Weather Cloudy and warmer; light rain tonight. LY 4 w A Lt igau tlattE Editorial New Treaty Aids Hemisphere Unity # * I -j ... - . VOL. LII. No. 17 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1941 Z-333 PRICE FIVE EN i ... Russian Officials Reported Ready To Leave Moscow Arming Of U.S. Vessels I- Germans aain To Capital Admit Nazi Approach As Reds Advances U.S. Ambassador Ste'ihardt Flees (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Friday, Oct. 17.-The leaders of Russia's government or at least part of them were reported early today to have left Moscow to the des- perate arms of the Red Army, and it was believed they were setting up a wartime capital at Kazan, 450 miles to the east, to continue the fight. There was no immediate official confirmation of the reports, which came from reliable sources just as Washington dispatches disclosed Uni- ted States Ambassador Laurence A. Steinhardt and his embassy staff were leaving :Moscow in a general diplomatic evacuation for an undis- closed destination in the interior- presumably Kazan. London sources -suggested the Stalin government had left the fate of Moscow, now a capital in name only, in tge hands of the army. They declared it would be defended- foot by foot agaisnt German troops driv- ing down from the west and north- west. The Moscow radio was still broad- casting up to midnight, but it issued only propaganda stories and no news. Moscow stations failed to send the post-midnight communique at the usual hour. The Russian embassy in London gave one reply to all phone calls over a period of several hours: "There is no one in now. Call back in a half hour." British authorities replied "no -commeit" on queries for confirma- tion of reports of the Russian gov- ernment rove They said, however, that if the Russians announced the withdrawal of the government from the capital it would only emphasize their determination to continue the fight. Reds Claim Nazis Still Face Strlfggle (By The Associated Press) MOSCOW, Friday, Oct; 17.-The Red armies, admittedly breached and bleeding on the approaches to im- periled Moscow, fought on today with undiminshed ferocity, claiming a heavy toll of the assaulting Germans even while acknowling great losses of their own. The German frontal assault, im- plemented' with everything that Nazi army and arsenal could produce, was being met by Soviet forces still "alive and struggling" with the aid of fresh Russian tank formations, official dis- patches declared. War correspondents, with brave words, insisted the resistance and tenacity of the Russians remained unbroken, despite the Germans'"tem- porary successes." The whole people, they said, too, were preparing to fight as soldiers for a long time. There was little attempt, however,! to disguise the fact the Germans had managed to break through the defense at unspecified points, or to minimize the anger to Moscow. "They are throwing into action everything they 'could scrape up at home, in the occupied countries, or withdraw from other directiois of the front," wrote a military correspond- ent to the 'government newspaper Izvestia. Three Faculty Men Leave For Capital Three more faculty men have -re- ceived one-year leaves of absence from the University to meet the ever- pressing d emand for experts in Wash- ington to direct the national defense effort. The action, taken early this week by the executive council of the Board of Regents, approves applica- tions for leave from Prof. Charles F. Remer of the economics department, Prof. Preston James of the geography department and Prof. Samuel Goud- smit of tlje physics department. Remer and James are already in Washington working in the office of Machine Tools Stand Unused, Thomas Says DETROIT, Oct. 16.-OP)--Machine tools in the Detroit area adaptable for defense production are currently operated at "no more than 35 per cent of capacity," R. J. Thomas, pres- ident of the United Automobile Work- ers (CIO) declared today. In a report to a Congressional com- mittee investigating labor migration, ' Thomas described it as "a startling situation" and urged "immediate steps by We Army, Navy and other Government agencies to co-ordinate this reservpir of unused equipment for the full and immediate transitionl of the auto industry as a whole to defense production." The UAW-CIO president reported a survey in 34 Detroit automotive plants showed that of 1,577 machine tools of 13 principal types, 337 are idle throughout the week and the re- mainder operate at an average of 70.4 hours weekly. On the basis of capacity operation equaling 160 hours a week (with eight hours for maintenance), total weekly operation could be 252,320 machine hours, Thomas said, compered with the present rate of 87. 