Weather and warmer today.' Y Official Publication Of The Summer Session 4E3aiI Editorial A Job Weli Done I' I ..... AX. No. 44 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 16, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS mw Pico Replies belles Note Assaulting Companies Ohio State Trustees Ban Students' Marxist Group xpropriated Corporations Brougit On Own Fate, Foreign__Minister Says .ejects U.S. Plan For Joint Operation MEXICO CITY, Aug. 15.-(P)- eneral Eduardo Hay, Mexican For- gn Minister, tonight assailed the ecalcitrant" attitude of expropri- ed oil companies and charged they id forced a suspension in negotia- )fs looking toward a settlement. His statement replied to one issued - Sumner Welles, acting Secretary' State in Washington, who yester- y demanded an early settlement of e controversy now nearly 18 months, n Minister said the com- ted the United States' s suggestion of a "mixed perate the oil properties the suggestion was re- xico. he said, the cbmpanies the suggestion attributed he negotiations to the vernment. As a result, he Mexican Ambassador n was obliged "to make y rectifications, suspend- tiations." Iay said, despite the atti- oil companies, "Mexico, frank spirit of concilia- ing now as always, on 3roposed by Mexico or lually constructive which >mitted, to renew con- ith the companies." At Conference Here Grave doubts.ds to the effective- cess of diplomatic action in protect- ing United States company property from expropriation had been ex- pressed only this weekend by several members of the Conference on Eco- nomic Relations with Latin America held at the University. One Government official had in- dicated great faith in the "psycholog- ical effect" of this government's ver- bal "frowns "at her smaller neighbors to the south. Others advocated more drastic reprisals in the form of eco- nomic sanctions of one form or an- other. But some, whose fears may have been justified by Mexico's refusal to consider even joint operation of ex- propriated oil companies, warned that any attempts to regain control for the companies woud prove futile in the face of rising nationalistic senti- ment in Latin American nations. FDR Appeals For Settlement Of Union Row Calls On Heads Of CIO And AFL To End Quarrel For Benefit Of Labor NEW YORK, Aug. 15.-P)---Presi- dent Roosevelt, who brought the leadership of the AFL and CIO to- gether last winter in a series of un- successful conferences intended to make peace between them, appealed again today for a settlement of their differences. "I venture to express the hope," Mr. Roosevelt said in a message to the 76th annual convention of the New York State Federation of Labor (AFL), "that the convention will leave open every possible door of ac- cess to peace and progress in the af- fairs of organized labor in the United States. "If leaders of organized labor can make and keep the peace between various opinions and factions within the labor group itself, it will vastly increase the prestige of labor with the country and prevent the reaction which otherwise is bound to injure the workers themselves." In another passage, the President remarked: "I hope you will give attention to the matter which I am always. con- Two Dissent Terming Act] 'Greater Threat' Than Mere Discussion Club COLUMBUS, O., Aug. 15.-(P)- majority of Ohio State University's Trustees concluded an investigation of "Unamerican and subversive activi- ties" today by criticizing some faculty teaching methods and banning one student organization, "The Marxist Club." Two of the seven Trustees, however, filed a 'dissenting report asserting: "We cannot feel that the existence of a Marxist discussion club consist- ing of 15 out of 13,000 students is a threat to our free institutions. The order requiring its dissolution seems to us a greater threat." The dissenting trustees were Miss M. Edith Campbell of Cincinnati ald Lockwood Thompson of Cleveland. The Trustees' investigating com- mittee's report on the American-Le- gion inspired inquiry found some evi- dence of "bad taste" in classroom teaching and conselled faculty mem- AFL Decrees ctors' Union Overpunished Reinstatement Is Ordered For Sophie Tucker's Ousted Stage Company ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., Aug. 15.