Weather Y G Lit igtU Showers And Cooler il4*tij Union Leaders .u VOL. LII. No. 5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1941 PRICE FIVE CENTS War Role Of Doctor To Be Told . Triennial Medical School Reunion Attracts 430 Doctors To Gathering Three-Day Meeting To Continue Today The role played by m~edicine in times of national emergency will be the principal subject for discussion in today's sessions of the second tri- ennial reunion for alumni of the Uni- versity Medical School. The three-day meeting, which opened yesterday, has attracted 430 doctors from al parts of the country, all Medical School alumni or former staff members of the University Hos- pifal. Treatment of wounds, with special reference to those produced by enemy action, will be discussed by Dr. Fred- erick A. Coller, chairman of the de- partment of surgery, at the morning session, which will begin at 9 a.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Dr, Joseph R. Darnall, Lieutenant Colonel in the Medical Corps of the United States Army, will speak on army medical service. Dr. Darnall was graduated from the Medical School in.1918, in which year he was appointed first lieutenant in the Medical Officers' Reserve Corps. Since 1938 heihas been engaged in '. work in the Office of 'the Surgeon General in Washington, D. C. Dr. Lewis To Talk "Enrichnrent and Restoration of Foods in RelationR to the National Health") will be considered by Dr. TTiward B. Lewis, chairman of the Department of Biological Chemistry of the Medical School. Addresses on other topics of med- icine will also be given during the day. Dr. Warren T. Vaughan, of Richmond, Va., director of : the Vaughan-Graham Clinic and a spec- ialist in allergic diseases, will speak on "The Allergic Factor in Certain Dermatoses." Dr. Vaughan, the. son of the late Dr.'Victor, C. Vaughan, former Dean of the Medical School, re eived the degree of Doctor of Med- icile here in 1916. Dr. Walter M. Simpson, graduate of the University Medical School in 1924 and Director of the Kettering Institute for Medical Research in Dayton, Ohio, will discuss the latest developments in the diagnosis and teatment of brucellosis. Dr. Sturgis Will Present Paper Dr. Cyrus C, Sturgis of the Simp- son Institute for Medical Research, will give a paper on "The Lesions of the Nervous System Associated with Pernicious' Anemia; the Present Day Major Therapeutic Problem of the Disease.". A round table discission on the early diagnosis of cancer will be the feature of the luncheon session, to be held at 12:15 p.m. in the Union. Leaders in the discussion will be Dr. Udo J. Wile, Dr. H. Marvin Pol- lard, Dr. Frederick A. Coller, Dr. Fred J. Hodges, Dr. Walter G. Mad- dock and Dr. James H. Maxwell, all of the Medical School faculty. -Germany, Britain To Make Exchnge Of War Wounded A BRITISH PORT, Oct. 2-(P)- This port on the southeast coast of England and its couptterpart some- where on the French coast of the English Channel will get' a glimpse of peace this week-end when Britain and Germany call off their war tem- porarily in a restricted zone and ex- change 1,500 prisoners each. It will be the first British-German 1 exchange of the war. The 3,000 prisoners who had not expected to see their homelands until the end of hostilities will cross the channel in two British hospital ships under a safe passage agreement pro- viding withdrawal of warplanes and warships from the zone. The British prisoners are coming into France from Germany by way of Switzerland, which agreed to act as a transport intermediary. Commons Will Debate LONDON, Oct. 2.-()-The House of Commons will debate-probably in secret-whether Britain can con- tinue to conscript its own manpower for an eventual continental offen- sive and still turn, out the arma- ments which both the British and their allies\ need, Prime MinisterI Red Communique Says Proper Steps Nazis Vacate Trenches' Broad Russian Counter-Offensive Movement Drives Germans From Approaches To Leningrad '4 -- - - '----- - - - Can Prevent Gas Shortae Findings Are Reaffirmed By Senate Group; Reveal Situation Is Improved Committee Shown Pelley Tabu ation Price Control Is Endorsed By Bankers, Group Hears Morgenthau Assert An 'All-Out' Tax. Bill Will BeNecessary Secretary Suggests Greater Savings 'Daffy' Team With Wyatt Dodgers (By The Aissociated Press) MOSCOW, Oct. 2.