.*. Weather Cloudy; light snows. Jr 1G a -A- n I.dL -dd&6.- El . a t t Eaitorial Freedom Of Assembly And Youth Congress... Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication VL. LI. No. 100 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Quintet Trounces Mandier, Lunging For A Rebound Shot Wildcats In Fifth Fuehrer Threatens Great Sea Offensive; Germans Sink 215,000 In Tonnage Big Ten Wolverines Turn Tables On Purple With Sizzling Second-Half Drive, 45-39 Trackmen Enter Triangular Meet By DON WIRTCHAFTER A gang of Northwestern huskies applied weight and brawn to the im- proved Michigan cage attack last night, but by the time 2000 spec- tators, who turned out to witness the home finale, straggled out of Yost Field House, the Wolverines had chalked up their fifth Big Ten vic- tory, 45-39. It was a sizzling second-half at- tack, much like the one displayed against Illinois on the same floor Sat- urday night, that enabled the Oos- terbaan charges to turn the tables on the 45-34 licking the Wildcats handed them earlier this year. Sofiak Spurs Wolverines Three points behind entering the second half, the inspired Wolverines, spurred on by battling Michael Sof- iak, and shuffle-footed Bill Cartmill, turned on the heat and left the visi- tors with their eighth Conference loss of the season against two wins. The veteran seniors, making their final appearance on the Field House court, accounted for 27 of the Michi- gan points. Little Mike dumped in four baskets and five foul shots in the final spurt to lead the Wolverine scoring with a 16 point total. Cartmill finished second with 11. Michigan Attack Begins Once the Michigan attack began rolling, the Northwestern quintet, re- sembling a weight-lifting outfit more than a cage team,- found their strength no match for the Wolverine speed and deception. Strapping Don Clawson, 220 pounds of gridiron brawn and a scratchy head, steamed up and down the floor like a runaway horse, but his efforts were all in vain. Michigan was on its way and couldn't be halted. The only thing that kept the Wild- cats in the ball game was the eagle eye of Bob McCarnes, the Logans- port, Ind., flash, who split the nets nine times for an 18 point total to make him high scorer for the eve- ning. , Michigan sprang to an early five (Continued on Page 2) Thinclads To Meet State, Normal Today By HAL WILSON Michigan will send its mighty track reputation under the heavy fire 61 a pair of home-state rivals, Michigan State and Michigan Nor- mal, in their annual triangular meet tonight at the Spartans' spacious Jensen Field House. But from all. advance indications it appears that State's most import- ant contribution to the meet will con- sist in the furnishing of the site. The Spartan squad, weak at the season's start, was rendered even more anem- ic by the injury of their ace all- around performer, Walter Arring- ton, and tonight's meet stacks up as a triangular clash in name only. In reality the Hurons from near- by Michigan Normal will provide most of the opposition for Coach Ken Doherty's cindermen, who will be striving for their second straight win of the current indoor campaign. And stiff opposition it will be, too, for Michigan's Ypsilanti neighbor ranks (Continued on Page 3) Sigma Xi Tour Planned Today Scientific Society To Visit Metal Laboratories Metal processing laboratories will be visited by members of Sigma Xi, scientific honor society, when they meet at 8 p.m. today in Room 1042, East Engineering Building, it was announced yesterday. Scheduled to conduct the tour and to address the members prior to the Triumph Lawyers Quit Work As Fire Breaks Out Diligent law school students were distracted temporarily from their briefing yesterday evening by a fire that broke out in the basement of section F of the Lawyers' Club. Waste paper accumlated in bales caught fire sending smoke through- out the law club and then through the University underground tunnel system which brought the smell of smoke to most buildings on the can- pus. Zahn estimated that basement re- pairs may cost several thousand dol- lars. "Quite a few tiles on the ceiling were broken and if a whole new ceil- ing has to be put in it will be costly," -he said. JHop Record SWill Be Given With Gargoyle 'Stardust' Will Be Revealed To Campus; Magazine Will Be Issued Today A two-minute recording of out- standing men and music from the r1941 J-Hop will be enclosed on the cover of each Gargoyle sold today, Dave Donaldson, '41, editor in chief of the campus magazine, announced yesterday. Band leaders Benny Goodman and Gene Krupa, of Gov. Murray D. Van Wagoner, Tom Harmon, '41, and Lee Perry, '41, chairman of the central scommittee of the J-Hop, all are heard on the record, Donaldson add- * ed. Also included is the music of all three bands, the