- (P)-The American Federation of La- bor's executive council ruled tonight that Sophie Tucker's American Fed- eration of Actors had been too cruelly punished when the Associated .Actors and Artistes of America turned it out into the cold. The executive council called on the AAAA to reinstate the union and or- dered the International Alliance of] Theatrical Stage employes, which had adopted the orphaned body, to with- draw the charter it gave the AFA. Suspension Lifted The AFL lifted all suspensions is- sued by the various local and parent unions until questions involved can be solved by a joint committee of 10 selected from the AAAA, Actors Equi- ty, Chorus Equity, 'Radio Artists, Screen Actors and the AFL. "This decision," said William Green, AFL president, "has been sub- mitted to the AAAA, the AFA and the IATSE and we assume it will be ac- cepted by all parties. "This controversy was dumped in our laps as an extra-ordinary affair and it will be the purpose of the American Federation of Labor to have this decision carried into ef- fect." Injustice Hit Another actors' problem which the AFL council investigated was the question of actors who perform in9 the several mediums of stage, screen, radio and have to pay union dues for each medium. "It impressed the council," Green said, "that it was an injustice for an actor to be compelled to join one union after another, even though he sang the same song or did the same act on half a dozen different me- diums." A point yet to be settled is the status of Ralph Whitehead, executive secretary of the AFA. Green said: "No understanding was reached about Whitehead. He simply takes his chance as does any other candidate for office."' Miss Tucker, head of the AFA, seemed emphatic that Whitehead would stay. Army Crash Injures Two Failing Motor Causes Fall Into Pacific Ocean SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, Aug. 15- (P)-A United States Army plane broke into four parts and two of its four-man crew were seriously injured today when a motor failed and caused the ship to crash into the Pacific Ocean near Parrita, 60 miles south of Puntarenas. The bi-motored plane was one of six en .route from Panama to San Antonio, Tex. Lieutenant Frank Smith and fSec- bers that more "temperate action" would create "better relations." The majority action also demanded faculty members assume greater re- sponsibility for student activities and exercise more rigid supervision. Main criticism fell upon the Marx- ist Club, which the report said "en- gaged in a study of the theories of Karl Marx," and "made an effort to interest other campus groups in the cause of Loyalist Spain." The Board stated: "We do not be- lieve that a publicly-supported in- stitution has any right to give aid and assistance in the form of recognition and quarters to organizations such as the Marxist Club." The Board defended "free class- room discussion of controversial sub- jects" but "more temperate action on the part of a few faculty mem- bers would be conducive to better public relations. We speak of things which are in bad taste rather than subversive. The Board ordered: That faculty advisers to campus groups attend all meetings and report regularly to the university president. That the Council on Student Af- fairs be "required to scrutinize more carefully all campus organizations, and the council be required to con- sult faculty advisers." The Board said it did not believe the American Student Alliance "had been conduced in the best interests of the university" but that there were no specific grounds to act against the group. The Alliance, the Board said, is an affiliate of the American Student Union which "resulted from a coalition of the Student Union for Industrial Democracy and the Na- tional Student League, the latter group being the American section of the Proletarian Youth League of Moscow." The groups investigated had a combined membership of no more than 75 persons out of the 13155 stu- dent enrollment, 2,517 faculty mem- bers and service employes, the Board said. The trustees' action brought from State Legion Commander Eli Jensen commendation- for the "definiteness of their recommendations," and the fairness and directness of the in- vestigation. Delay Raising Sunken Squalus Until Thursday Divers Find Vessel's Hatch Open; Salvage Officials Unable To Explain Cause PORTSMOUTH, N.H., Aug. 15.