-German troops are being driven foot by foot from their trenches on the Leningrad ap- proaches in broadtRussian counter- offensive action and above the city Red marines have lanGei and en- trenched themselves in bitterly-con- tested positions, military dispatches reported tonight. Russian guns, it was added, si- lenced German long-range batteries which had been shelling one of Len- ingrad's districts. So'ath of the city, in the region of Staraya Russa, the official govern- ment organ Izvestia announced four settlements and a hilltop had been recaptured by Soviet forces and four German companies had been routed in a single action. The Germans, said front-line re- ports, are rushing up reinforcements in an effort to stem general Red cointer-attacks which already have greatly improved the Russian posi- tion all about the city. (The British wireless reported also the Russians had retaken Strelna, 20 miles west of Leningrad, and that 20 miles to the east of the city the Nazis had been thrown back to a depth of nearly 30 riles from Kolpino east- ward to Lake Ladoga.) On the central front Ru sian counter-attacks were reported rolling Students Asked - Not To Shred Display Cards Destruction Of Cardboard After Game Will Mean End Of Colorful Shows Two thousand Michigan students will, be seated in the card display sections at tomorrow's tilt with Iowa and if they rip the Maise and Blue pasteboards into little shreds like they've always done before at the game's end-well, then that's just the end. It'll be the end of all card displays for the season and probably "the dur- ation of the emergency,"' as the say- ing goes. Defense priorities in the paper in- dustry have made the cost of the reams of colered cardboard too dear for the Michigan Union's pocketbook, so Jim Edmunds, '43, who is running the thing says. 'Complicated markings and direc- tions have been stapled on the 2,000 seats in sections 25, 26, and 27 telling you just which way to hold your card to spell out "'M" or "Iowa" or what- ever the cheerleader tells you to do. According to- Edmunds who has been directing a crew of sophomores in putting the 25,000 markings on the pasteboards, tomorrow's show will be the biggest ever. The eight-display show will climax in a Maize and Blue "V" for victory enclosing an "M" for Michigan with the Morse version of "V"-three dots and a dash-thrown in. So just in case they don't shred the' cards when the going gets tough to- morrow, and you want to do it next week at the Pitt game, drop around to the Natural Science Auditorium, at 5 p.m. next Wednesday and receive your reserved seat tickets for the card display. on, and the official Communist news- paper Pravda declared Fled planes set fire to forests in some areas to drive the Germans out at the conclu- sion of a 17-day battle. The Dnieper River in the south, dispatches, from the official news agency Tass asserted, was carrying away thousands of German dead. Little news could be gleaned from Russian sources about the German assault on the tCrimean Peninsula, where Nazi glider troops are being employed. To Whip Yanks Hurls ictory Berlin Under Reports Russians Fierce Air Attack (By The Associated Press) BERLIN, Oct. 2.-The Russian southern armies, their backs to the Black and Azov Seas, were under violent and general German aerial 4attack tonight, said military dispat- ches from the front, and the Nazi lani offensive pressed on east on the Dnieper River. Red forces in one area were de- clared, however, to have made a1 powerful counter-attack across the lower Dnieper, but it was added that the Hungarians holding the line there had broken Russian efforts to form, a bridgehead. ' Because of the secrecy maintained by the German High Command it was impossible to tell precisely where the lines lay in the south, but on the basis of available reports it appeared the Germans and their allied stood considerable distances east 'of the Dnieper in some areas, while in others the Russians still were close to that river. 'Tihe air force and artillery, said reports from the northern front, dominated the siege for Leningrad. Smoke hung heavy over the city, it' was added, from fires set off by Ger- man shells. Nazi long-range guns also bombarded the naval bases of Kronstadt and Oranienbaum to the west. SChineseGroup Will Celebrate Double 10 Day "Double Ten Day", the 30th anni- versary of the Chinese Republic, will be celebrated by ,University Chinese students with the first formal dance of the school year from 9 to 1 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 10; in the ballroom of the League. Proceeds from the annual affair will be donated to the United China Relief Drive. The theme of the an- niversary celebration will stress the closer political and cultural rela- tions between United States and China as the Sino-Japanese war en- ters its fifth year. , The Chinese national holiday re- ceived the name of "Double Ten Day" because it comes on the tenth day of the tenth month. Decora- tions around the ballroom will be built on the "Double Ten" idea. Camarda Shot To Death NEW YORK, Oct. 2.