WFeather Not Much Change 4 fri ' t mt 0~k. miil Editorial Second Front UpR To Roosevelt .., I ------------- VOL. LI No. 36-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1942 2:15 A.M. FINAL .. . . . . . . . . . . . Labor Groups Will Combine Force In Huge 'Peace' Parley Conference To Close Gap Between CIO, AFL Is Certain; Labor Leaders Willing To Talk It Over Two Committees To BeAppointed CHICAGO, Aug. 4-()-The Amer- ican Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations agreed today to consider merging their forces in one huge unit at a historic peace parley. A conference to study steps to close the seven-year gap between them and to bring approximately 11,000,000 workers under a single standard be- came assured when. AFL president William Green aanounced the Fed- eration's standing peace committee was ready to meet a similar group appointed by CIO president Philip Murray. TheAFL chief reported the date and site of the meeting would be fixed by members of the committees, expressed the hope that the negoti- ations would be finished this fall aid stated he was confident "the con- ferees will be able to reach a jsettle- ment fair to all Concerned." Murray Names Committee Murray, in a letter to Green last Sunday, advised that he had named a committee to discuss "possible es- tablishment of organic unity between our organizations." Green regarded the note as the CIO's "official ac- ceptance"' of the AFL's sugg'estion Idst May that peace parleys be re- sumed. Green tqd reporters he be- lieved President Roosevelt was "deep- ly interested" in a reunion of the labor bodies. If the AFL, claiming 6,000,000 members, and the CIO, claming 5,- 000,000 adherents, reunite, it would raise the question of what, if any- thing, John L, Lewis would do. Lewis, head of the United Mine Workers, bolted the AFL in 1935 and set up 4 the CIO. There have been reports that Lewis, at odds with Murray, would withdraw his union from the CIO. CIO, AFL Unity Green asserted re-establishnient of unity between the CIO and AFL would be the "greatest single con- tribution" both could make to "the success of the-war effort." He added: "It will eliminate division, discord and jurisdictional strife. It will ex- pedite war production. It will permit labor to speak with a single and more effective voice, both in protecting the social and' industrial interests of workers today and when world peace is finally negotiated." The AFL and CIO engaged in peace parleys in 1937 and 1939, but con- ferences were broken off each time. The task of attempting to remove all obstacles on the road to unity will be in the hands of the negotiating committees. Representing the C10 will be Murray; R. J. Thomas, presi- dent of the United Automobile Work- ers; and Julius Emspak of the United Electrical Radio and Machine Work- ers. Three vice presidents will speak for the AFL. They are Harry C. Bates of th e Bricklayers Union, Dan- iel Tobin of the Teamsters Union and William L. Hutcheson of the Car- penters'Union. Defense Calls Col. Lndberg In Pelley. Trial By The Associated $ress INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 4.-The se- dition trial-of William Dudley Pelley and two associates, accused of seek- ing to interfere with the nation's war effort, neared an end today with the brief and somewhat anti-climac- tic appearance of Charles A. Lind- bergh, called as a defense witness. After the noted aviator and for- mer America First leader testified that he had made no effort since the United States entered the war to learn the people's attitude, the de- fense announced it had no other witnesses immediately available and Judge Robert C. Baltzell recessed the trial until tomorrow. The defense apparently called Lindbergh in an effort to gain sup- port of published articles in which Britain Charges India Is Appeasing Japanese All-Indian Congress Approves Of Civil Disobedience To Obtain Freedom By The Associated Press NEW DELHI, Aug. 4.-The Brit- ish government charged today that the great majority of the All-India Congress working committee are ap- peasers of Japan and that the na- tionalist leader Mohandas K. Gan- dhi favors prompt.