Weather Cloudy and warmer. C, I, , r Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication ~~Iati Editorial Barriers Hamper Interstate Trade. . VOL. Ll. No. 76 ANN ARBOR, MICIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1941 Z323 ANN RBO, MCHIGN, UNDY, JNUAY 1, 191 Z330 'PRICE FIVE CENTS Wolverine Cagers Drop Close Game' Student Senate To Close Three-Day Parley Today To Purdue, 41-40 v Varsity Pucksters Take 4-3 Hard Fought Win Over College Of Mines Michigan Matmen Defeat Dearborn (Special to The Daily) LAFAYETTEInd., Jan. 11.-Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's Michigan bas- ketball team staged a desperate last minute rally in a valiant attempt to spring a startling upset over Purdue, but fell one point short of overtaking the Boilermakers to drop a 41-40 thriller. At that it took a referee's decision on a technicality to prevent the vis- itors from sending the game into overtime. Grissen Oversteps Line With six minutes left to play in the game and the score reading 41- 37, Michigan's Jim Grissen was awarded a foul shot. The stocky Wol- verine guard made good the free throw but the point was disallowed when the referees ruled that Gris- sen's toe was over the line A basket by big Jim Mandler and a successful foul toss by Grissen brought the score to 41-40 but the final gun barked before the Maize and Blue could muster a tying. or game-winning tally. Both teams scored 16 baskets from the floor but the Wolverines' 16 personal fouls afforded their oppon- ents the margin of victory. The Boil- ermakers cashed in on nine out of 19 gift tosses as Michigan rung up eight in 14 tries. Purdue Aim Is Better Coach Ward "Piggy" Lambert's hoopmen also proved the better shots fromfscrimmage, making good on 16 out of 59 field goal attempts while the losers needed 72 shots at the hoop to score the same number of bas- kets. The game was airtight all the way through. The score at half time was 18-all and the two quintets were never separated by more than three points at any stage of the encounter. Captain Herb Brogan's eight points on three baskets and two foul shots kept Michigan in the game during a somewhat ragged first half that (Continued on Page 3) Ross And Stodden Lead Wolverine Ice Attack By ART HILL Charley Ross and Bert Stodden led Eddie Lowrey's Michigan hockey team to a 4-3 victory over a much im- proved Michigan College of Mines aggregation last night and thereby enabled the Wolverines to rack up the state college hockey champion- ship. The two defense men both played the entire game and between them accounted for all four of the Michi- gan tallies. As in the first game with the Min- ers, the local club was forced to come from behind to gain the vic- tory. The Huskies scored twice early in the first period and led 2-1 at the end of the period. After six minutes and nine sec- onds of the opening frame, Dave Wilson opened the scoring by beat- ing Goalie Hank Loud of Michigan on a close-in shot after taking a pass from Capt. Bob Petaja of the Huskies. The visitors wasted little time in adding to their score. Just 19 sec- onds, after the first score, Petaja and Wilson teamed up again to give (Continued on Page 3) Matmen Take Six Bouts From Dearborn Squad The Wolverine wrestling team had an easy time with the Dearborn A.C. squad last night as the Varsity mat- men took six out of eight bouts to open the season with a 22-6 victory at Yost Field House. Ray Deane opened up the meet when he grappled with Dearborn's Carl Lindenbalm in the 136-pound division. Deane had his own way throughout the entire match. He picked up points in the first period and barely missed a fall with a head cnicntc .. k ..n.. A r ns' A A Blakenan To Discuss Students' Future Panel Criticizes Extent Of Academic The Student Senate's annual three- day winter parley will close today when Dr. Edward N. Blakeman will summarize the contents of the en- tire parley at 3 p.m. in the Union. A general discussion will follow on the theme of what the student can expect looking into the future. A special panel composed of Prof. Roy Sellars of the philosophy depart- ment, Prof. Arthur Smithies of the economics department, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Prof. Lowell J. Carr of the sociology department, and Rev. H. L.{ Pickerell will be present. All the other speakers who participated in the parley have been invited to attend. Debate at yesterday's panel on the controversial issue of "License- Freedom-Suppression" resolved in- to two conflicting viewpoints in re- gard to academic freedom at this Possibilities; Freedom New Agencies To Control Defense, Lease-Lending, Nazis Aid Italy Off Sic ily a {. HERB BROGAN Snow Carnival Will Sponsor Ice Sculpture When the 1941 Winter Carnival's much-talked-about-snow does come, there'll be more than snowballs to make for it, as far as its sponsors are concerned. A snow sculpturing contest . . . with no restrictions on the subject save morality . . . was announced yester- day for fraternities, sororities and dormitories by Jack Grady, '42, gen- eral chairman of the Carnival. Awards will be made on the basis of originality and