Rhapsody in Drums of Krupa, Goodman's Henderson's Stomp and Raymond Scott's Quintet concluding with "Happy J-Hop to You." The recording is on a fiber material and can be played on any victrola, Donaldson said. The program is in- cluded, too, to identify the six parts of the recording. "Stardust," the sexpert, will be in- troduced to the campus in today's issue as Preposterous Persons finally reveals the identity of the writer of "Osculation is an Art," "Dates Is Funny Animals" and How to Fence SEmotion." "These Are The People" will fea- ture Prof. Werner E. Bachmann, of r the chemistry department. Professor Bachmann has been working with sex hormones and cancer producing com- pounds, and the Gargoyle feature will highlight some of the interest- ing sidelights on this research. TIME LIMIT EXTENDED The time limit on unsold books in the Student Book Exchange has been extended and the Exchange will be open from 1 p.m. till 5 p.m. today, it was announced yesterday. A few books have yet to be called for. Faculty Urges Passage Of Lease-Lend Measure Jim Mandler is shown lunging for a rebound shot during the stirring second-half rally. Watching his efforts are Al Butherus (17), Mike Sofiak (8), Bob McCarnes (24) and Russ Wendlund (8) Aeronautical Group To Hear Plane Designer Society Will Give Banquet For Grover Loening, Pioneer Air Engineer Grover Loening, pioneer aeronaut-( ical engineer and designer, will ad-R dress an open meeting of the Insti- tute of Aeronautical Sciences at 8 p.m. today in the Kellogg auditor- ium of the School of Graduate Den- tistry. A dinner for Loening, to be held at 6 p.m. today in the Union, will be attended by Prof. Edward A. Stalker, Prof. Felix W. Pawlowski. Prof. Emerson Conlon and Mr. Har- old F. Allen of the aeronautical en- gineering department; Prof, Arthur D. M4oore of the electrical engineer- ing department, and Prof. Edward L. Ericksen and Prof. John A. Van den Broek of the engineering me- chanics department. Other guests of the Institute at- tending the dinner and meeting will be Dr. Ralph Upson, inventor of the all-metal dirigible; Dr. Gerhart, head of the aeronautical engineering de- partment at Wayne University, and Larry Ziggbund, president of the National Intercollegiate Flying Club. Loening is noted for his invention of the strut-braced monoplane and amphibian airplane design. Holder of a number of patents, Loening has served as an adviser to many govern- mental boards and is a holder of the Wright and Collier trophies. Daily To Hold Staff Tryouts For Freshmen First Meeting Is Today;i Business, News Training Is Offered To Students Eligible second semester freshmen will have their first opportunity to try-out for posts on the business and editorial staffs of The Daily at1 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. respectively todayz in the meeting room of the Student Publications Building. Those wishing to do work on thet editorial staff, which will consist of news and feature writing, headline-3 writing, proof-reading and editing, will be able to join the regular men's edit staff or either the sports or wo- men's staffs. Business staff tryouts will spend' their freshman and sophomore years: taking care of' advertising contractst and drawing-up ads. In their junior year they will be able to hold such posts as that of manager of local advertising, circulation and nationalt advertising, accounts, service, con- tracts and classified advertising and5 publications. Senior positions are those of busi- ness and assistant business manager, women's business manager and wo- men's advertising manager. Ivan C. Crawford To Discuss Ethics A t Engine Smoker "Ethics in Professional Practice" will be discussed by Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the College of Engineer- ing at the first ethics "Get-Together Smoker" of the year at 7:.0 p.m. Thursday in the main ballroom of the Union.E Dean Crawford, former chairman of the ethics committee of the Na- tional Engineering Council, will dis- cuss the broad aspects of profession- al practices in his profession in order to acquaint students with some of the varied ethical problems they may have to face after graduation. Thursday's program will also in- elude several bits of entertainment including colored motion pictures of activities at the University's summer surveying site, Camp David, Wyo. Koella Will Discuss Writings Of Pagnol Prof. Charles Koella of the ro- mance languages department will give the second in the series of Frn- ob l-vbrp; n "Ton-a n ad+wm Petitions bearing the names of 214 University faculty men were sent to. Sen. Prentiss M. Brown and Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg today urging immediate passage of the lease-lend bill. Expressing full faith that authority granted by the bill would make