-negotiations with Japan for the independent India he seeks to establish now. The government citeddocuments seized in a raid on the All-India Congress Party's headquarters at Allahabad, in particular the original draft of a resolution put forward by Gandhi advocating that Indians wage a campaign of civil disobedi- Hi bee Speaks To Tau Beta Pi Honor Students Engineering Society Hears Founder Talk At Dinner For 18 New Members Prof. Henry H. Higbee, speaking at the initiation banquet of Tau Beta Pi, engineering honor frater- nity, said last night that "it has been the distinguished men in the past who have brought the world to what it is today." "The world looks to the same kind of men in this generation to bring it out of this mess," he said. Prof. Higbee founded the chapter here in 1905 and has been an active officer of the national fraternity for more than 15 years. "We need more study of man himself rather than more study of nature," he said. "They (the past generation) developed the mechan- ics of living; we must, develop the ethics of living. It is important that the engineer find the proper rela- tionship to the moral and religious side of life." Robert Sundquist, who gave the. welcome, is the president of the Michigan Gamma chapter of Tau Beta Pi. Prof. Louis A. Baier was toastmaster at the banquet while William Lehmann led the response. The new initiates are: Edgar A. Bongort, Brice M. Bowman, Herman Dykstra; Charles E. Goodell, Gilbert Hammond, Robert Hehemann, Guy A. Hoenke, John K. Koffel, William H. Lehmann, John W. Luecht, Rich- ard K. Mosher. Donald M. O'Neill, Carl C. Red- inger, Cecil Robert Sessions, William T. Sparrow, Hideo Yoshihara, Lee C. Verduin land Peter. A. Weller com- plete the list. Coast Dimout Set By Army Pacific Order Approaches Blackout In Scope Associated Press War Correspondent SAN FRANCISCO, AUG. 5 (Wed- nesday)-The army today ordered a dim-out of the entire Pacific coast, so vast and drastic in scope as to ap- proach the proportions of a blackout. It called a halt to baseball and other. outdoor sports at night, ord- ered every electric sign and theatre marquee extinguished anti prescribed some form of shielding for virtually every other type of exterior lighting. The regulations, defined in a proc-' lamation by Lieut. Gen. J. L. DeWitt, commanding the fourth army and western defense command, will be- come effective August 20. Covering a strip of western Wash- ington, Oregon and California at some points as much as 150 riles wide, they have the effect of extend- ing and tremendously augmenting the dim-out order requested by the navy last spring for certain ocean- front sections. The proclamation created a zone of restricted lighting, which General De Witt said the present situation requires as a matter of military necessity. He called attention to at- tacks on ships traveling in coastal waters and attacks on land installa- tions. Allied Planes Level Japanese-Held Cit ence to win immediate ireedom from British rule. Gandhi admitted the substance of the charges, but said he had taken his position for bagaining purposes. Such a resolution was eventually adopted by the working committee and is to be voted upon by the party in a momentous meeting this Friday, but the apprtved resolution, sup- ported by the more moderate Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, omitted refer- ences advocating direct cooperation with Japan. Gandhi's proposed resolution stated in part: "Japan's quarrel is not with India. She is warring against the British Empire. India's participation in the war has not been 'with the consent of representatives of the Indian peo- ple. It was a purely British act. "If India were freed, her first step would probably be to negotiate with Japan.... "This committee desires to assure the Japanese government and peo- ple that India bears no enmity either towards Japan or towards any other nation. India .only desires freedom from all alien domination. "But if Japan attacks India ahd Britain makes no response to its ap- peal, the committee would expect all those who look to the Congress for guidance to offer complete non- violent non-cooperation to the Japa- nese forces, and not to render any assistance to them ..." Officials ove To Investigate ~Black Market' By The Associated Press NEW OF3 EiANS, Aug. 4.-Charges than an extensive "black market" in steel existed will be investigated thoroughly, a congressional sub- committee announced today shortly after President Roosevelt said that he thought persons who sold steel in such manner should go to jail. Almost at the same time, Price Administrator Leon Henderson in Washington ordered an immediate investigation of the report that black market sales had been made to the Higgins shipbuilding yards here. "This matter of a black market will be fully investigated, not only here and in Washington but through- out the country," said Rep. Peter- son (Dem.