-(P) -A hatch on the after battery com- partment of the submarine Squalus was found open by a diver shortly before Navy salvage officers decided tonight pontoons used in raising the $4,000,000 submersible must be read- justed, delaying at least until Thurs- day a second lifting attempt. Just before work on the submarine stopped for the night, Rear Admiral Cyrus W. Cole wirelessed the infor- mation from the salvage flagship Falcon to the navy yard. Capt. Richard F. Edwards, who re- turned to the Navy yard tonight, said the salvage officers were at a loss to explain the open hatch. He added, however, that leakage of air into the compartment might have built up enough pressure to force open the hatch when the bow shot to the sur- face on the unsuccessful attempt to raise the Squalus last July 13. Divers made a preliminary inspec- tion of the open hatch tonight but deferred a thorough check until to- morrow. Officials said another lift might be attempted Thursday unless more difficulties are encountered.. Traffic Meet Begins Class SafetyWork One, Two-Week Courses Offered As Main Part Of 2nd Annual Session Modern Methods Offered:Students The National Institute for Traffic Safety Training yesterday launched special courses of one and two-week duration in various phases of special- ized training, as the principal func- tion of its second annual meeting here, lasting until Aug. 26. Simultaneously with the beginning of classroom sessions, Dr. Miller Mc- Clintock, chairman of the Adminis- trative Committee for the Institute, declared that its purpose is to offer persons engaged in traffic safety activities an opportunity to keep abreast of modern techniques and further enlarge their opportunities for "career service'" in the traffic safety movement. Dr. McClintock, who is Director of the Yale Bureau for Street Traffic Research, said that the special courses at Ann Arbor supplementing the training work at Yale and Northwestern, as well as that of motor vehicle departments and other groups, is proving most far-reaching in its influence for bet- ter traffic conditions. Special Course The special courses launched this morning and the course directors are: Accident Investigation by Police, A. R. Forster, Director of Training Ac- tivities of Northwestern University Traffic Institute; Administration of Drivers' License Examinations, J. S. Baker, Traffic Safety Consultant, National Safety Council; Advanced Methods of Adult Driver Training, Mrs. Mildred Y. McKay, Director, Driving School of the Cleveland Auto- mobile Club; Traffic Engineering, Maxwell Halsey, Associate Director, Yale University Bureau for Street Traffic Research; Traffic Accident Reports and Records, R. L. Forney, Chief Statistician, and Kirk A. Kee- gan, Statistician, National Safety Council, Traffic Safety Education in Elementary Schools, Dr. F. R. Noffsinger, Educational Consultant, American Automobile Association; Vehicle Fleet Safety, James G. Hay- den, Fleet Engineer, National Safety Council. Experts Impressed The traffic officers, traffic investi- gators, engineers, safety directors and teachers attending the Institute were markedly impressed with the state- ment sent by Thomas H. MacDonald, U. S. Commissioner of Public Roads, in which he stressed the importance of such training programs as that of the Institute. Commissioner Mac- Donald said: "Modernization of the country's road system, with particular empha- sis on elimination of congestion, will undoubtedly minimize traffic hazards. Such a program has been recom- mended to Congress, on the basis of findings from the highway planning surveys now under way in forty-six (Continued on Page 4) Visiting Astronomer Snaps 7,000 Mars Shots BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa, Aug. 15.-(P)-Or. Earl C. Slipher, American astronomer, has completed photographing the surface of Mars, making 7,000 pictures-many in color -during a month's study of the plan- et at the University of Michigan Observatory here. Excellent visibility during the week end enabled Slipher to obtain' data on the wind direction on Mars which recently has been nearest the earth since 1924 although approximately 36,000,000 miles away. Charge Jap Sentinal Hit U.S. Woman Full Report On Incident Sent To Washington; Reject Jap Explanation Sought To Enter Blockaded Region TIENTSIN, Aug. 15.- (P) -The United States consulate was reported to have sent Washington a full re- port today on the slapping of a 59- year-old American widow by a Ja- panese sentry after finding a Japan- ese explanation unsatisfactory. It was understood the report fol- lowed upon a visit by Japanese Vice- Consul W. Nishida to the consulate to attempt adjustment of the inci- dent. It involved Mrs. Mary Frances Richard, who was slapped and de- tained for an hour yesterday when she sought to enter the Japanese- blockaded French concession. Called Arrogant The Japanese consulate said the differences arose because of language difficulties and Mrs. Richard's al-j leged "arrogance" when she was called upon to produce identification papers. Mrs. Richard, a native of San Fran- cisco who has been a resident of China 34 