Weather tY Bk igaut~ Partly cloudy and warmet. tt Editorial Neutrality Vote is Not sigh of Disunity.a VOL. LI. No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS UMW Confers With Owners Over Question Of Union Shop Presidents Bidding Brings Continued Negotiations; No Decision Is Reached Problem Of Strike Monday Still 'In Air' (By The Associated' Press) WAHINGTON, Nov. 14-At the bidding of President Roosevelt, rep- resentatives of major steel companies and the United Mine Workers re- sumed direct negotiation today on the issue of 'a union shop in captive coal mines, but reached "no conclu- sions" at their first sitting.t "Pursuant to President Roosevelt's instructions we have been meeting, but no conclusions have been reached," was the terse announce- ment of Jo n L. -Lewis, UMW head, as the conferees emerged from a hotel suite. "The meeting has been going on very nicely, very satisfactorily," said Benjamin Fairless of United States Steel Corporation. The negotiations will resume to- morrow, but the question whether 53,000 miners in the captive pits owned by steel compafiies will go out on strike Monday, the first working day after the expiration of the exist- ing tru'ce, was still up in the air. Productlyn To Continue If these negotiations fail to pro- duce an agreement, Mr. Roosevelt asked that the dispute be submitted to "an arbiter, 6r arbiters, or any- body else with any other name, and that in the meantime -coal produc- tion continue,' The President advanced his pro- posal at a 30-minute White House conference at which he told both steel and union officials the Govern- ment "will not order, nor will Con- gress pass legislakion ordering, a so- called closed shop." Will Not Tolerate Stoppage He warned no interption tQ tle fue. supphies f the steel mills could be tolerated because steel Was ur- gentl needed for national defense. If legislat4l0: to prevent such an interruption should become necessary, Congress would approve it "without any question," he asserted, and then added: "Because it is essential to national ,defense that the necessary coal pro- duction be continued and not stop- ped, ft is therefore the indisputabid obligation of the President to see that this is done." Recommendation Unmentioned ,The transcript o the President's remarks released by the White House made no mention of the Defense Me- diation Board's recommendation last Monday that the UMW sign a con- tract that did not include a union shop clause. As asked, by the UMW, such a clause would reluire all work- ers in the mines to join the union after a prifod of probationary em- ployment. . The President's action appeared to have returned the dispute to the sta- tus it had before the Mediation board's most recent recommendation. At the Mediation Board's head- quarters, a spokesman described members of the Board as highly pleased with the White House move. 'Adler To Talk For. Soviet, Aid+ Local Group To Sponsor Russian Medical Help\ Efforts to lighten the effects of Russia's "scorched earth policy" on t the Soviet people will begin here with an address by Philip Adler, Detroit News feature writer, at 8 p.m. Mon- day in the Rackham Auditorium un- der the auspices of the Ann Arbor Committee for Medical Aid to Russii. Adler's travels for the Detroit News took him to Russia twice, in 1929 during the first Five Year Plan and again in. 1934. Enabled by his first hand observation to speak accurately about Russia, Adler will explain its needs and the working of its system. The focal committee, under the chairmanship of Prof. -Stanley Dodge of the geology department, intends to affiliate itself with the national Russian Relief, Inc., in the near Briksh Carrier Is Torpedoed BySubmarine HMS Ark Royal Is Sunk Off Gibraltar Coast; 32 DeathsReported (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Nov. 14-The 22,000-ton British aircraft carrier Ark Royal, which from the Arctic Circle to the Cape of Good Hope had carried into action against the Axis an honored name going back to the defeat of the Spanish Armada, went down today with mortal torpedo wounds. It was attacked yesterday east of Gibraltar by a submarine-most like- ly by an Italian submarine, although this point was not officially made-_ while it was en route to that western Mediterranean fortress. It sank this morning under tow en route to por while some of its 1,600 men were Sworking to the last, in the best of its traditions for quiet and presistent valor, to bring it safely into harbor. The great majority of its crew, said the Admiralty', were saved. (Dispatches from La Linea, Spain, said first casualty figures at Gibral- tar indicated 32 dead,60 injured and some 50 crewmen missing. The Span- ish report, which put the scene of the sinking off Marbella, Spaim, 25 miles northeast of The Rock, laid some of the dead and injured were brought there early Friday aboard a de- stroyer.) 4 (This account said only about a dozen of the Ark Royal's 60 planes were able to take off before it sank.) It was the greatest casualty to the Royal Navy since the German Battle- ship Bismarck sank the British battle cruiser Hood last May. CIO Supportt Is Promised To Roosevelt President Murray Pledges Cooperation Of Group To Destroy Hitlerism DETROIT, Nov. 16-(?)