Weather Generally Fair; Cloudy Tomorrow. \'L Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication iait Editorial I he Faith Of Prof. Schnuman,.. VOL. Ll. No. 83 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1941 Z-23 PRICE FIVE CENTS i s Mediterranean May Be Scene Of Nazi-Fascist Concentrati on Japanese Foreign Minister Says Axis Will Finish Task Of Making New World Order 'In Time' Civilization's Crisis Near, He Declares (By The Associated Press) Usually reliable sources indicated tonight that the outcome of Premier Benito Mussolini's meeting with Adolph Hitler would be concentration on beating the British in the Mediter- ranean war arena. Some foreign observers considered a coordinated German-Italian com- mand possible as a result of the "ex- tensive conversation concerning the situation" announced in a communi- que identical to one issued in Berlin. Malta Objective Virginio Gayda, editorial spokes- man of Fascism, mentioned a coali- tion of forces to stem British suc- cesses, and Malta appeared to be the number one objective. Stefani, Italan news agency, said 100 German dive bombers wrought "immense devasta- tion," sank a merchantman and dam- aged, the British aircraft carrier fl- lustrious a third time in ten days at that Mediterranean island yester- day. "Against a coalition of enemy forces, the Axis is opposing a coalition of its forces," Gayda wrote in 11. Gi- ornale D'Italia. But the attempt to bomb Malta and its key port of Valetta into use- lessness as a British naval base, and the reinforced Axis efforts in Libya and against Greece do not, Gayda in- sisted, mean abandonment of a plan to attack Britain herself. 3 'Give Japan Time' Meanwhileein Tokyo Foreign Min- ister Yosuke Matsuoka told the Jap- anese Diet today that Japan, Ger- many and Italy certainly will accom- plish their goal of a new world order "if only given time,", and expressed hope that the United States "will bend her utmost efforts to allay the impending crisis of civiization." Should both the United States and Japan become involved in a new world war because of the Triple Mili- tary Alliance, he said, "no one could guarantee that it could not develop into a war spelling the downfall of modern civilzation." "The United States," the foreign minister said, "apparently entertains the idea that her own first line of national defense lies along the mid- Atlantic to the east, and not only westward along the eastern Pacific but even as far as China and the South Seas. Smith To Tallk On Iranian Art Noted Islamic Authority Will SpeakTomorrow Myron Bement Smith, Consultant in Islamic Archaeology and Art in the Library of Congress, is expected to disclose some of his findings on the question of origins of Gothic architecture in the mosques of Iran in an illustrated talk tomorrow in the College of Architecture and Design. For those interested in a more gen- eral consideration of Iranian art and architecture Mr. Smith will deliver a University Lecture at 4:15 today in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. The Iranian origin controversy was opened late in the last century by a French engineer, Marcel Diulafoy. Until recently, however, the mosques and shrines of Iran (Persia) were closed to Western scholars preventing a proper study of the question. Lead- ing an expedition studying these (Continued on Page 5) Ruthven To Greet YMCA_- Delegates President Alexander G. Ruthven will greet more than 300 delegates to the annual State Convention and Laymen's Conference of the YMCA at its opening luncheon Thursday in the TTninn. Wild Life Expert WENDELL CHAPMAN Photographer Speaks Today on Wild Life' .Wendell Chapman Brings Color Slides And Movies To Accompany Talk Wendell Chapman, well-known wild-life photographer, will show his films on "Wild Animals in The Rock- ies"' at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Audi- toruim in an illustrated Oratorical Association Series lecture. A member of the Explorers Club, Chapman has a unique distinction among wild animal photographers. The box-office at Hill Audi- torium will be open all day until Mr. Chapman's lecture at 8:15 p.m. He never carries a gun. He and Mrs. Chapman have been able to gain the confidence of some of the most timid and rare animals. His pictures show remarkable activities of mountain goats, bears and other big game. Since his intimate association with native animals in the wilds, he has entirely given up hunting, although he does not object to hunters taming the surplus numbers of any species which is not in danger of being exter- minated. It is more difficult Chap' man said, to obtain a good picture, than it is to kill a prize trophy. Axis To Decide U.S. War Entry, Schuman Says By HOMER SWANDER America's entry into World War II is not a question that will be de- cided by anyone in this country not even by the President or Congress- it will be decided by the Axis powers. Such is the opinion expressed by Prof. Frederick L. Schuman of Wililams College, in