Weather Y ' E Fair and Warmer. Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication aig Edito rial There Is A Difference I VOL. LL No. 169 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 25, 1941 Z323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Wolverines Defeat Purdue NiMe, 14-4; Netters Win Match Mile, Two-Mile Teams' Crack Michigan Records Hood, Largest Battleship, Sunk By Nazi Bismarck; Bombers Hurled At Crete Trackmen Place Second As To Californians New World Romp Mark Team Tallies Runs In Final Innings; Tennis Squad* Concludes Home Season Dick Wakefield Hits Decisive Home Run By MYRON DANN (Special to The Daily) LAFAYETTE, Ind., May 24.-Afte: spotting their foes four runs in thi fourth inning, Michigan came to life and blasted three Purdue pitcher for seventeen hits to gain a 14-4 victory over the Boilermakers today The Wolverines tallied all thei runs in the last half of the game scoring ten runs in the seventh anc eighth innings alone. Big gun for the Varsity was Dic Wakefield, who clouted his seconc home run in as many days. Big Dick's drive came in the eighth inning. wit the bases loaded. The ball carriec more than 430 feet into deep centei field and in all probability was a harder hit than his blow in the firs game of the series. Ray Fisher used three pitchers ir gaining the second straight triuml over the Boilermakers. Mickey Stod- dard started on the mound, but the curly-haired right hander was chased from the box in the fourth frame after he was tagged for four runs and four hits. Little Mase Gould relieved Mickey and held Purdue hitless in the four innings that he worked. After he had pitched six consecutive balls in the seventh inning, Fisher put in "Lefty' Muir, who gave up only one hit dur- ing the rest'of the game. Going into the seventh inning, Pur- due was leading 4-3 and it looked as if the Boilermakers might upset the Conference leaders. Then the Wol- verine nine that had remained com- paratively idle during the first part of (Continued on Page 3) Netters Nose Out State In Final Match, 5-4 By DICK SIMON Michigan's mighty netters fought with all they had yesterday as they came from behind to beat Michigan State, 5-4, on the Palmer Field courts and ring down the curtain on the 1941 home season. It was a .nip-and-tuck battle from start to finish with the Spartans lead- ing, 3-1, at one point in the match. The singles were split, each side win- ning three, but the Wolverines won two of the doubles matches to gain their second victory over the State lads this season and their 16th win in 19 starts. Jim Porter, regular number three man was still on the sidelines giving his injured foot another day of rest. Captain Jim Tobin played his last game- on Wolverine territory and made short work of Morris :rilling, number one Spartan player, 6-4, 6-1. Jim's placement shots were keeping his opponent s deep in. his own court that the Michigan senior could rush the net to score points at will. Without detracting from Tobin's brilliant play, the feature match of the day was the doubles battle be- tween Wayne Stille and Gerry Schaf- lander and State's team of Frank Beeman and Bill Maxwell - a battle which brought the Wolverines victory. The meet was all tied up at 4-all when the two teams were half way through (Continued on Page 3) Purchasers To Get 'Ensians Tomorrow Michiganonsians will be distribut- ed from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow on the first floor of the Publications Building. Purchasers are urged to bring their receipt stubs and also ten cents in change, to facilitate distribution. The dime was added to take care of the sales tax it was necessary to add this year. Although it doesn't cover the full amount due, the dime was felt to be a simple means of taking care of the tax. There still remain a limited number of 'Ensians for sale at five dollars Hull Is Urged To Ask Vichy For U.S. Bases WASHINGTON, May 24.-(P)-- Senator Mead (Dem-NY) urged Sec- retary Hull today to undertake "friendly negotiations" with the Vichy government for the establishment of American defense bases on the island of Martinique and other French po- sessions in this hemisphere. "Should this effort prove futile and should it be the judgment of our government that the interests of -this hemisphere are in jeopardy," Mead added in a letter to Hull, "seizure by force should be accomplished without delay." - Acquisition of French island po- sessions has been advocated by other senators, among them Clark (Dem- Mo), and Reynolds (Dem-NC), who have been critical of present admin- istration foreign policy. Senator Pepper (Dem-Fla), who proposed a week ago that the United States seize French islands in this hemisphere, agreed with Mead that negotiations for bases should be un- dertaken first. "While we could take Martinique and other French possessions without difficulty," Pepper said, "we should try first to negotiate for bases and then see what happens." Mead expressed belief that friend- ly negotiations initiated by this coun- try would "invite sympathy and sup- port of a large portion of the French population."r "If a proposal to negotiate were re- jected by the Vichy government," he told Hull, "such a rejection could hardly be interpreted as anything else than an action taken as a result of extreme pressure from the contemp- orary continental conqueror." Band