Weather Showers And Warmer d+ it4MWo *atij Editorial Hard-Boiled Handling Of Race Riots Urged,, VOL. LII. No. 159 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Wolverine Nine Plays At Indiana First Battle Of Two-Game Series Is Slated Today; Boim Is Mound Choice Team Seeks Eighth StraightTriumph By BOB SHOPOFF Special to The Daily BLOOMINGTON, Ind.; April 30- Michigan's 15-man baseball squad arrived in town late last night full of confidence that it would keep its Big Ten record clean this week-end when it plays a two-game series with the University of Indiana. The Wolverines filled the holes in what was left of last year's cham- pionship team with promising sopho- mores and are now definite favorites to successfully defend their title. Since coming back from the South, Michigan has won its last seven tilts, including two Conference games against Purdue last week-end. Boim Will Pitch Coach Ray Fisher has named Irv 'Pro' Boim to start for the Wolverines today. 'Pro' will be opposed by John- ny Logan, Hoosier ace moundsman. Logan was counted on heavily before the season opened, but he started slow and is now rounding into shape. His record stands at two wins and two defeats. Today's game will start at 4 p.m. Coach Paul Harrell's squad has had trouble in its Conference games so far this season. Last week they lost two to Ohio State, 5-4 and 6-1, after previously losing two to Illi- nois and splitting a two-game series with Iowa. Iowa has one of the best teams in the Conference this season. Great Lakes beat Indiana, 13-4, Tuesday. Indiana Has Slugger Pacing the Hoosiers' attack is big Ev Hoffman, first baseman who has been doing plenty of slugging lately. Against the Buckeyes he knocked out a single, a doule and a home run in three tMmes at bat. Playing against Wabash he hit a triple with the bags loaded to aid his mates in winning 20-6. Ready to match blows with Hoff- man are Wolverines Bud Chamber- lain and Paul White. Michigan's star third baseman is batting .326 in 12 games and has batted in 18 runs by his many long hits. White has collected four home runs to date and his batting is rapidly improving as his .353 average shows. Michigan has four men in the lineup batting over .300. Coach Fisher received news just before the team laft yesterday thati Turn to Page 3, Col. 4 Nation Awaits Ersatz Rubber Experts Demand Proof Of Inventor's Claims WASHINGTON, April 30. -4-') Within a week or two government experts will crowd into a little glass laboratory not very far from Wash- ington and demand a put-up-or-shut up show-down from a man whosays he can make rubber from natural gas, grain and either woodpulp or coal. The turn of events in that labora- tory may spell the end of the na- tion's rubber shortage - or spell D-U-D in large, crestfallen letters. Anyway, it will be a chapter in one of the war's strangest stories. For weeks, harried by the critical rubber situation, the experts have been checking into the inventor's claims, testing his product, attempt- ing to analyze it, and losing sleep over its mysteries. Not even today will any of the government men pass official judgment. It's the consensus that there's nev- er been any material quite like it- except rubber itself. Known syn- thetic rubber reactions are missing, analyses seem to show crude rubber, ..while actual tests with tires indi- cate qualities superior to synthetic and equal or superior to crude. Scientifically the experts say, it's almost unbelievable; therefore, they have their fingers crossed. But, since there's just a chance the inventor can do what he says he can do-make rubber that's better and ahenaPr +an erd euing raw ma- Mass Meeting Will Hear Talk On V-i Plan Today Lieutenant Wisner Will Explain New Navy Program To Underclassmen And High School Seniors The Navy will open an intensive drive to recruit Michigan students under its new V-1 plan when Lieut. Trusdell E. Wisner, Navy recruiting officer at Chicago, addresses a mass meeting of freshmen, sophomores and local high school seniors at 4 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Lieutenant Wisner will be intro- duced by Capt. R. E. Cassidy, Com- mandant of the Naval ROTC. Mem- bers of Captain Cassidy's staff will attend with uniformed NROTC ca- dets. In advance of Lieutenant Wisner's appearance here the Navy yesterday announced an important change in the V-1 procurement plan. A new provision now permits V-1 enlistees who fail to pass the Navy compre- hensive exam, required after one and one-half years of college work, to enter Class V-5 (Aviation Cadet). Admission to this class will be grant- ed to such students provided they can pass physical and mental exami- nations for prospective aviation offi- cers. Lieutenant Wisner will explain in detail the new deferred service plan, which enables students between the