impressiveness, the bigger the better and anything goes, from a model of Angell Hall to a bust of Betty Grable. All statues must be labeled with a placard. Explaining construction techniques, Don West, '43E, and Don Harness, '43E, co-publicity chairmen, suggest that the statues be built by degrees to the desired shape and then "washed" with water to freeze the surface. An excess of snow and ice must be created so that the figure it- self may be chiseled from the ice. Exceptionally large works should be supported by a wooden :framework. Two large trophies, now on display at the Union, will be awarded to the winners in the men's and women's divisions. University. The idealistic approach was stated by Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department when he declared, "Students and faculty members should in respect to academic duties be unfettered from any considera- tions of utility. Any University stu- dent should be free to do anything a citizen may do." The other three speakers, Prof. Richard C. Fuller of the sociology department, Prof. Lowell J. Carr, and Prof. John P. Dawson agreed with this thesis but they added a reserva- tion that was brought up by Carr. "The thesis cannot be maintained without regard to the responsibilities and social consequences of what you say and do. Consideration of what a student may do should be qualified by what others think of the Univer- sity," he asserted. As expected, the case of the thir- teen students refused readmissioln came up for discussion. Prof. Carr said that perhaps from the point of view of public relations the cases had been ineptly handled. "The way in which they were handled reflects certain things," he said. He indicated that he meant public opinion in the rural parts of the state. In the realm of national affairs, Evashevski Sr. Dies In Detroit Funeral Rites To Be Held At Home Tomorrow Albin Evashevski, father of Forest Evashevski, '40, Captain of the 1939- 40 Michigan football team, died at his home in Detroit yesterday. He was 54 years old. Surviving Mr. Evashevski are his' wife, Mrs. Katherine Evashevski, and his two sons, Kenneth and Forest. The funeral services will be conduct- ed in Detroit at 1 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Evashevski's death followed closely after the announcement of the engagement of his son to Miss Ruth Brown, Grad., daughter of Prentiss Brown, junior senator from Michigan. The wedding is to take place either during spring vacation or in June. Prof. Dawson said that at the present time no new restrictions are needed, but if England should lose our whole society will have to make new de- cisions and our concepts of liberty will have to be revamped. Prof. Slos- son showed that atstimes of crisis there is need to preserve freedom of opinion at the very points at which people want suppression. At another panel at the same time on student government and extra- curricular affairs, Dean of Students Alice C. Lloyd declared that very few students wish to take responsi- bility in real student government and that this was one of the chief ob- stacles in the way of its adoption. Other members on the panel were Miss Ethel C. McCormick Social di- rector of the League, Dean Joseph A. Bursley, and Assistant Dean Walt- er B. Rea. Health Officer Reports State 'f'lu' Eptidemic LANSING, Jan. 11.-(V-)-Dr. H. A. Moyer, State Health Commissioner, said today a mild form of influenza had spread throughout Michigan un- til a situation of epidemic proportions had been reached. "Its spread throughout the state has become serious," Dr. Moyer said. "though an, investigation by the Health Department has shown that the influenza itself is not of a seri- ous nature and only a low percentage of cases has developed into pneu- monia." The Upper Peninsula is less affect- ed than the Lower, Dr. Moyer said, but throughout the Lower Peninsula the disease appears to be fairly even- ly distributed. He said he did not believe Michigan was harder hit than neighboring states. The Health Commissioner said his department had been unable to com- pile statistics on the exact number of cases because of a delay in report- ing such cases to county health offi- cials. f Clerk Assaults Sore Manager Cleavinger Pleads Guilty To AttemptedRobbery Russel Cleavinger, 20, 112 W. Jef- ferson, was arrested yesterday af- ternoon by Sgt. Geringer of the Ann Arbor police and charged with sus- picion of assault with intent to rob. Cleavinger was held after an at- tempted robbery of the Thom McAn shoe store at 215 S. Main yesterday noon. Marlin Prindle, 1714 Abbitt, manager of the store was struck on the head with a club during the rob- bery attempt. He was not seriously injured. According to Sgt. Geringer, Cleav- inger, a clerk in the store tried to rob it during his lunch hour. He left the front entrance, went around to the rear of the store and entered DR. EDWARD BLAKEMAN Nazis Bomb British Fleet In Mediterranean Battle, Axis Command Reports Moscow Rebukes Americans, British (By The associated Press) ROME, Jan. 11-Four British war- ships have been hit in a new joint German-Italian aerial offensive against British