Weather Cloudy; somiewhat colder. ig .itt4U ~Iaili Editorial The NLRB's Nero Chairman.. Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication VOL. LI. No. 77 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1941 Z-2 TRICE FIVE CENTS Goodman, Krupa, Scott Music Will For Supply J-Hop King Of Swing's New Band Will Play At Saturday Night's Informal Dance Friday Orchestras Feature Hot Solos Benny Goodman, "King of Owing," Gene Krupa, "Doctor of Tympany," and Raymond Scott, "Foremost Com- poser of Modern Music,t' will offer a contrast in dancing rhythm when the doors open on the 1942 J-Hop February 14 and 15. Scott's new orchestra and Krupa's recently featured "danceable" music will set the tempo for the first night formal, while Goofman's clarinet, his new orchestra augmented by the addition of a baritone saxophone, will smooth out the background for baturday's "swing" informal. Sweet And Swing Besides the contrast of "sweet and swing" between Friday's and Sat- urday's orchestras, the first night will be versatile within itself, as both bands augment their sweet music with "hot" solos. Benny Goodman's orchestra was -acclaimed top band in a pop- ularity poll featured in the Jan- uary 1 edition of a national mu- sic magazine. In the first two-night presentation of J-Hop, the musical arrangements will provide a triple attraction. "The well-rounded program of Krupa and Scott for Friday, and Goodman for Saturday, will give the junior dancers what musicians term "every rhythm in the books," Phyllis Waters, Music Chairman, said. All three bands, lately reorganized, 'hav been featured in radio, screen, and personal appearance programs. Featured with Scott will be his six- piece combination known as the "Quintet," Claude Burke, baritone, Gloria Hart, "Tiny Tornado of Song," and Art Tyerson, "Guitarist Extra- ordinary." Known for his unusually named compositions: "Powerhouse," "Stormy Weather Over Newark," "Dinner Music For a Pack of Hungry Cannibals," Scott's music has been labeled "Futuristic," and "Ultra- Modern." Stars Irene Day Ace drummer man Krupa will star Irene Daye, "Lovely Lady of Song," and baritone Howard Dulaney with his orchestra Top stick manipulator Krupa along with Goodman and Tommy Dorsey, educate the public to "swing," is knaownfor his adap- tation of the symphonic trick, "con- trasting dynamics," to modern dance music. The new Septet, -replacing the former Quintet, will add versatility to Goodman's music with star trump- eter Cootie Williams, and Charlie Christians on the electric guitar. Singer Helen Forrest is one of the few members who will hold over from (Continued on Page 5) Swing Maestro Varsity Cagers Lose Illinois Contest, 47-41 (Special To The Daily) CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Jan. 13.-Michigan's hustling basketball team made another gallant bid for its first Conference win of th4 season here tonight but when the game was over, the Wolverines only found themselves more deeply entrenched in the Big Ten cellar. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's hoopmen staged another of their des- perate last half rallies only to succumb to a powerful Illinois quintet, 47-41. A crowd of 5,619 fans witnessed the encounter. Both teams started slowly, but Michigan was never ahead, though the Wolverines gained a 2-2 tie in the first few minutes when Jim Mandler, :enter, tipped in a rebound to coun- iter"H tta pair of free throws by Walter Annua Student "Hoot" Evers: Mandler had ll the best of an in- Senate Parley dividual scoring duel with Art Ma- thisen, Illinois sophomore pivot man. Mandler, counting on pivot shots and rebounds, picked 14 points while hold- ing Mathisen ta seven. Before to- Dean Lloyd, Prof. Smithies night's game both had been tied for Close Sunday Session; the Big Ten scoring lead with 25. Blakeman Summarizes points. After the Illiti, employing a fast Satisfaction with the Student Sen- break, with success, piled up a 24-15 ate's annual parley last weekend was half time advantage and then leng- expressed yesterday by John Mc- thened the margin to 36-20 with sev- Cune, '41, president of the Senate and en minutes gone in the second period, William Todd, '42, general chairman the Wolverines staged a belated spurt of the parley. that never quite caught the Illini. "Considering the difficulties made Diminutive Mike Sofiak, held by the Christmas vacation, the par- scoreless the first half, contributed ley was successful," Todd said. Mc- four baskets and one free throw to Cune declared that the speakers were- this late rally, and with the help good and the discussion stimulating. of George Ruehle and Mandler, nar- His suggestions for improvement were rowed the Illini margin to eight better student attendance and a points in four minutes. greater integration of discussion at The two teams battled on fairly the symposiums. even terms the remainder of the The national defense situation pro- way, Mandler pitching in a setup vided the background for discussion (Continued on Page 3) New Greek Thrust Called War's Greatest Offensive; Justices Uphold Spy Law Prof. Halecki WL Discuss War's Results Cracow University Dean Will Consider Latest Plans For World Order Discussion of possible