-CfO Pres- ident Philip Murray asserted today Hitlerism must be destroyed and de- clared "the CIO offers its complete support to President Roosevelt's pol- icy of furnishing all possible economic and material aid to Great Britain,. the Soviet Union and China." Murray, in his repoit to the annual CIO convention, set forth: "Today labor has become more deeply appreciative of the dangers to democracy through Hitler's aim of world conquest. It is clear to labor that a single task looms ahead-the defeat of this menace to humanity. Hitlerism must be defeated and de- stroyed. Democracy can survive ini no other way." Murray said Mr. Rosevelt was car- rying out'a foreig policy formulated through the joint action of the execu- tive and legislative branches of the government, and "has sought to pro- tect our national interests and tl'e cause of democracy." He added: "Toward this end the CIO offers its complete support to President Roose- velt's policy of furnishing through our government all possible economic and material aid to Great Britain, the Soviet Union and China, which are the nations now carrying on the struggle to rid the world of Nazism, the enemy of mankind." Murray also reported the CIO op- poses "any tie between wages and the cost of living," and "rejects the idea of forced saving plans which affect wages." Literary Magazine To :Be Supplement In Sunday's Daily After considerable delay, readers will receive the first issue of Perspec- tives, campus literary magazine, as a supplement to tomorrow's Daily. The reasons for this postponement of publication will be explained by the editors in a special note to the magazine's readers. Selected f9r primary position in the magazine is "Certain Hidden Things," a short story by Jay Mc- Cormick, '42. McCormick here pre- sents. the very real experiences of a+ small child at the death of his Marine Unit Is Removed From China Out To Boost All-American Stock Wolverines, Lions Will Tangle Today In Eastern Contest Nippon New More Cabinet Approves War Fund; Calls Men To Service Kurusn To Attempt Final Peace Effort (By The Associated Press) Swiftly following up his neutraility revision victory in the House, Presi-j dent Roosevelt announced today a decision to withdraw the token forcej of 970 American marines in China, thus leaving the protection of Ameri- can interests in that section of the world to the Asiatic Fleet. The disclosure, at the President's press conference, was made even as special Japanese envoy Saburo Kur- usu arrived in this country for what appeared to be one more-and pos- sibly the last--joint effort to discover a formula for peace in the Pacific. Good Military Strategy Indications were that they were withdrawn according to good military, strategy, for their own .rotection in event of hostilities. Those who held this view con- tended the timing of the announce- ment in relation to the House vote on neutrality yesterday and the ar- rival of Kurusu in San Francisco this morning on a trans-Pacific plane furnished its own significance. They believed the United States was show- ing Japan that its decks ere cleared for action in case hostilities should break out. Japanese War Fund Meanwhile word came from Tokyo1 that the Japanese Cabinet has ap- proved for submission to the special session of Parliament today an extra- ordinary war fund of 3,800,000,000 yen (nominally $874,000,000) and a general account appropriation of 510,000,000 yen ($117,300,000). The War Office announced a drastic re- vision of conscription regulations ren-,J dering scores of thousands of hitherto exempt men liable to early summons1 to the colors. Another factor in the crisis is the dispute between Japan and Russia over the sinking of the Japanese liner. Kehi Maru in the Sea of Japan on Nov. 5, attributed by Japanese to collision with a mine broken away from the Vladivostok fields. Informed sources said Russia re- plied only today to Japan's urgent protest and they understood Russia rejected all major Japanese claims.. Erika Mann Will Speak To AAUW Here Today Erika Mann, one of the leading representatives of former German culture, will lecture on "Who Has Youth, Has The Future" at 3 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. She will speak before the members and guests of the Ann Arbor-Ypsi- lanti branch of the American Associ- ation of University Women, and will remain for tea in the Ethel Fountain Elussey lounge. Michigan Favored 4-1 Against Columbia As Westfall Seeks All-American Honor; Intersectional Record To Be Defended By ART HILL (Special To The Daily) NEW YORK, Nov. 14.