-WP)-Emil Camarda, 56-year-old general vice- president of the Atlantic Coast Dis- trict of the 'AFL's International Longshoremen's. Association, was shot to death today in a building in the heart of the financial district. WASHINGTON, Oct. 2-(P)-A CHICAGO, Oct. 2. - UP) - The Senate committee, told the railroadsl American Bankers Association could begin hauling 200,000 barrels of pledged support of the defense pro- petroleum daily to the eastern sea- gram, endorsed price control and board within two weeks, unofficially recommended reduction of non-es- reaffirmed today its findings that a! sential government spending today threatened gasoline shortage could be after Treasury Secretary Morgenthau avoided if proper steps were taken. asserted an "all-out" tax bill would, Chairman Maloney (Dem.-Conn.) be needed next year. summed up members' views with the The organization's convention terse comment that he saw little commended the policy of seeking to change in the situation since the meet a large proportion of rearma- committee reported three weeks ago ment costs through taxation, but that there was no actual shortage maintained "the burden should be either in gasoline or transportation distributed equitably over the whole facilities. population" and held the "power of "It appears to me," he said, "that taxation must not be used to destroy what change, if any, has taken place enterprise." has been an improvement in the sit- Morgenthau told the bankers the uation. On the basis of information tax law which went into effect yes- made available to the committee, I terday was only a "good start," and feel that the shortage, always bar- that "the tax bill next year will have ring unforeseen 'events, should be to be a genuinely all-out bill, a gen- quickly overcome." uine levy upon all in accordance with s 1 T , L } a f r s Maloney said the foundation for this viewpoint, substantially the same as that expressed by Senators O'- Daniel (Dem.-Tex.), Burton (Rep.- Ohio) and Barbour (Rep.-N.J.), was laid in testimony given today that the railroads had 24,000available tank cars and that it would be "no problem"'to &load and ship from 800 to 900 daily, bearing 200,000 barrels of oil. Previouslypetroleum co-ordinator Ickes had testified that if something was riot done to overcome the 175,000 barrel daily excess of consumption over shipment to the seaboard area, there would not be enough oil to go around this winter. President John J. Pelley of the Association of American Railroads laid before the committee today a tabulation showing the location of '41,993 tank'ars to be empty at 8 o'clock last Saturday morning. Allowing for average daily load- ings, he said 3,595 of these, plus 993 other "empties" stored elsewhere, were available to take on fuel cargoes if the oil companies 'wanted to use them. Sta re Readied For Big Money Chance Of Lifetime Given Talented Michigan Coed Prof. Arthur Hackett of the School of Music will be in his offices at 3:30 p.m. today and Monday to re- ceive applications from Michigan co- eds for the $1,000 School of Music- Hour of Charm talent search. Preliminary auditions will be con- ducted at the School during the com- ing week so that 10 will be chosen to sing in the finals at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre on Oct. 15. A trip to New York for appearance on the Hour of Charm show, $1,000 and a $4,000 scholarship for the Uni- versity are in the offing for the win- ner. -Michigan entrants must sing one of the following 12 songs, Professor Hackett said. Carry Me Back to Old Virginny; In the Gloaming; When You and I Were Young, Maggie; Home on the Range; Believe Me, If All Those En- dearing Young Charms; The Things I Love; Lover Come Back to Me; Smoke Gets In Your Eyes; Remem- ber; Kiss Me Again; I Love You Truly; I'll Never Smile Again; Vilia from "The Merry Widow;" Deep in My Heart, and Only' a Rose. IThree Cornered 'Pants' Just Aren't In Style CLEVELAND, Oct. 2.-(P)-Listen, Mom, three-corner pants are old stuff. Folding a square cloth into a tri- angle and anchoring it centrally with a safety pin is completely out of date. The convention of the Nation- al Institute of Diaper Services makes it positive. There's the panel fold, the kite fold or the square, pinned at the hip with one or two pins. "But never," says George Garland of New York, secretary of the Institute's their ability to pay, if it is to raise the necessarytrevenue, checktinfla- tion and take the profit out of war." The treasury head said that, with the help of the new taxes recently enacted, "our tax structure will yield about $14,000,000,000 in revenue, but it still contains many inequalities and many omissions which will have to be corrected next year." Morgenthau suggested the bankers prepare the average citizen for greater taxation and greater savings. Approval was voted