296 hours. Thomas said there still was time to place in effect a plan advanced last December by Walter P. Reuther, UAW-CIO official, for utilizing ex- isting auto plant machines and tools for defense production. , Harold McCormick, Inventor's Son, Dies BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., Oct. 16.- WP)-Harold Fowler McCormick, son of Cyrus Hall McCormick, inventor of the reaper, died today of a cere- bral hemorrhage. He was 69 years old. Death followed an illness that caused him to be bedridden much of the time in recent years.~ He suf- fered fromi arthritis and recurring heart attacks and had to use a wheel chair and be assisted by a nurse. The millionaire head of the Chi- cago Harvester Family had been in ill health several years, suffering from heart trouble. He had spent most of his time in recent years in Califor- nia, where in 1938 he niarried Miss Adah Wilson, his 34-year-old nurse. It was the third marriage for Mc- Cormick. Awaits HouseApproval Final Vote Expected Tomorrow; Heated Debates Bring Republican Split Over Issue Of Neutrality Act WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. -(A')- the attitude of both sides in the Evidences of Republican disunity on House toward the question of this the question of arming merchant country's participation in the world ships multiplied today as the House crisis, Cluett said "if we had relied debated that issue at a session which solely on the advice of Congress the ran into the night and cleared the country would probably be in the way for a final vote, and assured ap- same position it was two years ago." proval, tomorrow. "Give me the leadership of a great First, Representative Fish (N.Y.), American like Wendell L. Willkie," he frequent cirtic of Administration went on, "as contrasted with a dozen foreign policy, announced he intend- parading isolationists who cannot, ed to vote for the bill repealing the and will not see the greatest peril Neutrality Act's prohibtion against ever confronting this nation, and who putting guns on merchantmen. would lull us into a state of false Then Representative Cluett (R.- security.", N.Y.) sharply criticized the opposi- Otherwise, debate followed gener- tion he said had come from a major- ally the lines of the argument which ity of House Republicans to "prac- has continued unabated since Presi- tically every move made by the Presi- dent Roosevelt asked last week for dent and his advisers in the depart- repeal of the Neutrality Act's pro- ments of the Army and Navy to bring hibition against arming merchant to this country that security which is ships. vital to us and to those who are fight- ing for us and the principles we es- A '? E I o- Asking whether this opposition was rr u sincere or was born of political ex- To Russia pediency, he declared: "If this antagonism is a political At Convention maneuver, it will prove to be not/only A a death blow to the Republican Party, , but a disservice to the nation which Dispute Leads To Ouster will never be forgotten or forgiven."Dspt Led ToO tr Nor was Cluett sparing of Demo- Of Brewery Workers; crats in Congress. Declaring it had Bolshevism Denounced been "an amazing sight" to witness IF.C. Names Representative Council To Take Tryouts; List Upperclass Pledges Richard C. Arbuckle, '42, of Psi Upsilon house was elected to the Executive Council of the Inter-Fra- ternity Council at its meeting last night, The council also adopted a reso- lution to take a sophomore from each fraternity. The I. F. C. also announced the pledging of the following upperclass- men whose names were not included in the list which was published in Tuesday's Daily. Acacia: Fred Bryan, Allen Grieg- er, Warren Shelley, Gene Sherry, George Crocker, Richard Widman, William Dixon, Robert Reid, Galvin Smelcie, Marc Hebden, Jack Moehl- man. Alpha Tau Omega: Richard Burck, John Roth, Cyril Tyler, Richard Wellman. .Delta Upsilon: Jack dopeland, Richard Johnson, Robert Sovern, Louis Telbizoff, Jack Vizena. Kappa Nu: Melvin Soodik, Paul Schoenberg. Kappa Sigma: William Johnston, E. Bruce Kleber, Robert Holland, Walter Stewart, Robert Vibbert, Don- ald Plott, \Robert Winkley, Charles (Continued on Page 6) SEATTLE, Oct. 16. - (P) - The American Federation of Labor ad- journed its 61st Annual convention early tonight after endorsing full aid to Rusia, but denouncing Com- munism in caustic terms. The aid to Russia action high- lighted a day which saw suspending of the Brewery Workers Union from the Federation after bitter debate between leaders of the brewery work- ers and the teamsters union. The suspension was for the union's refusal .to abide by the Federation's standing decision