Jr 5k ig tan :43 t Editorial Cloudy, Colder I Anti- Strike Legislation Needed .. I VOL. LI. No. 51 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS 4 i House Action Bans Control Of All Wages BrYHuoe Vote Administration Bill Issues Await Final Settlement; Serious Questions Arise Banking Committee May Make Study WASHINGTON, Nov. 26-()-By the decisive vote of 218 to 63, the House today rejected the proposal that a rigid limit be imposed upon all wages and prices. With ;that done, it pushed on to is- sues presented by the administration bill to establish ceilings for the prices of selected commodities. There was an increasing demand thatbthe legis- iation be sent back to the banking committee for additional study. Ahead lay decisions on several prickly questions, on all of which most of the political or regional blocs customary to the House were widely split. The issues awaiting settlement included: Regulating the prices of farm com- modities. Licensing $Sstem Establishing a licensing system. for dealers selling commodities to be' regulated. Granting the government authority to stabilize prices by large-scale buy- ing or selling of commodities. Giving. broad powers of adminis- tration to the present price control office headed by Leon Henderson. If the licensing provision is in- cluded, Rep:MVartin (Rep.-Mass.), the Republican leader, said there would be virtually solid Republican senti- ment for recommitting the bill. Rep. Dies (Dem.-Tex.), chairman of the Committee on Un-Americanl Activities, said on the floor that. he would vote to recommit the measure If it contains its present broad dele- gation of power to Henderson. He3 has said repeatedly that HendersonE and his associates had records of af- filiation with Communist organiza- tions. Introduced By Qore The over-all price ceiling proposal was presented by 'Rep. Gore (Dem.- Tenn.), who had already fought the issue out and been defeated in thec House Banking Committee. His pro-; posal embodied the ideas of Bernard; M. Baruch, chairman of the old War; Industries Board., It would have frozen rents, pricesi andtwages at their level of this week for the duration of the emergency, ex- cept that agricultural prices could not be fixed until they reached parity. In behalf of his proposal, Gore said the administration bill was a "weak- kneed, piece - meal, half-hearted" measure which might easily bring on inflation instead of preventing it. Depth Charges.s Kill U.S._Salors Crew Says Cause Of Deaths Was ShipExplosive NEW YORK, Nov. 26-(PA)-Sur- vivors from the torpedoed American destroyer Reuben James believe thatj some of the 100 men lst with the ship died from the explosion of the vessel's own depth charges.' Men clinging to life rafts in the icy waters on the night of Oct. 31 were torn to pieces by their own ex- plosives going off below them, surviv- ors related. At his press conference in Wash- ington, Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox said that there were two depth charge exposions, although "we don't know with what effect."1 Survivors asserted that the depth charges (metal cans containing high explosives) had been set to explode at 50 and 100-foot depths and that at least two went off as the ship sank to those levels. They said safety catches on the charges had not been locked because the ship was in a danger area 'near Iceland. Knox said that the charges were3 normally carried ready for automatic explosion while in a perilous zone. Capetown Clipper Ends Epic-Making Journey NEW YORK, Nov. 26--(P)-Com- pleting an epic 19,961-mile route- proving flight that linked three conti- Lost Bicycles Close In On Local Police Force Bicycles have a habit of growing on a person-even if hk wears a blue coat. Chief of Police Sherman T. Morten- son has watched his men bring in the lost or stolen bikes for several months now and the assorted collection to date totals approximately twenty. If many more are picked up, the police department will have to look for new storage space or else sell the bikes at public auction. So the Chief is appealing to all Uni- versity students who have somehow parted with their bicycles during the past two months to reduce the stock on hand. The Chief says, "Come on down to police headquarters and have a look." Missing bicycles now in the hands of police can be identified by their city license tags or serial numbers. Prof*' Worrell Will Present Russel Lecture Scholar Receives Honor For Outstanding Work On Eastern Languages William Hoyt Worrell, professor of semitics and an authority