0 weather lain and ocolder. JLY Sfr igan ilatt Editorial Basic Grounds For Hesitation .. VOL. LII. No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS FDR Orders Army To Seize Plane Plant "" : Ted Sharp Is Chosen Head Of '42- J=Hop As Vote Ends Dotterrer Wins Soph Prom Chairmanship; Others Elected To Fill Posts Judiciary Council Supervises Election Ted Sharp, a junior from Detroit, was chosen in the campus election yesterday to the chairmanship of the 1942 J-Hop Committee. Chuck Dotterrer, a sophomore'en- gineering student from Detroit, was elected chairman of the 1941 Soph Prom Committee. Members of the J-Hop Committee from the literary college are, Bob Begle, Detroit, Bob Burstein, Pitts- burgh, Pa., Bob Bartlow, Buffalo, N. Y., Leanor Grossman, Huntington Woods, Rose Mary Mann, Ann Ar- bor, and Elaine Barth, Rochester, N. Y. The' other members elected from the School of Engineering are Bruce Renaud, Detroit, and Tom Poyzer, Milwaukee, Wis. Jim Snodgrass, Cincinnati, O., was chosen to represent the forestry and pharmacy schools. Mary Louise Knapp, Detroit, was elected from the School of Music. Mildred Christa, Detroit, will, represent the architec- ture school. Members of the Soph Prom Com- mittee from the architecture and en- gineering schools are, Stan Glass- man, Rochester, N. Y., Dick Emery, St. Joseph, and Ralph Beuhler, Ann Arbor. Soph Prom Committee members from the literary college are, Harold Cooper, Far Rockaway, N. Y., Jack Hooper, Danbury, Conn., Marty Fe- ferman, South Bend, Ind., Phyllis Present, East Lansing, and Nancy Hattereley, Ft. Wayne, Ind. The restricted electionwas super- vised by the Men's Judiciary Council in cooperation with the Michigan Union. ASU Granted Official Status Organization Is Removed From Probation List The American Student Union was removed from probation by the Dis- ciplinary Committee last Tuesday and is now recognized as an approved organization. Because of infraction of University rules, the ASU was put on probation last December. After their recognition, the execu- tive committee issued the following statement concerning their present position. "It is extremely fortunate that the American Student Union may again function as a recognized campus organization. The main issue before the country today is the mili- tary destruction of Hitler, in order to preserve America as an indepen- dent nation. This is the main issue before students, too, for the very future of education depends upon the outcome of this war. It is of urgent necessity, therefore that all groups, agreed on this one issue regardless of other differences, should unite for immediate action.- Other organiza- tions and other individuals will as- sume their responsibilities. But the ASU with its experience in anti-fas- cist struggles and itslactive member- ship can be of service too." Buikema Named Head Of Citizenship Board LANSING, Oct. 30.-(AP)--Spon- sored jointly by the State Depart- ment of Public Instruction, the U. S. Immigration and Naturalization Ser- vice and the Works Progress Admin- istration, a 12-member council wasl organized here today to provide citi- zenship training for 291,000 aliens in Michigan.- Dr. Benjamin J. Buikema, Assis- tant Superintendent of Schools in Four-Day Coal Miners' Strike Ends With Temporary Truce WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.-A four- day strike of 53,000 captive coal min- ers was terminated today under a 17-day truce accepted by John L. Lewis, United Mine Workers presi- dent, and Myron C. Taylor, director and former board chairman of Unit- ed States Steel Corporation. The mines were scheduled to start reopening tonight or tomorrow, and operations were expected to be back to normal by Saturday. Under the agreement, suggested by President Roosevelt last night in a letter to William H. Davis, chairman of the Defense Mediation Board, the mines will continue to operate pend- ing a second attempt by the board to mediate the dispute over a de- mand for a union shop. Neither the mine operators nor the Union, how- ever, \vill be bound to accept the board's recommendations. The mine workers stipulated that they had accepted the agreement for a period ending Nov. 15. Union offi- cials said this was to prevent "a long, drawnout," session of the board. On a previous occasion the board con- sidered the dispute several weeks be- fore making its recommendations. (The captive mines involved