f' Weather ;L Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication 3atij Editorial t,I. i takei, in Far East Vital T6 Economye., VOL. LI. No. 102 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1941 Z-323. PRICE FIVE CENTS Sen. Chandler ScoresAttitude Of Opposition. To Lease-Lend Public Confidence In FDR] Is Being Undermined, Kentuckian Declares; Wheeler Strikes Back First Real Debate Occurs Over Bill WASHINGTON, Feb. 26-()-In a tumult of snapping tempers, the Sen- ate today heard Senator Chandler (Dem-Ky) accuse opponents of the lease-lend bill of endeavoring to un- dermine public confidence in Presi- dent Roosevelt. In turn, Senator Wheeler (Dem- Mont)tangrily replied that Mr. Roos- evelt was trying to "flim-flam" the public. He repeatedly described as "shocking" the President's statement of yesterday that the task of win- ning the war must 'take precedence over any talk of peace aims. He called it indicative of an atti- tude that the United States was al- ready in the war. It was the first real debate, and the'first sign of ebbing patience, of the nine days the Senate has devoted to the bill. A session which began in quiet fashion with Senator Nye (Rep- ND) continuing a speech begun last week, was suddenly transformed into a scene of excitemeht. First of all, Wheeler interrupted Nye to say that Mr. Roosevelt's words. indicatd a position which this coun- try should not take unless it is ready to enter the war. "I submit we are not in the war unless the President of the United States has already committed us to war," he shouted. "If we are in the war, I repeat that we are in viola- tion of the Constitution of the United States." "How can Britain win, unless we come into the war?" Nye asked, and to this, Senator Clark (Dem-Mo) added the observation that the Presi- dent had "practically said, 'Yes we are in the war.' " Thoroughly aroused, Chandler plunged into the discussion. House Debates Appropriation Bill WASHINGTON, Feb. 26-()-The House took up a $1,533,439,702 emer- gency appropriation bill for the army and navy today ad almost immed- iately heard a. Republican charge that "unreasonable delays" had taken place in the defense program. Soon after the bill reached the House floor, Rep. Taber (Rep-NY) said: "'-1hcre have been all sorts of things that resulted in unreasonable delays in the defense program that could have been avoided if they had been thought out before hand. Per- haps it was too much to expect." He declared defense workers had been "dominated" by labor unions and added that if this continued it] would bring socialism and dictator- ship. Secretary Perkins, he said, had been instrumental in raising the cost of Camp Edwards, Mass., from $7,- 000,000 to $29,000,000 by ordering payment of a "prevailing" wage rate which he said represented a gross. increase of 71 percent"above pre-, vailing union wages in the territory." Duringsecret hearings on the bi made public today, Gen. George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff, and other high-ranking officers conceded mis- takes had been made in the army expansion. New Strike Board Is'Taking Shape' WASHINGTON, Feb. 26-(U)-A plan for a new labor board to serve as a "supreme court" for strikes and disputes in defense industries which cannot be settled by the established machinery of federal mediation, was reported taking shape today in the hands of high officials. One well-informed official who de- clined 'to be quoted by name said an executive order for the creation of such a board was in the final stage of drafting, and might be hastened h h, 2k a +. of+ a: i d mviairik I1.A. F. Planes Sweep Channel _______________ ___ I ___ Hockey Sextet Is Under dog In Minnesota Charged In Brawl Somaliland Capital Falls To British Forces; English Seize Italian Island In Dodecanese n__ _ __ _ _ __ Husky Defenseman Game Today Remer Names Aid To Britain As .Peace Step The passage of the lend-lease bill was characterized as the best possible way to keep the United States out of Anglo-Turkishl Relations Discussed; Civilians Killed In Holland (By The Associated Press) The British aerial offensive gath- ered fury today, squadrons of planes sweeping back and forth across the English Channel hour upon hour, and bombs were declared to have explod-I ed on the docks at Calais, and across the face of Northern France. BERLIN, Feb. 26.