Will Give SpringConcert Work Of Contemporaries, Wagner To Be Heard The 28th annual Spring Concert of the University of Michigan Con- cert Band will be given at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Wagnerian music and contempo- rary pieces will comprise the program of the concert, which will be open to the public. The Spring Concert is one of the outstanding offerings of the University bands during the year. Lucille Bennett, violin soloist, will play a composition written by her father, David Bennett, one of the well-known composers of band music in this country, entitled "Cubana," a violin solo with band accompaniment. Featured on the evening's program will be Wagner's "Homage March" and "Wotan's Farewell and the Magic Fire Music" from "Die Walkyries." The Michigan Bands will also hold their annual spring banquet Wednes- day in the League. - (Special to The Daily) 4LOS ANGELES, Cal~, May 24.-Th greatest relay teams in Michigan' track history showed the 25,000 roar ing spectators on hand at the Lo Angeles Coliseum Relays plenty o fancy 'running here today, placini second in both events and setting ne Michigan records for both the mil and two-mile distances. Running their hearts out in th two-mile relay, the Michigan team composedofBob Ufer,Dave Mat thews, Johnny Kautz and Warrerm Breidenbach, forced the Californi baton-passers to a new world's rec ord of 7:34.5 minutes and ran th best race ever recorded in the Mich igan books, turning in a time of 7:4 seconds. Breidenbach Stars Breidenbach, the sensation of th 1941 Wolverine track aggregation featured the mile relay, blazing hi way around the Coliseum track in th almost super-human / time of 468 seconds, The Wolverine crew also se a new Michigan record for this event the four-man team of Ufer, Jack Leutritz, Breidenbach, and Al Thom- as stepping off the distance in 3:12 bettering the mark set in 1939 by more than two seconds, and finishing only a few steps behind the Southern Cal- ifornia team which won the race in 3:11.7. Bob Ufer, leading off for the Wol- verines in the two-mile relay, took a Chinese Relief Tag Campaign Is Successf ul Drive, Unique On Campus, Surpasses Expectations; All StudentsCooperate Generous University students and townspeople contributed $1,017.35 for Chinese Civilian Relief in the "chop- stick campaign" conducted Friday by the University of Michigan Chinese Students Club. The campaign, unique in campus history, proved a complete success and overshot its goal, according to Paul Lim-Yuen, '42E, co-chairman of the drive. More than 316 students from all campus organizations co- operated in the relief effort by do- nating their services as tag and chop- stick salesmen. The money will be sent to the Unit- ed China Relief group whose nation- al effort closes today with the ob- servarice of "China Sunday" in Michi- gan. The aim of the national drive was $5,000,000. In the past two years the local Chinese students have con- tributed two ambulances to their homeland. The "chopstick campaign" was un- der the co-chairmanship of Cheng K. Tseng, Grad., and Lim-Yuen. Collect- ing was under the direction of Jack Tsu, '41E, while service was handled by Mursoh Wu, Grad., and Shing Kong Kuh, Grad. Publicity and cor- respondence were managed by Che Tang, '42E, and David Y. Liang, '42BAd., respectively. An official statement of appreciation for the large contribution from the members of the campus Chinese colony will be released on Tuesday. Le f 4V e e n a WARREN BREIDENBACH brief lead but surrendered it very soon to California's Johnnie Reese and Indiana's Paul Kendall. The - speedy Wolverine sprinted the last lap of his leg, however, and handed the baton to Matthews only a step behind the Hoosier team. Pace Is Fast Unable to keep up the fast pace, Matthews ran third to California's mighty Grover Klemmer and Wayne Tolliver of Indiana. Kautz, the third man on the Michigan team, fought hard with Indiana's Roy Cochran and Don Barry of the Trojans, with Dick Peter of California going far into the lead in the meantime. Great credit for snaring second place to record breaking California must go to Breidenbach. The flashy Wolverine star gained plenty of sweet (Continued on Page 3) Residence Hall Scholarships Given To 19 Helen Newberry, Stevens, Betsy Barbour, Martha Cook Awards Presented Residence halls' scholarships for 1941-42 have been- awarded to nine- teen women on the basis of scholar- ship, citizenship and financial need. The awards, which include board or room or both for an entire school year, are divided by semesters so as to benefit as many as possible. The1 recipients must have at lekst a BI average and have usually earned at least part of their expenses. Betsy Barbour House Scholarships were announced as follows: Barbara Alcorn, '43, Suzanne Nicholson, '43, Ann Podoley, '44, and Ann Costikyan will receive room for one semester; Mary Haferkamp, '42, and Janet Pet-k erson of Bronxville High School will receive board for the same length of time. Those who are to be awarded a se- mester's board at Helen Newberry1 are Margaret Emery, '42, and Judy Gold, '42. Room scholarships for a semester will go to Helen Kulinski, '44, ,Betty Altman, '42, Elaine Gard-1 ner, '42, and Evelyn Grantham,,'44.