in the strikes are mines owned by steel companies, which do not place the coal on the open market but use .it in their own operations. If a union shop is granted, all miners will have to become members of the union after a certain period of employment. (The strike was ended after four appeals by President Roosevelt. Lewis Fund Reaches Quarter Mark rejected the first two and made no public reply to the third.) Lewis announced the UMW's deci- sion to order the men back to work at a dramatic press conference with Taylor. Lewis joined Taylor at the latter's hotel after conferring for two hours with a score of district officials of the United Mine Workers. He later said the district leaders had voted unanimously to accept the Presi- 'dent's proposal. Senate Adopts Plans To Hold Soldier Dance Student Body To Entertain Fort Custer Men Here; Support SDD Proposal Recognizing the nation-wide prob- lem of draftee entertainment, the Student Senate' unanimously voted last night to sponsor a special cam- pus dance for enlisted men in Fort Custer. This resolution, the Senate's first official act of the University year, has been referred to committee for a hearing on transportation and ball- room facilities. Full cooperation will be given to the Student Defenders of Democracy who have already ini- tiated a similar proposal. "This dance," declared President Bill Todd, '42, "will give Michigan studeitts an opportunity to show their appreciation foi the soldiers' services. The lack of recreation for these selectees gives it a special im- portance." Todd anticipates a problem in bringing men in from Battle Creek, nearest town to the army camp, but he feels that it can be done with aid from local groups, the USO and stu- dent organizations. The Senae's second resolution, also adopted unanimously; proposed an investigation of lighting condi- tions in the general library. Intro- duced by Jacob Fahrner, '43, this, plan would make use of several pre- vious' surveys of existing conditions. In making his proposal, Fahrner pointed out .the need for improve- ment in the illumination of several library study halls. Under its constitutional system of senatorial courtesy, the Senate recog- nized two new Senators appointed by members prevented from serving their full terms. Orval Johnson, '43, will replace William Ditz, and Ruth Basye has named Winston H. Cox, '42, to fill the vacancy left by her resignation. Sally Walsh, '43, was unanimously chosen to take over Miss Basye's position as Senate secretary. Army Pilots Are Found FRESNO, Calif., Act. 30. -(R)- Two Army pilots, lost during a storm from a formation of 19 planes last Friday, were found alive beside a campfire in the Mt. Whiteny region of the high Sierra, the Army report- ed tonight. A relief plane was dispatched from the Fresno 'Army air base to drop food and blankets to the pain. Engine Men Will Choose Class Heads Electioneering Prohibited By School Committees In Vote For Officers Freshman Council Posts To Be Filled All forms of electioneering declared taboo by the election committee, se- niors in the College of Engineering will go to the polls today to elect five officers for the class of '42E. Emphasizing the importance of the restrictions against electioneering of all kinds, Verne C. Kennedy, '42E, chairman of the election committee,' warned that any candidate found guilty of infractions would be auto- matically disqualified and his votes discarded.' Candiates for the class presidency as announced by the committee are Robert Boswell, William Collamore, Ted Kennedy, John Templer and Bill Schomburg. The runner-up in the presidential election will automati- cally become vice-president under the rules of the election. Running for the post of class sec- reary are Charles Armstrong, Harry Imming, Roy Mattern, Carl Rohr- back, Herbert Ford Whipple and Ted Williams, while Joe Hallissy and Bob Imboden will vie for the treasurer's position. Fifth official to be elected today will be senior class Engineering Coui- cil representative., Candidates will be Dean Hanink, George Pusack and Tom Williams. The president-elect will act as the second senior repre- sentative to the Council. The rules against electioneering, Kennedy explained, are aimed ex- pressly at bulletin board signs and campaign slips which are usually passed around prior to the elections. With equally stringent restrictions! against electioneering, freshman en- gineers will elect two representatives to the Engineering Council in their (Continued on Page 2) 'My Process Stolen!'