WPeather Continued cold with somec AOF at Editorial Enlightened Opinion can Stop Lynching VOL. L. No. 91 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JAN. 27, 1940 PRICE IVE CENTS Senators May Let State Dept. Adjust Trade With Japanese Expiration Of Commercial Treaty Leaves U.S. Free To Decide On Relations Army To Continue Invasion Of China WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.-(P)-The idea of giving the State Department discretionary authority to restrict or ban trade with Japan, now that the Japanese-American commercial treaty is dead, gained support tonight in some Senate quarters. Senator Hatch (Dem.-N.M.) said he thought such a step was advis- able. One member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who requested that he remain unidenti- fied, also endorsed it. This Senator pointed out that it would give the State Department a powerful weapon which it could bring into use at any moment if developments in Japanese-American relations neces- sitated. No Ceremony At End The hour of the treaty's expira- tion was midnight tonight, EST, ac- cording to official calculations here, although Tokyo considered that the pact died at 10 a.m. Thursday. No ceremony marked its end here; no official proclamation was issued; no instructions given to government de- partments. Notice of abrogation of the 29-year old treaty was given six months ago as a means of bringing pressure on Japan to respect American rights in China. That was the only official pronouncement. There was no comment in official circles on the arrival of the expira- tion date. President Roosevelt de- clined at his press conference to dis- cussit. Secretary of State Hull was ill at home with a cold. Sumner Welles, Undersecretary of State, had no comment. There was every indication, too, that for the time being at least trde relations would remain the same. Senators To Go Slow Most members of the Senate For- eign Relations Committee indicated a disposition to go slow in consider- ing proposals to embargo the ship- ment of American raw materials to Japan. Such legislation has been intro- duced by Chairman Pittman (Dem.- Nev.) and Senator Schwellenbach (Dem.-Wash.) The Committee is expected to meet Tuesday or Wednesday and then may give prelimirry consideration to the embargo bill. There are several steps which the Administration can take without fur- ther Congressional action. The President, if he finds Japan discriminating against American in- terests, can invoke an act of 1928 and impose an added duty of 10 per cent on imports from Japan, or imports brought to this country in Japanese ships. He can invoke the Tariff Act of 1930 and impose any amount of extra duty he decides to fix, and, if the discrimination then continues, place a complete embargo in imports from Japan, and place added harbor fees on tonnage rates on Japanese ships. Japanese Army Intends To Go Ahead By CLARK LEE SHANGHAI, Jan. 26.-()-Jap- anese Army officers in China say that the ending of the United States- Japanese commercial treaty today can not alter their program for the establishment of "a new order" in this country. They assert that no matter what economic pressure the 'United States may bring in the treatyless period ahead their program, which has meant harm to Americans and in- fringement of their treaty rights, must go on even if this means frontal conflict with the United States. Since 1931 the Japanese Army has dictated the Empire's policy respect- ing China. If its attitude is un- changed, experienced observers here see little chance for a Japanese- American agreement to replace the old treaty, since there would be no assurance that promises made by the Tokyo government to respect Ameri- can interests would be carried out Britain Doubles Rations; Russians Again Beaten Back, Finns Claim- -° v, English Will Get More Meat; Sign Economic Treaty With Greece By ROBERT E. BUNNELLE LONDON, Jan. 26.-('P)-British conviction that the Navy and Air Force are finally solving the problem of German assaults upon the Em- pire's vital supply lines was bolstered today by a Food Ministry order doub- ling the bacon and ham ration. This development was closely fol- lowed by official announcement of the conclusion of an economic and financial agreement with the Greek government, details of which were not immediately disclosed. Britain previously had pledged aid to Greece in the event of aggession threatening her independence., Despite the better situation in im- ported food supplies as reflected by the relaxation in rationing, three more neutral ship losses were revealed with the landing of 49 survivors at Scot- tish and Irish ports. Twenty-four other crewmen from the three were missing. The new rationing order, effective Jan. 29, increased to eight ounces the amount of bacon or ham allowed each person per week, and was greet- ed jubilantly by the press with such headlines as "Navy Brings Home the Bacon." Rationing of bacon, ham and sugar was begun on Jan. 8. Elation over this evidence of ade- quate pork supplies was tempered somewhat by reports of a shortage of fresh meats-probably in Febru- ary-under