Weather Not Much Change We . . ... ........ . ........... itt t~ til Editorial Shouldn't Give Credit Hours For PEM... . j VOL. LII No. 28-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 24, l 42 2:15 A.M. FINAL Investigrators Disclose Revolt Scheme As 28 Are Indicted Nine-Month Investigation Is Climaxed By Arrests; 28 Groups Are Named In Grand Jury Charge Trials Will Start Early In Autumn By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 23.-A wide- spread conspiracy' to promote revolt in the Army and Navy was charged today in an indictment against 28 persons which was opened in Federal district court here. The accusation, carrying penalties up to 20 years in prison and $10,000 fine, climaxed nine months' investiga- tion by a Federal Grand Jury which reached into all parts of the country in hearing nearly 7;000 pages of testi- mony by 150 witnesses. ' he defendants probably will be arraigned in Washington next Thurs- day, a Justice Department official said, with the trials probably start- ing in late September or early Octo- ber. The indictment was returned sec- retly on Tuesday and handed up to Judge James W. Morris. in the dis- trict ourt for the District of Colum- bia. Its existence became known yes- terday when some of the accused were arrested, but details of the charges were not disclosed. 28 Organizations It charged on the first count that the defendants and others intended to imair the loyalty, morale and discipline of the armed forces. The grand jurors named 28 organ- izations and 30 publications as fac- tors in the conspiracy. The defendants included: Gerald B. Winrod of Wichita, Kas., publisher of "The Defender." George Sylvester Viereck of New York City and Washington, D. C., for many years a German propagandist Who was 'sentenced on Marc' 13 for violation of the foreign agents reg-, istration act. William Griffin of New York, pub- lisher of the "New York Enquirer."I William Dudley Pelley of Nobles-1 ville, Ind., leader of the Silver Shirts and publisher of the abandoned "The Galilean," who faces trial for sedi- tion at Indianapolis next week. Mrs. Elizabeth Dlling of Chicago, author of "The Red Network" and other publications., x Charles Hudson of Omaha, Neb.. editor and publisher of "America In Danger!" Remaining Names Elmer J. Garner and James F. Garner, 'father and son, both of Wichita, Kas. They were indicted for sedition in May in conhction with the publication of'"Publicity." William Kullgren : of Atascadero, Calif., publisher of "The Beacon Light." C. Leon De Aryan of San Diego, Calif., publisher of "The Broom." Court Asher of Muncie, Ind., pub- lisher of "X-Ray," the mailing privi- leges of which have been withdrawn. Ellis o. Jones and Robert Noble, both of Los Angeles, organizers of the Friends of Progress. Both of them were sentenced for sedition on July 20. Ralph Townsend of San Francisco, Lake Geneva. Wis., and Washington, a contributor to "Scribner's Com- mentator," who recently was sen- tenced for failure to register as an agent of Japan. William Robert Lyman, Jr., alias Robert Lanham of Detroit, an officer of the National Workers League (De- troit), a distributor of pictures for Otto Brennermann, also a defendant., Tire Tube Rationing Quotas For August Are Raised -- OPA WASHINGTON. July 23.-()-_ State tire and tube rationing quotas for August, higher in most categories than in July, were announced today by the Office of Price Administra- tion. For the most essential passenger car services, 58,308 new tires will be made available, compared with 57,- 097 this month; 87,860 grade two Hull Outlines Proposal For Permanent Peace 'Allies Must Exercise Surveillance Over Nations,' Declares Secretary In Radio Aggressor! Talk Russians Fall Back Near Rostov Before Smashing Nazi Assaults; British Seize Initiative In Egypt Gy The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 23.-Secre- tary of State Hull, looking forward to a postwar world, said tonight that while a permanent mechanism for peace was being built "the United Nations must exercise surveillance over aggressor nations." The Secretary's blueprint for peace was given in an address broadcast throughout the United States and, by shortwave radio, to the world. It followed by only a few hours a sim- ilar discussion from London by Hull's counterpart in England, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. Hull included among the measures he said would be needed for a better world an international agency to keep peace "by force, if necessary," land "adjustment of national arma- ments. Neutrality 'Absurd' At the same time he warned the