-At exactly 2 p.m. tomorrow afternoon, the power- ful Michigan football machine which Fritz Crisler has brought out of the Midwest to this biggest of big cities will, for the 22nd time in 15 years, risk one of the greatesbintersectional records ever compiled. For tomorrow is the day when Crisler's Wolverines will move out onto the Baker Field gridiron to have at the proud Lions of Columbia, coached by Lou Little and possessed of one of the trickiest offenses in the nation. No power-packed band of gridiron behemoths is this Columbia outfit. Presenting a line which averages just 185 pounds per man and a line-smash- Michigan's}great captain and fullback, Bob Westfall, will be seeking All-American honors in today's Columbia clash in New York. The game will be Westfalks only chance of the year to appear before the Eastern experts, and will have a large say in determining whether or not he will win the coveted All-American post., Russians Claim Full Offensive Driving Nazis From Moscow '_____ ( Germans Admit Advance Slow On Soviet Capital; Southern Attack Broken (By The Associated Press) The Russians claimed last night to be slowly driving the Germans befo're them everywhere on the Moscow front, and in the Far South it was obvious that the invader was making at most only a creeping progress against a terrible Red resistance. It was, by all signs, the best day for Soviet arms in many a week, for the Germans themselves in effect ack- nowledged that everywhere they were struggling bitterly @not for miles but for mere yard by yard. Series Of Victories The greatest of a series of victories 'reported by the Soviet on the Central Front was about Tula, 100 miles to the south of Moscow, where it was said that after two weeks of battle a major "German offensive that in- volved 15 consecutive tank attacks had been broken. "The Germans were here yester- day," said an official account. "To- day, only their corpses are here." Invader Driven Back In every other major sector about Moscow the Russian story was simi- lar: At Kalinin, 95 miles above the capital, 20 Soviet villages were re- captured within a 24-hour period. At Maloyaroslavets, 65 miles southwest of Moscow, the last detachments ,of the invader driven from the east bank of the'Nara River. Russian information as to the south was not so detailed-and not quite so confident in tone-but it was claimed that before Rostov, on the Don River, the northern gateway to the Caucasus, an elite Nazi division had been routed. As to the Crimea, it was said that Russian reinforcements still were moving up. / Of the Central Front, the Germans acknowledged Russian counter-at- tacks "in considerable force," and re- ported that the initiative was pass- ing back and forth between the two groups of armies. The smashing of 58 Russian casemates and the cap- ture of a number $of villages was claimed, but the general tone of Ber- lin's accounts of this theater con- ceded what was not admitted direct- ly: That matters were not going too well for German arms. Going Gets Tough In the Crimeano advance of on- sequence was claimed by the Ger- mans. They described the approaches to both Sevastopol and Kerch--the one the southwestern Crimea Red naval base and the other a bridge- head to theCaucasus--aq hard and bitter roads to travel. Fireside Group Is Addressed By Speckhard ing fullback who scales just 163 soak- ing wet, it cannot depend on its abil- ity to bowl over opposing tacklers. But the elfin proportions of the men who play football for him have failed to phase Lou Little. For Lou has long been famed for his ability to make big ones out of little6ones, big at least as regards their ability to win football games. Columbia has always had small squads, usually composed of small men, and the season of 1941 is no exception Lions Have Won Only Three Since they opened their schedule against Brown University, some seven weeks back, the Lions have compiled a record of three wins and three losses, not overly impressive, it is true, but still not bad when you consider that midget line. Never forget, either, that, of the three games Columbia has dropped, only one has been by anything resembling an impressive margin. A strong Army aggregation took Lou Little's club into camp by a 13-0 score but almost equally power- ful Georgia and Pennsylvania had to be satisfied with 7-3. and 19-16 wins over the Lions. On the credit side of the ledger, Columbia can point to a 13-6 win over Brown, ,a 730 victory against Cornell and a complete submergence of Princeton, 21-0. - Michigan Heavily Favored sPearson,.Alen Release Stor Of Naval Fight U.S. Ships Battle German Mosquito Boat Carrier Off Iceland Coast (Editor's Note: On the grounds that it had entered into an agreement with Secretary Knbx not to handle naval ' news unless officially released by the Navy Department, the syndicate which handles the "Merry-Go-Round" refused to send out the following story. The Daily received it from authors Pearson and Allen themselves, with the comment: "This story comes from an official source and in our opinion does not revealmilitary information t of a nature useful to an enemy.") Former Britain Aid F Editor De Expects Dr Invasion Glares Full Try They're In The Opera Now: Martinelli And Piuza To Appear In Fourth Choral Union Concert ('Oi) Giovanni Martinelli almost entered the cabinet-making business and Ezib Pinza just missed being a bicycle- rider, but they're with the Metropoli- tan Opera now and they always sing in packed concert halls. The tenor and the basso will appear in a joint recital at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday on the Hill Auditorium stage. It will be the fourth concert in the 63rd annual Choral Union Series sponsored by the University Musical Society. A limited number of tickets to the single performance yet remain and can be purchased at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. With