it possible to extend enough aid to, England to defeat Hitler, the state- ment was circulated in the University by Prof. Charles F. Remer, of the economics department, Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history depart- ment, and Prof. Carlton F. Wells, of the English department.. The documents have been mailed to the Michigan Senators with the explanation by the faculty men that "we have signed the petition on our en, Women Begin Debate Season Today Discussion Will Be Held To Plan First Round, Choose Topic Of Series, Men and women interested in in- tramural debating will meet for the first time this year to get the cur-{ rent tournaments under way at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1025 in Angell Hall. Under the direction of Jack Shul- er. '42L, and Jean Maxted, '41, teams will register for the first round of the two separate contests. Prof. Ken- neth Hance and .Mr. Arthur Secord, will address the group. The proposition of campus interest to be debated by the two groups will e determined at today's meeting. Each team will be assisted in the preparation of its case by graduate students in speech. Experience is not necessary to student participation, the studen l direcors announced. The object of the intramural programs sponsored by Delta Sigma Rho, Athena, the League and the Union is to give train- ing and public speaking opportuni- ties. Trophies will be awarded to the winners and runners-up in each di- vision at the speech honors banquet to be held in April. Slosson Discusses War "After the War--What?" was the question to which Prof. Preston W. Slosson offered a variety of possible answers last night at the meeting of the Ann Arbor Forum. personal responsibility as citizens of the state and as American patriots concerned about the future of our country." Composed by Professor Slosson, and edited by other, members of the group, the statment advocated quick approval of all-out aid to Britain be- cause "to give aid with reservations, might mean to lose all our effort." Members of the teaching staff from every school and college signed, Professor Wells said. Of these 69 had a rank of full professor, 37 were asso- wiate professors, 36 assistant profes-. ors, and 32 teaching fellows. Decrying persons who insist that* our aid can be of no avail in deter- mining an ultimate outcome of Eur- ope's war, the petition declares that the United States "is the most pow- erful nation in the world, and has it in its power to decide whether it shall act soon enough, strongly enough, efficiently enough to keep the present peril far away." Enactment of the bill is not "an absolutely safe course," the petition cautioned, but, failure to pass it "may be the most dangerous of all. It added: "We have it in our power to decide whether we will 'act soon enough, strongly enough, efficiently enough to keep the present peril far away; or whether we prefer to face it later, alone, on our thresholds. This last is the alternative we choose if we delay or hesitate to take whatever measures the emergency may de- miand." Richard Pattee Will Give Talk State Department Official To Discuss Conflict Richard Pattee of the Division of Cultural Relations, Department of State, will deliver a University lec- ture on "Inter-American Relations [as Affected by the War" at 4:15 to- day in the Rackham Lecture Hall, under the auspices of the University Committee on Defense Issues.: Educated in several universities, including the University of Coimbra, Portugal and the University of Lou- vain, Belgium, Mr. Pattee taught history and political science in the University of Puerto Rico and other schools before becoming connected with the State Department in 1936. Mr. Pattee reuided 12 years in Puerto Rico and has toured every na- tion in America except two. He has written several biographies of South American statesmen and contributed to The Commonweal,, the Hispanic American Historical Review, and the Journal of Negro History. Enlarged U-Boat Activity Will Reach Full Swing In Next Two Months Thailand, IndoChina Agreement Is Near MUNICH, Germany, Feb. 24.