that the teamsters have jurisdiction over beer' truck drivers. The resolution& committee's pro- posals, as adopted by the Convention, carried even stronged denunciation of Communistic practices than did the executive council's report. The adopted resolution said: "It is the opinion of your commit- tee that a victory by Stalin over other countries in Europe would be as dis- astrous to free institutions as a vic- tory by Hitler." The Convention 'unanimously adopted three national defense reso- lutions submitted by the California and Indiana State Federation dele- gates. .Petain DecIaration Charges War Guilt F., -u-, FDR In Secret Meeting As Japan Faces Crisis; Military, Foreign Experts Confer With President As Showdown Nears Senator Nye Fears New Tokyo Cabinet WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. -(A)- Imposing a rule of strict secrecy, President Roosevelt conferred with top-flight military and foreign affairs advisers an hour and three quarters today, while on Capitol Hill some legislators predicted events in the Far East might lead to a Japanese- American showdown. The situation in Japan, where the Cabinet of Premier Prince Fumimaro Konoye has resigned, and in Russia, where Moscow is half ringed with hammering Nazis, was believed to have been canvassed as the President talked with the following group: The Secretaries of State, War and Navy; General George C. Marshpll, Army Chief of Staff; Admiral Har- old R. Stark, Chief of Naval Opera- tions, and Harry L. Hopkins, Lend- Lease Supervisor. Hull Gives No Comment t When the conference was over Secretary of State Hull told reporters he was "expressly prohibited" from saying anything, and added he did not expect any public statement from the White House. Shortly after the conference ended informed sources said they had re- ceived word that Laurence A. Stein- hardt, American Ambassador to Rus- sia, was leaving Moscow with his staff for some point in the interior. It was indicated that all foreign diplomats were moving from the capital. In Congress two men who-.are us- ually poles apart in their outlook on foreign affairs agreed the cabinet resignation bore ominous implications for the future of Japanese-American relations. Senator Nye (Rep.-N.D.) said: "Of course, we can't tell much un- til a new cabinet is appointed, but the resignation of the former one ap- parently means a complete military setup in Japan. If it is to bean all- out pro-Axis government then we will face a most serious hour. Red Battle Important "The outcome of the battle for Moscow probably will determine Ja- panese policy finally. It is quite ob- vious that Japan will try to be on the winning side."' Senator Hill (Dem.-Ala.) asserted: "It looks to me as though Japan Cabnet QuiF Japan Crisis Seen As .Link In Nazi Plans By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) Thundering Nazi blows on the outer gates of Moscow find a distant but dramatic echo on the Tokyo end of the German-Italian-Japanese axis. Whatever else the Japanese cabinet crisis may mean, it is too closely in- terlocked with the developing siege of Moscow not to be regarded as an important piece dropping into place in the jigsaw puzzle of Hitler's war plans. Whether Berlin's guarded hints that the capitulation of Moscow is immediately impending is justified remains to be seen. There is no reasonable doubt, however, that Nazi undercover pressure in Tokyo, timed to coincide closely with the German investment of Moscow, had some- thing to do with the konoye cab- inet upset. There is sound military reason for Hitler to seek some sort of threaten- ing Japanese gesture just now, whether aimed specifically at Russia or at the American aid-for-Russia effort. Moscow's defenses are crumb- ling under the hammering of Nazi armies which at some points are only about 60 miles from the Kremlin, nerve center of Communism. Hitler's headquarters has drawn a grim picture of Russian army col- lapse in the west. More than 6,000,000 Russian soldiers have been killed, crippled, or captured within 16 weeks, according to German bookkeeping. Berlin sees Russian resistance in the west reduced to a hodge-podge of em- battled civilians and remnants of shattered divisions which escaped German traps. Films Continue Run At League 'Time In The Sun' Given Unusual Press Reviews Nipponese Ministers Split As Pressure For Move Against Russia Grows UT.S. Negotiations Take .New Turn To French Leaders believes Russia might cave in and that they want to move in some- VICHY, Unoccupied France, Oct. where if she does. Then we may have 16.