years, said the slapping oc- curred when she tried to enter the concession with vegetables and fruit "prohibited" in the blockaded area. She was carrying the produce into the foreign area for use in her small canning business which she operates to supplement her income as a teach- er of English. Tells Story Her account follows : The sentry ignored her identifica- tion card issued by the American con- sulate and ordered her into a shed where another Japanese ordered her to dump her baskets. She was about to comply when she saw a Chinese in front of her re-. moving his trousers while undergoing search by the Japanese. There-upon she turned and dumped the vege- (Continued on Page 3) Train Vandal Search Begun By FBI Agents Clues Spur Investigation Of 'Work Of Madman' RENO, Nev., Aug. 15.-()P)-Federal officers today took over investigation of the wreck of the streamline train "City of San Francisco," and direc- tion of the search for the maniac who, trainmen say, deliberately de- railed the train, killing 23 people and injuring 109. The search was spurred by clues to- ward the identity of the man, or men, who moved a rail and thus hurtled the 17-car train into a Nevada can- yon Saturday night., "We have some definite evidence," said A. D. McDonald, President of the Southern Pacific Company, who took charge of the railways' investi- gation, "but it is of such a nature that we do not feel free to divulge it at this time." An unrevealed number of men were picked up in railway yards and "ho- bo jungles," and were questioned as the search spread over Nevada, Utah and California. Officers were divided in their opinion as to whether the crime was the work of one or two men. Mc- Donald sided with those who believed it was the work of a lone madman- "a man with a diseased brain-pos- sibly one with a grudge against some individual on the train, satisfying that grudge without regard for the lives that might be snuffed out." "A man would be a fool to take an- other into his confidence in a thing like this," he continued. "A confed- erate would, sooner or later, be bound to squeal." Fear Danzig Coup As Ominous Silence Hangs Over Europe Gridiron Moguls Protest Idea Of Thanksgiving Day Change Observers Parallel Scene To Days Just Preceding Nazis' Stroke At Munich German Troops Mass Near Polish Border (By The Associated Press) A silence, which many observers regarded as ominous, hung over the foreign offices of Europe Tuesday night and in Berlin there were indi- cations almost immediate action might be forthcoming in the Ger- man-Polish dispute over Danzig. Amid continued rumors of peace plans and exchanges of mysterious messages between capitals, trained observers thought they saw a parallel to the days preceding Munich. One of the most portentious signs in Berlin was the silence in govern- ment quarters where there usually is much to be said until something def- inite is afoot. Other signs noted in Berlin includ- ed: Massing of German soldiers all along the Polish frontier; Demands by the. German press for Hahn Says Is Aided Date To Business Man By Advancing November 23 NEW YORK, Aug. 15.-(IP)-A grid- iron rebellion grew today apace with1 a pile-up of protests from rock- ribbed traditionists against Presi- dent Roosevelt's plan to change the1 day of Thanksgiving this year from Nov. 30 to Nov. 23. Many in authority and business-' men, favored the President's prece- dent-smashing idea-to help business' -but the football people were both] amazed and flabbergasted over what to do with games scheduled for Nov. 30. There may be two Thanksgivings this year. Tradition-bound New England was largely shocked. Senator Bridge (Rep.-N.H.) led the opposition in Washington with a statement that the President's an- nouncement was "a complete surprise because there had been no intimation of it in Mrs. Roosevelt's column." Heartily approving the President's announcement was Lew Hahn, gen- eral manager of the National Retail Dry Goods Association, who on Aug. 4 addressed a communication to Secretary of Commerce Hopkins urg- ing an earlier Thanksgiving as "good for business." His organization represents some 5,700 department, specialty and dry goods stores, which were estimated to do well over $500,000,000-or around 15 per cent of the yearly total-in the peak shopping season from Turkey Day and Christmas. Hahn said the President's move would have an "assuring effect" upon manufacturers and distributors of consumers goods. But from the angry tone of author- Fall Causes Injury To Dorm Worker Falling down an elevator shaft ities most vehemently opposed to the proposed