Weather Y Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication :4Iait t Editoril Dots Fcrd icaii- VOL. Ll. No. 85 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1941 Znx British Crush Italian Defenses At Tol PRICE FIVE CENTS ruk ____ Iigby's Past Looks Bad, So Harmon Pulls Out Tom Declares He Won't Play In Proposed CharityGame Telegrams Assert That Promoter Has Acted Disreputably In Past Dealings; Lost License Evy, Fritz Frutig' Refuse Offer Also By DON WIRTCHAFTER The "Mystery Bowl" appeared doomed here last night when Tom Harmon informed The Daily that he was pulling out. H rmon's decision came after a furious evening during the course of which:.,k 1. The Daily received a telegram from a friend in Pittsburgh, declar- ing the elusive "Rig" Rigby to be Elwood' (Wait A Minute) Rigby, a wrestling promoter with a none-too- wholesome background. 2. Mr. Rigby himself called Harmon from California, learned that Tom had decided to withdraw because of Rigby's alleged Pittsburgh exper- iences, and then hotly denied that there was anything shady about his past. Wire Gives Information The Daily's information about the mysterious Mr. Rigby came from a friend closely associated with the Post Gazette in Pittsburgh. This friend wired The Daily, as follows : . "Party lost promotion license un- der Commissioner McCelland 1937- unethical tactics. Was known in sporting circles as Elwood Wait A Minute Rigby. Post Gazette describes him as absolutely no good. Wrote numerous bad checks around town. Was last heard of in California where he called Post Gazette on phone and wired stories which they refused to accept as they say he is bad news. Want nothing to do with him. Their advice all others to steer clear if money is concerned." The Daily received this telegram early in the evening and immediately relayed the information to Harmon. To which Tom replied: Harmon Steps Out "Well, if that's the way things stand, and that's the kind of a guy he is, you can count me out." At midnight Rigby called Harmon by telephone, *to see how things are going." Harmon told him that he had decided to withdraw, because of this telegram which The Daily had re- ceived. That drew a blast from "Rig," who insisted that his reputation was clean, that he had no outstanding debts, that this proposed game is the idea of Miami businessmen, and that he would gladly leave the scheme al- together if it would save the game. Further evidence was received in a wire from Jack Bell, sports editor of The Miami Daily News. While he was here, Rigby had claimed several times that Bell was the man through whom he was negotiating in Miami. According to the Hollywood mystery man, it was Bell's idea to hold such a game, and Rigby was going to handle (Continued on Page 3) Churchill As Draft For Labor LONDON, Jan. 22-Prime Minister Churchill declared today that Bri- tain must conscript her factory man- power and womanpower because she faces in the next six months the first intense demand for labor to supply an army on a scale unchanged from the days when British troops were to have fought "a continuous action on the continentAof Europe against the German enemy." "This great nation." he told the Will Not Play FDR's Power Will Be Topic Of Discussion Osterweil, Ryder To Study Extraordinary Executive Request For Authority Michigan Forum To Sponsor Debate r TOM HARMON Prof. Slosson To Deiver Tl On War Today University Women's Club To Hear Fourth Lecture In Current Event Series The fourth in the series of lectures on "Current Events" will be given at 4:15 p.m. today in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building by Prof. Preston Slosson of the history de- partment. This series of lectures is sponsored by the Ann Arbor-Ypsi- lanti branch of the American Associ- ation of University Women. At each of his lectures Professor Slosson reviews the latest develop- ments in the world situation since the time of the preceding lecture. In his last talk, he stated that the present struggle between Germany and Eng- land would be decided on the sea: in Britain's ability to transport raw ma- terials through the German subma- rine and aerial blockade. In his lecture today, Professor Slos- son will deal with the current con- troversy in Congress over the powers which would be given to President Roosevelt in Bill No. 1776, the "lend- lease" bill. He will also take up the recent political developments in Ru- mania and the state of the war be- tween Britain and Germany. President Roosevelt's bid for more authority in his program to aid Bri- tain will receive the support of Frank L. Ryder, Grad., and the opposition of Harold D. Osterweil, '41, when they meet in the first Michigan Forum debate of the year at 7:30 today