Mediterranean sea power-an action said unofficially to be continuing-the Fascist High Command announced today. In a, communique stressing the "fraternal, close co-operation" of the Nazi air force in this first action for the Germans in the Mediterran- ean, the Italians gave these as the results of the attack: An aircraft carrier hit by an Ital- ian aerial torpedo; a cruiser struck by two heavy bombs from Italian dive bombers; a second aircraft car- rier hit by heavy Italian bombs; one of these aircraft carriers hit also by both heavy and medium German bombs; a destroyer hit by the Ger- mans. The German High Command's communique subordinated the Medi- terranean action to its next-to-last paragraph; made no specific mention of the Italians other than that im- plied in the phrase that Nazi fliers "participated"; and said nothing of German-Italian fraternity. Bulgaria Must Open Door SOFIA, Bulgaria, Jan. 11-Appar- ently referring to the supposition that Germany may soon demand the priv- ilege-of sending troops through Bul- garia toward Greece and the Dar- danelles, a member of the govern- ment majority in Parliament de- clared in effect today that Bulgaria must open its doors if requested by a great power to do so. Moscow Justifies Deal With Germany MOSCOW, Jan: 11.-(iP)-The gov- ernment and party press of the Sovi- et Union spoke out sharply today in justification of the new economic deal between Germany and Russia and rebuked British and American statesmen who may consider it war- like. Furthermore, the newspapers an- nounced, Moscow will make addition- al trade treaties in 1941 as she pleas- es, with nations both at war and at peace. "It is time," said an editorial in Izvestia, the government organ, that the world understands the U.S.S.R. follows an "independent policy and will continue to follow it." ALFRED CONNABLE * * * Local Alumnus Plans To Run For Re-eney Alfred Connable Candidacy For On Board Of Reveals Position Regents Alfred Connable, '25, of Ann Arbor, Detroit Trust Co. official and for many years an active alumnus of the University, today announced his can- didacy for the Board of Regents. Two regents are to be elected in the Spring election. This year the terms of Regents Franklin M. Cook of Hillsdale and Charles F. Hemans of Lansing expire. Both Hemans and Cook are Democrats. Connable, a Republican, has served as a member of the Board of Gov- ernors of the University of Michigan of Detroit and an alumni member of the executive committee of the Uni- versity Interfraternity Council. He was proposed for the Board of Re- gents at the Republican State Con- vention at Flint in 1938 and received State wide support from delegates. He holds degrees from both the University and in Business Adminis- tration from Harvard. When he went to school here he served as president of the Student Council, a forerunner of the present Men's Judiciary Coun- cil, an editor of The Daily, and as a member of Sphinx and Michigamua honor societies. He belongs to the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. During the last presidential cam- paign he was one of the State organ- izers of the Associated Willkie Clubs. Priorities Division To Use 'Crackdown' Methods To Obtain Cooperation Production Office To Govern Loans WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.(P)-A new government agency empowered to use "crackdown" methods to ob- tain industry's compliance with de- fense orders took form today with the appointment of staff officials to the priorities division of the Knud- sen-Hillman Production Management Office. Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., director of the division, named several assist- ants and also a joint Army-Navy- Industry special group to assure an adequate flow of steel products for defense and other needs. The priorities division is an execu- tive arm of the new four-man defense production general staff headed jointly by"William S. Knudsen and Sidney Hillman. Officials said the division would carry out any "crackdown" orders of the Knudsen-Hillman board, by means of priorities which govern the delivery of materials and use of transportation. Ample powers to enforce a right of way for defense orders were voted last summer by Congress, officials said. Thus far, however, there has been no announcement of a decision to use the powers. Stettinius is chairman of the ad- visory priorities board as well as director of the executive division. Other staff appointments included Blackwell Smith, an aide to Stettin- ius in the defense commission, assist- ant director in charge of staf activi- ties. Production Management Office To Govern Loans (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 - The lease-loan program for aiding Bri- ,ain will probably be carried out chiefly through the new Office of. Production Management if the leg- islation introduced yesterday giv- ing the President wide powers is ap- proved, an Administration leader in- licated today. Senator James F. Byrnes, South 'arolina Democrat who partici- pated in preliminary conferences on the legislation, said that this pro- -edure was likely. The OPM-the defense "supreme