We'Ilther [Yan charning. to snow timight Y ' AQigart ju&Iit! Editorial Strong Action Will Preserve Our Libertiles ,e VOL. L. .No. 98 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEB. 18, 1940 PRICE FIVE C British Destroyer Rescues Prisoners Aboard Nazi Ship H.M.S. Cossack Invades Norwegian Fjord To Seize Reich Prison Freighter Altmark LONDON, Feb. 17.--P)---A conquering British destroyer came home to- night with 300 Britons rescued from the Nazi prison ship Altmark, leaving the German prison vessel rammed fast in the ice and rocks of a Norwegian fjord after a defiant and furious fight on the very shores of a frightened neutral nation. Like a chapter from the exploits of Drake or Nelson, a boarding party from H.M.S. Cossack, one of at least three British destroyers involved, swarmed over the decks of the dingy, 12,000-ton Altmark, freed the sea- men-prisoners taken months ago by4 the now-scuttled Admiral Graf Spee and killed five Germans and wound- ed five others. The officer-leader of the boarding party sprang eight feet to the lower deck of the Altmark, knocked aside a German guard, and raced to the bridge to send the Altmark hard ashore with a "full speed astern" ring of the engine-room telegraph. Then he rushed to the captain's cabin and flung open the door, only to be wounded in the arm by a pistol fixed in a "booby trap." In a spectacular side show to the battle, the 5,805-ton German tanker Baldur, cornered off shore by the British destroyer Ivanhoe, was scut- tled by her crew-"in German fashion," as the British admiralty put it. The British foreign office received Norway's protest over the seizure with counter-representations over Norwegian failure to find and release the British prisoners during a search prior to last night's incident. This failure, it said, left Britain no alter- native but totake matters into its own hands and free the captives. An admiralty communique, de- scribing the boarding of the Altmark in stilted, official language, said shots were fired by both sides and asserted the boarders found two porn pom guns and four machine guns on the Altmark. It also described the rescue of one German Altmark crewman from the ice-filled water and told how the destroyer Ivanhoe rescued the crew of the Baldur. Berlin Hints Revenge For British Attack BERLIN, Feb. 18.-(IP)-Dark hints of revenge for the British attack on the German steamer Altmark were published by an indignant Nazi press today. Wrathful official quarters took a grave view of the act. "The crime in Gjlessingfjord pre- sents us with an entirely new state of affairs in war policy and war tech- nique, the effects of which cannot now be foreseen in the slightest degree," raged Adolf Hitler's own newspaper, Volkischer Beobachter. "If old idiots and tiny criminal minds were not at the helm in Eng- land, then they would know that National Socialist greater Germany has the habit of striking back. "They should know that the tragedy has filled the entire German people with a single determination: we will present an accounting!" The more reserved Berlin Borsen Zeitung declared that the memory of the brave, unarmed German sailors who died "will continue to flame with- in us and demand expiation." The Lokal Anzeiger described the incident as "a declaration of war on neutrals." A blunt declaration that non-com- batant nations now must show whe- ther they are "strictly neutral" was published by the Essener National Zeitung, which is close to Field Mar- shal Hermann Goering. Norwegians Protest 'Violation Of Neutrality' (By The Associated Press) OSLO, Feb. 17.-British invasion of a Norwegian fjord in a daring raid on the German prison ship Altmark filled Norway tonight with alarm for the delicate balance of her neutrality and with resentment over the disre- gard of her sovereignty.; She protested vigorously to Great Britain against the action of the Bri- tish destroyer Cossack in forcing her way in the darkness last night into Gjessingfjord under orders of the Bri- tish Admiralty to free the Altmark's prisoners "with or without permission Democrats Set July5As Date For Convention Farley Schedules Meeting At Chicago; Will Follow Republican Nominations (By The Associated Press) July 15 was selected by Chairman James A. -Farley as the date for the Democratic national convention at Chicago. Chairman Farley called the Demo- cratic meeting for a date exactly three weeks after the Republican national convention is to convene in ,Philadelphia on