T1H1E MICHIGAN DAILY Prom Election To Be Oct.' 30 Closing In On Moscow- Germans Robert Samuels To Direct .Balloting; All Petitions Obtainable At Union HolmbergWill Aid Thirteen committeemen for the J- Hop and nine for the Soph Prom wil be elected October 30, the Men's Ju- diciary Council announced last night. Robert Samuels, '42, newly chosen di- rector of campus elections, will be'in charge of the balloting, assisted by Edward Holmberg, '43, of the Union staff. The chairmen for both committees are to be chosen from the College of Engineering. The J-Hop committee will comprise one student each from the nursing school (elected, separ- ately) the educational school, the music school, the architedtural school; three members from the en- gineering college; and five from the literary cellege, three men and two women. On the Soph Prom Committee there will be four engineering or ar- chitectural studen~t's and five othfers, three men and two women, from any other undergraduate school. Engineering and literary school pe- titions must contain 25 signatures, and those in -other divisions of the University should have as close to that number as possible. The peti- tions are obtainable in the student offices of the Union from 2 to 5 p.m. on week-days, William Slocum, '42, Judiciary Council president, declared. They are due at noon, October 23, at the same offices, and must be accom- -panied by eligibility cards. The Council will in'terview candidates from 2 to 6 p.m., October 23 and 24. The women candidates for J-Hop and Soph Prom positions will be in- terviewed by the Women's Judiciary Council at the League on oThursday. The time and place of balloting are to be announced at a later date. co-Ups Offer Cbeaper Rlates Several Vacancies Open For Room And Board l L T i f a k a 3 MILES: KALIN RZHEMOSCOW BOR DINO . V YAZ MOZHAI SK ENSK fYELP+ A KALUGA .(b S BRYANSK . t OR E L GOM EL IKURSK KHARKOV ¢O -r KREMENCHUG DNIEPERO- ' PE TROVSK ZAPOROZHE TAGANROG MARIUPOL YE ISK OD ESSA- Sea ofAzov North Atlantic Raider Hunted; Kearny Afloat Tension High In Capital; Fear Raid May Be Nazi Move To Bolster Japan Iraa I . . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN / r i __ J The German High Command said they were fighting 62 miles from Moscow (1), claiming that Kalinin and Kaluga had been in their hands for several days. Arrows indicate pincer actions developing against the Russian capital. London sources said that the German drive toward Kharkov (2) still met with stubborn resistance. Germans stated that defenses of Odessa; (3) under siege nearly 60 days, had been penetrated by Rumanian forces. Pacific Air Base Constuction Pro gres sing' WellI Navy Says 1 , ; Despite the general rise in the price of food and other commodities, Uni- versity students can still live econ- omically. The cooperative houses on campus make it possible for both men and women students to get room and board for a weekly cost ranging from $2.25 to $6.00. Those who just take their meals at co-op houses pay from $1.50 to $3.40 per week. There are a number of vacancies for both room- ers and boarders; students who wish to inquire about them can cali Owen Schwam, 2-2143. Tentative plans are being made for a new cooperative house, at which the weekly room and board rate will be approximately $5.00. All those inter- ested should telephone Louis Cote, 7350. State-Seized Property Owes Rent To Owners LANSING, Oct, 17.-(,')-A prop- erty owner who redeems his land af'ter it hs been seized by the state for non-payment of taxes may re- cover any rentals. the state collected during the period of seizure, the State Court of Claims held today. / The decision awarded Frank J. Kehoe of Jackson a judgment of $801.5.0, the amount the state had collected on rentals while it held title to Kehoe's land. I Circuit, Judge Joseph A. Moynihan of Detroit, presiding over the Court of Claims, said "the state cannot make a profit on the exercise of its taxing authority at the expense of the owners of real property." Man Who Shot Landlord Is Pardoned By Governor LANSING, Oct. 17.-(,P)-Robert Benoit, Detroit resident sentenced to two years probation for shooting his landlord, was pardoned today by Governor Van Wagoner to nullify deportation proceedings. Benoit, sentenced on a simple as- sault case, faced deportation to Can- ada. He is married and the father1 of three children. The parole board recommended a pardon and said de- portation would be a hardship. 1 Sunday Carillon Concert Will Be Mixed Program Giving his regular Sunday evening carillon recital from Burton Tower, Prof. Percival Price, of the School of Music, will present a mixed pro- gram, featuring "Gavotte for caril- WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.