- Aged Abbott Sues State He lives in a four-dollar-a-week rooming house plasteed with col- lege pennants and pictures of a re- sort-hotel he planned; he has a daugh'ter in Duke University-and now he is suing the State of Michi- gan for $13,000,000. He is white-haired, 65-year old Charles Abbott, '97, who claims to have invented the moveable dies used by the state in manufactring auto license plates. The University graduate, an en- gineer-lawyer, .claims the state agreed in 1921 to pay him 50 per cent of all his process saved-more than one dollar per plate. Now they're manufacturing plates for six and one-half cents apiece, "and they owe me money, and plenty of it." "I've got the boys in a hole now, and when I get Michigan I'm going after the other states that stole my process." Pilot Survives Plane Crash; 14 Are Killed Officials Await Airman's Recovery From Accident; Ice Blamed For Wreck' MOORHEAD, Minn., Oct. 30-() --Soothed by sedatives, a veteran fly- ing officer tonight rested for the ordeal of telling official investigators what happened during those agon- izing moments today in the fatal, flaming crash of his Northwest Air- lines Transport plane. Physicians declined to permit Cap- tain Clarence Bates, 41, a 10,000 air hour flier, to talk about the 2 a.m. disaster that killed 14-everyone on the liner but the pilot. Victimswere twelve passengers, the stewardess and copilot. Whether, as unofficial outside ob- servers believed, the ship gathered ice quickly in slipping down through fog and mist to freezing ground tem- peratures will not be known until Bates talks. Also eagerly awaited weredetails of Bates' exit from the plane. He presumably either was thrown from the cockpit or crawled from the wreckage, which caught fire almost immediately. George Gardner, Wvice president in charge of NWA operations, said he was assured Bates was recovering rapidly from shock and minor in- juries. Gardner, other NWA officials, Civil Aeronautics Authority repre- sentatives and local authorities, as well as the aviation world awaited the direct details of the apparent sudden disabling of the 21-passenger plane as it virtually hovered over the, Fargo airport. That was its next stop on the Chi- cago to Seattle flight. Concealed by thick weather with a 500-foot ceil- ing, the twin motored transport re- ported to the St. Paul dispatcher that it was coming on routine instru- ment approach from 2,700 feet. Stimson Directed To Move Troops; Striker Is Injured Hopkins Finds Stalin Hopef ul Of Nazi Defeat NEW YORK. Oct. 30--OP)-"The battle line will remain west of Mos- cow." Thus spoke Joseph Stalin to Harry L. Hopkins, President Roosevelt's special representative, who described his dramatic and historic meeting with the Russian leader in an article in the current American Magazine. "We Russians shall win the war," Hopkins said Stalin told him. "The battle line will remain west of Mos- cow. Russia will not fail. Russia is big, Russia is exorable. Russia is fighting-for Russia. She will not, again be enslaved. Once we trusted this man -.-" And then Hopkins commented: "I hope I shall never be hated as Stalin hates Hitler." "For Hitler he had more than the anger he would necessarily have for a man who had double-crossed him; it was a personal hatred that I have seldom heard expressed by anyone in authority." r Fraterntes Fail To Open , Closure Of Two Houses Reduces Total To 38 Two social fraternities, Hermitage, the fraternity of which President Ruthven was a member during his college career, and Tau Kappa Ep- silon failed to open this semester, putting the number of active frater- nities at 38. - Although there was a record num- ber of freshmen who signed up for fraternity rushing, there is no in- congruity in the fact that the two fraternities are not operating, since they closed before the semester be- gan, it was pointed out. At least part of the cause for the closing of the two was placed on the draft and the increase of national de- fense industry employment. Among professional fraternities, Delta Sigma Pi, a business adminis tration organization went off cam- pus, and a Chinese fraternity, Alpha Lambda is also closed. Committee Is' With Drive Satisfied Results The Community Fund reached the quarter-mark yesterday in the drive toward its $59,434 