June 2b. His announcement, at Miami, Fla,, brought the comment from Republi- can Chairman John Hamilton that "it looks like some of the Democrats don't think President Roosevelt's late convention idea was so hot after all." White House circles had indicated several weeks ago that the President was desirous of shortening the po- litical campaign by delaying the convention dates. The OhiocDemocratic central and executive committee, meanwhile, went on rgcord in favor of the state's delegation to the convention sup- porting the President if he desires renomination. The committee said that if President Roosevelt eliminates himself, the first choice for a "favor- ite son" candidate should be Senator Donahey, with Charles Sawyer, na- tional committeemar, as second choice. Sturgis To Discuss Simpson Institute Summarizing the work of the Simp- son Memorial Institute. for the past 12 years and the more important in- vestigations relating to the cause and cure of pernicious anemia, Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, director of the Institute will present one of two talks at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building before the meeting of the Research Club. Also scheduled to speak on the same program is Prof. Everett S. Brown of the political science department who will discuss "The Restoration of Civil and Political Rights by Presidential Pardon." Kabul Recalls Minister ANKARA, Turkey, Feb. 17.-(P)- Afghanistan's Minister to Turkey was recalled urgently homeward to Kabul today for military discussions which were reported to be connected with the possible spread of war to Western Asia. Annual Parley In Education 0pens April29 Contemporary Luminaries, Books, Political Issues IncludedAmong Topics William L. Phelps Featured In Talks Searching analyses of contempor- ary world figures such as Stalin, Chamberlain and Roosevelt . . . de- tailed discussions of American and foreign policies . . . authoritative re- views of the great books of 1939- these compose merely a portion of the program announced for the Eighth Annual Adult Education In- stitute convening April 29 through May 3 in the Rackham Building.- S o u t h America, contemporary American domestic problems and a9 consideration of Near Eastern tradec routes and culture are also included on the program of the Institute whichi is sponsored jointly by the Extension3 Service and the Michigan Federation of Women Clubs. Phelps To Talk William Lyon Phelps, emeritus pro- fessor of English literature at Yale University, will discuss current booksl such as Carl Sandburg's Abraham Lincoln: The War Years"; Somerset Maugham's "Christmas Holiday"; John Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath," and Margaret Rawling'sI "The Yearling."f Professor Phelps will conclude the conference with an address on "The Art of Living." He is noted as the author of such best sellers as "Whatj I Like In Poetry" and "What I Like in Prose." , American and foreign policies to' be considered are the national de-t fense policy of the U.S., the U.S.1 and the Far East, the repeal of the embargo and its consequences and the Latin-American or Good Neigh- bor Policy. Individual attention will be given to Mexico, Brazil and Ar- gentin a. Contemporary Problems Contemporary American domestic problems such as the "Economic and Social Significance of the Falling Birthrate"; "Storms or Rainbows for the Farmer"; "Labor's Objectives," and "Plums of Plenty or Grapes of Wrath" are scheduled for discussion.r Speakers at the Institute in addi-t ,on to Professor Phelps will include1 Ernest L. Anthony, dean of Agricul- ture at Michigan State College; Ar-t thur G. Dorland, head of the history department at the University of Wes- tern Ontario; Dr. Paul W. Harrison, medical missionary to Arabia for 30 years; No-Yunk Park, Chinese au- thor and lecturer and an authority on our Far-Eastern relations, and Arthur E. Raab, chairman of th State of Michigan Labor Mediation Board. Roosevelt To Visit Panama Canal Zone Aboard U.S.S. Lang at Sea, Feb. 17 --(AP Via Wireless) -Lifting the veilF of secrecy surrounding his cruise,s President Roosevelt a n n o u n c e d through an aide today that he wouldd arrive at the Canal Zone early to-r morrow for an inspection of the de-L fenses on the Atlantic side of the Panama Canal. Brig.