- The Anne Shipman Stevens Schol-t arship, awarded to a resident of Martha Cook and which includes bothl room and board, has been given thist year to Margaret Avery, '43. It is1 based upon scholarship and ability in student affairs. Other scholarships in Martha Cook" Residence Hall were for room andt board for one semester. These went to Margaret Groefsma, '43, Opal Shim- mons, '42Ed., Margaret Jackson, '42, Elizabeth Luckham, '42, Ruth Thom- as, '43, and Kathryn Nicol of High- land Park Junior College. Russo-Finnish War Film Will Be Shown Tuesday; A full length documentary sound film of the Russo-Finnish war, issued1 by the Soviet Government and ap-i proved by the Art Cinema League, A nEditorial . SINCE FRIDAY when the Regents voted once more that the "faculty must dominate the Publications Board" we have had time to re- flect. We have reflected about the shallow conception of democracy that says that students may not participate in the responsibility of their own newspaper, (for the student members of the Board are to be in effect only "advisers" hereafter). We have reflected also on the conception of a University which allows so flagrant a disregard of the University's own constituents-the students and the faculty. The protests of 4,350 students were passed off like water off a duck's back, as were, what is asserted to be the "maturer" opinion, of a great many faculty members. The Regents did all this in the name of the people of Michigan4 whose constitution states in its preamble that the people have estab- lished their constitution, "grateful to the Almighty God for the bless- ings of freedom, and earnestly desiring to secure these blessings un- diminished to ourselves and our posterity." That is what the pre- amble says--it's not the law but it expresses the spirit, the very essence, which the people say should be embodied in its laws. The Regents didn't violate the law Friday, but they did violate flagrantly the spirit which education is supposed to foster in future etizens. That is how we feel, and we know concretely that 4,350' students and numbers of faculty feel the same way. If we had several years in which to reach every citizen of the state and explain it to them, we are confident that they would feel the same way too. BUT FOR THE TIME BEING the reorganization plan is on" the books-as securely as the draft.' Histrionics now aren't going to remove it from the books. The plan-given with the pledge that it would never go further than administer the student formulated Daily Code of Ethics-is one of those givens under which we must continue to put out the same free and Pacemaker Award newspaper of the past. That the present Board has administered that Code adequately is not now the question. All of us must live within the limitations of the situation. The long-run development of man has been the lifting of those limitations, but in the short-run man must live and work within them. Principles must be applied to what is,. otherwise they remain the product of mental gymnastics. That is the task of The Daily editors. If at any time the pledge of those who initiated the reorganization plan is broken, if the letter and editorial pages of The Daily are throttled and no longer represent student opinion, the campus will hear about it and can act uuon it. As for the editors, we believe that a philosophy which would allow such a move is unworthy to be taught or learned. We would have to leave with the hope that our action would effect a better good. WE ARE CONFIDENT that such a move will not be taken. Though we will lend our influence to undoing what has been done, ours is the greater and more profitable task of continuing to publish a free and respected Daily. Given the situation, there lies the greater good. Robert Speckhard Emile Gele Albert P. Blaustein Alvin Dann David Lachenbruch T. A. Raman To Give Lecture, On India's Problems Tuesday German Warship Damaged In Iceland Naval Battle, British Sources Indicate Long-Range Fighters DestroyAirdrome LONDON, May 24.--(P)-The 42,- 100-ton battle cruiser Hood, largest warship in the world, was blown to bits in the waters between Green- land and Iceland today by the new German battleship Bismarck during a battle of grave historic import'be- tween the behemoths of the British and German navies. The Admiralty, in announcing this largest single naval loss the British navy'has suffered since the war be- gan, attributed it to an unlucky hit in a munitions magazine and ex- pressed fear that more than 1,300' men had been killed. The 35,000-ton Bismarck received damage and tonight is fleeing, pur #' sued by the remaining British war- ships, the announcement said. Nazis Jubilant The German high command, which first disclosed the destruction of the Hood in a special communique, placed the scene off Iceland and said the, Bismarck and all the other German forces emerged from the battle virtu- ally unscathed and continued their Atlantic operations. A British battle- ship was forced to withdraw, the Germans said. Greenland, protection of which has been assumed by the United States, and Iceland, now under British occu- pation, are separated by a 250-mile stretch of water, the Strait of Den- mark. It was apparently somewhere near the mouth-of this strait, on the edge of the Western Hemisphere, that the battle occurred. The brief British communique shocked the Empire during celebra- tion of the 122nd anniversary of Queen Victoria's birth. It said: "British naval forces intercepted early this morning off the coast of Greenland German naval forces, in- cluding the battleship Bismarck. Enemy Engaged "The enemy were attacked, and during the ensuing action H.M.S. Hood (Captain R. Kerr) wearing the flag of Vice Admiral L. E. Holland, received an unlucky hit in a maga- zine and blew up. "The Bismarck has received dam- age and the pursuit of the enemy continues. "It is feared there will be few sur- vivors from H.M.S. Hood." That was all. Speculation immediately arose whe- ther the Tirpitz, sister ship of the Bismarck and known to have been completed about the same time this -year, also was in the Western Atlan- tic battle. British Bomb Crete, Destroy Nazi Planes (By The Associated Press) CAIRO, Egypt, May 24.