on Near Eastern languages, will be the Henry Russel Lecturer for 1941-42. Author of six books and editor of a seventh which is now on the press, Worrell has established a national reputation in his field. He has tra- veled extensively in the Near East and in collaboration with a young Austrian scholar, Werner Vycichl, has discovered an |gyptian community in which many words have been; pre- served. Professor Worrell, a graduate of the University, has been a member of the faculty since 1925. Prior. to that time he was diretor of the American School of Oriental Languages in Jerusalem. . In recognition of his scholarship he has served as president of the West- ern Branch of the American Oriental Society, of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters and of the Research Club of the University. He was also made a fellow in the Ameri- can Academy of Arts and Science in 1939. Awarded annually to the member of the faculty who has done the most scholarly work throughout the school year, the lectureship was made pos- sible by a bequest to the University in 1920 by Henry Russel. An award is also given for distinguished work among the younger faculty members. Hoosier Hammer Will Take To Air Tom Harmon and his draft board can stop checking signals. The Wol- verine hero of day before yesterday has been approved for the Army Air Corps, and will probably be in uni- form before he gets the New Year's confetti out of his hair. The Gary gridder certainly can't be very surprised about the way the whole thing turned out; in his tour around the lettuce league last fall he predicted that come the new year he'd be taking to the air for Uncle Sam. Thomas Dudley will follow his friend and fellow All-American, Ed Frutig, into the service. Bill Drafted To Eliminate Labor Tie-Up Mediation Board Powers To Be Revised Greatly By New Anti-Strike Act Chairman's Action Is Termed 'Drastic' - BULLETIN- WASHINGTON, Nov. 26-(A01 -The Hlouse Judiciary Conit- tee in an extraordinary meeting tonight decided to recommend legislation of its own to control defense strikes unless the labor committee approved a bill "with enough teeth in it." (By The Associated Press) :Legislative machinery to end de- fense sthikes turned in the capital yesterday while in New York City the three-man arbitration board in the captive coal mine dispute planned to remain in continuous session until it reached a settlement. Acting Chairman Ramspeck (Demr' Ga.) of the House labor committee disclosed the tentative provisions of his "drastic" measure which may reach the chamber tomorrow, while on the other side of the Capitol. The Ramspeek measure, decided upon after a White House conference, would recreate the National Defense Mediation Board which would act after collective bargaining or other conciliation had failed. If either side refused to participate in board media- tion proceedings, the President could create an emergency arbitration board representing the public to make recommendations in 30 days. If labor rejected the board recom- mendations, it would be deprived for six months of rights under the Na- tional Labor Relations Act and the Norris-LaGuardia Act, which limits the right of Federal courts to issue in junctions in labor disputes. If management rejected the rec- ommendations, the Chief Executive would be authorized, in his discre- tion, to take over the plant and oper- ate it on behalf of the government. The bill also would provide a 60-day cooling off period, during the board's work. Russian Films Will Be Shown Prokofiev Music Provides Program's Background Fierce battles between the Germans and the Russians in the 13th century with an implied parallel to the pres- ent conflict raging on the Eastern front-are the outstanding action shots of the film "Alexander Nevsky," which opens at 8:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The picture is enhanced by the music of Prokofiev, which provides a background in which sound and im- age blend remarkably well. Also on the program, sponsored by the Ann Arbor Committee for Medical aid to Russia, are two other films-a documentary on "Soviet Oil in the Caucasus" and "Golden Mountains" featuring Shostakovitch, world fam- ous composer who is now at work on his seventh symphony in Leningrad. Tickets are available during the day at the League and at the Rackham 'Building after 7:30 p.m. Britain's Libyan Forces Combine For New Drive North Of Tobruk; Nazis Aim At Circling Of Moscow TOLMETA '"" R B /?CE '~TOBRUK:E::.'j' BUT:r E:- LI BY AI A.AEN ": BI ' Si '-I-,