in the North Lounge of the Union. Herman Epstein, '41. will preside over~the debate proceedings and open discussion from the floor will follow the addresses of the principal speak- ers. Following the discussion a vote will be taken on the topic to deter- mine the sentiment of the audience. The Forum is a non-partisan or- ganization sponsored by the Michigan League, Michigan Union, Student Senate and Daily to stimulate the interest of students and faculty in current issues in political, social and economic fields of thought. The gov- erning committee is comprised of the heads of the sponsoring organiza- tions, and the Parley committee of the Student Senate is in charge of arrangements.. "It is hoped that the Forum will fill in the long gap between the Par- leys," Epstein remarked, in announc- ing the intention of the sponsoring; committee to sponsor a regular series of Forums throughout the coming semester. Outside speakers as well as students and faculty will be in- vited to speak from the Forum's ros- trum, he said. Assisting Epstein and the Parley committee in arranging today's de- bate has been executive secretary, Laurence Mascott, '41. Prof. Arthur Smithies and James Duesenberry of the economics department are hon- orary members of the Forum com- mittee. Nazi Air Ace Interned; Two Prisoners Escape AN EAST CANADIAN PORT, Jan. 22.-(P)-A Nazi air ace ranked as one of Germany's, most deadly and hun- dreds of other shotdown airmen and captured seamen were brought here from England for internment today but two escaped within a few hours after they trudged down the gang- plank of their camouflaged prison ship. The escape of the unidentified pair was announced by the Royal Cana- dian Mounted Police just after the exploits of the ace prisoner were de- tailed without identifying him by name. Radio Vox Pop' Will Be Staged Here This Week "Vox Pop," the original man-on- the-street radio program, will make its first campus appearance west of New York here at 7:30 p.m. next rhursday when Parks:Johnson and Wally Butterworth broadcast their weekly coast-to-coast CBS feature from the Union Ballroom. Several graduates and undergrad- uates will be quizzed by Johnson and Butterworth during the course of their half-hour program and a variety of prizes will be given to participants for correct answers. University students will be able to hear another college "Vox Pop" broadcast tonight direct from the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. 1940 football captain, Dick Foster, and Davis Cup tennis player, Joe Hunt, will be among those quizzed. The entire floor of the Union Ball- room, which will hold about 700, will be given over to chairs for students wishing to attend the broadcast. An- nouncement of ticket distribution and other arrangements will be made in The Daily early this week. In a statement to The Daily re- ceived yesterday, Johnson, originator of "Vox Pop," said: "Everyone knows about the famous University of Mich- igan and would like to meet some of the boys and girls who are students there. They'll get their chance through "Vox Pop." And the ques- tions won't be as tough as those on your exam papers two days after the broadcast." YMCA Holds Statewide Meet In Union Today Members To Be Greeted By President Ruthven; Judge Carlson To Talk More than 300 members of the YMCA will hold their annual State Convention and Laymen's Conference today at the Union. Dr. James Ellenwood, state YMCA secretary for New York, and Judge Eskil C. Carlson, former president of the national YMCA council, will be the chief speakers of the conven- tion. President Alexander G. Ruthven will give the welcoming 'address at the convention luncheon to be held at 12:15 p.m. Dr. Ellenwood will speak on "Look at the Y," and the State Committee will offer its an- nual report. Opening the sessions will be a gen- eral assembly at 9:30 a.m., with Fer- ris D. Stone presiding. "The Y in an Unplotted Future" will be the topic of Dr. Ellenwood's opening speech of the day. Sectional meetings will be held at 10:30 a.m. Judge Carlson will deliver the main address at the conference dinner scheduled for 5:15 p.m. His subject will be "The Basic Problem and our Obligation to Youth." Other features of the closing banquet will be a description of the Indian Guides cab- in system and a talk on "The Camp- bell Jr.'s Gang" by Edward Laimae, of the Detroit YMCA branch. Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of the (Continued on Page 2) Maxwell Speaks To Engine Group "Hands" which lift with ease, the heavy beams and other materials used in manufacturing were described to members of the student section of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers by M. C. Maxwell, assist- ant to the president of a crane and hoist manufacturing company in a talk "One-Hundred Horsepower Hands" given last night. Specialists, Industrialists Will Convene Second Annual Hygiene Conference To Begin Proceedings Today Year's Progress To Be Reviewed Medical specialists and industrial- ists from over the entire nation will convene here today through Satur- day for the second annual Confer- ence on Industrial Hygiene. Meeting to revive the past year's progress in industrial Hygiene and to point out and discuss some of its trends, the Conference intends to stress the close interrelationships of industrial hygiene to the modern pub- lic health movement and to the health sciences professions, with par- ticular reference to the medical pro- fession. The list of speakers includes prom- inent representatives from each of the special fields of industrial hy- giene: medicine, engineering, nursing, and laboratory work. Roundtable dis- cussions under selected chairmen will be held. Under the chairmanship of Dr. John Sundwall, director of the Divis- ion of Hygiene aid Public Health of the University, the opening session at 9 a.m. today will begin with a wel- come address by Dr. James D. Bruce, vice-president of the University, chairman of the Division of Health Sciences and director of the Depart- ment of Post Graduate Medicine. "Health Promotion in Industry," and "Industrial Medicine and Other Health Agencies" will be discussed by Dr. Frank J. Sladen, physician-in- chief of the Henry Ford Hospital, and Dr. K. E. Markuson, director of the Bureau of Industrial Hygiene of the Michigan Department of Health, re- spectively. Convening at 2:00 p.m. today's af- (Continued on Page 2) Defense ProductionI Rising, Knudsen Says WASHINGTON, Jan. 22-(P)-In' clipped phrases, William S. Knudsen submitted today a cautiously opti- mistic report on the progress of ef- forts to gear industry quickly to the manufacture of arms. The plain-spoken defense director told reporters he hoped that 33,000 military planes would be turned out by July of next year, although "we were slow getting under way." Of these, he said, 14,000 were earmarked for- Breat Britain. At the first of a series of weekly press conferences at which he said he woudl alternate with Sidney Hill- man, co-director, Knudsen reported war plane production already was "getting a little better."- 0W Rritich Study Hints. Are Featured By New Garg Magazine Goes On Sale Today; , Twenty Prize 'Gargoons' To Be Run Timely and helpful, or at least timely, hints on how to study are pictorially featured in the February issue of Gargoyle, on sale today. Two full pages show Michigan students preparing for or fortifying against that trying exam period. Freudian Fanny is here again-this time describing the technique that should be followed by girls who only want to be friends. Stardust has fol- lowed up "Its" -since the editor, refuses to to divulge Fanny's Franken- stein's sex-first two articles on love as ruled by the head with this one on fencing. After one has learned how to get a date and how to oscu- late, a girl ought to know how to deal with the consequences.-; "These Are The People" focuses on Gertrude Frey, who worked with Louis Adamic last summer while he was writing his latest book, "From Many Lands." Garg goes south this issue, too,1 as Will Sapp, '43, has contributed three pages of the bronzed and brawny swimming team on their trip to Florida during swimming vaca- tion. Matt Mann, the team's coach, is shown in action, directing the na- tators at practice. Twenty prize "Gargoons," selected from the past eight years are re- vived in today's edition, and are run along with 15 new cartoons. Past readers will remember especially car- toons by Al Williams, '39, who is now working as a cartoonist for Walt Dis- ney. i hands-entered Tobruk at after more than 24 hours of attack upon the town and port ritish troops, warships and rs. isands of Italians-no precise had been made-already had pported captured. the Tobruk fortress was the r part of an Italian garrison 00, and the fact that units of itish Mediterranean fleet had ble to bombard the town for suggested that there could be e of retreat by sea. Attack Began Early re the .town, smoke rose over bble left by the shells pumped so long. general attack began early lay morning. "Free French" fought bitterly and success- side the British and Australi- Bardia, Tobruk was ringed by ig outer arc of defenses about les from the coast and, with , encircling the whole town. er cover of general, prelimin- saults by British and "Free " forces, picked regiments of and Australians were massed the eastern-and main-sec- the defenses. ero-hour-shortly after dawn iay-sappers plunged- forward through the