for a Congres- sional investigation of Federal ex- penditures with a recommendation that non-essential spending l e re- duced during the emergency. Lloyd Heads. New! Group On Defense Headed "by Dean Alice C. Lloyd, a new six-member committee on wo- man defense activity was announced yesterday by Prof. Louis Hopkins, chairrpan of the University Commit- tee on National Defense. With the purpose of ozganizing both extra-curricular and credit de- fense projects for University wo- men, the latest addition to Michi- gan's emergency set-up will stress public health, Red Cross, dietitic, and recreational trinirlg. Much of its program will be conducted through the women's physical education de- partment. Committee members named are Mrs. Byrl F. Bacher, assistant dean of women; Miss Adelia M. Beeuwkes, Health Service Dietitian; Dr. Mar- garet Bell, chairman of the women's physical education department and Miss Laurie E. Campbell, assistant professor of physical education. Miss Hazel G. Herringshaw of the public health nursing department and Miss Ethel A. McCormick, wo- men's social director, complete the committee. WHITLOW WYATT Prof. Hopkinis Explains New Defense Work' University Offers Course' In Codes, Construction Of Radio Plane Devices A War Department plan for radio- beam detectors along the entire coast of the United States may require as many as 300,000 skilled op rktors- and the University is equipped to aid in their training. According to Prof. Louis Hopkins,' University defense head, Electrical' Engineering 23a and 23b will enable a student to pass a government radio license examination with excellent chance of placement in this new serv- ice., Offered under the recently-initiat- ed defense training program, this training includes code practice and actual construction of receivers and transmitters. Since these courses stress the practical and fundament- al side of radio communication, a year of physics is the only prere- quisite. The new detecting devices, al- though not yet in production, have already caused Washington to issue, a call for 500 volunteer technicians. Operators will be drawn from both army and civilian sources' with a second lieutenant's commission awarded to those chosen. While the government has not yet indicated the nature of the proposed detector, Signal Corps sources have stated it resembles similar British de- vices in ' its basic principle. This would mean a beam of radio waves sent seaward, and reflected back to the transmitting staticn if an air- plane is struck. The detector device, the War De- partment claims, was developed by Signal Corps radio engineers at Fort Monmouth, N.J., over a period of six years. 3-2 Win Squares World Series At One Game;- Pitcher Chandler Chased Action To Resume in Brooklyn Today YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Oct. 2-()-Brooklyn's battlig, al- ways courageous Dodgers fought their way from behind today to a 3 to 2 triumph over the New York Yankees and levelled the World Se- ries before another tremendous turn- out of 66,248 fans. John Whitlow Wyatt, tall and bald, this year's standout among all the National League's pitchers, turned the trick for the Dodgers. The 32-year-old Georgia right- hander was pelted for nine hits by the Yankees, seven of them in the first four innings, but he seemed to get better as he went along and he never let the Yanks get wound up. Never Loses Poise , He was marvelous with men on bases and even though the Yanks managed to get at least two runners on the bags in six different innings, Wyatt never lost his poise. A double by Tom Henrich was tie only extra base blow he permit and after the fourth inning he kept the bombers virtually smothered. Al- together he caused the American League champs to leave 10 runners.: stranded. The Yanks got to him for single runs in the second and third innings and made the spectators start think- ing the duel was to be a second show- ing of yesterday's opener which New York won by the same score 3 to 2. But it was another Georgia boy, Spurgeon (Spud) Chandler, who cracked first. Chandler Chased In Sixth The Dodgers, who were held to six hits during the game, broke their bonds for two runs on a pair of walks and two hits in the fifth inning to tie the score and then punched over the winning run and chased Chandler from the box in the sixth. For four innings Chandler was masterful, fanning two men inthe first inning and facing only the m-in imm 12 batters. When Joe Med- wick singled in the second he was immediately erased by the first of three Yankee double plays. Then Chandler gave his first pass to the first Dodger, up in the fifth inhing, Dolph Camilli, who had fan- ned three straight times yesterday and hadn't been on base previously during the