-(P)-DNB, German News Agency, reported to- day in a Sofia dispatch that assault charges had been made in the Bul- garian capital against U.S. Minis- ter, George H. Earle, former Demo- cratic governor of Pennsylvania, as a result of last Saturday's cafe bottle-throwing incident with a German Army officer. Group To Hear Talk On Ethics By Crawford Union Meeting To Clarify Professional Problems Of Engineering Student With Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the College of Engineering as principal speaker, the Engineering Council and the Cimmittee on Professional Prac- tice will present an ethics get-togeth- er at 7:30 p.m. today in the main ball- room of the Union. Designed to acquaint engineering students with some of the ethical problems of, their profession, the meeting will feature discussions on this topic, several bits of entertain- ment and colored motion pictures of the University's summer surveying camp at Camp Davis, Wyo. Dean Crawford, whose talk is en- titled "Ethics in Professional Prac- tice," will discuss his experiences in this field while chairman of the ethics committee of the National Engineer- ing Council. The engineers' get-together is part of the University's program of re- ligion and ethics which have been created to bring before the upper class and graduate students in each college ethical situations which chal- lenge professional practice. According to Dr. Edward W. Blake- man, student religious adviser, the degree program offered in this field is centered in the Literary College where 50 courses in seven depart- ments have been opened for this pur- pose. wa An Pi no pa Re to An ar de on ar it an av mE lo Br ar in a talk yesterday before the The attack continued tonight. merican Student Defense League by At Calais, the air ministry said, of. Charles F. Remer of the eco- the quayside, jetties and tidal basin mics department. were squarely hit. "Another reason Congress should Coincident with the story of Eng- ss the Lease-Lend Bill," Professor lish air fury, the British announced emer asserted, "is to demonstrate today the capture of Mogadiscio, cap- ital of Italian Somaliland, and un- our potential supporters in South officially claimed effective control merica and Central Europe that we of all its 270,000 square miles, pictur- e no longer going to allow the ing it as the first entire colony to mocracies to be picked off one by be knocked out of the Fascist Em- .e by Fascist aggression." ire. " If the Axis powers know that we Mogadiscio, a city of 55,000, fell e not fooling about aid to Britain to British Imperial troops who had will change their position to such thrust forward 400 miles from British extent that we will be able to Kenya, and other columns were de- 'oid war with them," Professor Re- clared to have struck on 60 miles er explained. up the Juba Rive'r to entrap the main He also pointed out "important Italian forces between the captured Heu alsonpoite outsnimorant towns of Gelib and Brava and cut ttain economic reasons for aiding their last road of retreat. Added to British claimed victories _-came the British announcement to- S night of the seizure of the small Ital- Aa naian Learn ian island of Castelrosso, 10 miles off I the southwest coast of tpre Turkish Debates Union mainland and easternmost of Italy's Dodecanese group,, in the Mediter- ranean. uesSion Today It was the first capture of an island .. __of the blockaded Dodecanese, al- though many of them-notably luehl, Huston To Oppose strongly-fortified Rhodes-have been Peace Group To Convene At Unity Hall Built around a program of action for national peace a local town meet- ing of youth will be held at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Unity Hall under the sponsorship of local representa- tives at the recent national Town Meeting in Washington. The program, according to Miss Ruth Clark, '43, temporary chairman of the committee, has been endorsed by members of several church organ- izations, student cooperatives, the Liberal Student's Union of the Uni- tarian Church, and Hillel Founda- tion. Opposition to the lend-lease bill currently pending in the United States Congress will be stressed at the meeting, she said, in addresses to be given by student and faculty speakers. This meeting will provide an op- portunity for all students to partici- pate in an active peace movement on campus, Miss Clark emphasized. There is no charge for admission, and all students are urged to attend. Nathan Milstein To Give Recital Here Tuesday Russian Violinist Replaces Enesco On Next Choral Union Concert Program Because restrictions created by the current war prohibit the appearance of Georges Enesco, Roumanian vio- linist, in America, Nathan Milstein; the distinguished Russian violinist, will appear in the next of the 1940-41 series of Choral Union Concerts to be presented Tuesday, March 4, at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Although born in Odessa and a survivor of the Russian revolution, Mr. Milstein moved at an early age to Paris and eventually entered the United States, where he became an American citizen. Despite heavy pre-season demands for tickets, admission for this concert may still be purchased either at the University Musical Society offices in Burton Memorial Tower or at the box office in Hill Auditorium. For his Ann Arbor program Mil- stein will play the following pro- gram: Adagio and Rondo, Stamitz. Prelude and Gavotte in E major (violin alone), Bach. Sonata in F major, Op. 24 (Spring Sonata), Beethoven. Meditation, Tschaikowsky. Burlesque, Josef Suk. Concerto in A minor, No. 5, Vieux- temps. Wolverine Team Will Face Gopher Forward Wall: Rated Among