Physics Teachers To Convene Here Featuring addresses by Prof. A. E. Stalker and Dr. Franklin Johnston, the winter meeting of the Michigan U.S. Money Anid Britain: U.S. Likely To Grant Credits To Great Britain, Watkins Says Mine Disaster Toll Increases 25 To 27 Feared Caught In DeepestOhio Shaft CADIZ, 0., Nov. 29-0P)-Blast- made rock falls tonight slowed down rescue crews as fears mounted for the lives of 25 to 27 coal miners trapped far underground in Ohio's deepest shaft mine. Officials of the Ohio and Pennsyl- vania Coal Company, operators of the mine eight miles northeast of here, said a recheck showed between 25 and 27 men in the blast area. They estimated rescuers would not reach the miners before 7 or' 9 a.m. tomor- row. Caught without warning by a dev- astating explosion 466 feet under- ground and two miles from an exit shaft, workers in section "12 north" were cut off from escape by deadly gas and tons of rock, coal and earth. Reports of miners that one body had been located later proved un- founded after company officials re- checked with rescurers. Adolph Pa- cifico, district United Mine Workers vice-president, said, though, that the trapped men had only "one chance"- that was by reaching a finished mine room. By EDMUND GROSSBERG declared. B "If the war continues, it seems un- ance may h likely that We can -escape or long .7 billion int postpone the extension of loans'to "Not only Britain," Prof. Leonard L. Watkins been furthe of the economics department con- ports in mo cluded in an interview yesterday on ger contrac the actual need for American credits are in 'imm to Great Britain. . nify the ple "The monetary resources of Great centage ofa Britain in the United States at the Watkins ex present time are not known, but at The adni the outbreak of the war, the Federal cies in Bri Reserve- authorities estimated that dicates tha Great Britain and her Dominions purchases i held about five billion dollars of li- added. quid resources," he explained. "If, as M During the first year of the war, recent pa he continued, large amounts of gold America is were sent to the United States by senal' and Empire countries. Purchases were United Sta paid for by exporting goods and ser- ditional do vices to the United States, by gold quired," Pr shipments, by drawing on dollar bal- He point ances, and by the sale of American first year c 3ut the unfavorable bal- have been larger than the dicated. y have British resources er depleted by rising im- re recent months, but lar- cts have been placed, or ediate prospect, which sig- dging of a still larger per- available funds," Professor plained. ission of serious deficien- tish home production in- t an even larger scale of n the coming months, he . Greenwood stated in a arliamentary discussion, to serve as a 'second ar- if British exports to the tes are reduced, then ad- llar resources will be re-' ofessor Watkins asserted. ted out that during the of the war, new gold pro- Gone Are The Days: Black Friday Breathes Its Last, Class Games TakingIts Place i i - rt G ' By A. P. BLAUSTEIN "Black Friday" is no more. So says Douglas Gould, '41, presi- dent of the Union, who announced yesterday that organized frosh-soph "depantsings" and duckings were a thing of the past. In its place the Union staff plans to sponsor Class Games which will probably be very similar to those held before the world war, consisting of pillow fights, flag pole rushes and tug-of-war between two evenly di- vided sides. During the past decade, according to Gould, "Black Friday" has been more or less of a failure. The fresh- side is more than eager for action. Class Garies would enable the Union to get an equal number of frosh and sophs and some sort of class suprem- acy could really be es'tablished. Although two other organizations, namely Congress Independent Men's Organization and the Interfraternity Council, assisted the Union in organ- izing the "Battle of the Pants," this fall it was announced that the latter group would do all of the work in the future. Plans have already been discussed for next November and several let- ters have been sent out to discover how other colleges and universities SANTA 15 ON HIS WAY-