change it appeared there might be a dual Thanksgiving this year, with some states gorging on turkey, cranberries and football on Nov. 23 and the old guard having theirs a week later, which would be just another Thursday to "new deal- ers." The State Department in Washing- ton pointed out that the governors of the individual states have more to say about Thanksgiving than the Presi- dent because his proclamation is val- id only in territories and the District of Columbia and among Federal em- ployes. College football managers saw their finely drawn schedules upset by the President's announcement and ex- pressed resentment in some cases, and a desire to switch dates as best they could in others. The change would not only affect schedules themselves but the condi- tioning plans of the coaches, who would find big games scrambled out of the order originally planned. Announce New Wage Increase In WPA Work To Raise National Average About $2.50 A Month; Required By Relief Act WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.-(p)- Commissioner F. C. Harrington an- nounced today a new schedule of monthly security wages for WPA project workers which, he said, would raise the national average about $2.50 a month for approximately 2,- 194,911 persons.. This, he added, would mean that the old average of $53 a month would be stepped up to about $55.50. The new wages become effective Sept. 1.- In general, Harrington said, the -~~"nn A lnes r.n..n.i.l ir- WARSAW, Aug. 16.--(A)--The Polish telegraph agency reported that German authorities today closed all border traffic along that part of their Silesian fron- tier facing the Polish district of Rybnik. The agency added that all tele- phone communication between this German district and Poland had been cut off. No reason for this action was given although the impression in Polish circles is that it is a move to provide -secrecy for German fortifications or troop movements in this area. BERLIN, Aug. 16.-(AP)-Nazi newspapers said Polish police closed local border traffic outside of Beuthen in Upper Silesia to- day. The newspapers said that Po- lish border guards yesterday para- lyzed local border traffic on the Beuthen-Katowice Railroad and on the highway between Beuthen and Tarnowice. Workers living on the Polish side, the newspapers said, were kept from going to jobs in the German mines in the Beuthen region. "speedy" settlement of the Danzig question; warnings to England, France and Poland to be reasonable "before it is too late"; the unexpected return from Italy to Berlin yesterday of Propaganda Minister Joseph Goeb- bels; the hasty return to Rome from Salzburg, Germany, on Sunday of the Italian Foreign Minister, Count Gal- eazzo Ciano; prohibiting of German fishermen to go to their fishing grounds in the Baltic; desertion of German beaches on the Baltic; and the reported distribution of booklets to German soldiers telling them how to ask for essential needs in the Polish language. It was surmised that Count Ciano's quick departure for Italy after his conference with Fuehrer Adolf Hitler and Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop might have been to syn- chronize the Axis plans. Meanwhile, Europe remained an armed camp. A military writer for Reuters, British News Agency, esti- mated Europe's men under arms ex- clusive of naval and air forces, at 8,500,000. He concluded there ap- peared to be a "fairly even balance" between the land forces of the Rome- Berlin Axis and the British-French front and associated powers. The part in the Danzig question to be played by unassuming Dr. Carl J. Burkhardt, high commissioner of the League of Nations in Danzig, still re- mained a question. Packard Workers To Vote On Union DETROIT, Aug. 15.-(IP)-Approxi- mately 9,000 employes of the Packard Motor Car Co. will vote Thursday to determine whether they wish to be wnn-.nd t n t.- , w- 4T"% Y~.:. i -1 A., Huge Power Socialization Stride Taken In TVA Utility Purchase NEW YORK, Aug. 15.-(P)-Gov- ernmental authorities today paid $78,425,095 for electric power pro- perties in Tennessee in the greatest transfer of utilities from private to public ownership in the history of the United States. The money payment, in a ceremony participated in by more than 200 demonstrated that no business, how- ever well run, can endure against the competition of the Federal Govern- ment." He declared his company had been "forced" to sell because it could not compete with "subsidized Government competition." David E. Lilienthal, director of the Federal-owned Tennesse Valley Auth- ority, which contributed $44,728,300