the government butcher- ing program, adopted recently as a preliminary to rationing of these com- modities. Sharing attention with the food situation on the home front was a terrific explosion in a power station supplying the Lancashire Steel Cor- poration at Ir.am, one of the largest steel plants in England. The explosion was the second in Western England within a fortnight, however, and the War Office warned the public today that sentries posted at vulnerable points had orders to fire if challenges went unheeded. Sinking by submarine of the 1,300- ton Norwegian steamer Gudveig in the North Sea with a loss of 10 men was disclosed when seven survivors were landed in a Scottish port. The Latvian steamer Everene, 4,484 tons also was reported sunk by a submarine shortly after leaving the English port of Blyth. -.The crew was rescued. Windt To Pilot City's Annual Drama Season Civic Committee Appoints Professor To Direct Five Play Productions Ann Arbor's eleventh annual Dra- matic Season will be directed by Prof. Valentine B. Windt, of the speech de- partment, it was announced yester- day. The Civic Committee in charge of the season also said that Mrs. Lucille .W Waltz will be business manager and Janes Murnan will be company manager. Five plays will be presented by the organization between May 13 and June 15. More complete plans will be announced later. Chairman of the Civic Committee is Daniel L. Quirk of Ypsilanti. Other members are Mrs. Guy Maier, treas- urer; Dr. Joseph A. Bursley, dean of students; Dr. Alice Lloyd, dean of women; Harold Golds, Prof. Wilber R. Humphreys, of the English de- partment; Mrs. M. Rees Hutchins; Mrs. I. L. Sharfman, and Neil Staeb- ler. Information Please: What's The War For? STOCKHOLM, Jan. 26.-()-The Finnish radio tonight broadcast an "Information Please" program with 40 Russian prisoners from the de- stroyed 44th Soviet Division sitting in as the "experts." Cigars were passed to those who those who answered their questions correctly but only 11 of the 40 did any smoking. All were stumped by these ques- tions: WXhn unne flneniff n9 International Summary (By The Associated Press) Shanghai: Japanese army of- ficers express determination to continue "new order" program in China despite abrogation of com- mercial treaty with the United States. Washington: Proposal to give State Department authority to re- strict or ban trade with Japan gains support in Senate; treaty expires without ceremony. Helsinki: Week-long fighting northeast of Lake Ladoga finds Red Army companies cut to pieces; Soviet dead, Finns say, "Counted in the hundreds." Paris: German and French ar- tillery engage in long duel as French scouts report signs of pos- sible offensive. London: British Food Ministry doubles bacon and ham ration; 49 survivors of three neutral ships land at British ports. Artillery Shatters West Front Quiet PARIS, Jan. 26.-(Y)-The slum- bering steel giants of the Western Front suddenly burst into action to- day with a fierce artillery duel which shattered the frosty silence of the Vosges Mountains. Military sources said French big guns opened the engagement from behind icicle-draped emplacements after scouts had brought back re- ports of feverish German outpost activities, possibly indicating an im- pending offensive. Nazi artillery replied in kind and for hours both sides threw shell after shell at each other while Allied and German planes took advantage of the first favorable weather in, days to roar aloft on reconnaissance flights. BERLIN, Jan. 26.-(IP)-The news- paper Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung said today that the crews of 17 of 18 German merchant ships halted by British warships since the war be- gan had succeeded in scuttling their ships and the eigtheenth was made so unseaworthy that the British had to sink her. Oh, Johnny Comes Marching Home Again STEVENS POINT, Wis., Jan. 26.- (A)-Undersheriff John Longbauer drove all over Keene Township with a warrant in his pocket for the arrest on an assault charge of John Rice, Jr., 18-year-old farmer. After several hours of fruitless search he gave up and started back to headquarters. A youth, standing on the highway thumbed a ride. Long- bauer stopped and picked him up. It was Rice. Soviet's Troops Battered As Finns Repel Attack At LakeLadoga By WADE WERNER HELSINKI, Jan. 26.-(P1)-Week- long attack without quarter tonight found company after company of the] Red Army cut to pieces northeast of Lake Ladoga, the Finnish command announced, with Finnish redoubts "everywhere retained." With Soviet dead declared by the Finns to have been "counted in the hundreds," the furious assault pene- trated the eastern shores of the lake itself. Under a heavy artillery barrage, the Russians were sent in, waves against the bastions of Fort Mantsi, island stronghold command- ing a coastal corner of Finland. Like the other attacks, the Finns said, these were repulsed, "the enemy leaving more than 100 dead before our positions." Cavalry Destroyed A Finnish communique told the grim story of the destruction of long Russian cavalry columns. It drew a terse word picture of the