-Gen. Edwin M. Watson, theV President's secretary and militaryI aide, said Mr. Roosevelt would conferI with Commanding General Van Voor- o his of the Canal Zone and military, naval and civilian authorities. Cagers Track T Varsity Snaps Losing Streak In Dull Game, Capt. Rae Leads Scoring With 10 Points; 3,500 Watch Wolverines Win By CHRIS VIZAs Michigan's 29-18 victory over Chi- cago's basketball squad last night at Yost Field House was as exciting and impressive as an old ladies' rocking chair social. As the Wolverines waltzed into their first Conference victory in the last four games, the Maroons slowly sank deeper into the Big Ten cellar as they ran their losing streak to seven straight games. Chicago Power Nil Despite the narrow 12-11 lead Michigan held at half time, Chicago's real scoring power was practically nil as only Capt. Dick Lounsbury, who lead the invaders' attack with nine points, scored the lone Maroon field goal in that period with about a minute to go before half time. In an effort to crash through Chi- cago's dull but stifling offense the Wolverines committed nine personal fouls in the opening frame, and Chi- cago kept the running by connecting on nine out of its eleven free shots. The Maroons made good on their first seven charity tosses and then Lounsbury connected for his field goal. Score From Floor The shock of scoring from the floor was so great that it momentarily up- set the Windy City quintet as Louns- bury and Paul Zimmerman each made only one free throw out of two attempts, thus closing the first half scoring. Only Charles Wagenberg, substitute guard, was able to duplicate Louns- bury's feat of sinking a field goal. It was the last Chicago score of the night and came with less than four minutes of play left in the last period. Lounsbury added two more baskets from the floor to his total during the second half and one foul shot by (Continued on Page 3) Down Team Displays Strength Maize And Blue Wins Four-Mile Event To Set New Meet Record Don Canham Establishes New Mark In High Jump At Annual Indoor Relay Carnival At Illinois (Special To The Daily) CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Feb. 17.-Mich- igan contributed two of the three new meethrecords established to- night in the 17th Illinois Indoor Re- lay Carnival but the highly-touted Wolverines captured only one of the feature relay races--the four mile university test. The quartet of Karl Wisner, Jack Dobson, Ed Barrett, and Capt. Ralph Schwarzkopf set a new carnival mark of 17:39.4, cracking the old mark of 17:50.5, set by Pennsylvania in 1930. Wisner was a few yards be- hind at the end of his leg, but Dobson handed Barrett a slight lead which the latter increased to 45 yards be- fore handing the baton to Schwarz- kopf who took it easy, winning by only 15 yards. Indiana Takes Two Indiana won the two-mile and medley relays, with Illinois surprising by capturing the mile relay in which Michigan finished second asWarren Breidenbach failed by a yard of catching Illinois' Will McCown. Don Canham, brilliant high-jump- ing junior, added the relays record to his collection by leaping 6 ft., 6% in., to better the old mark of 6 ft., 51/2 in., set by Burg of Chicago. This was the same height as Canham's new Yost Field House record set last; Tuesday night., Charlie Decker, Michigan's sopho- Grapplers Win At Penn State Lions' Elliott Breaks Leg In Bout With Jordon (Special To The Daily) STATE COLLEGE, Pa., Feb. 17.- Capt. Forrest Jordan's default victory over Penn State's Warren Elliott in the final bout gave Michigan a 16 to 14 triumph over the Nittany Lions hitherto undefeated grapplers here tonight. With the score at 11-11, Capt. Ernie Bortz scored a surprise victory over Don Nichols in the 175 pound class' to give the home team a three point margin going into the final bout. Jordan's bout went into split peri- ods and Elliott took the defensive. The Lion broke away in a minute, but Jordan was successful with a leg dive and as the wrestlers fell to the mat Elliott suffered a broken leg. . Harlan Danner won his fifth straight fall victory by pinning Roy Gensler of State after the grapplers had wrestled on fairly even terms for' eight minutes. Michigan was forced to come back from an 11 point deficit when Tom Weidig and Dick French lost deci- sions and State's Eastern Intercol- legiate Champion, Frank Gleason, tossed Jack Sargent after punishing the Wolverine for eight minutes with a figure four. Bill Combs scored a notable tri- (Continued on Page 3) more pole vaulter continued to showJ great promise, and finished tied for first place at 13 ft., 6 in. which is better than he has ever vaulted be- fore. Smith Takes Second In the 75-yard dash, Al Smith of Michigan finished second to Big Ten champion Myron Piker of Northwes- tern. Stan Kelley made a highly un- successful attempt to defend his low hurdle title won last year, when he finished fourth behind Don Olsen of Illinois. In addition, Kelley placed fourth in the high hurdles behind Ed Smith, Wisconsin's Negro timber- topper. Michigan's Conference 440 cham- (Continued on Page 3) Michigan Tech Defeats Varsity Pucksters, 4-0 Miners Score All Goals In Game's Last Stanza; Captain Villeneuve Stars (Special to'The Daily) HOUGHTON, Feb. 17.