goal. Contributions totalling $14,089 were repoi'ted by eight of the ten cam- paign divisions at a luncheon at the Union, which marked the end of three and one-half days of the annual 10-day campaign. The special gifts division, which opened its campaign prior to the general campaign, led in the amount of contributions with 130 pledges to- talling $8,821. Next in order were the University division, which report- ed $2,377, the commercial division $2,002, the public schools $464, Junior Chamber of Commerce $122, the ser- vice clubs division $118, the industrial division $95 and University hospital $90.. . John Moore, executive secretary of the Community Fund, expressed, great satisfaction over the progressof the campaign and predicted that the quota would be exceeded. The pro- ceeds of the campaign will be dis-. tributed among the 12 social welfare agencies participating in the Fund and will be expended by them in I 1942.} The campaign will close Wednes- day, Nov. 5. The next general report meetings will take place Tuesday and the final report will be made Thurs- day. Morgenthau f Asks Greater SecurtyTax WASHINGTON, Oct. 30-(/P)-Sec- retary of the Treasury Morgenthau today called for a quick increase in Social Security taxes to ward off in- flation and help finance the defense program.4 He said there would be extra money in the pockets of the people, but no goods to buy with it. Therefore he wanted to "mop it up." He declined to say what new tax rates he proposed, but authoritative sources said he was trying to choose between two plans which would either double or quintuple the tax on em- ploye pay checks. These sources said that under one plan being studied in the highest ad- ministration circles the present old age pension taxes of one per cent each on employes and employers would be increased to two per cent each, and the unemployment in- surance tax on employers would be raised slightly from its present three per cent rate. They said, however, there was also a strong possibility that the Adminis- tration would choose a more drastic proposal which would inicrease the employes' pension tax from one to five per cent, while raising the em- ployer's pension tax from one to two per cent so that after paying the three per cent unemployment insur- ance tax employers also would be pay- ing a total of five per cent. ROTC To Present Retreat Ceremony' A battalion of the senior and soph- omore cadets of the University ROTC unit will observe the military cere- mony of retreat at 5:15 p.m. today when they march in a parade and review at Palmer Field. Labor Harassed Industry Taken Over By Soldiers;- Reenforcenents Sent U.S. Trucks Roll In From Two Points -- BULLETIN - NEW YORK, Friday, Oct. 31. -(P)-Between 20 and 30 U.S. Army trucks carrying troops to the Air Associates plant at Hen- dix, N.J., left Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, at 12:30 a.m. (EST) today. Meanwhile the Jersey City, N.J., police teletype reported 19 trucks of troops from Fort Jay, Governors Island, passed through the Holland Tunnel en route to Bendix before midnight. WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. -(A')- President Roosevelt tonight ordered the Army to take over the Bendix, N.J., plant of Air Associates, Inc. The plant has been harassed by labor disputes since a strike of CIO- United Automobile Workers started Sept. 30. The President directed Secretary of War Stimson to take over opera- tion of the plant and retain control as long as may be required in the in- terest of national defense. It was the third time the President has resorted to such drastic action to deal with time-consuming disputes between labor and management which have affected production in defense industries. Non-Strikers Stop Work As Union Men Return BENDIX, N. J., Oct. 30-(P)-Act- ing on a request of the War Depart- ment, CIO union: workers withdrew tonight from the strike-troubled plant of Air Associates, Inc., .after their return to work benches promt- ed a brief flurry of violence and a 30-minute work stoppage by 300 non- strikers. Charles Kerrigan, eastern regional director of the United Automobile Worl ers of America, Aviation Divi- sion, said the union members, rein- stated today in the positions they left a month ago, would stay away from the plant ,"until Washington acts." He said Edward F. McGrady of the War Department, which asked the withdrawal, had advised him to ex- pect speedy intervention. Fifteen of a group of 26 UAW mem- bers had entered the plant at the change of shifts when the sitdown by nonistrikers occurred. Joel Miller, union committeeman, ,aid the first union man to take his place at a machine, Aaron Oren- stein, a turret lathe operator of Brooklyn, N. Y., was badly beaten when "50 or 60 men jumped him." 