ages of 17 and 19 to complete at least two years of college and offers them the possibility of becoming officers in the Naval Reserve. Under its Officer Procurement Plan the Navy will enlist approxi- Labor-Prof its Bill Is Tabled In Committee Naval Group Administers Final Blow By Small Margin;_FDR Is Uphei WASHINGTON, April 30. -(- Legislation to limit war profits, in- crease the statutory work week from 40 to 48 hours, and freeze the status quo of closed and open shops for the duration of the war was killed today in the House Naval Committee by a vote of 13 to 12. The action, taken under parlia- mentary procedure which bars recon- sideration of the bill except through unanimous consent of the full com- mittee, apparently meant that Presi- dent Roosevelt had effectively halted for the time being the movement in Congress for new labor legislation. Possible Senate action was deferred indefinitely earlier this week when Senator Connally (Dem.-Tex.) de- clined, in view of Mr. Roosevelt's op- position, to press a labor bill he had pending. In his message last Monday on the cost of living, the President told Con- gress that no labor legislation was needed at this time, that strikes were at a minimum, that retention of time and one-half pay for work in excess of 40 hours a week was necessary to preserve the workingman's standards of living. By its vote, the committee also left the question of limiting war profits in the hands of the Ways and Means Committee, which now is studying the Chief Executive's suggestion for a $25,000 limit, after taxes, on individ- ual incomes, and the treasury's de- mand for sharply increased levies on excess profits of corporations. Board Petitions Must Be Filed At Daily Today Nominations of candidates for the positions on the Board in Control of Student Publications to be filled at the all-campus elections May 8, must be in the hands of the secretary of the Board at the Student Publica- tions Building by 5 p.m. today. Seniors or graduate students are eligible for positions on the Board, and may be nominated either by a committee composed of retiring edi- tors and business managers of publi- cations or by petitions signed by 100 students. Candidates for the six Union vice- presidencies will be selected by a committee appointed for that pur- pose by the Board of Directors of the Union. Nominations may be made by petitions bearing the signatures of 200 Union members. Petitions, avail- able until Monday at the Student Of- mately 80,000 college students each year. Basis for keeping V-1 trainees in school is to enable them to re- ceive preliminary training that will qualify them to become Naval offi- cers. In addition to receiving educa- tional training, students enlisted in V-1' will also receive physical train- ing. Present plans call for a mini- mum of four and one-half hours of rigorous exercise per week. In his telegram to President Ruth- ven last month announcing selection of the University as a center for the new plan, Secretary of the Navy rank Knox declared that "young men who apply for enlistment under this plan will be serving the nation if they continue their college courses no less than those alumni who are already in active service." Interscholastic Press Meeting To Open Here Fifty-Three High Schools Send Representatives To Annual Conference More than 500 students represent- ing 53 high schools will gather in the Union Ballroom for the opening ses- sion of the Michigan Interscholastic Press Association meeting at 1 a.m. today. President Alexander G. Ruthven and Dr. Charles W. Brashares will address the convention, with Prof. John L. Brumm presiding. Professor Brumm is head of the journalism de- partment which is sponsoring the convention in cooperation with the MIPA Discussions and addresses revolving about the theme "Tomorrow-Whose World?" will take place throughout the day. At the executive session at 11 a.m. a representative from each of ten high schools will address the convention in a three minute presen- tation of his publication's views con- cerning the editorial policies of high school newspapers during the war. Schools represented will be: Roose- velt High School, Ypsilanti; High School of Commerce, Detroit; West- ern High School. Detroit; Creston High School, Grand Rapids; South High School, Grand Rapids; Central High School, Detroit; and Muskegon, Mt. Clemens, Highland Park, and Petroskey High Schools. The adviser's luncheon at 12:30 p.m., with Arthur G. Hughes of Ford- son High School presiding, will be followed by a general assembly at 2 p.m. A demonstration in the art of in- terviewing will be presented at this time by R. Ray Baker, special writer for the Booth Syndicate. Mr. Biker will conduct an interview after which he will answer questions from the floor. Prof. W. H. Maurer of the jour- nalism