-(lP)-As uinder way. The navy also reported if to serve notice it was feeling fit for exceptional progress in the develop- any showdown in the Pacific, the ment of Alaskan air bases at Sitka, United States Navy announced to- Kodiak and Dutch Harbor. night its prbgram of constructing air The huge new drydock at Pearl bases in that vast ocean is progress- Harbor, Hawaii, is basically complete, ing very well. the statement said, and the Kaneohe Without so much as a mention of air base on the island of Oahu is in, Japan, where an Axis-minded pre- operation even while enlargements mier has just been chosen, the official are being carried forward. announcement said: Navy Statemet "In short, the new *Pacific bases The navy statement on the orders program is keeping well apace of the to merchant ships to proceed into general expansion program of the port was worded as though to allay navy in building up the nation's two- alarm. It said thea was "nothing un- ocean navy to the greatest array of usual or new" in thisaction, adding seapower the world has ever seen." that any implication the vessels Only a few hours earlier the navy would not continue to ply their usual had announced it had ordered "a trade was erroneous. very few" American merchant ships Marine circles in San Francisco into port for instructions. It did heard, however, all American ships not say where these ships are 10- bound for the Orient had been direc- cated , but other sources indicated ted to put into Honolulu, and reports the international crisis with /Japan circulated in the national capital had sent a number of vessels speed- that the Japanese liner Tatuta Maru ing to safety from Pacific war clouds. had been recalled to Japan with sev- Blow At Siberia Feared eral hundred American passengers. These two developments followed (At Honolulu, however, officials at increasing predictions on Capitol Hill the NYK Line, owners of the Tatuta that the new Tokyo government Maru, said they had heard of no might strike at Siberia, now that the change in the ship's schedule, which{ defenders of Moscow are fighting calls for arrival in Honolulu a week with backs t the wall, from today, nor had they heard from The situation in Moscow was fur- the vessel itself.) ther emphasized when the State De- partment formally announced United Government Heads States Ambassador Laurence Stein- hardt., together with other members Study 'Victory' Phan of the Moscow diplomatic corps, high ,.y a officials of the Soviet foreign office and members of the American sup- WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.-(P)- ply misoion, had left Moscow for some Amid growing tension over develop- destination eastward, ments abrod, high administration Amongthose traveling with Stein- sources revealed today they were hardt are the United States military studying a proposed $50,000,000,000 a and naval attaches, other embassy year "victory program." personnel, two representatives of the While the program is only in ,the American Red Cross, and ten Ameri- study stage, it was learned authori- can newspaper correspondents. tatively that President Roosevelt had Air Base CoAnpleted ordered the Army, Navy and Office In its report on air bases, the navy of Production Management to map said the one at Midway Island, which out a program that would match the is about 1,200 miles from Honolulu productive efforts of the Germans. on the route to Yokohama, Japan, The Germans are supposed to be has been "completed far ahead of spending more than half of their na- schedule." tional income on arms, and $50,000,- In addition to the originally- 000,000 a year would be about half planned construction there, it was the prospective American national stated, "substantial expansions" are income. Officials who revealed these stud- ies, however, cautioned "ther is no- Engine Professor thing formal about this," and poin- " - ted out it hasn't gonetfar enough yet 1C kl a ay tt o .be taken up even tentatively with I l:. the budget bureau. (ontinuedfrom Page 1) in response to questions about pos- sible retaliation that regular Navy orders applied. He noted the tor- pedoing was clearly in the American Defense Zone. The regular orders given the Navy last Sept. 11 were to hunt down and eliminate any "rattlesnake raiders" in American defensive waters. Although the Navy said nothing of the raider's nationality, members of Congress quickly assumed it was a German submarine and talked of re- taliation. Senator Pepper (Dem.-Fla.) de- clared the Navy should retaliate "with two sinkings for each assault," and Chairman Connally (Dem.