Weather little Change In Temperature L Bk iau j1aiItg Editorial Conversation At A Bar . . VOL. LII. No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1941 Z-SZS PRICE FIVE CENTS FDR Believed To Be Seeking Neutrality Act Am endments President May Authorize Merchant Ship Arming, ShipmentsTo Canada Provisions To Hold In Combat Zones WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.-(AP)- President Roosevelt was reported re- liably today to b considering a re- quest tCongress for modifying of the Neutrality Act to permit, arming American merchant ships and their use in carrying war supplies to Can- adian ports from which they now are barred. Although the President told his press conference no final decision had been reahed, informed sources said it was not likely any attempt would be made at this time to repeal the Act's provisions prohibiting United States vessels from entering ports in European combat zones. Several Congressional leaders, in- dluding Chairman Connally (Dem.- Tex.) of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, have advocated the lat- ter course, but Mr. Roosevelt was represented as preferring to seek less controversial changes in the law now. Word the President might ask for expansion of the legal shipping areas, without seeking abolition of the com- bat zones he has fixed by proclam- ation, came as a surprise to most of his lieutenants. The Neutrality Act now specifically prohibits American ships from car- rying goods to belligerents in an area bounded on- the south by latitude 35 north and on the west by longitude 66 west. Thus this nation's merchant vessels are cut off from entering certain Canadian Ports, notably Hali- fax. Lesltve ateiss were reported to haveinformed the president he could obtain authority to arm mer- chant vessels with relatively little controversy, if they were to be oper- ated only in detense waters." New Tax Bill Takes Efft ect Today WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.-)-- Today was like the day before Christ- mas in the nation's retail stores, Ap- parently,' millions of people rushed to buy goods'before sweepng new taxes took effect at midnight. At that hour all of the excise taxes contained in the recently-enacted revenue bill became effective, except for the increased tax on night clubs. Just so nobody would leave a party when it was warming up, the Treas- ury postponed the time for putting this levy into effect until 10 a.m. Wednesday. (Of course the new income taxes won't have to be paid until next March 15.) The big rush today was on liquor, furs, jewelry, toilet preparations and automobile tires and tubes. On furs, jewelry and toilet preparations, the new tax-10 per cent of retail price- must be paid by the retailer, and prices were sure to go up tomorrow. The liquor taxes are usually paid by manufacturers, but a special com- pensating "floor" tax equivalent to the increase on these items was levied against supplies already in the hand of retailers and other sellers so that prices of these goods 'were also due for a quick jump. All the other mer- chandise taxes will be collected from manufacturers; therefore many of these prices may not rise until new merchandise. actually manufactured after today reaches retail outlets. Ruthven Praises Student Advisers For Work Done $1,000 Plus Radio Spot Is Offered Singing Coed v / V { Y } 1 I t i + VIVIEN . . . Radio Singer to Judge Coed Singers Any Michigan Girl - Except Torch Singers -May Enter Nationwide Radio Talent Search Here Friday A Free Press Observes Its Newspaper Week PHOENIX, Ariz., Sept. 30.-(')- Page one of Wednesday's Arizona Republic is blank except for column rules and this brief box: "On this page appears all of the news of the world you could read this morning if it were not for the daily newspaper. "This is all the news you would be able to- read if the daily newspaper were not uncensored, unfettered, in free America." Page two also is blank as the newspaper inaugurates observance of newspaper week. Britain's Home Position Better, P stoBChurchill Says, Germany May Still Strike On Three Battle Fronts, Prime Minister Reports 'Daffy' Dodgers, Yankees Clash In Opening Game, I Series Todayv of Worl i , . ... Yankee hurler .. . . . . Dodger Slugger ' r. t t t t t t Davis Probably Will Start On Mound For Brooklyn Against 'Red'_Ruffing 70,000 Expected To Pack Stadium (By The Associated Press) Curt Davis, plim skder-ball specialist of the Brooklyn Dodgers, sprang up tcday as the probable surprise starter against Charley (Red) Ruffing of the New York Yankees in today's open- ing game of the World Series. A forecast of showers threatened the initial contest of baseball's annual classic, but fans began gathering from all over the country today and refused to be discouraged at the outlook. A crowd of 70,000 was expected to pack big Yankee stadium to capacity before game time at 1:30 p.m., E.S.T. The chief topic of conversation in the crowded