post-war or- ders by such an able historian as is Prof. Oskar Halecki is of great sig- nificance, Prof. Arthur R. Boak, chairman of the history department, declared in an interview yesterday. Professor Halecki, international- ly known historian and former dean at the University of Cracow, will give a University lecture on "Problems of an International Order in European History" at 4:15 today in Rackham Lecture Hall under ,the auspices of Pianist Horowitz BENNY GOODMAN J-Hop Tickets Will Go On Sale At Union Today Students Asked To Bring Exact Amount Of Cash, One Application Only J-Hop tickets will be on sale from 12 noon to 4:30 p.m. today in the Union. Anyone presenting an approved application may purchase a ticket at the price of seven dollars. Identifi- cation cards are not necessary, but only one ticket will be sold at a time to eliminate dangers of carrying large amounts of money. The seven dollar price is inclusive of both nights; tickets for each night may .not be purchased separately. Paul Samson, '42, ticket chairman, requests that students have the exact amount of currency for payment. "We again remind students that persons caught scalping tickets will be subject to disciplinary action by the Men's Judiciary Council," Lee Perry, '42, general chairman, em- phasized. Thoroughgoing Yeggs Clean Pi Lambda Phi While the 31 brothers of Pi Lam- da Phi slept soundly in the dormitory of their house at 715 Hill St. early yesterday morning yeggs made their way inside, ransacked almost every room in the house and emerged with $150 in cash and about $1690 worth of clothes, typewriters, watches, rings, cameras, victrolas and cigarettes. The burglars entered through an unlocked window in, the dining room, Detective Harry G. Smith said. Sev- eral students heard the burglars but they believed they were other mem- bers of the fraternity. This same house was broken into last year but the amount stolen was much less. the history department. "The subject of post-wara tion in Europe has not treated thoroughly by an torian," Professor Boak "and Professor Halecki is recognized as one of the organiza- yet been able his- declared, generally foremost at the closing session on kSunday. Dean Alice C. Lloyd advised youth not to feel self pity but rather since it has a priceless opportunity to do something constructive it should look at the situation that way. Another speaker, Prof.. Arthur Smithies of the economics depart- ment, asserted that American youth should not passively acquiesce in the present crisis. Its attitude should be one of helpful constructive criti- cism, he maintained. "The President should have a con- tinual mandate from the bulk of the people to maintain social advances," he declared. Dr. Edwa.rd N. Blakeman mead a summary of the contents of the en- tire parley. Student Co-Ops To Hold Meet Sessions Friday' Are Open To Entire Campus An all-campus meeting on the sub- ject, "Student Cooperatives," will be held at 4 p.m. Friday in Room 319 of the Michigan Union under the auspices of the Inter-Cooperative Council. Reverend H. L. Pickerill, whose name has been connected with co- operatives at the University of Mich- igan ever since their inception, will keynote the meeting with a talk on "The Growth of Cooperatives on the Michigan Campus-a History and Evaluation,", in which he will discuss how the Michigan campus coopera- tives grew to become famous through- out the world as a democratic student housing, movement. Dorothy Morris, '43A, president of the Katherine Pickerill Cooperative House for women will discuss life in a woman's cooperative house, and Ed- ward Fried, '41, president of the In- ter-Cooperative Council will give a talk on cooperative living for men. The entire campus is invited and a special welcome 'is extended to stu- dents interested in rooming or board- ing in a cooperative house next sem- ester. There are now 13 coopera- tives on the Michigan campus, of which nine are for men, three are for women and one is for married couple§. Six Students Enter Finals In Speech 31 Six contestants for the second 'Speech 31 contest were chosen from 18 representatives of various sections of the class yesterday by members of the speech department faculty for the finals at 4 p.m. in Natural Sci- ence Audtorium tomorrow. Leanor Grossman, '43, of Hunting- ton Woods; Morton Jampel, '41, of Brooklyn, N.Y.; Richard P. Mead, '42E, of Erie, Penn.; Perry Nelson, '42, of Saginaw; John Steward, '43, of Dearborn, and Robert Vibbert, '43, Detroit will particilpate in the contest. The speakers will select topics of their own choice for the final con- test. Representatives for the pre- liminaries were chosen by members of the class sections. Judges will be Prof. William P. Halstead, Prof. H. H. Bloomer and Mr. Glen Mills of the speech depart- ment faculty. Mr. Alfred Partridge, also of the speech department, will act as chairman for the semi-sem- ester forensic event. The Speech 31 contest is held each semester to determine the most ef- fective student speaker in the course. All but one student will be eliminated in tomorrow's finals. Ski Club To Show SportsFilm Today A forty-minute motion picture of one of the most important ski meets of recent years