-Michigan's luckless hockey team lost its sixth game in a row and the mythical championship of the state when Michigan Tech broke out on a four- goal scoring spree in the third period here this afternoon to whip the Low- reymen, 4-0. The victory gave the Huskies their third win in the four game series, all three of their victories coming after the Wolverines won the first game in Ann Arbor. After two scoreless periods, Arne Mars opened the fireworks on a play set up by Capt. Maurice Villeneuve. The husky defenseman took a pass from his center and beat goalie Eldon "Spike" James after 2:50 of the period had elapsed. Bob Petaja followed with a pair of goals, the first coming on a power play while Wolverine Jim Lovett was in the penalty box and the second on a double pass from Villeneuve and Norman Sihvonen. Barney Bourne wound up the after- noon's scoring when he soloed down the ice, feinted James out of position and drilled home the fourth tally shortly before the final gun. The game was the final athletic event on Tech's Winter Carnival pro- gram. It was the third time the Wolver- ines had been shut out in the four game series. Varsity To Meet Purdue The Wolverine cagers will meet Purdue University's Conference leading quintet at 7:30 p.m. to- morrow in Yost Field House. Dual Meet Sees Wolverines Win All First Places Medley Relay Team Sets Varsity Record; 1,206 Watch Michigan Power By DON WIRTCHAFTER Capturing first places in every event on the program, Michigan's National Collegiate and Western Conference swimming champions soundly trounced the Iowa Hawk- eyes, 63-21, last night before 1,200 fans in the. I-M pool. The massacre was even worse than the 61-23 trimming that the Wol- verines handed the Iowa mermen last year in Iowa City when they limited the Hawkeyes to two second places in the individual events. Last night, the Iowa squad gathered in three seconds in the individual races but failed to gain as many thirds. RWed! Takes Second One. of Iowa's seconds came in the 150-yard backstroke event when Matt Mann entered but one swim- mer, sophomore Dick Riedl, who de- feated the Hawkeye co-captains, Al Armbruster and Charles Bremer in 1:38.6. The Hawkeyes scored their other two second places in the 50-yard free style sprint and the 200-yard breast- stroke race. Charley Barker, tie National Col- legiate sprinting champion, took the 50 in 23:4 but Walt Bareisa, the Iowa speedster, whipped Bill Holmes to thenline by one foot for second position. In the breastroke, John Sharemet, Michigan's husky sophomore, but- terfield all the way to finish seven yards ahead of George Poulos, the Iowa star, in 2:26.4. Aside from the relays, the Wolverines captured first and second places in every other event. Medley Relayers Win The Michigan medley relay team started the evening off on the right track by coasting to victory over the Hawkeye trio in 2:55.4, a second and a half better than the Western Con- ference record and the fastest time a Wolverine team has ever turned in, The previous varsity mark for this event was set in New Haven last month when Bill Beebe, John Share- met and Tommy Williams edged out a crack Yale trio in 2:56.8. Beebe swam the backstroke lap again last night and his :59.7 timing for the 100 yards gave Sharemet a four-yard lead. Big John, swimming against Poulos, held that lead for 75 yards and then opened up to add advantage. The rest was just a romp, with Gus Sharemet, John's free styl- ing brother, easily outstroking Iowa's Don Wenstrom over the last 100 yards. Welsh Takes Two The only double winner of the eve- ning was Jim Welsh, Michigan's middle distance ace, who finished ahead of Tommy William in the 220 and Blake Thaxter in the 440. In the shorter race, Williams kept on even terms with the Wolverine junior over the first century in :52.8, but "The Swimming Automaton" proved too fast