-Fla.), chairman of the committee which is investigating the Maritime Commission's cancellation of a Higgins contract for 200 Liberty Ships because of an alleged steel shortage. President Roosevelt at a press con- ference said charges before the com- mittee of a black market should be investigated and Peterson said in re- ply, "they will be, we will not stop until we get to the bottom of this and Congress will have a full report." These developments followed tes- timony before the ,committee by Frank 0. Higgins, general manager of the Higgins Corporation and son of A. J. Higgins, that there was a "black steel market with bulging warehouses scattered over the na tion." Th ,,,beis Petition For IaclaI19 o sts Joe College has moved into the city council to fight for his right to get, home on the weekends, The executive council of the Michigan Union- petitioned the councilmen at, their reguar meet- ing on Monday td designate cer- tain "strategic" corners on main arteries leading out of town as official hitch-hiking stations. Designed to meet the student's transportation problem now that. tires have turned into gold -mines. the plan proposed that identifica- tion cards be issued to all would- be riders. These would e shown to the obliging' motorist and would constitute a waiver of the driver's liability in the event of any accident. To make it complete, the stu- dents even want hitch-hiking signs to be posted on the corners. U.S, Fighters B a;;54 #Planes In Sea Battles Navy Pus Losses At Four After Single Squadron Fights Japs At Midway By The Asocated Press WASHINGTON, AUG. 4-A single squadron of Navy fighter pilots was credited officially today with having shot down 54 Japanese planes and probably shot down 18 others to help win the great air-sea battles of Coral Sea and Midway. The squadron lost only four planes, two to enemy fight- ers and two which rap out of gas. In reporting the squadron's score the 'Navy said that it was made in four actions-one in the Coral Sea and three at Midway-and called these "the most decisive series of in- dividual aircraft actions in the war to date." Among the enemy planes reported as certainly shot down were at least 22 Japanese "Zero" planes, long re- garded by American rpilitary and naval authorities as the enemy's best fighter. In 'a sense, therefore, the single squadron's fighting record was re- garded in naval circles here as one measure of the relative merits of the Japanese craft and it% Grumman "Wildcat" opposition as well as of the combat skill of Japanese and Ameriocan pilots. Law Review Editor Chlose n Marshall Peter Appointed To Succeed Estep The appointment of M a r s h a 11 Peter '43 L, to the position of editor- in-chief of the Michigan Law Review was announced yesterday by the fac- ulty of the Law School. Estep, the former editor, has re- signed to enter the Naval Training School at Notre Dame. others members ne~y appointed to the senior board of editors of the Law Review are George Rudolph, George Schilling, and Robert tlrich. Schilling was made an associate edi- toir.P The remaining group on the senior board include the last springs ap- pointees James Dunlap E d w a r d Dwyer, and James MCrystal Nazi' SCaucasus Advance Threatens Russian Flank Two-Score Circus Animals Die As Flames Sweep Menagerie Sparks From Train Believed To Have Started Blaze; North Estimates Damage At $200,000 By The Associated Press CLEVELAND, Aug. 4.-Fire, ter- ror of the jungle, sxept the Ringling. Circus menagerie today, killing two- score animals, but tonight the big top and the midway carried on with all their bright lights and glittering colors. The flames broke out at noon to- day in the menagerie tent, just as the hands were gathering for lunch. There were 18 cages and rows of tethered beasts. Big John Sabo, the menagerie su- perintendent, shouted and the ani- mal men came running. In 15 agon- izing minutes the tent had burned, cages were charred, the screams of caged "cats" had heralded their fierce death; and the rout of ele- phants, zebras and camels had sub- sided to a tense quiet. Henderson Counts Loss Dr. J. J. Henderson, the circus veterinarian, turning with ? grimace from the quivering body of a camel which had just been destroyed by a merciful shot, counted the loss. So did Big John, nervously bossing the removal of