Fritz Kitzinger at the piano, Martinelli will open the program, singing the following selections: An die Musik, by Schubert; Die Main- acht, by Brahms; and Ch'ella mi creda, from "Girl of the Golden West," by Puccini. Britain feels that the United States should be more clean-cut about what it is doing, stated Robert Speckhard, former Daily editorial director, in his "Report on England" yesterday at Hillel Foundation's Fireside Dis- cussion Group. England's feeling is that "they must have unqualified aid from the United States before they go on the continent," he continued. Although the British feel certain of ultimate victory, invasion attempts must be forestalled until more strength is gathered were the common senti- ments in the warring nation, he said. The feeling of a united effort is everywhere prevalent, but the British have surrendered little of their dem- ocracy in the war effort, he remarked. The lack of reticence about criti- cizing the government while recog- nizing the necessity of common ef- fort was found especially striking. Speckhard travelled to England in a Norwegian vessel convoyed with some 40 others by British warships to the Port of Liverpool. He de- scribed at length the actual func- tioning of the convoy and the high- spiritedness of the sailors. Press Censorship DeploredBy SDX NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 14.-P)-By unanimous vote, delegates to the an- nual convention of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, today adopted a resolution criticizing "certain government departments" for withholding important informa- This record, of co rse, cannot stand comparison with that of the Wol- verines who, playing in a tougher sec- tor, have comne up with five victories in six attempts; losing only to Minne- sota which ranks as the nation's number one team today. With this in mind, it is only logical that the Broadway betting agencies have established Michigan as a 4-1 favorite to cop tomorrow's intersec- tional encounter. And, if the bettor is looking for points, the lads with the checked coats and bow ties will give 13 of them if you care to bet on Columbia. In other words, the Wol- verines are favored by two touch- downs. Similar Offenses Not the least of the prospects in store for spectators who witness to- morrow's clash is that of watching two teams with surprisingly similar offensive set-ups. Although Michigan has tended to depend more and more on power play as the season has pro- gressed, they are still very reliant on deception, much as is the Lion aggre- gation. In addition, both teams employ a man in motion on most plays, both start the majority of their plays from a spinner and, lastly,- both operate almost exclusively from a single wingback formation' with an unbal- anced line. Being forced to rely more on trick- ery than does Fritz Crisler, Lou Little has come up with what many observ- (Continued on Page 3) It's Man Vs. Owl In Fight To Find Which Is Wiser A Barred Owl proved a little too wise for one forestry student yester- day when Waldemere Bejnar, '43, fell 30 feet from a giant elm tree west bf the Main Library in an attempt to recapture the escaped bird. Bejnar, who miraculously escaped injury, good.naturedly described his unsuccessful quest as "good experi- ence." The speedy recovery of the owl r a mva ftaf u Pnannco+ fr ifat. is By DREW PEAWSON and ROBERT S. ALIEN The U.S. Navy has had a big battle with Nazi surface and submarine raiders off the coast of Iceland and off the Norwegian approaches to the Russian Arctic ports. The fight took place' early this week .and the Nazis definitely came off second best. The Navy either sank or captured ao new type of German war vessel, a mosquito boat carrier. Operating like an airplane carrier, this ship carried a flotilla of small, speedy tor- pedo launches which were scoring the vital shipping lanes around Iceland. The carrier was guarded by a num- ber of U-boats, which attacked our naval ships when they went after the :arrier. Some of the U-boats were either sunk or captured in the en- gagement. What losses, if any, the Navy sus- tained are hot yet known as only the barest details of the battle are so far available. However, it can be defin- itely stated, that the Nazis, were soundly licked. Gargoyle Sale To Be Tuesda Publication Will Feature "The Worm Turns' Once again the worm turns, this time in Gargoyle's Nfovember issue, which will be released Tuesday for sale on campus and in the local book- stores and newsstands. Preparation for the second semes- ter's program and studying for finals in the not too dim and distant future have been simplified for students through "The Worm Turns," or, "Things Your Catalogue Never Told You," in Michigan's magazine of cam- pus life. Garg looks deep into the faculty and presents them as they really are and as they grade. Defying possibilities of being forc- ibly ejected from the University, Garg editors are giving the lowdown on the classes of certain professors. It's really done in the spirit of good fun, though, for Garg truly likes all the faculty. Movies Will Be Shown Of Ilhini-Michigan Game Full length movies of the Illinois- Michigan game will be shown at 7:30 m GIOVANNI MARTINELLI