carcasses of more than 400 horses sprawled in the snow. It is in this area that the Russians, in attacks at various points, have tried all week to cut a flanking swath behind the Mannerheim Line. One large force of attackers was cut off several days ago near Kitela, and, apparently, has still obtained no re- lief. Up just above the narrow Finnish waistline, north of the Arctic Circle, dispatches from the field described a sudden hush in Russian artillery fire combined with unusual activity] on the highway east of Markajarvi. It was to this town that 40,000 Rus-- sians retreated after abandoniing a drive to cut Finland in two. May Resume Retreat Paul Sjoblom, Associated Press correspondent with the Finnish army on the Gapland front, said the Finns believed the Russians were moving back their heavy arms in preparation to resuming the general retreat be- gun last week at Lake Joutsi, and then digging in at the Central Soviet base of Salla village. Salla is less than forty miles from the Russian border. A number of United States and Canadian volunteers, most of them s i experts, were reported in train- ing in northern Finland preparatory to front fighting within a few weeks. L leven nations now are represent- e i n the Finnish Foreign Legion. The frc t battalion sent into the lin , it was said, will be under the command of an Italian officer. (A Berne dispatch quoted Allied sources as saying more than 2,000 trained Italian and Hungarian volun- teers recently crossed France en route to Finland). Filipino Liner ReportedSunk In Sea Storm President Quezon Aground Off Japanese Coast; Rescuers Are Hampered 'City Of Flint' Ends 113-DayJourney TOKYO, Jan. 27.-(J)-The 8,341- ton Philippine liner President Que- zon was reported by the Japanese steamer Ukishima Maru to have sunk stern first today several hours after going aground on treacherous reefs off Tanegashima Island, southern Japan. The President Quezon carried a crew of 114 and one or more passen- gers. A raging storm hampered res- cue work. The Japanese ship, two hours after reaching the side of the stranded liner, wirelessed that the engine room and forward hatches were damaged. One hold and the engine room were reported full of water. Domei, Japanese news agency, said there were 12 passengers besides the crew. Other reports placed the pas- sengers at 20; still other advices said there was only one aboard. The Ukishima Maru reported she picked up the Quezon's SOS calls at 3:30 a.m. Friday and reached her side at 5:50 a.m. The Quezon first gave her position as latitude 30.16 north, longitude 130.16 east. The Quezon was making her first voyage under the Filipino flag. Form- erly the American liner President Madison, she sailed from San Pedro, Calif., Jan. 6. She usually carries about 1,500 passengers in addition to her crew of 140. Famed 'City Of Flint' Will Arrive Today . BALTIMORE, Jan. 26.-(P)---The City of Flint, an unassuming little freighter catapulted. by war into the center of an international drama, moved into the safety of U.S. w- ters tonight and toward a gala wel- come befitting a hero coming home from the wars. Nothing more sinister than a stiff north wind and occasional ice floes remained to be conquered as she steamed up Chesapeake Bay-at the end of a "six weeks" voyage that took 113 days to complete. Capt. J. A. Gainard and his crew :f 40 will arrive tomorrow morning, ending a fiction-like journey that saw them seized by a German crew, held captive in a Russian port, head- ed through the gun-sprouting Brit- ish blockade and, at last set free, turned for home with an unromantic cargo of iron ore. She was expected to reach quarantine sometime after midnight, and dock after daylight to-j morrow. Families and friends of five Balti- moreans in the crew planned joyous receptions, and promised a crowdE "and maybe a brass band" would be on hand when the 4,963-ton freighter ties up at Sparrows Point, several miles from the city's center. Home after a cold, gale-swept voy- age during which they held to the cir- cutious but comparatively safe nor-I thern route, the crewmen probably will plan celebrations of their own,i for they have been without pay sincef Oct. 3. Officials of the United States Lines took heavy pay pouches aboard at Cape Henry today. Club Sponsors Demonstration Of Airplanes Braving zooming, scalp-creasing, flying models and the impending threat of exams, 900 air-minded Spec- tators last night witnessed the travel- ing air show "From Magic Carpet to Rocket Ships" brought to the Rack- ham Lecture Hall by the Franklin Institute under the sponsorship of Sigma Xi society. Presented here by Richard V. Thayer, the lecture demonstration traced the history of aviation from the flight of birds to modern clipper ships through a series of demonstra- tions and motion pictures, accom- panied by a running explanation and pertinent wise-cracks when the per- fnrmnr hara H.mnn hnlbrv Regents Approve Creation Of New Denti stry Institute Attend First Meeting REGENT KIPKE * . * Local Dimes March On Capitol To Alid National Paralysis Fight REGENT HERBERTk Get Wheeler's Strong Backing Senator's Labor Alliance Seen As Bid For 1940 Farm And Labor Support COLUMBUS, Jan. 26.