remaining neutrals that their pro- fessions of neutrality were "absurd and suicidal" in the face of the world-wide conflict and called upon "all peoples who prize liberty" to fight for it as their duty. Hull's outline of post-war projects was one of the most specific yet made by a responsible official of the United Nations and amplified the policies previously advanced by Vice Presi- dent Wallace and Undersecretary Sumner Welles, among others. It was delivered in an address pre- pared for broadcast over all national networks and for short-wave to the world. The speech had been eagerly awaited since President Roosevelt heralded it at his Tuesday press con- ference. ,Hull advocated the widely dis- cussed "period of transition" after the war during which the United Na- tions cooperatively must'"supplement and make more effective the action of countries individually in re-estab- lishing public order, in providing swift relief, in meeting the manifold problems of readjustment." Constructive Task "Beyond these," he continued, "there will lie before all countries the great constructive task of build- ing human freedom and Christian morality on firmer and broader foundations than ever before.. This task, too, will of necessity call for both national and international ac- tion." . To prevent far, Hull said it was "plain that 'some international I agency must be created which can- by force, if necessary-keep the peace among nations in the future." "There must be international co- operative action," he went on, to set up the mechanisms which can thus insure peace. This must include eventualeadjustment of. national armaments in such a manner that the rule of law cannot be successfully, challenged and that the burden of armaments may be reduced to a min- imum. Court Of Justice "It is plain that one of the insti- tutions which must be established and be given vitality is an interna- tional court of justice. It is equally clear that, in the process of re-estab- ishing international order, the nited Nations must exercise sur- veillance over aggressor nations un- til such time as the latter demon- strate their willingness and ability to live at peace with other nations." Hull also called for' reduction of excessive trade barriers, interna- tional monetary stabilization and machinery through which capital may "move on equitable terms from financially stronger to financially weaker countries." Biddle Orders Sit TO Enjoin Petrillo Action Justice Department Acts To Prevent Threatened Halt Of Record Making By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 23.-James C. Petrillo, head of the American Federation of Musicians (AFL), en- countered Justice Department oppo- sition today in his drive to eliminate "canned" music from every place but the home. Attorney General Biddle author- ized the filing of a suit to enjoin Ptrillo and the Federation from pre- v'enting union members from mak- ing transcriptions and recordings for anything but private use. Explanation Asked In addition, the Federal Commu- nications Commission called upon Petrillo and the National Broadcast- ing Company for a full explanation of the cancellation of a broadcast by the National High School Orchestra from Interlochen. The FCC also asked its legal staff to advise it on procedure for "a broader study into other musical problems as they affect'radio broad- casting"-apparently to study 3e- trillo's order against making record- ings for non-private use after July 31. The date and place of the anti- trust suit was not announced, but a Justice Department official said that it would be soon and either at Chi- cago or New York. Order Called Unjust The Department called Petrillo's order against iaking additional non- private records "unjust both to labor and the public" It asserted that small radio sta- tions would be forced out of busi- ness, eliminating a source of morale- sustaining war programs and that the order would adversely affect restaurants, hotels and -small dance halls which use "juke" boxes, adver- tising agencies, musical motion pic- tures, electrical transcription manu- facturers, and even the radio net- works and large radio stations. Both Armies Consolidate Desert Positions; Allies Attempt To Force Fight New Gun, Tanks In English Hands By EDWARD KENNEDY Associated Press Correspondent. CARIO, Egypt, July 23-The Army, of the Nile carried the fight to theI Axis forces along the entire 40-mile' Alamein desert front today for the second straight day but its main at-, tention was devoted to consolidating positions won in the opening phase of the new battle. The British, seeking