department will preside, Rationing Plan For University Is Announced Procedure for registration in the University for War Ration Book One, part of the nation-wide registration to be held May 4, 5 and 6, was an- nounced yesterday by Robert L. Wil- liams, assistant registrar. The University registration is held for students whose permanent home address is outside Ann Arbor and who have passed their 18th birthday, Williams said. Ann Arbor students, University employes and students liv- ing with an Ann Arbor family as a member of a family unit should reg- ister at elementary schools as indi- cated by the Ann Arbor School Board. Students under 18 should instruct their families at their permanent home address to register for them to secure their ration books and to forward the books to them here. Books will not be issued to students under 18 in University registration. The War Ration Book is to be used for rationing all commodities that may be placed on the ration list by the Office of Price Administra- tion. Separate books will not be is- sued for individual commodities..The only item covered by the Ration Book at present is sugar. Williams emphasized that students eating in restaurants, fraternities, WPB Claims GM Violation Of Steel Ban WPB Charges Ternstedt Division With Violation Of Priority Regulations Suspen sion.Period Is Penalty Ordered WASHINGTON, April 30. -(P)- The War Production Board today cited General Motors Corporation, Detroit for alleged violation of prior- Ity orders. The order charged that the Ternstedthmanufacturing divi- sion of General Motors used consid- erable quantities of scarce chrome steel and aluminum in the manufac- ture of "bright work," decorative moldings, radiator grills and other body hardware for automobiles, in direct violation of regulations. A suspension order, effective Sat- urday, prohibits General Motors from manufacturing any replac-] ment parts for passenger cars, trucks, trailers or buses for a period of three months, except functional replace- ment parts necessary to keep vehicles on the road, The Board announced also it had investigated complaints "from vari- ous sources" that Ternstedt also was using up large quantities of copper," nickel and zinc in violation of WPB" conservation orders. The investigation revealed, WPB" said, that the company's use of those1 metals did not violate any orders then in existence. The suspension order charged that Ternstedt used 10,259 pounds of chrome steel-a hard metal highly important to armament production- in the production of decorative mold- ings between Jan. 7 and March 9 of this year. The company used 9,239 pounds of primary aluminum and 11,492 pounds of secondary aluminum be- tween Jan. 24 and March 13 in pro- duction of the radiator grills and hardware, WPB alleged. General Motors was the third ma- jor war contractor cited by WPB on charges of priority violations. Court action was instituted last week] to enjoin Carnegie-Illinois Steel Cor- poration and the Jones and Laughlin] Steel Corporation from continuing, alleged improper diversions of steel from military to non-essential civil- ian uses. Walter P. Reuther drector of the United Automobile Workers (CIO) General Motors department, com- menting the citation expressed regret tonight that the order would necessi- tate laying off thousands of workers for three months. Reuther recalled that more than six weeks ago he had charged in a letter to Donald M. Nelson, WPB chairman, that General Motors was using critical materials at its Tern- stedt division plant. Twenty Jap Planes Destroyed In Raid' ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Aus-1 tralia, April 30.-(P)-Twenty planes; on the ground at the Japanese air] base at Lae, New Guinea, were de-1 stroyed or damaged by Allied bomb-1 ers yesterday, the Allied Command announced today.] A headquarters communique also" said large fires were started at Lae, raided almost daily by Allied airmen who are trying to break up Japan's invasion forces in this area. Japanese planes attacked Port Moresby, New Guinea, three times yesterday but did only minor damage. On Tuesday, a report from an ad- vanced Allied base disclosed, one Roy- al Australian Air Force flier, courag- eously braving an escorting force of 14 zero fighters, broke into a forma- tion of eight Japanese bombers over Port Moresby and scored a hit on one bomber. Sideshow... RENO, April 30. --OP)-- A fire chased a truck a block, but the truck got away. A valve on an oil-spraying tank- truck was being cleaned with a blow torch. The torch set the oil on fire. Oliver Evans, the driver, sped the machine up the street. Oil con- tinued to spray from the valve, ig- niting as it struck the ground, un- til another workman finally suc- ceeded in closing the valve. * * * PRYOR, Okla., April 30. -(IP)- fan n Rnth Tulsa nrinting Flaming Lashio Captured As Japs Cut Burma Road; Axis Meeting Anticipated I' .. I.4 Hitler, Mussolini, Hiroshi May Coordinate Effort In GiganticSingle Front RAF Planes Attack Plants Near Paris BERN, Switzerland, April 30.