Greatest In CollegeIce History Michigan Has Yet To Win Series Tilt Im Resolution Advocating Hemisphere Unification In the first international debate of the year the University's two-man debating team will meet two students of McMaster University of Hamilton, Ontario, at 4 p.m. today in Room 1025 Angell Hall. The Canadians will uphold the affirmative of the proposition "Re- solved: ;That the nations of the Western Hemisphere should establish a permanent union." Bill McCallion and Emerson Strafford will oppose the University team composed of Wil- liam Muehl, '41, and John Huston, '41.. Because of the interest in Pan- American affairs and Canadian par- ticipation in the European conflict, the debate should present vital issues of interest to the student body and faculty. Last week-end the squad partici- pated in two divisions of the 72-col- lege national practice debate tourna- ment on thissame question at Man- chester College, Ind. In the A division Muehl and Huston won three and lost three of their contests. Arthur Biggins, '41, and Joe Schroeder, '43, won five and lost one. In the B tuornament Edwin Bowers, '41, and George Eves won three and lost two. William Halliday, '43, and Chester Mysticki, '42, won four and lost one. raided repeatedly by the RAF. Meanwhile in .Ankara, Turkey, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and General Sir John G. Dill, chief of Britain's Imperial General Staff, met diplomats and Turkish leaders here today in conferences which are expected to determine the (Continued on Page 6) Prof. H. B. Wethey opens Art Seminar Today In Lane Hall' Prof. Harold B. Wethey, chairman of the fine arts department, will open the program of the seminar in relig- ious arts under the auspices of the Student Religious Association with a lecture on "Christian Arts" at 7:30 p.m. today at Lane Hall. As one of the outstanding features of the current semester's program, Professor Wethey will discuss the forms of religious arts which have been representative of changes in religious interpretation. The lecture is open to all students and faculty. It will initiate one of the many extra-curricular programs al- ieady planned by the Association. Students will hear other speakers and study forms of religious symbo- lism throughout the semester. BERT STODDEN n t Dean C. Griffin fj Gives VocationC t Lecture Today , N Business Administration a School Head To Open w Union Guidance Series w The Michigan Union's annual ser- J es of vocational guidance lectures s pens at 4:15 p.m. today in the small N. ballroom of the Union with an ad- ii Iress by Dean Clare E. Griffin of 9 the School of Business Administra- bion. h The series of lectures is designed E o help students in their selection of fl a field of concentration or one of the h prfoessional schols on the campus. l Other lectures in the series include: r Medicine, March 13, Dean Fursten- berg; Law, March 20, Dean Stason; Education, March 20, Dean Edmon-! on; Library Science, March 25, R. J.I Gjelsness; Architecture, April 1, Dean Bennett; Graduate Studies, April 3, Dean Yoakum; Pharmacy, April 8, Dr. Lewis; Music, April 10, Earl Moore; Engineering, May 1, i Dean Crawford, and Forestry, May i 8, Dean Dana. - The necessary qualities for a ca-v reer in the business world will form the topic of Dean Griffin's address,e it was announced by the chairman in charge of the guidance talks, Rob-f ert Sibley, '42E. Case material for Dean Griffin's talk comes from onev of the most complete records of thec histories of graduates ever compiled by a professional school, Sibley said. Van Wagoner Will Broadcast Governor To Inaugurate Series On Democracy Governor Murray Van Wagoner will open a new series of University broadcasts, entitled "Why' Save De- mocracy?" with a talk on Your Gov- ernment at 10:30 p.m. tomorrow over Station WJR. Governor Van Wagoner will co-' pare the democratic way of repre- sentative government with methods used in certain European countries which are attempting to transplant their non-democratic forms of gov- ernment in the Western Hemisphere. The purpose of these broadcasts is to combat anti-American propaganda through education, according to Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, Acting 'Director of Broadcasting. Each Friday a prom- inent authority will speak on some phase of American life as contrasted with life in the dictatorship countries. Northwestern Professor Blasts Athletic Program EVANSTON, Ill., Feb. 26. -(I)- By ART HILL Paced by one of the greatest for- yard lines in collegiate hockey, Mi- Lesota's mighty Gopher sextet will ake the ice tonight at the Coliseum o do battle with Michigan's much- lefeated outfit. The Gophers will be heavy favor- tes to emerge the victors in both to- ight's contest and the final game >f the series to be played on the same ce Saturday night. Minnesota has lready racked up two victories over he Wolverines, in games played at vinneapolis earlier in the season, by cores of 4-0 and 7-2. The Twin ities crew has a season record of