to force the issue, went into the third night of the attack without a major decision1 in sight. An early assessment of British+ gains showed tank and infantry ad-1 vances and consolidation in the+ center, at the western end of Ruwe-1 isat Ridge and about Deir El Sheim,, and some progress by imperial in- fantry in both the northern and southern sectors. Many Tanks, GunsI Obviously the British had many new tanks and guns. The enemy forces encountered at' most points were predominantly Ger- man, indicating diminished Italian participation in the main battle cauldron about 80 miles west of Alex- andria. Some prisoners were taken. (Axis communiques said the Brit- ish attacks in the .main battle caul-+ dron were repelled and counter- attacks launched, with the capture of 800 to 1,000 imperial prisoners and destruction of 130 tanks.) Allied light bombers and fighter- bombers were late in starting their operations yesterday because of dust storms churned up by the bombing of enemy positions in the light of flares and the half-moon the night before. . The dust subsided about tlee hours after dawn, however, and te bombers attacked relentlessly throughout the rest of the day.' Nineteen Direct Hits Nineteen direct hits and many+ near misses were scored on armored cars, vehicles and gun positions. The RAF lost 11 planes. The Ger- mansbhad some dive-bombers in the air, but in general their aerial ac- tivity remained on a small scale. Whilethe main aerial activity was in the battle sector, U. S. Army heavy bombers joined the RAF in pounding Tobruk, Gazala, Salum, Fuka and Matruh, all Axis air or supply bases. Picncs Bomb Jap Posit ions In New Guinea HEADQUARTERS OF GENERAL MacARTHUR, Australia, Friday, July 24.-LA)-Allied bombers made five attacks Thursday on new Japa- nese installations near Buna Papua, and left a 5,000-ton Japanese trans- port burning, Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur's Headquarters announced to- day. Build.ings and barges at Gon Mis- sion, the settlement on the northern coast of New Guinea where the Jap- anese succeeded in disembarking be- tween 1,500 and 2,500 troops Wed- nesday, were raided by Allied dive- bombers, a communique said. This is the first time the use of dive-bombers against the Japanese has been mentioned in this area, All the bombs fell in the target area. Fighters also attacked the Gona toehold where an anti-aircraft bat- tery was silenced. Art Ci-nema League, To Show Famous 'Duck Soup' Tonight Opening the summer Art Cinema League series, the Marx Brothers' To Sciences, Says Prof. Howson Religion Has Not Been Adapted Head Of Of Religion Thinking At Vassar Declares Refinement Is Requisite Of Education "One of the first requisites of a more dynamic religion is the refine- ment of its thinking," declared Prof. J. Howard Howson yesterday. Speaking at the concluding lunch- eon of the Eighth Annual Confer- ence on Religion, Prof. Howson pointed out the fact that religion has not been wholly adapted to the new orientation of life that has grown out of the comparatively modern de- velopments of science. The obsolescence of the idea that the earth was the center of the uni- verse, growing out of the studies of Copernicus, was only a beginning of this new orientation. The laws of gravitation and evolution as well as the development of modern psychol- ogy followed in the next few cen- turies. As a result, Prof. Howson remarked, our educational system is animated by this newer type of ap- proach. On the other hand, our religion is anchored in a Pre-Copernican world and is losing its grip on our younger people, To hold them we must "either protect them from the implications of science or get into the mood of science and take the 'Second Front Plans Denied To- Commons view that no concept is valid unless it is derived from the facts," Prof. Howson declared. Indicating his preference for 'the latter course, Prof. Howson discussed some ideas in religious experience that he believes to have permanent validity and which could serve as a basis for this new approach to reli- gion. Included among these were "the awareness of the life that flows through us," "the sense of commu- nity," and the fact that "religion has emphasized the supremacy of the individual." Union Leaders Protest OPA Wage Policies I= Prof. Is Found Dead In Auto E. Miller Of Math Dept. Dies Of Heart Attack Dr. Edwin W. Miller, 37 years old, University professor of mathematics, was found dead in his car late yes- terday afternoon at the intersection of Ford and Middle Belt roads in Garden City. Deputies of the Wayne County sheriff's department said Prof. Mil- ler apparently suffered a heart at- tack. He is survived by Mrs. Frances M. Miller, and his mother of Marquette. He hAd no children. Miss June Fink- beiner, a fellow apartment-holder of Prof. Miller's at 210 S. Thayer St. said last night that when she saw Prof. Miller at 1:30 p.m. yesterday he seemed "perfectly healthy." By DREW MIDDLETON Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, July 23.