'Cellist Feuermann Makes Listeners Forget It's Raining Almost 5,000 people forgot it was raining yesterday. They were listening to Emanuel Feuermanti, his 'cello and his accom- panist putting on the best show at Hill, Auditorium since the time last fall when Dorothy Maynor made the oboe player in Eugene Ormandy's or- chestra cry by her singing. When it was all over, Emanuel Feu- ermann-holding a 'cello that was al- most as tall as he was-stood on the stage' bowing to the audience's ova- tion. Albert Hirsh,. his accompanist, stood with him. Once the audience was so enthu- asti6 they started to clap before the artist had quite finished a selection They had to call the modest Mr. Feuermann back three times before they got their encore. Then they mad it two Locker Room Leftover Left To Loser: Old .Wet Sock Trophy Awaits Favorable Student Opinion ___________4a Norseman Speaks For Countrymen:. Expeditionary Force On Island Necessary Evil, Says Icelander Although the people of Iceland prefer to be left to their own devices, they accept the Anglo-American oc- cupation of their island as a neces- sary evil, Thor Reykdal, '43E, the first Icelander ever to attend the University, declared in an interview yesterday. Slow-spoken and unassuming, Reykdal, a native of Reykjavik, was an eye-witness to the British occu- pation but had arrived in this coun- try before the 'coming of the Ameri- can troops. The people, he said, re- ceived the British move with mixed feelings of surprise and indifference. Most of the inhabitants of Iceland peared on the island but rumors of their impending arrival were current. 6ince 1918, the 130,000 people of Norwegian and Irish stock living in Iceland have been subject to the King of Denmark. According to Reykdal, the severance of all connections with their former over-lords fulfills a long desire. Iceland wishes to be com- pletely independent after the present war., Reykdal is a student in naval arch- itecture. He first learned of the Uni- versity of Michigan from a counselor at Columbia University. His journey to this country preceded the recent series of sinkings by several months, and his ship was not in convoy. Impressed with the highly indus- A new trophy has been proposed for the Ohio State-Michiagn grid ri- valry, and its adoption depends upon the "general student reaction." But there's something different about this trophy-it goes to the loser, not the winner. And that's not all. What is the trophy? Is it a loving cup? No. Is it a golden football? No. What is it? Just an old wet sock! No kidding. An alumnus of the University, who "prefers to remain anonymous until student opinion is known" has volunteered to donate as a prize, "an athletic sock that is worn at the toe and heel . . . placed in a cylindrical glass candy jar approxi- mately nine inches high by seven inches across." The sock, the donor states, "is not actually wet except in phraseology." The proposal for thq "Ol' Wet Sock" trophy was made to Coach "Fritz" Crisler, who turned it over to the students to decide whether they "want it in their trophy case if they lose the game." or not this idea should be adopted. It has been suggested that students write to The Daily expressing their feelings on the idea of a "Wet Sock" trophy for the Michigan-Ohio State game. Although The Daily reserves the right to print the signed letters and cards received, communications not intended for publication do not have to be signed. All communica- tions will eventually be turned over to Coach Crisler to give him an idea of the student feeling on this scheme. If few replies are received it will be considered a negative answer, but students are encouraged to answer in the negative or %positive. All replies must be received at The Daily by next Tuesday morning, Nov. 4, and should be addressed to "Old Wet Sock Editor" care of The Michigan Daily, Student Publications Build- ing, Ann Arbor. The alumnus, anxious to start a tradition similar to the "Little Brown Jug," gives the following complete description of the trophy:, I i