a Hillel Foundation lec- ture Sunday at the Rackham Build- ing. "When it best suits the interests of the Axis powers they will commence their attack upon us and we will be forced to fight," Professor Schuman asserted. Only if Russia opposes the dictator powers' march into the Balkans will the Axis fail to declare war against us, he continued. Professor Schuman prophesied that out of the present international strife a new united world would come, with a new social order, minus the social injustices and class conflicts of the present order. If ourway of life is to predominate in the new order, we must put an end, by governmental action, to the strife between rich and poor, he con- cluded. French Group Hears Allard In the works of the great classic French playwrights the changing patterns of society of the eighteenh,,, century have been criticized and em- bodied in immortal characterizations, Prof. Louis Allard, in the first French lecture of the annual series spon- sored by Le Cercle Francais, pointed out yesterday. Corneille's work was inspired great- ly by the actualities of the circles which he frequented, the scholar of French cited in his discussion of tragedv. comedy and drama. The wo- Cagers Score First Big Ten Win,4124 Minnesota Defeat Breaks Five-Game Slump; Team Leaves Conference Cellar Ruehle Tallies Ten To 'Lead Scoring By NORM MILLER Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's down- trodden Wolverines have finally won a Big Ten basketball1game. Led by their three senior veterans, Captain Herb Brogan, blond George Ruehle and diminutive Mike Sofiak, the Varsity cagers unleashed a strong second half attack to trounce a hap- less Minnesota quintet last night in Yost Field House by a score of 41-24. First Conference Win The victory was the first Confer- ence triumph of the season for Mich- igan after four vain attempts, and lifted the Wolverines out of the Big Ten cellar for the first time this year. It was the Varsity's "Little Three" who supplied the punch that snapped the Varsity's prolonged losing streak. Ruehle turned in one of his best games of the season with some su- perb work getting the ball off the Michigan backboard besides finding time to toss in 10 points. Brogan Holds Carlson Brogan, pitted aaginst the Gophers' high-scoring Don Carlson, complete- ly blanketed the Minnesota ace. Carl- son, who had previously been run-i ning wild against Conference oppo- sition, hardly had a look at the bas- ket last night as the Varsity captaii- held him to three foul shots, none of which were recorded against Bro- gan. And it was tiny Sofiak who supplied the spark to the Michigan offensive with his~clever ballhandling and pass- ing that set up several baskets for his mates. Mike also flipped in three baskets and as many fouls. Yet in spite of the fact that the Wolverines emerged on the long end of the Score for the first time since their encounter with Pitsburgh dur- ing the Christmas vacation, there have been several occasions when Michigan turned in far better per- formances in defeat. Minnesota Weak It was rather thepatheticnature of theiropposition that enabled the Wolverines to register such a lop- sided win than any brilliance of their own. The Minnesota quintet that vis- ited Ann Arbor last night was one of the saddest teams the Varsity has faced in a long time. The Golden Gophers made only eight buckets all evening in 54 shots at the basket and from the opening of the second half until the final two minutes of play, Coach Dave Mac- Millan's cagers were held Without a single field goal. In addition to that, they were throwing away the ball all night long, left Michigan men wide open under the basket, and when they found themselves far behind in the last stages of the game, the Gophers elected to pass the ball among them- selves aimlessly instead of even mak- ing an attempt to score. The game also had its rough spots. (Continued on Page 3) Med. School Committees Are Named Finton To Head Executive Board; Weeks, Ziegler, Lawrence Are Appointed Andros Will Head Council On Honors Percy J. Murphy, '41M, President of the Senior Class of the Medical School, yesterday announced his ap- pointments to the various senior com- mittees. Murphy was named president last October as the result of a general election in the medical school. At the same time Robert E. Medlar was named Vice President, Chris J. D. Zarafonetis was named Secretary, and William F. Weeks was named Treas- urer. Chairman of the Executive Com- mittee is Max A. Finton; other mem- bers are John H. Sanders, Paul M. Cunningham, Eleanor Smith, Primi- tiva D. Demandante, Gordon R. Har- rod, William W. Jack, Jack N. Grek- in and F. Bruce Kimball. The Commencement Announce- ment Committee is headed by Robert F. Ziegler assisted by Myrtle V. Col- lins, Donald D. Findlayson, Robert E. Michmerhuizen and Wayne Stew- art. Howard C. Lawrence (Chairman), Mason S. Maynard, Donald B. Eff- ler and Daniel C. Siegel comprise the Ensian Committee. Members