-(P)-De- mands of labor and agriculture for a1 government-backed war on unem- ployment-termed "America's No. 1 problem"-received strong backingI today from Sen. Burton K. Wheeler1 as he turned aside queries whether he would be a Democratic presiden- tial aspirant. (Senaor Wheeler is a Michigan al- umnus, a graduate of the law school's class of 1905.) President Roosevelt, who has* not; acted on pleas by the Congress of Industrial Organizations and the Na- tional Grange for a general confer- ence with industry on unemployment, also was implored by Wheeler to de- clare his third term intentions im- mediately. Wheeler told the jubilee conven- tion of the CIO's United Mine Work- ers of America that only through gov-+ ernment leadership and solution of "economic absurdities" could unem- ployment be ended, prosperity as- sured and "American ideals of in- dustrial and political democracy" achieved. The Montana Senator, regarded in some quarters as a leading Democrat- ic presidential possibility, gave defi- nite indications of a bid for farm- labor support. Filipino Educator Addresses Banquet Filipino students here were urged to take advantage of their stay in the United States by learning the ways of democracy in action by Bemilo Osias, former president of the Na- tional University of Manila and at present assistant to the resident min- ister in Washington. Kipke And Herbert Attend Initial Board Meeting; Donations Acknowledged Men's Dormitory To Open Next Fall The University Board of Regents at their regular January meeting yes- terday approved a new organization for the study of graduate and post- graduate dentistry and accepted gifts of $152,508. The session was attended by Harry K. Kipke of Detroit and J. Joseph Herbert of Manistique. Both Kipke and Herbert were elected on the Republican ticket last fall, and yesterday's meeting was their first official act. They succeed Junius E. Beal of Ann Arbor and Ralph Stone of Detroit, members of the Board who retired Jan. 1. Kipke was placed on the Public Relations and Plant Equipment com- mittees. Herbert will serve on the Educational Policies and Student and Alumni Relations committee. The East Quadrangle, newest men's dormitory group, will not be opened until next September, the Regents announced. Largest of the donations was $100,- 000 from the Horace H. Rackham and Mary A. Rackham fund, to be added to the income of the Institute for Human Adjustment. The University Musical Society contributed $25,000 to be placed in the University Musical Society En- dowment Fund. Name Is Announced In recognition of financial assis- tance from the W. K. Kellogg Foun- dation of Battle Creek, the new grad- uate dental organization will be named "The W. K. Kellogg Founda- tion Institute: Graduate and Post- graduate Dentistry." Action taken by the Regents provides that the In- stitute will be a separate unit of the University, affiliated with the dental school. Its staff will be independently organized, although some of the fac- ulty will also participate in under- graduate teaching. The Institute will operate under its own budget, Accrding to the citation approved by the Regents, the functions of the Kellogg Institute will be to "conduct postgraduate work in dentistry and in cooperation with the Horace H. Rackham graduate school to give graduate instruction leading to ad- vanced degrees." Prof. Paul H. Jeserich, present di- rector of postgraduate education in the dental school, has been named di- rector of the Institute. Resignation of Prof. George H. La Rue, director of the University bio- logical station at Douglas Lake for the past 23 years, was accepted. Prof. A. H. Stockard, of the zoology de- partment, was appointed to succeed him. Professor Stockhard will be assisted by an advisory committee consisting of Prof. Paul S. Welch, of the zoology department, Prof. Carl D. LaRue, of the botany department, and Prof. C. W. Creaser of Wayne University. Resignations Are Accepted Resignations of Prof. Justin L. Powers of the pharmacy college and Prof. Robert R. Dieterle, of the University Hospital, were accepted. Dr. Powers has been a member of the faculty since September, 1926. On March 1 he will take up new duties as chairman of the National Formulary Revision Committee and Director of the Laboratory of the American Pharmaceutical Associa- tion at the American Institute of Pharmacy at Washington. Dr. Dieterle received the degree of Doctor of Medicine from the Univer- sity in 1923 and he has served at Georgetown University, at the Mil- waukee Sanitarium, and in the medi- ,al school here. A specialist in the field of psycho-therapy, Dr. Dieterle will enter private practice in Ann Arbor. Leave of absence from Jan. 15 to March 14 was granted to Dr. Kent G. Latham, of the medical school, so that he can work in the laboratory of Dr. Eugene Church, at Pontiac. Leaves of absence for the second semester were granted toeMr. Harry O. Potter, of the engineer- ing college; to Prof. John Alexander, of the medical college; and to Prof. J. E. Emswiler, Qf the engineering college.