a charred wagon. John Ringling North heard their reports, and said that upwards of two-score animals were dead. "Oth- ers may have to be destroyed. There is a puma that is suffering," he said. A few minutes later a shot ended the puma's life. $200,000 Damage North tentatively estimated the campu s .Vote To Determine Prom. dress By BARBARA DeF ES An all-campus vote will be taken from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. tomorrow to put an end to all quibbling about whether or not Michigan's Summer Prom shall be formal or semi-formal, General Chairman Donald E. West said yesterday. The dance was previously an- nounced as optional-formal or semi- formal-but the central committee, deluged under with complaints and somewhat confused itself,, has decid- ed to let the campus make up its own mind. Polls for this all-campus vote will be placed at Angell- Hall, the front steps of the Union, the middle of the diagonal and in the engineering arch. Tickets, on sale for the first time to- morrow, will be available at all of these posts. Statements from central comfnit- tee show that Buck Dawson, repre- senting Alpha Phi Omega, is a (Continued on Page 3) loss at $200,000. He said a fire offi- cer had told him he believed sparks from a train, passing by on the lake- front, had started the blaze. The animals killed by fire or de- stroyed by the guns of quickly gath- ering police and coast guardsmen included two elephants, 10 camels, eight zebras, five lions, two tigers, three deer, two Indian donkeys, two brindle gnus, two giraffes,, and the puma. The performing animals, the big. top, the horses and the gorillas Gar- gantua and Toto Were unharmed. Fed by straw and sawdust, and' sreading like a flash across the can- v and the big painted wagons, the flames seared the caged beasts, ter- rified the rows of elephants and zebras, and defied the flailing shov- els and buckets of mechanical crews, a few performers and train- ers, the circus firemen and the city's police and firemen. Kanzler Gets New Position In Washington, Chief Of WPB Automotive Branch Leaves Detroit; Will Appraise Industry DETROIT, Aug. 4 -(P)- Ernest Kanzler who took over the job of Chief of the War Production Board's automotive branch last January 21, left for Washington tonight to be- come deputy chairman of the WPB in charge of program progress. To the new assignment which will involve a thorough and constant ap- praisal of the production effort of in- dustry in general Kanzler will take the more than six months experience gained in coordinating the automotive industry's war materials output task. Until a successor is appointed to Kanzler as chief of the automotive branch and director of' the Detroit region of the WPB, these two posts will be handled by D. J. Hutchins. who has been head of the materials section of the Detroit WPB office. R. L. Vaniman, who as deputy chief has been in charge of the Wash- ington office of the automotive braInch, will be acting chief of that division., New Plan To Check Car Speedometers Is StudiedBy WPBJ WASHINGTON, Aug. 4.-(AP)-As an alternative to nation-wide gaso- line rationing to save rubber, the War Production Board was reported today to be considering a speedom- eter-checking plan to "ration mile- age." Simultaneously a high official of the Office of Price Administration said fuel oil rationing in the East was a "distinct possibility" unless other drastic steps were taken. Lim- itation of gasoline deliveries as far east as the Mississippi was under consideration, he said, to free tank cars for hauling petroleum east. Officials who would not permit use of their names said the "mileage rationing" proposal before WPB called for the registration of every automobile and the allocation of a specified number of miles to each through "certificates of necessity" issued to drivers. FDR To Decide Fate Of Spies WASHINGTON, AUG. 4 -(R)- President Roosevelt said today that he was making a careful review of the voluminous evidence presented German Drive Approaches Don River Elbow; Cuts ThroughSouth Of Salsk Apparent Goal Is Only 50 Miles Off By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, AUG. 5 (Wedneaday)- German troops have made another 50-mile advance in the Caucasus to threaten Tikhoretsk, an important junction on the Soviet Railway sys- tem, and also have gained in the Don River elbow northwest of Stalingrad, the Russians announced early today. Driving southwest of Salsk along railway, the