will highlight today's meeting of the Ski Club at 7:30 in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The film was made in December, 1939, at the Federatione Internation- ale de Ski meet at Sun Valley, Ida- ho. Expert skiers and jumpers came from all over the world to compete in the slalom, cross-country, jump- ing and other events. Dick Dur- rance, Friedl, Pfeiffer and other rec- ognized masters appear in the film, according to James Hynes, '43L, of the Ski Club. modern scholars in the field of his- tory." He suggested that Professor Ha- lecki would consider proposed plans for future leagues, coalitions, etc. from the historical viewpoint, and would trace past efforts to solve problems of conflicting interest of European states by peaceful means. "His talk will not be propaganda for any particular position on the ques- tion," Professor Boak said. "Professor Halecki's work has been research in the early modern period, especially of eastern Europe," he stated. "He was here two years ago and gave a memorable talk." Driven from Poland by the Ger- man invasion, Professor Halecki or- ganized the Polish University in Exile in Paris and was its first president until he was again forced to leave by advancing Nazis. Men's Chorus To Sing Today Varsity Glee Club Will Give Jackson Concert The Varsity Men's Glee Club will leave at k: 15 p.m. today from. the Union for Jackson where they will give their first formal out-of-town concert for a women's organization. .Prof. David Mattern of the School of Music will conduct the group's program including "Ballad For Amer- icans." Erwin Scherdt, Grad., will sing the solo. The chorus will be ac- companied by Jack Ossewaarde, Grad. The Glee Club will be entertained before the concert at a dinner spon- sored by the woman's group in Jack- son's Hayes Hotel. Supplementing' their program will be Chan Pinney, '41E, Jim Bob Stephenson, '43, and Phelps Hines, '42A, who will offer songs from this year's production of the Union Opera. Co-Ops Call Applicantsj All women students interested in rooming or boarding in a cooperative house next semester are urged to phone Ruth Wellington, '41, at 2-2218, the Inter-Cooperative per- sonnel committee announced yester- day. ' * * Noted Ptantst To PlayChoral Union Recital Vladimir Horowitz, noted Russian pianist, will appear in a Choral Union concert here at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium under the aus- pices of the University Musical So- ciety. The son-in-law of Toscannini, famous conductor, Horowitz is wide- ly known for his dynamic piano ren- ditions of the works of the masters. His performance tomorrow night will be the first opportunity Ann Arbor residents have had in eight years to hear the pianist. Until last winter, Horowitz was playing his recitals abroad. He first appeared in America in 1926, but left for the sake of Eur- opean audiences several years ago. A few tickets for the recital are still available at the University Musi- cal Society offices in Burton Tower, or may be secured tomorrow night after 7 p.m. at the Hill Auditorium box-office. Horowitz will play the following program: Beethoven's Sonata i4 E-flat major Op. 31, No. 3; Schumann's Arabesque, Op. 18; Chopin's Sonata in B-flat minor, Op. 35; six short etudes by Jelobinsky; Liszt's Sonetto del e- trarca, Au bord d'une source, anc Feux follets; and Horowitz's own var- iations on a Theme from "Carmen.' International Center To Hear Dr. Stevens Dr. David Stevens, director of the division of humanities of the Rock- efeller Foundation, will be the guest for a special tea at the International Center from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today. The opportunity to meet Dr! Stev- ens is especially extended to stu- dents from Latin American countries. The Rockefeller Foundation at the present time is particularly interest- ed in the establishment of exchange scholarships and fellowships. Reich Renews Diplomatic Activities In Bulgaria; RAF Fly Over Bengasi Italian Resistance Is Termed 'Scant' (By The Associated Press) ATHENS, Jan. 13.-Greek soldiers reporting scant resistance, stabbed deeper into Italian defense positions below Valona today and Greek spokesmen declared this might prove the greatest offensive of the war in Albania. Although they claimed Fascist lines were crumbling at some points, au- thorities in Athens still lacked con- firmation of reports from the Yugo- slav frontier that Tepeleni, fortified mountain town guarding an Italian- built highway to the port of Valona, had fallen. Capture of Tepeleni would give the Greeks a jumping-off place for a re- newed thrust toward Valona, sole southern Albania port remaining in Italian hands. A companion drive- northward along the coast was said to have brought the Greeks within 30 miles of Valona. New gains were claimed also for forces which swept on north- ward from Klisura, a strategic cen- tral front point taken last week. German Activity Meanwhile, in Bulgaria Germany renewed diplomatic activitiy tonight amid indications of a stronger Rus- sian stand against possible transit of German troops through Bulgaria for an attack on Greece or the Dardan- elles. The German minister, Baron Her- bert von Richtofen, called