hotel lobbies where the baseball notables and fans congre- gated tonight was the prospect of the Dodgers withholding their ace, John Whitlow Wyatt, from the opening tussle, and leading off with Davis. No Light From Durocher Manager Leo Durocher allowed the mystery to continue and there was good reason to believe some super- strategy had been mapped out for Wanted: A Michigan coed with a real, genuine singing voice who wants to win $1,000. Torch singers need not apply. See Prof. Arthur Hackett at the School of Music. That's the news that's emanating from the music school today. The Hour of Charm, a Sunday night radio show featuring an all- girl orchestra, is looking for new vocalists and If a Michigan coed fills the ticket by her trial appearances on the program she will receive an award of $1,000 and the University will be endowed with a $4,000 four, year scholarship for deserving musi- cal students. Registration for the contest will begin Friday at the music school offices. Applicants need not be en- rolled in the muisic school. Preliminary auditions will cull the contestants down to ten who will sing at the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre on Oct. 15 in final eliminations to be judged by the music school and Police Warn Against Theft Chief Requests Fraternities To Lock All Entrances Chief of Police Sherman H. Mor- tonsen again issued both an appeal and a warning to fraternities and sororities to lock their doors and win- dows at night to prevent a recur- rence of the series of robberies which took place last year. Several houses were robbed during the last semester, most of them tak- ing place during the night, A few, however, took place during the day and also during the dinner hour, when all the members were gathered in the dining-rooms. Phief Mortonsen suggested that all members of fraternities be required to carry' keys to their houses, so that doors may always be locked at night. What happens, he explained, is that doors are left open because some- body forgets their key and doesn't want to ring the bell late at night. So the door is left unlocked, but too many times the last person in forgets to lock it when he comes in. Unless doors and windows are locked every night, the Chief said, robberies of fraternities will continue, and probably increase. Mortonsen also suggested that strangers seen-loitering around fra- ternity houses should be reported to the police at once. If this is done, the police will be able to check on their business and find out the rea- sons for their presence around fra- ternity houses. Detroit Auto Strikers Ordered Back On Job DETROIT, Sept. 30.-(P1-Work- ers in Dodge, Briggs and Plymouth plants were ordered back to their jobs tomorrow after unauthorized Vivien, the present vocalist of the all-girl orchestra. Michigan's winner will appear on the Hour of Charm show on Sun- day, Nov. 16. For this she will re- ceive $100 whether or not she emerges as one of the three finalists in the competition with entrants from the ten other schools in whicht the talent search is being conducted. Entrants in the national auditions will be given a list of 12 musical num- bers from which to make, their selec- tions. The song titles and full in- formation may' be secured at the School of Mdsic Friday. .Russia A dmits Army "Retreat InDo net Basin MOSCOW, Oct. 1. -()- The Russians acknowledged for the first time today a Red Army retreat into the rich Donet Basin after aban- doning Poltava, but dispatchesafrom the north claimed waves of cheering Red infaptrymen had won back a city on the approaches to Leningrad and entrenched themselves in a new, ad- vance line before the besieged metro- polis. The German High Command had announced the capture of Poltava, 80 miles southwest of the chief Donet industrial city of Karkov, on Sept. 19 along with that, of Kiev, but today's Russian communique indicated the last portions of the town were aban- doned only Tuesday. Poltava is some 180 miles south- east of Kiev and in the path of Ger- man forces which were claimed to have trapped the major part of Mar- shal Semeon Budyenny's Ukraine de- fenders. Budyenny's forces apparently still remained intact and were making{an orderly withdrawal to establish new lines for the defense of the Donet area, which holds vast Soviet indus- tries. Russian accounts of the operations on the north said Red forces regained the city before Leningrad after a 12-hour assault by Soviet tanks and infantrymen, thus measurably eas- ing .the pressure on that second city of the Soviet Union. Berlin Reports Close Skirmishes Near Leningrad (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Sept. 30.