--()-With the hindsight reflec- to move. ted by a specially chosen council of "So far as I am concerned, I favor Team Faces Tough Foe; FansFill SpecialTramn . o "Time in the Sun" and "China- Strikes Back," the two films compris- ing the Art Cinema League's second presentation of the season, continue their run at 8:15 p.m. today and to- morrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Unprecedented press acclaim has been accorded "Time Ain the Sun" which has been termed by the "New York Times" as a "spectacular dis- play and a magnificent account of- Mexican native life which arises from mere exterrals to spiritual forces . . . The photography is so stunning and, of such dramatic strength that each individual shot offers an exciting experience!" "China Strikes Back" reveals ex- clusive pictures of the former Eighth Route Army, its leaders and guerilla warriors in training. Critics have said that "it is a striking document of the unification of Free China. TOKYO, Friday, Oct. 17. -(A) Senior statesmen of Japam we called into conference with the Er peror at 1 p.m. today to recomme a new Premier after the third go ernment of Prince Fumimaro Ko oye collapsed last night in the face a grave impasse on national policy t ward the United States and Sovi Russia. Those called to confer includ Marquis Koichi Kido, Lord Keeper the Privy Seal, Dr. Yoshimch Ha president of the Privy Council; Bar Reijiro Wakatsuki, Koki Hirota, A miral Keisuke Okada, Admiral Mits masa Yonai, Gen. Nobuyuki Abe a Count Keigo Kiyoura. The Konoye %Cabnet, not thr months old and occupied during mc ,of its tenure with circuitous Was: ington negotiations and indecisi uneasiness over the 'consequences opportunties offered to Japan Germany's war with Russia, resign en bloc. Coidd Not Agree A communique said Konoye a his ministers had resigned becau they could not agree "on the way pursue national policy." Most obser ers 'considered this to mean sev weeks of Japanese-American negol ations in Washington had taken decisive turn unpleasant for Japa This was coupled as a major fact in tie Cabinet collapse with growii militarist pressure for action again Russia, now that the fate of Mosc itself is in the balance. Informed sources foresaw the uk lihood of more vigorous Japane foreign policy under a new gover: ment, which may take shape Fride This policy woud be characterizE it was believed, as necessar to bre, the so-called "ABCD" encircleme of Japan-military and ecoon measures of the United States, Bi tain, China and the Dutch from the East Indies Bastion. Matsuoka In Eclipse The third konoye governmez formed July 18, after the start the German-Russian war, saw t eclipse of Foreign Miister You Matsuoka and some of his pro-A policies, and might be termed in r trospect an interim regime for frightened and isolated nation. No Axisminded Japanese hope the seer ingly collapse of Moscow and t impasse at Washington will bring resurgence of Matsuoka's policies close Axis collaboration, & possi: the return of Matsuoka himself to tV government. Operetta Tryouts Sought 'By MUSIC School Play Groin Tryouts for the forthcoming ope to be given jointly by Play 'Prducti of the Department of Speech a the School of Music will be held 2 p.m. tomorrow in the music scho .The musical, which is 'one of t's given each year by dramatic grou on campus, will be of a alibresin -ar to that of "The Bartered Brid and Mozart's Il Seraglio" which ha been offered here previously. Any students with vocal tale are welcome to try out. for' pa in the production. They must coi prepared to sing for two minutes a must bring with them either anS companist or the mnuslc for th selection. Valentine B. Windt, irector Play Production; Thor Johnson, cx Iductor of the University's sympho IOrchestra and members of the Scho of Music's' faculty will judge the coi petitors. The opera has not been chosen y but it will not be a Gilbert and Sul van opera for all of these have ready been presented hereyyinPy dt1 past.hth FDR Leaves Capital WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. -(A' President Roosevelt left the Capi tonight for a weekend at Hyde Pa: ,i B y DICK SIMON Coach Fritz Crisler's title-yearn- ing Wolverines, 35 strong, entrain at 8:15 a.m. today for Evanston, Ill., where they will receive their first real Conference test tomorrow against Coach Lynn Waldorf's Northwestern eleven.d The team will spend the night at Highland Park, Ill., and move into Evanston and Dyche Stadium just before the opening whistle. Both teams will be going into the fray with clean slates, Nrthwestern havinK won two games and Michigan three. The Purple had little trouble in whipping Kansas State, 51-3, and Wisconsin, 41-14. The Maize and Blue trounced Michigan State, 19-7, squeezed through with a 6-0 victory over Iowa and then last week gave Pitt a