-Tex.) of the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee asserted "we shall retaliate by sinking every surface raider or sub- marine. that invades our defensive waters or threatens any of our Naval vessels. (In Berlin, authorized quarters said the only information there on the torpedoing was the American re- ports, and for that reason comment was withheld. It was pointed out that German submarines were not in con- stant touch with their bases and usually returned to their stations be- fore making reports.) Aside from an apparent general disposition to regard the incident as intended to affect the Pacific situa- tion, the reaction of legislators varied widely. - Representative Cox (Dem.-Ga.) called it "probably the incident for which we have been waiting," but Senator Nye (Rep.-N.D.), opponent of administration foreign policy, de- clared there was no reason it should meanhwar. "When the Navy operates under shooting orders that the President has given, we ought not to be sur- prised when these things occur," Nye said. Senator Johnson (Rep.-Calif.) com mented: "It is just another incident leading us into the war. There were no casualties, but that won't make any difference." 'Kearny' Hit Seen AsPart Of Nazi Plan Simpson SaysHSubmarine Commander Has Orders To Hunt For Victims By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) Destiny rode the deadly warhead of the torpedo that wounded the United States destroyer Kearny, providing an overt act fraught with conse- quences still to be revealed for this country and for the Axis. The encounter between the Kearny and a craft which was presumably a German submarine came at a mo- ment and under circumstances which compel recognition of the incident as a deliberate part of Hitler's master war gplan. Its repercussions upon American public opinion are yet to be assessed. There can be no reason- able doubt, however, that the sub- marine commander who loosed that torpedo at the Kearny was under Berlin orders not only to hunt for victims in forbidden waters off Ice- land, but to strike specifically at American warships. The blow was struck just as Berlin was picturing Russia all but beaten into impotency. It came also as Japan, shaken by a cabinet crisis, seemed to have cast its lot anew with its European Axis colleagues by ele- vating an Axis-minded member of its military caste to the premiership. Berlin Assurance Into that timing can be read a definite Berlin assurance to Tokyo that if Japan's pro-Axis. policy leads it into war with Russia, Britain and the United States, Nazi sea power will be interposed in the Atlantic to ease the odds against .it in the Pacific. And the purpose of that assurance, now implemented by the actual tor- pedoing of the Kearny, must have been to induce Japanese action against Russia in its hour of supreme peril. That was already implicit in Tok- yo's political upheaval, admittedly forced by widely divergent views among its public men as to which road Japan should now take in a wartorn world. That German agents in Japan have been busily thumbing the Axis silent partner down the Hit- ler road goes without saying. German Moves Hidden The attempts of the fallen Konoye cabinet to reach a peaceful rapproche- ment with London and Washington have been anathema in Berlin. Yet any German moves to short-circuit these attempts remained hidden until (Continued from Page 4) Churches First Baptist Church: 10:15 a.m., The Church at Study, Prof. Leroy Waterman's Class for Graduates meets in the church. Roger Williams Class for undergraduates meets in the Guild House, 503 East Huron. 11:00 a.m. The Church at Worship. Sermon, "Characteristic Christian Conduct," by Rev. C. H. Loucks. 6:15 p.m. Roger Williams Guild. Rev. Charles Brashares, pastor of the First Methodist Church, will speak on the subject, "Don't Be a Chisler!" First Congregational Church: 10:45 a.m. Dr. Leonard A. Parr, minister, will preach on "Seeing and Know- ing All."* 2:00 p.m. Cars will leave the church to take members of Ariston League (high school group) to the fall meet- ing of the Jackson Association of Pilgrim Fellowship at Leslie. Those interested in goirfg, call Priscilla Hodges. 7:15 p.m. Student Fellowship will (neet in Pilgrim Hall. Discussion of the evening will be led by Paul Lim- Yuen, who will talk on "The Con- fucian Approach." First Church of Christ, Scientist: Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: "Doctrine of Atonement." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. Free public Reading Room at 106 E. Washington St. Open Mondays through Fridays, 11:30-5:00; Satur- days, 11:30-9:00. Bethlehem Evangelical and Re- formed Church: 10:30 a.m. Worship service. 6:00 p.m. Student Guild. Discus- ;ion topic, "Development of Religious Music." First Presbyterian Church: Morn- ing Worship,. 10:45. "Does God Care?", subject of sermon by Dr. W. P. Lemon. Westminster Student Guild: Sup- per at 6:00 with meeting at 7:00 p.m. A Worship Service on "Prayer in Our World" will be led by the Rev- erend Henry Lewis, of the St. Andrews Church. Di ciples Guild (Christian Church): 10:00 a.m. Students' Bible Class, H. L. Pickerill, leader. 