-Winston! Churchill described Britain's home position today as enormously im-j proved, with its shipping losses cutl two-thirds in the last three months, but warned that in every arm save the air Hitler still held the initiative and could strike simultaneously and with great power in three fresh theaters if he chose.I In a war review before Parliament through which ran at once a re- strained exultance at the course of the battle of the Atlantic and a clear feel- ing of concern at the situation in Rus- sia, the Prime Minister said plainly that only the greatest of sacrifices by , the British people and a tremendous upsurge of production in the United States could keep the Red armies in- definitely in the field. He took notice of the agitation in some quarters that Britain should in- vade the continent to take some of the pressure off Russia. "I should be guilty of no indis- cretion," he said, "if I admitted that these questions have several times occurred to those responsible for the conduct of the war." "We don't know," said the Prime Minister, "how far he will attempt to penetrate the vast lands of Soviet# Russia in the face of the valiant Russian defenses, or how long his people will endure their own tre- mendous losses; or, again, whether he will decide to stand on the defen- sive and exploit the territory of im- mense value which he has conquered." Eastern Gas Supplies Down, Institute Reports NEW YORK, Sept. 30.-P)--Gas- cline supplies of the Eastern states dropped 229,000 barrels in the week ended Sept. 27 to a total of 22,133,000 barrels, the American Petroleum In- stitute reported today. The nation's total supply of fin-, ished and unfinished gasoline in- creased 804,000 barrels, the Institute said. Daily average crude oil production was 14,299 barrels under last week's record at 4,060,000 barrels, compared with a 3,799,950 a year earlier. RED RUFFING Medical Alumni Will Assemble At Triennial Reunion Tomorrow PETE REISER Four thousandtalumni of the Med- ical School and former staff mem- bers of the University Hospital are expected to convine here tomorrow for the second triennial reunion of medical alumni. Advance registration will open at 2 p.m. today in the Rackham Build- ing, and .will be followed by visits about the campus and the Univer- sity Hospital. The opening session of the three- day conferences will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall, and will begin with a lec- ture on "The Determination of the Circulating Thyroid Hormone," by Dr. George M., Curtis, professor of surgery at the Ohio State University College of Medicine, and a graduate of the University. Other lectures in tomorrow's ses- sion will cover such phases of medi- cine as malaria, syphilis therapy, bacterial chemotherapy and the use of sulfathiazole in acute and chronic osteomyelitis. A round table discussion on chemo- therapy will be the main event of tomorrow's luncheon session, to be held at 12:15 p.m. at the Union. This session will be followed by further Union Staff To Hold Tryout Meeting Today The Michigan Union undergradu- ate staff will hold a special tryout meeting for all eligible sophomores and second-semester freshmen at 4 p.m. today in Union Room 302. Members of the executive staff will explain the functions and services of the Union. Short talks by Robert Sibley, president, and Jack Grady, secretary, are scheduled. addresses by prominent alumni and facultymen. Other features of the reunion will include a party at the Washtenaw Country Club, a banquet in the Union 33allroom, and the Michigan-Iowa football game Saturday afternoon. Saturday morning the entire Med- ical School will hold a convocation in the Rackham Lecture Hall, at which time an address will be given by Dr. Warren Taylor Vaughan, di- rector of the Vaughan-Graham Clin- ic in Richmond, Va. Easing Of Draft Steadies Fallgin TU' Enrollment; Graduate Science Students Will Receive Deferments Now, Hopkins Declares A new list of occupational defer- ments issued by the state headquart- ers for selective service is one reason for the unexpectedly-small decrease in University enrollment, according to Prof. Louis Hopkins, chairman of the University Committee on National Defense., First to be affected by the addi- tional deferments are students pre- paring for medical, dental, veterinary and osteopathy work. The state headquarters, recognizing a shortage in these professions, has authorized a six-month deferment for students accepted in an approved graduate school. This shortage has also caused an- other new provision which grants commissions in the Medical Adminis- trative Corps Reserve to junior and senior medical students in Grade A professional schools. The second group to "come under recent student draft deferments, en- gineering and chemistry students do- ing above average work are consid- ered Class II-B if they are sopho- mores or juniors. - Seniors will be allowed to finish. In non-shortage professions, such as law and business administration, the state headquarters recommends that any senior doing acceptable work be allowed to graduate. NEW YORK, Sept. 30. -()- Broadcasting of the World Series under an exclusive agreement will start on the MBS network with the opening game Wednesday and