barbed wire bar- British tanks smashed through, ed by shouting British and ian infantrymen in steel hei- They quickly subdued two of arest strong points and then ulk of the attacking troops t through fanwise. Italians Admit Loss Rome the Italian high com- acknowledged that the British 'oken through Tobruk's eastern es. It asserted that in East British motorized forces had halted at predetermined points" had suffered "considerable n the bulk of the attacking poured through fanwise. the other fronts far away-in kfrica-as far as 2,000 miles- alians were withdrawing today, ports reaching British military uarters here. Italian divisions which had Kassala, in the Anglo-Egyp- >uda:, and the nearby frontier were said to have withdrawn than 40 miles inside Italian a with the British still in pur other Italian retreat reported long the southern frontier of ia. preme Court justice Retires SHINGTON, Jan. 22-G'P)-As- e Justice James Clark McRey- brusque and immovable foe of Deal contitutional principles, Lced his retirement from the me Court today, making possible lent Roosevelt's sixth appoint- to that nine-man tribunal. withdrawal started an immed- Major Libyan Base Falls To Attackers After Short Siege Australian Shock Troops Lead Successful Assault As Twenty-Four Hour Land, Sea And Aerial Bombardment Weakens Enemy Garrison Victors Report Capture Of Thousands As Aussies Cut Off Retreat Of Fascists (By The Assocleted Press) CAIRO, Egypt, Jan. 22.-The fall of the major Italian Libyan base of Tobruk to the British African Army was announced officially tonight. Mopping-up operations continued in the town's western defenses alone. "The remainder of the defenses are in our hands," said a military com- munique. Australian shock troops led the forces storming Tobruk. They immediately cut off the Italians still holding out beyond the port to the west. These advanced units-the same Australians who had led the way in a campaign that now has all but consolidated 80 miles of Libyan coastline in Civil War Spreads In Rumania As Iron Guard Fights Regime Church Must Keep Reflection % Alive,' Prof. E. E. Aubrey Says (By The Associated Press) SOFIA, Bulgaria, Jan. 23.-Civil war between Rumanian extremists and soldiers of Dictator-General Ion Antonescu spread rapidly through-. out Nazi-dominated Rumania today and news dispatches said several hundred persons probably had been killed in bitter fighting. Dispatches from Bucharest said the rebels claimed more than 30,000 were fighting for them. The revolt- ers also were said to be claiming the ascendency in most cities in Ru- manian Transylvania, the remnant of the vast province which the Axis left to Rumania last year in an en- forced settlement between Rumania and Hungary. Rumania's neighbors were nerv- ous. Hungary was reported calling up stations Radio Romania and Radio Bucharest broadcast an order for all Iron Guardists, believed to form the backbone of the rebel movement, to remain at their fighting positions and wait for orders from their chief, Horia Sima. BBC also said a Ru- manian arrmy corps-presumably the Fifth-was marching toward Buch- arest.) Advices from Brasov, north of Bu- charest, said a revolutionary leader, General Dragalina, was reported marching to Bucharest with troops. The Bucharest radio, held by the revolters, appealed to troops there not to fire on the rebels. The radio em- phasized that the extremists were "ready to die like our captain," mean- ing Corneliu Codreanu, Iron Guard leader killed in 1928. for whose death I Ministers from all parts of the state adjourned the second annual Michigan Pastors Conference here yesterday after three days of lectures stressing the church's duty to main- tain international fellowship in a world of nationalistic conflict. "While countries organizing for war preparation are being central- ized-at the expense of democracy, the church must keep reflection alive," Prof. Edwin E. Aubrey, professor of theology and ethics at the University of Chicago, asserted at the closing session yesterday. Speaking on "The Task of the Churchkingthe Present Crisis of De- mocracy," Professor Aubrey said the church must sustain the power of i I the "local seed bed" of morale in democracy, Professor Aubrey out- lined three chief functions for the church during the present crisis. The church, he said, should stimu- late the public mind and act as an agitator of discontent if society loses its perspective of right in war con- fusion. Secondly, the church must stabilize the public mind in the face of hysteria by giving historical and cosmic perspective, he stated. Thirdly, the church should steer the public mind by making the peo- ple feel guilty when pursuing self- ish motives, and by directing inevi- I