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship, Rev. Frederick Cowin, Minister. 6:30 p.m. The Disciples Guild Sun- day Evening Hour will be held at the Guild Hous~e, 438 Maynard Street. Robert Neset, a Graduate student, will speak on Catholicism. This will be the first in a series of prograins on the general topic "My Religion." A social hour and tea will follow. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: Sunday, 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 10:00 a.m. High School Class, Church Office Building; 1100 a.m. Kinder- garten, Harris Hall; 11:00 a.m. Junior Church; 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon Jy the Reverend John G. Dahl; 4-6 p.m. High Square Club Steak Roast. Cars will leave from Harris Hall for those needing trans- portation; College Work Program, 7:00 p.m. meeting, Harris Hall. Stu- dent speakers: Tom Lovering and Bill Clark; Topic: "Experiences in Work Camps in Mexico and North Caro- lina." Compline Service. Refresh- ments. Tuesday and Friday, tea is served in Harris Hall from 4 to 5:30 p.m. The Holy Communion is celebrated on Wednesdy and Thursday in the Harris Hall Chapel at 7:30 a.m. Trinity Lutheran Church: Church worship service at 10:30 a.m. Ser- mon by Rev. Henry O. Yoder on "More than Conquerors." Zion Lutheran Church: Service of worship at 10:30 a.m. Sermon by Rev. E. C. Stellhorn on "Ministering unto Jesus' Needs." First Methodist Church and Wes- ley Foundation: Student class at 9:30 a.m. in the Wesley Foundation As- sembly Room. Mr. William Cargo will lead the discussion. Morning Worship at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. Charles W. Brashares wigl preach on "Take Not God's Name in Vain." Wesley- an Guild meeting at 6:00 p.m.. The Rev. Owen Geer of Dearborn will spedk on "Cooperative Living."' Fel- lowship hour and supper following the meeting. Unitarian Church: 11:00 a.m. Morning Service, "Harry Bridges and Charles E. Coughlin-'Aliens'." j 7:30 p.m. Student meeting. Dis-' cussion on "Nazi Influences in the America First Committee." 9:00 a.m. Coffee Hour, folk danc- ing. The Church of Christ will meet for Bible study Sunday at 10:00 a.m. on the second floor of the Y.M.C.A. Building, This will be followed at 11:00 by the regular morning worship. The minister, Garvin M. Toms, will preach on the subject: "Created in Christ." The subject of the evening sermon at 8:00 p.m. will be "The Ways of Jehovah." The midweek Bible study will be held Wednesday evening at 8:00. The public is cordially invited to every service. St. Paul's Lutheran Church: Morn- in worship service at 10:45 a.m. Ser- mon by Carl A. Brauer, Minister, on the subject: "A Lesson in Prayer." Bible Class at 9:30 a.m. Gamma Delta Student Club spon- sors a hike in the afternoon, leaving the church at 3:00 p.m. Supper and social hour at the church at 6:00 p.m. A discussion will be held at 6:45 p.m. on the topic: "Do We Need a Modern- ized Bible?" r '4 7, in her ANN ARE x 77S T his star of opera, c+ has just' returned f tour off South Ames A limited number , either for the entire at the office of the in Burton Memorial SR0 EBUT F7,, / V Y, 8:30 -P M ncert, radio; and the movies, m a brilliant' "good wilti" ca. ftickets are still available, eries or for single concerts, University :Musical Society; -Q ower, - - ized Bible?" '7 .74 /777 7 7 7 / N /7 '4<' g~EiLEE~ IUN~J\JIX! 7 7 7 / . 'I D) on gfro ric of e L lTI~ - -- . . . ._ . _ _ _ ., ,, 1 t k7 \ Open an account now with the Ann Arbor Savings Bank. Put your money in a safe and rd Memsber Federal JReserve System and Federal Deposit I nsurancq C3or p. Ak h N L A ~A m - - m ___J 1. Airmy in ! pru r g When the Army call comes as it probably will in February for Prof. Frank A. Mickle of the mechanical engineering department, he will join the fast-growing group of Michigan faculty members who have left their classes to aid the nation in defense. Professor Mickle is a lieutenant- colonel in the reserve corp of the Ord- nance Department of the Army, to which post he was appointed last Au- gust. Prior to that time he had been a major. During the World War Prof. Mickle served as first lieutenant in the Army 11VIA.... T1....C A Y Tip ITI11+4L +1h_"in,,.,_ Council Will Hold Dance For Graduate Students Graduate students of all schools are invited to attend a record dance at 9 p.m. today at the Rackham Building. The dance sponsored by the Grad- uate Council, will feature a demon- stration of square dancing and offers the added attractions of new records and refreshments. All graduate students are urged to come, with or without escorts. iii I