--The govern- ment declined flatly today to let Commons in on whatever plans it has for a second front, but the tenor of its statement, coupled with an an- nouncement that Britain was digging deep into her remaining manpower, aroused speculation as to whether a decision has been reached on an in- vasion of Europe to help Russia. Further, it was officially disclosed that ano'her United States convoy,, one lnfthe largest ever to cross the Atlantic, had brought many more U.S. soldiers and airmen to augment the Allied divisions now in the Brit- ish Isles. The thousands of newly-arrived soldiers included American pilots, ground crews, Negro troops and other forces, a large corps of nurses and quantities of equipment.. The convoy had a safe crossing and its personnel is scattered now over the British Isles in numerous training billets. The second front was the major politico-military topic in all British circles from fish-and-chips shops to the highest quarters. It was clear to people and govern- ment that their fate is bound up with that of Russia. Sir Stafford Cripps, Britain's Lord Privy Seal and Commons spokesman for Prime Minister Churchill, gave the members of Commons to under- stand the government would not tip its hand. FDR Confers With CIO, AFL, Business Heads In Unusual Unity Gathering By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, -July 23. - The leaders of orgarnized management and labor paid an unusual wartime "unity" call upon President Roose- velt today, and a little later the CIO and AFL jointly asked him to forbid any "interference" with wage rates by the Office of Price Administra- tion. Together, Eric A. Johnston, presi- dent of the Chamber of .Commrerce of' the United States, William P. Witherow, president of the National Afsociation of Manufacturers, Wil- liam Green, president of the AFL, and Philip Murray, president of the CIO, entered Mr. Roosevelt's office. They told him that "for the first time in history" they had "sat down together voluntarily, to canvass what more" labor and management could "do to win the war." They said they had given the country a "demonstra- tion" of the "unity of purpose and action of American management and labor," and that additional meetings would be held when they seem ad- visable. Not long afterward, the joint la- bor war board of the CIO and AFL called to urge that Mr. Roosevelt continue the wage policy agreed up- on early in the war-no strikes, dis- putes mediated by the Labor De- partment, and wage controversies settled by the War Labor Board. Green told the President OPA was the only federal agency, which was "interfering." At the recent Los An- geles conference on wages in the air- craft industry, he said, an OPA rep- resentative had opposed a flat wage increase, and had thereby "inter- fered with production, caused resent- ment and lowered morale." Both Green and Murray opposed any effort to "freeze wages," a ques- tion much discussed in connection with efforts to curb living costs. Axis Onslaughts Repulsed On Road To Stalingrad By Defending Forces Soviet Successful In Northern Area BY EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Friday, July 24-With large forces of Axis tanks and mech- anized infantry beating at the de- fenses of Rostov, the Russians re- ported today that their hard-pressed armies had fallen back on one sector of that critical front after repulsing seven attacks throughout yesterday. Meanwhile, the Russians said, their forces defending the road to Stalin- grad, on the Volga, repulsed strong enemy onslaughts yesterday, while in the Voronezh area at the northern end of the blazing front the Russian successes continued. The Novocherkassk area of the Rostov battle, some 20 miles north- east of the city proper, saw perhaps the most intense fighting of the day, Russian reports indicated. Fought Defensive Battles "In the Novocherkassk area, our. troops fought defensive battles against large forces of enemy tanks and mechanized infantry," the mid- night communique said. "One of our units during the day repulsed seven enemy attacks and killed over 1,000 German officers and ml. When our troops were threat- ened with encirclement they