line victories, three defeats and two ies as compared with two copped, sight dropped and one deadlocked or the Wolverines. Leading the visitors' attack will be apt. Harold (Babe) Paulsen, one of he' highest-scoring forwards in col- ege puck history. In his first two easons at Minnesota, the Mesabi darvel tallied no less than 77 points n 39 games, coming up with 48 goals nd 29 assists. He handles the right ing duties on the starting forward val. Playing opposite the blond Babe, ocal fans will see speedy Freddie unger, one of the fastest-moving katers ever to tie on a blade for the daroon and Gold. The 145-pound unior wingman scored 14 goals and assists last season. Minneapolis boy Bobby Arnold olds down the center spot on the irst line. Although only a sopho- nore, Arnold has already proved that e is worthy of a place on the same ine with Paulsen and Junger. He ose to his greatest heights in the 3 (Continued on Page 3) Michigan Natators Win Six AAU Titles After the last splash had settled n the Sports building pool last night t was found, to the amazement of none, that Matt Mann's miraculous Michigan mermen had paddled their way to six state AAU titles and two records in another dazzling display f Wolverine swimming supremacy. Before a cozy gathering of aquatic fans, the Maize and Blue team had virtually a private workout, for they were racing against themselves most of the evening with the rest of the state's swimming talent evidently scared out of competing against the Big Ten and National champions. Though there was an evident lack of out-state competition, the natators put on a well received show with a little Rockford, Ill., demon by the name of Jim Welsh taking the lead- ing role. Matt's tireless workhorse streaked toa double victory, winning the 100 yard free style in 1541 and corning back to cop the long quarter- mile grind. Charley Barker and Gus Sharemet were behind Welsh in the century. Ine addition to those preliminary' chores, Jim took the anchor leg on the record-breaking 400-yard free style relay, putting his all-senior team homemin'front in a great duel against Tommy Williams. The win- ning time of 3:39.5 was almost 11 (Continued on Page 3) Michigan Grapplers To Meet Penn State (Special To The Daily) STATE COLLEGE, Penn., Feb. 26. -The Wolverine wrestling 'team ar- rived here tonight in preparation for their eastern invasion against a strong Penn State squad, tomorrow. The Michigan team will probably enter the meet as favorites, despite the fact that the Nittany Lions have already turned back powerful squads from Navy and Lehigh, The visitors' strength in the 136-pound class, 145- pound class, 165-pound class and 175-nound class is most likely to be Menefee Sees Seaway's Need Claims Middle West Area Would Get Benefits ," Opening up a Middle West area containing one-third of the popula- tion of the United States to world oceanic trade is the chief justifica tion of the St. Lawrence Seaway project, Prof. Ferdinand N. Menefee of the engineering mechanics depart- ment asserted before a meeting of Alpha Phi Omega in the Union last night. A national authority on the consol- idation of the resources of the Greak Lakes region, Professor Menefee ed that if the new Seaway Treaty which he expected to be brought up before the Senate in the very near future were ratified, it would provide a vast quantity of power and electri- fication throughout the Middle West. A system of dams, canals and dikes would be constructed with appropria- tions totaling near a quarter of a bil- lion dollars, providing for the harn- essing of the waterpower from the whole Great Lakes drainage system Graduate Examinations rum n ' - 1 a_ r - , Neville. Discusses Far East; C. E. Kellogg Lectures Ex-Minister To Thailand Describes Frontiers Of Asiatic Nations Describing the settlement and na- tionalization of Asiatic peoples, Mr. Edwin L. Neville, former American Minister to Thailand, delivered a University lecture yesterday on the historical events that led to the estab- lishment of Far Eastern frontiers as they exist today. . Mr. Neville explained how the fab- ulous Ghengis Khan .organized the; nomad tribes of North Asia into a conquering Mongol army by develop- metit of military strategy, an intel- ligence service, and a rigorous system of discipline. When the Khan died in 1227 A.D. Schairer To Lecture Chief Of U.S. Soil Survey' To Talk On Agriculture . Related To Science Dr. Charles E. Kellogg, Chief of the Soil Survey Division of the United States Department of Agriculture, will discuss "The Scientist and Agri- culture in a Democratic State," in a' University lecture at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Dr. Kellogg, noted member of the Association of American Geographers, is the author of varied articles on soil genesis, classification, conserva- tion and research, rural land-use planning, land classification and re- lation of soil conditions to social development. Today's lecture, sponsored by the geography department, will be fol- 1.. . r"