-OP) -Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini and probably the Japanese ambassador to Berlin, Lieut.-Gen. Hiroshi Oshi- ma, are expected to meet soon (if they haven't met already) in an ef- fort to coordinate three-power Axis war efforts toward what the Italian press.called today a "gigantic, single front." Bit by bit the picture of new tri- partite consultation was filled in by Axis propaganda agencies. Bern, as one of the few neutral spots remain- ing in Europe, has become a cross- roads for information on Axis moves. The Tokyo newspaper Hochi, ac- cording to a Tokyo broadcast, fore- cast a meeting within a few days of Hitler, Mussolini and Oshima, with- out indicating where they would get together. The Berlin Radio put out a Mun- ich dispatch reporting Oshima's ar- rival at that past meeting place of Hitler and Mussolini. But he was there ostensibly to participate in "the week of interstate cultural work." Oshima recently returned to Ger- many from Bulgaria where he con- ferred with the Japanese ambassa- dor to Turkey, presumably canvassing the Axis situation in the Middle East. The editorial mouthpiece of Itali- an Fascism, Il Giornale D'Italia, without mentioning Oshima, contrib- uted a hint that the meeting would be one ¢f a series which would par- allel "examinations, decisions and fresh resolutions" under the three- power pact. "We are on the eve of great events, both political and military," said this Rome newspaper which is edited by Virginio Gayda. Menl8 To 20 May Register Around July 1 INDIANAPOLIS April 30. -(P)- Major General Lewis B. Hershey, Federal Selective Service Director, said today men 18 to 20 would be registered around July 1, if possible, and at least by late summer. Hershey, here to address the Amer- ican Legion's National Executive Committee, told an interviewer that Congress might be asked ct amend the Selective Service Law to allow drafting of men under 20. He remarked the United States Government would be lucky if it got five per cent of its army from the group over 37. Selective Service, the Director said, does not plan to strip the field of men with dependents to meet army re- quirements. Men beyond 35 not in essential in- dustries, however, will be called pro- vided their families have enough in- come for reasonable support, he said. And I mean reasonable support," he added, "not necessarily on the level which the family has been accus- tomed." Hershey said the Government still aimed at an Army 3,600 000 by next Jan. 1 and he believed there would be enough housing facilities and equipment for them by that time. Stalin Praises U.S. Assistance Order Of Day Broadcast Lauds 'Friendship Ties (By The Associated Press) MOSCOW, Friday, May 1.-Joseph Stalin told the Soviet Union today that the United States and Great Britain are "giving our country more and more military assistance against the Fascist invaders" and that the Red Army has forced the Fascists "clear out of a considerable part of Soviet territory." The Russian Premier - Defense Commissar, broadcasting an order of the day to the Soviet Union on May Day, declared that the United States and Britain occupy first place among the freedom-loving countries helping Russia against the invaders and said that the Russians are connected with those two Allies "by ties of friendship and unity." It was his first order of the day since Feb. 23, the 24th anniversary of the founding of the Red Army, when he confidently declared that the German invader would be cast from Soviet soil in due time but warned that a "stern struggle" lay ahead. After more than 10 months of war, he said, Russia has become consider- ably stronger, the Red Army has be- come more organized and more pow- erful than it was at the beginning of the conflict, and has "passed from the defense to a successful advance against the enemy troops." RAF Planes, Plants Near Attack Paris LONDON, April 30.-V)-Pressing the offensive on the continent's aer- ial "second front," the RAF spread flaming ruin in the former Goodrich Rubber factory and the Gnome- Rhone Aero Works near Paris last night and fought a far-flung battle with German pursuit planes over Dover Strait this afternoon. The Germans countered with an- other short but sharp night raid on Norwich, but a British commentator said these retaliations were invited deliberately on the theory that every ounce of force expended against Britain is an aid to Russia. Today's dogfights, reminiscent of the autumn of 1940, were fought out at about 25,000 feet. Watchers at Folkestone followed the combats by the twisting skeins of exhaust vapors that marked wide expanses of sky. Le Havre, Calais and enemy ship- ping in the channel were attacked in daylight. U.S.