retreated to new positions upon the ordex of the command." (This was the second straight day that the Russians had acknowledged a crack in the defenses around NoV- oclierkassk. Just how far the Red forces retreated was not indicated.) Heavy pressure on the forces stand- ing guard over Stalingrad continued. The Russians declared the Germans were throwing in reserves in the fighting around Voronezh "and are trying with all their might to regain this lost position." Many Tanks Disabled The Soviet report said several scores of tanks, were disabled and about 1,000 men killed in one sector of the Voronezh front while in an- other sector one unit repulsed three counter-attacks and captured a fort- ified position. The Russians in the Voronezh area are hitting the Germans fiercely in an effort to relieve the pressure on the armies to the south. The most intense fighting was on the lofty north bank of the Don at Novocherkassk, 20 miles northeast of Rostov,'but other German columns were converging on the delta port from Voroshilovgrad and from Tag- anrog, 40 miles west on the Sea of Azov. -F Nazi Bombs Belst Three, British Areas What's Your Opinion? Question Of PEM Credit Hours Brings Varied Student Response By BOB SHADD Student response to Herbert 0. (Fritz) Crisler's suggestion for credit hours in PEM proved to be varied, as Michigan's newly hardened males were asked yesterday: "Do you feel that your efforts in the physical fitness program should be rewarded with academic credit?" Some of the comments .were: Eugene Mandeberg: "If I spend from four to five hours a week at PEM, some credit should be given. I'm not asking for five or six hours." Don MacCoul: "No! Credit should not be given. I don't mind putting in have accounts receivable at the Dean's office." Jim Landers: It is as much to the credit of the University to have phy- sically fit men as mentally fit. For this reason PEM is a valuable course yet one to two hours credit is only fair." Bill Loud: In view of PEM's pur- pose, to fit men for the armed forces. I think no credit should be given. A man should be glad to have the op- portunity of taking the program. If, when the war is over, physical hard- ening continues, that's a different matter and credit is only fair." Rill .reh=g. If fthe'v dotinove'credit. ownsley Memorial Exhibition Sells Over 1,000 Tickets Already By MIKE DANN fire order will run through their paces Daily Sports Editor for nearly an hour and a half. High- The ticket drive for the Townsley light of the exercises will be mass Memorial Program is less than one games that are so typical in Army day old, but already over a thousand and Navy training centers through- tickets have been sold with the de- out the nation. mand increasing by leaps and bounds. All members of the program will A tremendous wave of enthusiasm wear certain colored shirts and shorts has swept the campus in an effort that will greatly add to the color of to make the mass public demon- the evening's activity., stration by 1,850 PEM students a The greatest-tug-of-war in history fitting tribute to the late Dr. Elmer will be staged when 1,000 students R. Townsley who founded the Uni- will partak in the age-old sport. versity's physical fitness program. Earl Risk y, of the IM depai'tment Every department and group con- points out, "imagine about 35 tons nected with the University has set on each side, both pulling with all up special committees to take care their might. Just seeing that event of the ticket distribution for the alone should more than pay for the exhibition which will be staged Wed- price of the ticket." 4.--- -1T..._. ..._ .13 A e p i~l nr.dit in ri.4itt,4 hw's cy By The Associated Press LONDON, July 24 (1Friday)--The heaviest German air attack on Brit- ain in weeks broke over three sec- tions of England early today, with Nazi raiders scattering bombs and flares and defying intense anti-air- craft fire. There were no immediate indica- tions that bhe fliers were concentrat- ing on any one town. The raiders hit at the North and East Midlands, Eastern England and East Anglia, sending down showers of flares and following them with high explosives, The Germans flew over after an other day of RAP attacks on occu- pied areas. British Spitfires flew fast and low over the German-occupied coast in their fifth consecutive day of such raiding, spattering machine-gun fire and pouring bombs on enemy tropps and gun positions and road, rail and canal traffic. Although the, air ministry said the. operations were not on a large scale, they were described as intensive, and Mi~ff nnnosition from, the d~fe,,dain