series. Medwick followed immediately with a hard double that bounded against the low wall in left field, sending Camilli to third and Cookie Lavagetto waited out another walk to load the bases. Reese Scores Camillia Peewee Reese smashed a hot grounder to shortstop Phil Rizz±to; who threw to Joe Gordon in time to forge Lavagetto, but Camilli scored and Reese was safe at first as Gor- don's hurried relay bounced from the ground into John Strum's glove and out again. Then Mickey Owen punched a ground single into left field for another run. A fast double play on Wyatt pulled' Chandler out of this jam, but in the sixth inning Gordon made a bad throw on Dixie Walker's grounder, Billy Herman singleq him to third to rout Chandler, and after ,Johnny Murphy 'had fanned P'ete' Reiser,- Camilli looped a single into right field for the winning run.- Thus ended the domination of the Yankees in World Series play. They .had not been beaten in the autumn classic since October, 9, 1937, when the New York Giants captured theirF only gaine of that series. Since then (Continued on Page 3) Defense Secrets Revealed In Trial NEW YORK, Oct. 2.-('P)-Defense secrets, some of them too hot for the eyes and ears of a Federal court jury and all of them allegedly snatched from German spies, were introduced in evidence today at the trial of '16 men charged with espion- age. conspiracy. Federal Judge Mortimer W. Byers directed that none of the contents of the confidential FBI book be intro- duced into the record except a fly- leaf inscription which described the A Sure 'Anxiety Easer': Chemotherapy To Make Army Safe For Draftees, Long Says American Industry Can Win: General Motors Head Reveals- Defens Problems Of Industry By MORTON MINTZ Easing one anxiety of potential draftees, Dr. Perrin H. Long, famed research pioneer in chemotherapy said yesterday that the death toll of dis- ease in Army camps will "not even be high enough to cause parents to worry." Dr. Long claimed that complica- tions of measles, influenza and other afflictions-which in the last war killed more U.S. soldiers than ;did actual fighting-can now be suc- cessfully 'treated with drugs of the sulfanilimide family, making the outbreak of fatal epidemics highly improbable.. Dr. Long, who 'is attending the second triennial reunion of 4,000 medical alumni of the University, cited cases of camp -hospitals which have been filled with thousands of thus curbing the spread of the af- fliction." Dr. Long described the action of the latest member of the sulfaniti- mide family-sulfadiazine-by say- ing that with minimum toxic re- actions it can be administered to cure -90 per cent of the victims of gonorrhea in two weeks time. He said that sulfadiazine which only went on sale in drug stores Aug. 8, is at present the most effect- ive of the family and is already sup- planting the other members. "But even these have an outstand- ing record," he asserted. "Serious streptococcus ' infections are now rare because of early treatment with such drugs as sulfanilimide, sulpha- pyridine and sulphathiazole. With their use," he maintained, "the pneumonia death rate has been cut By BILL BAKER The chief hurdle in national de- fense production has been the prob- lem of bridging the space between de- fense orders and defense products on hand, Ormand E. Hunt, '07E, vice- president of General Motors declafed last night. Addressing the Medical Alumni Reunion banquet, Mr. HHunt pointed out two factors hampering industry in meeting defense needs: the vast difference between civilian products and military products, and the con-: tinual change in design of military machines. "Industry is making the necessary. changes," he explained, "and it is not our fault if orders were not placed early enough." In the aggressor nations industry was geared to make the change from civilian to military production. In Germany one auto plant produced trucks meeting military specifica- tary needs, it is necessary to change machinery, to bring together differ- ent types of workmen, and to produce a greater variety of articles. As an example of public ignorance of this fact, Mr. Hunt pointed out the false but general belief that auto and airplane engines are virtually the same. , Actually the difference between the two is great, making the process of changing from auto to airplane motor production a tremendous one, he said. Pointing out the difference, Mr. Hunt explained that auto engines are developed to secure the most econom- ical type for the general public. Air- plane engines, however, are developed with an eye to getting the greatest horsepower from the lowest possible weight, regardless of expense. Auto engines weigh six' pounds per horse- power, while airplane engines weigh less than a pound per horsepower.