Nazis have reached Be-, laya Glina, and their apparent goal is Tikhoretsk, another 50 miles away. Seizure of Tikhoretsk would out- flank the Russian Army still fighting the Nazis at Kushchevka, 50 .miles to. the north, and enable the German to control large segments of Russia railways in the Western Caucasus. Soviet Positions Pierced G e r m a n reserves succeeded in punching a hole in Soiet positions in the Don River elbow some 80 miles northwest of Stalingrad. "In the Kletskaya area and south of it," the midnight communique said, "our troops repulsed many en- emy attacks and inflicted many blows on the enemy. "The Germans threw In many re- serves and only at the cost of heavy losses pressed back somewhat our troops." The, push to Belaya Olina repre- sents a 125-mile thrust into the Cau- casus by the Nazi salient which clossed the Don ! near Nikolaevsk, bridged the Manych river to reach Salsk, then turned southwestward toward Tikhoretsk. "In the Kushchevka area h bulletin said, "the German it. troops continuously attack our de- fense lines. Most of the attacks are repulsed. In one sector only the en- emy succeeded in pushing forward." Cossacks Battle Hard Cossack cavalrymen equipped with 'modern weapons were in the thick of the Caucasian fight, but the tone of the Russian communique ,made it only too evident that the German mechanized might was telling in most sectors except perhaps at Tsim- lyansk. All attempts to cross the stream in the Kletskaya- region were declared repulsed and on the Lower Don.near Tsimlyansk German forces which poured 'across bridgeheads apparent- ly were contained in a pocket on the south bank. Nazis Near Oil Fields The Caucasus was the mos criti- cal zone along the 2,000-mile attle- front, because German troops were nearing the Maikop oil fields which produce 7 percent of Russian petrol- eui and were striking hard for the derricks of Grozny, which yield an- other 3 percent or More. The vast Baku pools near the Caspian were more than 600 . miles away, These producers of 75 to 80 percent of Rusian oil were protected by the towering Caucasus mountai. Of the Salsk fighting, 100 miles southeast of Rostov, the Russian communique at mid-day said: "Sov- iet troops were forced to fall back to- new positions after repulsing fierce enemy attacks." Union Defers, Action On New Overtime Ban By The Associated Press CHICAGO, AUG. 4-The CIO- United Automobile, Aircraft, Agricul- tural Implement Workers Union to- day considered but deferred action on a demand that the policy of no overtime for Saturday and Sundays be applied to other labor organiza- tions. The annual convention shelved temporarily a resolution which would renounce the union's own wartime policy of no week-end overtime pay unless other 1 a b o r organizations Shaw's 'Misalliance' To Open Run, 'On Michigan Repertory Stage Today By BERYL SHOENFIELD The Michigan Repertory Players of the Department of Speech open their fifth week of production at 8:30 p.m. today in the Mendelssohn Theatre with "Misalliance," a com- edy by the author of "Man and Su- perman" and "Pygmalion"-George Bernard Shaw. The Shavian answer to the age- old question of how modern children should be brought up will be found in this "debate in one sitting," so dubbed by the author upon comple- tion of his play in London, 1910. Representing domestic conven- tionality in the Shaw farce is the character John Tarleton, British un- derwear tycoon, whose scientific method of rearing children is con- stantly* thwarted by his own off- spring, Patsy and Johnny. A climax is reached when Patsy, resenting her father's firm reins, determines to Surrey home will include Daniel Mullin as Lord Summerhaps; Jacob Ulanoff as Julius Baker; and Marg- aret Muse as Mlle. Szczepanowska. Frank Pickard plays Joel, the flying suitor-by-accident. Guest director Charles H. Mere- dith, 'who guided the Repertory Players in "Thunder Rock," directs the Shaw vehicle. Meredith has been serving on the summer Department of Speech faculty, and will return in. the fall to New Orleans' Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre as managing director. A star of silent screen- days, his name is now familiar in community theatre circles, and his work as director of playhouses in Dallas, Texas, and Charleston, S. C., has won him acclaim. Howard Bay, designer, William Kellam, builder, arid Horace Armi- stead, painter-noted Broadway sce- nic art trio-have created the sets RICHARD STEWART i