-Britain hurled long range fighters and bomb- ers (possibly American makes) into the fantastic battle for Crete today, announcing destruction of at least 14 more German troop planes in the struggle to exterminate the Nazis clinging to Malemi airdrome. Confronted with overwhelming German air superiority at the start of the invasion Tuesday, the RAF pulled its planes out of Crete, but dis- closed today that others have joined the fray from distant bases. Location of the bases was not given. The Germans have managed to bring in some artillery and mor- tars in their effort to enlarge their foothold at - Malemi, British sources acknowledged, and are continuing to fly in reinforcements. Transports Attacked The RAF, however, said large num- bers of Junkers 52 troop transports were attacked yesterday on the beach and airdrome at Malemi, 10 being destroyed and many others "burned out" and made completely useless. Long-range British fighters were credited with destroying four addi- tional large German troop planes, thus raising the two-day toll to 30. (Nearest British land bases for this Skylark' Will Begin Run Tuesday With Ruth Matteson, Leon Ames An opportunity to obtain authori- tative information on the ever-puzz- ling problem of India will present it- self to the campus when T. A. Ra- man, native Hindu and London editor of the United Press of India, speaks on "India and the War" at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Build- ing under the auspices of the history and political science departments. Raman is recognized as one of the best journalists of India and as an authority on the political problems of his country. His columns are syn- dicated all over the British territory and he writes frequently in the Eng- lish press. When in London he also acts as a regular news commentator over the B.B.C., broadcasting to India. An able and persistent advocate of Indian freedom, his criticisms of Bri- tain's policy in India have often been the subject of parliamentary debate. Immediately upon graduation from King's College, Raman became secre- tary to Mahatma Gandhi during the Indian Round Table Conference in London. Following the Mahatma to India, he soon came into close per- sonal contact with leaders of all sec- tions of Indian opinion. When he returned to England in 'Poetically Mad' Greek Shoots At Italian King ROME, May 24.-A(P)-A Greek un- der a spell of "poetic madness" fired several wild shots at the automobile in which King Vittorio Emanuele was riding with Albanian Premier Shef- ket Verlaci last week on the Italian monarch's visit to Albania, Fascist authorities announced today. 1938, he became London editor of several nationalist papers and now occupies the most important foreign assignment of the largest Indian owned news service-a position in which he is in direct personal con- tact with Indian leaders such as Gandhi, Nehru and others. In the course of his journalistic career, Raman has met many world celebrities outside of India. He was in France at the time of the invasion and had exclusive interviews with many members of the French}cabi-' net. A id-To-Britain Group To Hear Editor Of TMV' Climaxing an American Student Defense League mass meeting, Ralphf Ingersoll, editor of PM, will "present an answer to the isolationists and de- featists" in his address at 8:15 p.m. June 3 in the Rackham Building. His talk will be titled "Aierica At the Crossroads." A well known liberal and inter- ventionist, Ingersoll's speech will bring to a close a day of student dem- onstrations led by the members of the ASDL, an organization favoring all possible aid to Britain. The journalist will also be present at a dinner to be served at 6:30 p.m. the same day. Reservations for the meal may be made by calling Gerald Davidson, '42. Ingersoll began his journalistic novtrP r n 147)9.q . n.p.-.. 4'..,+hn4 The curtain will rise 'at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday on "Skylark," the second of the Dramatic Season's produc- tions. , Ruth Matteson and Leon Ames, who played leading roles in "The Male Animal" which closed its run at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre yesterday, will head the' cast of this week's show. Hiram Sherman, who has previously appeared here for the Ann Arbor Dramatic Season, will also have a leading role. Other presentations will be "Ladies in Retirement" starring Ruth Gordon, "Man and Superman" with Madge Evans and "Golden Boy" with Sylvia Sidney and Luther Adler. The sea- son will continue through June 21. The comedy, which will be given through May 31 with matinees on Thursday and Saturday, starred Ger- -U--