-built Douglas bombers also attacked Flushing, The Netherlands and Abbeville, France. The air ministry said six German planes were destroyed during the day. Chinese Troops Hang On Under General Stilwell After Desperate Battle Casualties Mount As Fight Continues CHUNGKING, China, April 30.- (A,)-Flaming Lashio was in Japanese hands tonight. The Burma Road had been cut at that vital junction and the British and Chinese defenders of all Burma had beeneseparated by enemy forces of overwhelming strength. 'This was the outline of disaster given in a communique of the Chi- nese command, which disclosed that Lashio had fallen to the invader on Wednesday, after a great and bloody battle along that left anchor of the Allied line, but reported too that the Chinese troops under command of the American General Joseph W. Stilwell still were fighting doggedly in the vicinity ff the city. Casualties were high on both sides. Fall Of Lashio The fall of Lashio, taken in one of the swiftest drives of the whole Japanese campaign, was told thus tonight by the official Chinese ac- count: "Under cover of violent artillery and aerial bombardment the enemy launched a mass offensive on the new and old towns of Lashio Wed- nesday. "A large number of tanks, armored cars and airplanes joined in the at- tacking operations. "As a result we were outnumbered. "Our forces defied the enemy pres- sure and fiercely resisted until 1 p.m. Wednesday when both towns fell into the enemy's hands. "The battle of Lashio resulted in heavy casualties both for us and for the enemy. "The battle is continuing in the vi- cinity of Lashio after its occupation. We destroyed 12 Japanese tanks dur- ing the operations." Only Empty City Later an Army spokesman said that the Japanese found only an empty city when they took Lashio; that its fall did not disrupt supply lines for other fronts because new lines al- ready had been arranged under or- ders of Generalissimo Chiang Kai- Shek. Both the Chinese and British, he said, would fight on until the last in Burma. An unknown quantity of lease- lend supplies which could not be sent northward toward China along the Burma Road before Lashio's collapse had been put to the torch; the entire city was reported a core of fire. Police Protect NegroProject Four More Families Move Into 'Sojourner Truth' DETROIT, April 30.-(P)--Four more Negro families were moved into the million-dollar Sojourner Truth housing project today as state troops, with fixed bayonets, and state and city police patrolled the area to guard against possible violence. There were no incidents as the four families joined 14 others who took up occupancy in the federally- sponsored projct yesterday. At- tempts to form picket lines by neigh- boring white persons, who claim ten- ancy by Negroes would depreciate their property values, were frustrated. Nineteen more Negro families are schedulednto take up, residence to- morrow and another 10 on Saturday. Officials of the Detroit Housing Commission said that only 58 leases in the 200-unit project, named for a famous Negro woman abolitionist, had been granted. They added others would be disposed of soon. ' At Lansing, meanwhile, Governor Van Wagoner issued this statement regarding the use of state troops: "The state has no voice or official connection whatever with the hous- ing project, prior to a few days ago, Volunteer Workers Will Sell TagsFor Underprivileged Boys Tag Day will be held today, and on campus and in downtown Ann Arbor the coins that roll into collection boxes will enable the University Fresh Air Camp to carry on its work of Instructions to fraternities, sor- orities, dormitories and coopera- tive houses assisting in Tag Day collections, together with their re- spective stations, are listed on page 2 of today's Daily. providing under-privileged city boys of this area with a chance to have psychological and physical malad- justments corrected. From 7:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. volunteers from the various campus fraternities, sororities, dorms and' cooperatives four-week vacation through the gen- erosity of campus students. In addition to the funds received from today's canvassing, local mer- chants in the downtown business sec- tions, as well as fraternities and sor- orities have been solicited for special contributions. Campus organizations cooperating with the student committee in charge of Tag Day, under the general chair- manship of Richard Schoel, '43E, in- clude the Union, the League, The Daily, Interfraternity Council, and Panhellenic Association. NOTICES All students interested in en- rolling in the University Honors Program should file applications from 3 n.m. to 4:0 n.m. today in