terrific lacing to the tune of 40-0. At yesterday's. practice, the last one on home ground before the game which is expected to draw a capacity crowd of 50,000, the Wolverines went through a mock scrimmage. The line spent quite a bit of time block- ing dummies, and Tom Kuzma, Davey Nelson, Paul White and Don Robin- son took turns tossing passes. To climax the hard week of intensive drill, the whole squad went through By BARBARA JENSWOLD While more than three hundred have shown their support of the Michigan team by purchasing round- trip train tickets to Chicago at the special rate provided for by the Alum- ni Association, there still remain a number of fares, which are available at the travel desk in the Union. The train chartered to carry the fans to the game is scheduled to leave Ann Arbor at 8:20 a.m. Saturday anfl arrive in Chicago at 11:40 a.m. From station to stadium transportation will be via the Chicago North Shore ele- vated line. Provision has been made for a con- venientsmeeting place for Michigan alumni. Alumni Association will maintain headquarters Saturday morning on the third floor of the Palmer House in Chicago. Present throughout the morning will be T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Association, Robert 0. Morgan, assistant general secretary, and a number of the district alumni officers. Following the game, at 5 p.m., resi- dents of Michigan and University stu- dents will be guests at a reception to be held in Scott Hall, the Union building on the Northwestern cam- political justice, Marshal Petain placedathe blame for France's defeat today on six men who were returned to office time and again by French voters. In a broadcast to the nation the Chief of State announced a public trial would be held for five of the six, who already have been in prison more than a year. As far as the accused ministers are concerned, the Marshal's deci- sion failed to change their position. They have been in prison awaiting trial. They are still in prison await- ing trial. The accusation submitted to Petain by the council concerned: Former Premier Edouard Daladier,i Generalissimo Maurice Gustave' Gamelin, former Premier Leon Blum, Pierre Jacomet, former administra- tor of national defense industries, Guy La Chambre, and Pierre Cot. Actress Sees Practice; Still Has A Lot To Lea'n One would think that pretty Anita Louise of Hollywood fame would be quite a football authority after ap- pearing with Tom Harmon and For- est Eveshevski in "Harmon of Michi- gan." But the appearance of the Holly- wood actress at the Wolverine prac- tice this afternoon proved that she still has a lot to learn about America's favorite fall. sport. When some one pointed out to Miss Louise that the taking advantage of every possible opportunity to make certain our own security in the Pacific." Other legislators also read with' deep interest dispatches from Tokyo indicating the cabinet crisis might portend a "more vigorous foreign policy" designed to offset what the Japanese call encircling of Japan by the United States, Britain, China and the Dutch East Indies. I +4 Kennedy Named Drum Major As Band Leaves For Evanston Making their first out-of-town trip of the season, the University March- ing Band, under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli, will leave for Evanston today, where they will play at the Northwestern-Michigan game. tomorrow. Special guests of the band for the trip will be Dean Walter Rea, assist- ant dean of students, Prof. John L. Brumm of the journalism department and former faculty adviser to the band, and Emile Geld, '42, managing editor of The Daily. Other faculty men included in the, band's regular traveling complement Tickets for the band's annual Varsity Night show, to be pre- sented Tuesday, Oct. 28 in Hill Auditorium, may now be obtained at the Union, the League, Wahr's hnnefnra ,.nr . t.an..onm r n.nv mah. man, '45, take charge of the band on alternate weekends. Having already served two years as twirler with the University Band, Kennedy was the logical man to-step into the vacancy left by the gradua- tion of "Long John" Sherrill, drum. major of the band last year. Drum major at Arthur High School in Saginaw for three years, Kennedy won the state drum-majoring con- test while in high school, and is now working on a special "high throw" technique which he claims will en- able him to throw the baton over 100 feet and catch it when it comes down. Brother of varsity football center Ted Kennedy,'42E, Kennedy takes no chances on his batons, but makes his own, his latest being made of a special transparent plastic material and con- taining batteries and lights at each end. Definitely not confined entirely to