con- tinue through the final game. Air time is scheduled for 1:15 p.m. (EST) and in addition to an aug- mented station list expected to touch 300, short wave relays via Schenectady, N.Y., and Boston have been arranged. Red Barber, Bob Elson and Bill Corum will an- imounee. Brooklyn's pitching staff during the Series. Davis has a low-breaking curve that almost everybody expects to torment the Yankees, whom he shut out once last spring in an exhibition game. Next to Wyatt he is conceded to have the best chance of any Brooklyn pitcher to beat the powerful cham- pions of the American League. The reasons for starting with him are two-fold. Because he has a chance to hand- cuff the Yanks, Durocher would like to use him 'twice during the series if the struggle goes to six or seven games. He is 35 years old and thin as the fence posts of his native Miss- ouri. He has to have plenty of rest between games and the best way to give him a lot of rest is to use him in the opening game. Another Factor The other factor influencing a de- cision in favor of Davis, who won 13 games and lost seven in the Na- tional League season, relates to Wy- att. The tall, bald Georgian, winner of 22 games against 10 losses, can work on two days rest if necessary. He also is a good righthanded hitter as well as pitcher. The Dodgers hale- a hunch that Manager Joe McCar- thy's mound selection for the second game will be Lefty Marius Russo, be- cause southpaws were used to some advantage against the Dodgers during their long pennant fight. Durocher did not attend the Dodg- ers' workout today because of a meet- ing called by Commissioner, Kenesaw M. Landis to discuss playing rules with the managers and umpires. . Dressen Gives Hint Coach Charles Dressen, who was in, charge of the practice, asserted he could not say who would go for the Dodgers, but gave a cryptic hint: "I am pretty sure Leo has made up his mind and it may be a surprise to some people. Sometimes it is a good idea not to play your strength against the other fellow's strength." This strategy would bring up Kirby Higbe, another 22-game winner with a blazing fast ball, for the third game (Continued on Page 3) Army Deserts Privates- And AreThey Happy! WEST HARTFORD, Conn., Sept. 30.-(P)-Two privates, left behind by a convoy when their truck broke Get Them While They're Cheap! Threat Of Federal Tax Speeds ISellout Of Choral Union Tickets A last-minute rush to beat the Oct. 1 deadline-the date on which the 10% Federal tax goes into effect-was reported yesterday by Dr. Charles A. Sink, President of -the University Nearly one-third of the under-I graduates of the University are1 new members of the student body. May 'I express the deep apprecia- tion of the administrative authori- ties for the achievements of the Orientation student workers, who, at considerable personal sacrifice, returned early to Ann Arbor to assist these 4ew students in the task of enrolling in the University and becoming acquainted with the (By TheAssociated Press) 1 BERLIN, Sept. 30.-Skirmishes at close quarters in the suburbs of Len- ingrad and! hand-to-hand combats with bayonets in the far south were reported by German dispatches to- night as Adolf Hitler's armies re- signed themselves to the necessity of wintering on the Russian front. The military spokesman said there would be little news from the front for the "next few days" for "certain reasons" which he did not disclose. packed for each of the ten concerts,'' Dr. Sink stated. From the opening concert on Oct. 22, when Grace Moore, Metropolitan' Opera star, makes her Ann Arbor debut to the concluding program by Vronsky and Babin, famed duo-piano team, on March 3, this year's Choral Union Series will feature the out- standing artists in the musical world. Following Miss Moore on the pro- gram, Emanuel Feuermann, out- standing violoncellist, will be heard Oct. 30. The Cleveland Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Artur Rodzinski, willrappear on the Hill Auditorium stage Nov. 9; and a joint recital by Giovanni Martinelli and Ezio Pinza, Metropolitan Opera stars, is scheduled for Nov. 18. Frederick Stock will bring his Chi- cago Orchestra to Hill Auditorium Nov. 30, followed by the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra, under the baton of Serge Koussevitzky, on Dec. 10. Afte. 0hricmac n~ratinn the hora Rudolf Hess Is Piqued At British Jail Life LONDON, Sept. 30.-VP)-Rudolph Hess, former deputy fuehrer of Ger- many, twice started hunger strikes in, his place of detention because he had been treated as a war prisoner rather than a "special envoy" since he made his sensational flight to Scotlandmlast May, the London Evening Star de- clared tonight. The Star, reporting that Hess was fbeing confined "within a very easy distance of London," said that he was contending that as an "envoy" he ... ...., ..: .:: ..:: ... ...........r v:::: :::.. t r , : ............ ., ...................................:"3