and steady for his sophomore teammate and at the 200 was two feet ahead in 2:02.7. From there on in, it was all Welsh, whose 2:15.3 timing gave him a six-foot margin of victory. Williams swam the distance in 2:16.5. In the quarter mile, Welsh went (Continued on Page 3) Benedict To Present Science, Magic Talk Picture a man with the scientific ability of a Pasteur . . . the cunning of a high priest of deception--mold these qualities into a cohesive whole and you have Dr. Francis G. Bene- dict, former director of the Nutrition Laboratory of the Carnegie Institu- tion in Boston and New England vice- president of the Society of American Magicians, who will present a Univer- Swimmers Beat Iowa, 63 To 21; Maroons, 29-18; Church Groups Plan To Hear VariedTopics Today's Sabbath will see speakers from various walks of life speak to Ann Arbor congregations and student religious groups. Miss Muriel Lester, of London, England, will talk at the morning service of the First Methodist Church and Miss Dorothy Beecher Baker will describe the "Bah'i Faith" at the meeting of the Liberal Student's Union at the Unitarian Church. "What I Think Jesus of Nazareth Stood For" will be the topic of Rev. W. Russell Bowie professor of homi- lectics at the Union Seminary in New York City, at the morning worship f St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. rhe congregation of the FirstPres- byterianChurch will hear Dr. John E. Bibby of the Michigan Synod de- iver a sermon on "Triumphant Per- sonality." At the meeting of the Westminster Student Guild, Douglas Miller, '40, will describe his "Personal EUxperiences on a Mined Ship." The Wesleyan Guild of the First Methodist Church will inaugurate a series of five roundtables at its meet- ing today. The discussion groups following the supper will be entitled "Peace," "Racial Discrimination," "Workers' Rights" and "After Col- lege, What Then?"T Ann Arbor Skaters To Star At Carnival Spotlighting the festivities of the Ehird annual University of Michigan Ice Carnival to be held at 8 p.m. Fri- lay in the Coliseum will be a skat- "ng exhibition by Betty Courtwright Mannerheim Reassures Finland Of ContinuedForeign Support' -BULLETIN - MOSCOW, Feb. 18. (Sunday) (M)-The Soviet Russian military headquarters today claimed the capture of a station only four miles southeast of the vital Fin- nish city of Viipuri. HELSINKI, Feb. 17.-(P)-Finland's grizzled supreme commander, Field Marshal Baron Mannerheim, tonight reassured the nation that foreign help "is coming continually" and exhort- ed the Mannerheim Line defenders to hold firm to the new defenses to which they have withdrawn under the weight of the Red Army's 17-day offensive. "From abroad there already has come aid to a considerable extent and it is coming continually. "You can rest assured that the enemy never will be able to break my defensive system, if from a deep for- mation we raise new fortified positions to wear down his offensive power un- til the end. "Soldiers of Finland! We must stand without faltering. The de- velopments of the situation gives us every possibility of victory. The Fin- nish nation stands behind us and trusts us. Let us be firm." Echoing the thunderous roar of battle in the Karelian Isthmus and the Eastern Front were the exnlosions I t I I 1 i 1 J r 1 Pillsbury Finds High Correlation In Grades Of Fathers And Sons Father's mental powers are so much like those of his college boy son that Prof. Walter B. Pillsbury, of the psychology department be- lieves that University officials could just as well use the father's I.Q. for an entrance examination. Professor Pillsbury has made a sta- tistical study of hereditary intelli- gence at the University, and he has discovered that there is almost as much correlation between the marks of father and son as there is between the marks of a student receives in high school and college. Because there is such conclusive Pvic3nrP_ "n, mmigh Pvnie mam_ ity, and is not due to a similarity of home and school environment. Conclusions of the experiment are published in the current issue of the Michigan Alumnus Quarterly Re- view. ollege grades of 123 pairs of par- ents and children were compared in Professor Pillsbury's study. It was learned that in all instances there is a similarity which could be traced through the generations, and which was not the result of pure chance alone. The study here was financed in part by a grant from the Faculty Re- C.t'.h NinAa nti a h m .,min ..b.a