of the ,Cap and Gown' Committee are Robert Christensen, Chairman, Margaret E. Bentley, Jack Lapides and Robert Brown. The Class Picture Committee in- cludes Philip S. Peven as Chairman, Richard Pomeroy, Herbert Pedersen. and Harford W. Friedman. John R. McNicholas, Walter M. Whitehouse and Chairman George J. Andros form 'te Honor Council. The Finance Committee comprises Chairman William F. Weeks, Helen M. Thompson, Walter I. Lillie, My- ron Fink and H. Clay Tellman. Arthur G. Seski, Chairman os tne Studen Affairs Committee, is assisted by Ruth M. Moyer and Robert H. Davies. William H. Beierwaltes is chair- man of the Senior Ball Committee with Alan R. Brown as Assistant. The Cane Committee ends the list with the names of Fred G. Swartz, Chairman, and J. Bradley Moring. Gamma Phi Beta House Loses $89 To Thieves President Roosevelt Says 'Democracy Cannot Die AtInaugural Ceremonies Mrs. FDR Meets New Second Lady Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, serving her third term as First Lady of the Land, and Mrs. Henry A. Wallace, new Second Lady, are shown here in their first meeting as wives of the President and Vice-President respectively. Chicago Pastor Opens Parley; Urges New World Moral .basis - ----- - --- -- ---- Eighty-nine dollars in cash togeth- er with worthless unendorsed checks with a face value of $300 were stolen from the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house last night by a thief or thieves, who completely neglected $1,000 worth of jewelry. The sum of eighty dollars was tak- en from a cash box and nine dollars removed from a jewelry box, both in the room of Mrs. Margaret Went- worth, housemother, sometime be- tween 6:15 and 7 p.m., while the housemembers were eating dinner. The police, according to 'Virginia Lee Hardy, '4lEd, president of the sorority, were convinced that the rob- bery was "obviously an inside job." Second Annual Conference' Continues Here Today; Forums Are Planned Declaring that the world today is suffering from a moral "disease," Dr. Oswald W. S. McCall, pastor of the First Congregational Church in Chicago told the second annual Mich-j igan Pastors Conference here yes- terday that man's greatest task today is to lease a new moral basis for the world. A Bad Century "There are good centuries and there' are bad centuries," Dr. McCall said. "I believe that we are living in one, of the 'bad' centuries at the present time. It is unfortunate that we in- sist on asking ourselves 'Is it pros- perous,' rather than 'Is it right?'" "The world is suffering from a di- sease, a disease which manifests it- self in convulsions such as war. But between convulsions, we are making progress. If only we can catch and keep sight of the goal set by Him, then He shall not have lived in vain," Dr. McCall said. In an afternoon address Dr. McCall stated that it was necessary to lay aP new moral basis for mankind throught sacrifice, and pointed out that the1 church is the only hope for bringing about a new and efficient world ord- er. The Conference, held annually un- der the joint auspices of the Michi-1 'gan Council of -Churches and Chris- tian Education and the UniversityE Extension Service, will include ad-f ditional forums and lectures today and Wednesday. "It is the duty of the church to build a tolerant public opinion now so that eventual world peace will be, just to all nations involved," Dr.+ 1 Walter W. Van Kirk, of the Federal Council of Churches, told a Con- ference dinner audience yesterday. Cooperate Failing Dr. Van Kirk observed that Hitler should not be blamed for all the world chaos because it is a general cooperate failing of the world. Ger- many was merely the means of ex- posing the general inadequacy of modern peoples to cope with changing times. Contrasting Nazi technique to dem- ocratic, Dr. Van Kirk noted in a for- um discussion that Germany is suc- cessful because Hitler had built up a spiritual devotion to himself in the German youth while in the United States the Church has failed to de- velop a similar spiritual inspiration. Student Forum To Hold Debate Filling in the need for organized student discussion until Spring Par- ley time comes around will be the Michigan Forum, whose first meeting of the year at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Union features a student de- bate on the topic, "Resolved: That President Rosevelt Be Given the Ex- traordinary Powers He Has Asked of Congress." Frank L. Ryder, Grad., will argue for the adoption of the measure and Harold D. Osterweil, '41, will provide the opposition. After initial argu- ments and rebuttals have been made, chairman Herman Epstein, '41, will Points Out Task Of Times Is Riddingy Institutions Of External Disruption Third Inauguration WitnessedBy 75,000 By RICHARD L. TURNER WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. -()- His hand resting upon an old Dutch family Bible, his eyes squinting into the bright noon-day sun, Franklin D. Roosevelt slowly and thoughtfully