command"-is headed by William S. Knudsen, director, and Sidney Hill- man, associate director. This arrangement, it was said, would make for complete correlation from start to finish between pro- duction for American and that for British use. The OPM already has been charged by the President with full responsibility for American pro- duction. In addition, other sources said that agencies such as the Reconstruction Finance Corporation might be called upon to handle some phases of the program. The first necessity for making the program effective, Byrnes said, is a survey of production capacity to de- termine exactly how much and what kinds of equipment can be supplied to the British. He predicted that the chief items to be furnished would be airplanes, destroyers and cargo vessels. These, he said, are the things which Britain is most anxious to ob- tain. U.S. To Have Eight Bases On British Soil, Hull Says WASHINGTON, Jan. 11. -(MP-- Secretary Hull tonight announced agreement had been reached by the United States and Great Britain on sites for eight American air and nav- al bases to be constructed on British possessions in the Western Hemi- sphere. Formal 99-year, rent-free leases will be signed, officials added, as soon as an American mission, composed Axis Suffers From Lack Of Fuel Resources, SimpsonComments Student Church Groups To Hold Discussions On Current Affairs G - By KIRKE L. SIMPSON British seizure in the Libyan cam- paign of a fleet of grounded Italian planes raises again the question of Fascist oil resources, and the extent to which Italian reverses both in Af- rica and Albania may be traceable to lack of fuel. This seems the major explanation for the poor showing Italy has made in the air and at sea, in Libya and in Albania. Indeed, there appears to be an oil scarcity for both members of the Axis. The relative lull for three nights in Nazi air attacks on England last week well might be due more to oil and gasoline difficulties than to bad weather. The weather did not pre- vent British bombers crossing the Channel to batter the invasion coast those same nights. Berlin itself noted that the Nazi air attack on England was confined to "individual" plane raids. It may be that Nazi leadership welcomed a weather excuse for slow- at abandoned air bases west of To- bruk were reported left behind by the retiring Fascists because of damage inflicted by British air raids. That does not explain, however, how they happened to be caught on the ground in the first instance. Every circumstance of the fight- ing called for all-out use of Italian planes in Africa to stall the advancing British. Yet, at one base the attack- ers found 40 ships, crippled before they could get into air, at another 35 or so. There is reason to believe it was lack of fuel that grounded them. A successful Italian invasion of Greece to reach ports on the Greek Aegean coast might have opened new oil resources for Italy even if the British regained control, from Crete, of the mouth of the Aegean sea. The normal route for Rumanian oil is by sea, from Danube delta ports via the Bosporus and Dardanelles into the Aegean and thence to destination. Far more nientiful Russian oil from Current problems will be the cen- ter of interest at meetings of student religious groups led by well-known speakers at Ann Arbor churches to- day. At First Congregational Church Mrs. Slosson will show colored movies of her recent trip in the West and Southwest for the Student Fellow- ship group at 7 p.m. The morning sermon, by Dr. L. A. Parr, is "Taking the Short Cut." Mr. Lawrence Quinn, '36, will speak at 6:30 p.m. at the Disciples Guild Sunday Evening Hour. His topic will be "Four Years of College-An Eval- uation." Informal discussion, re- freshments and a social hour will fol- low. "Labor's Part in the Upheavals of 1940" will be the subject of Mr. Carl Haessler's speech in the Unitarian Church at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments will be served after the address. The Wesleyan Guild meeting at the First Methodist Church at 6 p.m. will hear Prof. Mentor Williams speak on "Religion in Contemporary Liter- ature." A fellowship hour and sup- Presbyterian Church will meet at 8 p.m. in the parlors to discuss Oriental customs under the leadership of three Oriental students. For the college group of St. An- drew's Episcopal Church the speaker at the 7 o'clock meeting will be Prof. Palmer Throop. His topic is "The Church in the Middle Ages." Re- freshments will be served and there will be a Choral Evensong at 8 p.m. The Ann Arbor Society of Friends will meet in Lane Hall today. The meeting for worship is from 5 to 6 and from 6 to 7 they will hear a report on the Work Camp Conference held in Philadelphia over the holidays. St. Paul's Lutheran Church will hold its morning worship service at 10:45 with a sermon by the Rev. Mr. Brauer on "Our Reasonable Serv- ice." The Gamma Delta Student Club will meet at St. Paul's Lutheran. Church at 5:30 p.m. for a fellowship supper, election of officers, and social hour, Sermons this morning at the vari- ous churches will be "Taking the Short Cut," First Congregational I