--4R) -Adolf Hitler himself reported to- day that German sea raiders had sunk 215,000 tons of shipping in the past two days and he proclaimed that this was only the beginning of a sweeping naval offensive to reach full swing in the next two months. He said Germany's undersea war- fare had been restricted until re- cently to ~ the operations of "so few, submarines" while new crews were being trained to go to sea in force. The announcement of sinkings by surface and undersea raiders in the past two days (later increased as to 217,300 tons by DNB, official news agency) gave grim point to the Fuehrer's threat of a grand offens- ive. Hitler credited Italy with tying up large British sea forces, as wep~ as land forces and planes, in the Medi- terranean area while Germany pre- pared for her naval onslaught. "Our struggle at sea only now can begin," he said. "The reason for this lies in the fact that, to begin with, we wanted to train new crews for U-boats~ which are now ready. "There should be no doubt of that. Just two hours ago I received infor- mation from the navy high command that just now reports on the last two days had come in during which high seas forces and U-boats sank 215.000 tons of "which U-boats alone sank; 190,000 tons,, among them one con- voy of 125,000 tons which was de- stroyed yesterday. "Those gentlemen (the British), however, must be prepared for still bigger events in March and April. Then they will find out whether we slept through the winter or who made use of time. Far Eastern Mediation Reported 'Near At Hand' TOKYO, Feb. 25.-()--Koh Ishii, spokesman of the cabinet 'informa- tion bureau, announced today that an agreement was "near at hand" in the Japanese mediation of the con- flict between Thailand and French Indo-China. He gave no details of the proposals under consideration or the sort of settlement expected, but deplored newspaper reports from Saigon to the effect that fighting might be re- sumed. In view of the continuing peace negotiations and yesterday's 10-day extension of the armistice to March 7, these reports obviously ex- aggerated the situation, he said. Prof. Elliott Will Lecture Today On Religion And Human Values' Neville Traces Eastern History In First Lecture Of Series Here Mr. Edwin L. Neville, former Amer- ican Minister to Thailand, will de- liver the second of a series of four University lectures here when he speaks on "Frontiers in East Asia" at 4:15 p.m. tornorrow in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre, under the aus- pices of political science department. In his first lecture yesterday, Mr. Neville sketched the rise and devel- opment of Chinese cultural and polit- ical institutions. He outlined, the fundamental schools of Chinese thought and described how the geo- graphy of the country influenced the growth of basic legal and political theories. Explaining Chinese expansion southward for several thousands of years, Mr. Neville pointed out the resistance of the Siamese peoples of elude three more University lectures, participation in the work of the po- litical sciecne department in the field of international relations and con- Isultation with students who are in- terested in the United States Foreign Service as a career. Upon his graduation from the Uni- versity in 1907 Mr. Neville com- menced his service in the Far East and was made Consul and Consul- General in various posts in China and Japan before he became Secre- tary of the American Embassy at Tokyo in 1925. Mr. Neville was appointed Coun- sellor of Embassy and Consul-Gen- eral in the Jananese capital in 1928, and in 1937 was made United States Minister to Siam, the highest hon- . .1i...... j. .-.A- Prof. Harrison S. Elliott of Union Theological Seminary of New York City will speak on "Religion and Human Values in Our Time" at 4:15 p.m. today at Lane Hall under the auspices of the Student Religious .Association. ' At 10 a.m. he will visit a graduate education class and at 12:15 attend a luncheon of faculty and local minis- ters. Professor Elliott will appear as the first lecturer on the second semes- ter program of the Student Religious Association. As president of the Re- ligious Education Association he is touring the United States and Can- ada conferring with University relig- ious counselors. His writings include "Student Standards of Action," "The Bearing of Psychology on Religion," "Solving Personal Problems," "The Process of Group Thinking," "Can Re- ligious Education Be Christian?" and "Grom Discussion in Religious Ed- .Prof.. Windt, Reveals Cast Of New Play Members of the cast of Play Pro- duction's offering of "Trelawney of the Wells" were announced yesterday by Prof. Valentine B. Windt, director of the drama group. The comedy by Arthur Wing Pinero, will run in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre tomor- row through Saturday. Appearing in this play are Mar- garet Schiller, '41, playing Mrs. Mos- sop; John Sinclair, '42, Ablett; Rich- ard Strain, '42, Tom Wrench; Mar- guerite Mink, '41, Imogene Parrott; William Kinzer, s'42, James Telfer; William Altman, '42, Ferdinand Gadd; Joseph Lynn, '41, Augustus Colpoys; and Margaret Cotton, '42, Mrs. Telfer. Others in the cast are Dorothy Haydel, '41Ed, who will take the part of Avonia Bunn; Ada McFarland, '42 in the title role of Rose Trelawn- ey; Edward Sullivan, Grad, Arthur Gower; Helene Herzfeld, '42, arah; Whitfield Connor, Grad., Sir William Gower; Adeline Gittlen, '42, Miss Tra-. falgar Gower; Ollierae Bilby, '41,