repeated the Presidential oath of office for the third time today and asserted the task of the times was to save "the nation and its institu- tions from disruption from without." "Democracy is not dying," he said with impressive solemnity, his head bobbing emphatically to the rhythm. f his clipped and spaced words. "We know it cannot die. Most Humane Society "We know it because if we look be- low the surface we sense it still spreading on every continent, for it is the most humane, the most ad- vanced, and in the end the most un- conquerable of all forms of human society." He dedicated his third administra- tion to the protection and perpetua- ion of "the integrity of democracy" n "the face of great perils never be- fore encountered."1 A spreading throng of some 75,000 chilled and heavily-bundled specta- tors were jammed before him into the Capitol plaza. Some were even perched in the branches; of the trees. Others had found dichstatoanag points on the roofs of the Senate and House office buildings. Lesson In Democracy Without pausing, the President swung into his speech. It was brief. Mr. Roosevelt felt, White House At- taches said, that he had fully covered the subject of the nation's foreign perils in his recent speeches. So to- day's address was largely what some called a lesson in democracy. "There are men," he said, "who be- lieve that Democracy as a form of government and a frame of life, is limited or measured by a kind of mys- tical and artificial fate--that for some unexplained reason, tyranny and slavery have become the surging wave of the future-and that free- dom, is an ebbing tide. "But we Americans know that this is not true." He went on into his statement that democracy is not dying and cannot die, and then compared a nation to a person. Two Convicted In Flag Case Young Sailors Admit Part In IncidentSaturday SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 20.-(JP)- Two young navy men on leave from a pschycopathic ward were convicted today of ripping a Nazi flag from its staff at the German Consulate. The incident occurred Saturday as some 2,000 persons alternately gasped and cheered at the reckless adven-, ture nine floors above the street. The two,Harold J. Sturevant, 19, of Haverhill, Mass., and Ervin G. Lackey, 20, of Charlotte, N.C., will be sentenced Thursday by Municipal Judge Peer J. Mullins who convicted them of a malicious mischief charge. They had waived trial by jury and pleaded innocent. In court, however, ech admitted his part in the escapade, an incident over which the United States Gov- ernment has given Germiny a written expression of regret, apd which Ber- lin has called "scandalous." Dr. James Franck To Talk Tomorrow Dr. James Franck, Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Chicago and a Nobel Prize winner Science Aids Marriage, Hart Says; Hanford Cites Milton 5 n By ROBERT MANTHO Just as human life has been im- proved over a period of three cen- turies by the employment of scienti- fic methods, so marriage can be im- proved in its average success and happiness by the application of sci- entific measure, Dr. Hornell Hart,' noted sociologist and professor of sociology at Duke University, assert- ed in a University lecture yesterday. Despite the facththat marriage is the field in which the most work has been done by sociologists, he stated, only recently have scientific methods begun t6 be applied with a view toward reducing the number of divorces. By means of the microscope the life span of individuals has been length- ened from an average of twenty-one vears in 1600 to sixty-five years to- sake and not as a means toward some end," Dr. Hart classified indi-' viduals as falling into three classes on the basis of their normal happi- ness. Those who never feel depressed maintain a score that always flue- tuates above positive 200. The second type includes those rare individuals whose measurement score never rises above negative 100-the pessimists extreme. According to Dr. Hart, the third or "roller coaster" type of happiness is the normal one. This last-named type gets its name from the up and down fluctuations of individuals whose happiness varies with their mood of the moment. Tests have shown, he continued, that a professor should employ praise, rather than ridicule or "bawling out" Propaganda By EMILE GELE Milton as a Puritan propagandist spoke the language of modern repub- licanism, Prof. James Holly Hanford, one of the world's leading Milton scholars and professor of English at Western Reserve University, asserted in a University lecture here yester- day. "Milton was a propagandist in the sense of supporting a cause as well as in the popular sense of subordinat- ing intellect to emotion in his argu- ments," Professor Hanford said. "His essential cause was to champion or- der against chaos and liberty against tyranny." Observing that Milton used all the devices of modern propaganda in his poetry and prose, Professor Hanford cited instances in which Milton ex-