on Premier Bogdan Philoff and Foreign Minister Ival Popoff in conferences consid- ered important in the wake of the denial by Tass, official Russian news agency, that the Soviet had given consent to German entry into Bul- garia. Airdromes and landing fields in the vicinity of beleaguered Tobruk were abandoned speedily by the Italians Cairo reports that RAF squadrons ranging far ahead of general Sir Archibald Wavell's land forces have gained control of the air as far as Bengasi, or over a third of Italy's north African colony, British sources said tonight. > ,, r e ,1 i. e e Spy Act Upheld In Washington today, the supreme court upheld the constitutionality of the sweeping espionage act of 1917 which makes it a crime to ob- tain 'or transmit any "information respecting the national defense to be used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage of any foreign nation," friend or foe. Two men convicted in California of violating the act in 1938 by furn- ishing to Russia naval intelligence reports which they deemed "innoc- uous" contended the wtatute was so oroad that it might even proscribe Lhe publicatio. of crop reports by newspapers if a jury held that such information was connected with "na- defense." Trackman Reads Of Successes In Greek Conflict With Pride Swomley Urges Public Support For 'Food To Europe' Meeting By HAL WILSON There's a lad on Coach Chester $tackhouse's yearling track team who might have been one of the short- skirted Evzone troops chasing Musso- lini's embattled legions from Albania this very moment, had it not been for his 'adventurous spirit and in- tense dislike for castor oil at the age of 15. Eleas Vlisides is his name and he's one Michigan freshman to whom the newspapers mean much more than ust a perfunctory glance at L'il Ab- ner, Superman and the sports sec- tion. For some of Eleas' relatives and doubtless his former playmates are engaged in the furious Greek fight against the Italian end of the Axis alliance. Born in Detroit. Eleas moved to an Italian vessel, and joined his parents here in Ann Arbor. Beginning with a two-word "yes" and "no" English vocabulary, Eleas finished up his high school educa- tion and is now trying to win a place on the frosh cinder squad as a half miler and become an engineer in- terspersed between reading news- paper accounts of his beloved Greece's military success. Strained relations between Italy and Greece have existed for a long time, acording to Vlisides, conse- quently the actual outbreak of war didn't surprise him a bit. "I knew the Greeks would resist any aggression,?' Eleas smiled, "because after 113 years of independence, we just wouldn't give it up that easily." His distaste for castor oil arose, Eleas guesses. from Premier General Survey Shows Students Indifferent To Parleys Because Of Bad Publicity, Generality Of Topics By CHESTER BRADLEY "With 35 million people reported- ly on the verge of starvation, Europe is facing possibly the worst physi- cal calamity in its history," John Swomley, secretary of the Youth Sec- tion of the Fellowship of Reconcilia- tion, asserted in an interview here yesterday. Swomley, here to address the local chapter of the international pacifist organization, urged public support for the organization of a local unit of the National Committee on. food for the Five Small Democracies, which will hold its initial meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in the Union. He maintained that "from the standpoint of pure humanity, we ought to become interested in feed- ing Europe," and insisted on the need for forming local organizations to Adolf Keller, a representative of thy ^ouncil of churches in Europe, to America, and Keller's stressing of the importance of American aid in feed- ing the suffering people of the five small democracies in Europe. According to Swomley, Keller re- ported that Protestant Christians in Europe were asking two questions: "Is American Christianity really in- terested in the world Christian church movement, and, if so, how can they let us starve?" and also, "Is there really a God, and, if so, where is our daily bread?" Swomley said that American health conditions are potentially endangered by the prospects of a famine in Eur- ope, recalling the disease epidemics which swept America at the close of the last World War. " General re- sistance to disease in Europe had The student body is about 90 per cent indifferent to discussions such as those which arose out of the win- ter parley last week, according to a personal survey in which the opinions of more than 100 students passing the center of the diagonal, were re- corded. Interviewers from The Daily dis- ity praising the efforts of the parley was that students are led into dis- cussions of topics with which they or- dinarily would not deal. Of the few opinions which were recorded the following are selected as representative of all attitudes.: Prof. Arthur Smithies: I don't contact. I think it is important to get people who usually do not participate in the sort. of discussions which go on at parleys. Seymour Podolsky, '42: In general the discussions were inadequate, for the student body was not well enough represented. It was especially inter- { I ,