Weather ' 1 2 Sit 43Uf 1Iiti Editorial Cloudy and Cooler. Why Spill American BWood?. I VOL. LI. No. 22 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1941 Z-sss PRICE FIVE CENTS 'Bold Venture' Losses Mount As Hull Calls Nazis Pirates American Sea Toll Is 94 As Man Of War Rescues All Hands On 'Lehigh' British Minelayer Lands Crew Safely WASHINGTON, Oct. 22.-( P)- More men were lost in the sinking of the American freighter Bold Venture than originlly feared, it developed today, while Secretary of State Hull spoke scathingly of Nazi designs for "a reign of terror on the high seas." But word was flashed meanwhile that all 39 of the American crew aboard the freighter Lehigh, which was, torpedoed on a trading voyage off the African bulge Sunday, had been rescued and brought to port. Rescued with them, apparently, were five Spanish stowaways. Twen- ty-two men were landed at Bathurst by the British Warship Vimy, an old World War ,minelayer, and an equal numlr at Freetown. In the latter group a third assistant engi- neer, Joseph Brady, Jr., was seriously injured in the chest and leg and a seaman, Joseph Bartlett, lst three, toes. Officials disclosed 35 men, all for- eigners, comprised the crew of the Bold Venture, former Danish ship now under Panamanian, registry; which was sunk off Icelan last; Thursday with its cargo of cotton, copper and steel. Its crew originally, had beenput at 32. Thus with 17 landed safely at Rey-i KJayik, the missing men numbered; 18. This brought to 94 the apparent1 loss of lives aboard seven American- owned Vessels attacked at sea since the European war started, including the 11 missing .from the torpedoed destroyer Kearny. Three other Amer- ican-owned ships have been sunk without loss of life. It was the torpedoing of the Le- high, flying the American flag and sailing without cargo from Bilbao, Spain, to the African Gold Coast, that impelled Hull athis press con- ference to say the act was "in har- mony with all the definitions of pi- racy and :assassination." He termed it a perfect example of the "Nazi policy of attempting to create a reign of terror, frightfulness and absolute lawlessness on the high seas, and especially on the Atlantic, Russian Relief ' To Be Project Of GroupHere Problems of Russian war relief de- mand immediate, serious action in the opinion of seyeral University pro- fessors and students and they pro- pose to do something about it. Preliminary plans were laid at an initial meeting recently, it was re- vealed yesterday, and arrangements for a larger meeting in the near fu- ture were made. Prof. Roy W. Sellars of the phil- osophy department, Prof. William C. Trow of the education school, and Prof. Stanley D. Dodge of the geo- graphy department' were appointed to plan organization of the Russian War Relief Committee of Ann Arbor which will cooperate with the na- tional organization in New York of which Dr. Frederick A. Coller of the University Hospital is a sponsor. The broad scope of the national or- ganization is emphasized by burly sailors and Marine workers of Ellis. Island Hospital who have organized a knii/ng group of deckhands and messmen to keep Russia supplied with, warm woolen clothing. "From now on we're knitting for Russia,' they say. Union Resells Unused Tickets Extra Minnesota Ducats May Be Purchased The Athletic Administration offices have asked The Daily to announce that the Union ticket resale desk is the only legal intermediary for the sal of extra non-student tickets for Students Jailed, Fined' On Charge Of Scalping By HAL WILSON (Daily Sports Editor) The big gun which University au- thorities have been brandishing at ticket scalpers, for the Minnesota game proved to be loaded yesterday. Two students, one a sophomore in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts and the other a junior in the School of Engineering, were apprehended at different times dur- ing the day by authorities while try-, ing to peddle regular $2.75 ducats for more than triple their face value. Both were confined by police in a, cell while being booked on a charge of scalping. At' the hearings before Justice J-j H. Payne both students pleaded guilty and were released from jail after paying fines of $29.75 and $19.75 respectively late last night. Maxi- mum penalty for the state offense is $100 fine o' 90 days in jail. And the authorities, trying to halt the wave of professional and student scalping which has swept over Ann A letter making serious charges1 against the present system of dis- tributing tickets and Harry Tillot- son's reply appears on the editor- ial page. Arbor and Detroit since the an- nouncement last week that the Min- nesota game was a complete sellout, warned that this was just the initial shot in an intensive campaign against continued scalping. Athletic Director Herbert O. Cris- ler yesterday expressed concern over the fact tht scalpers, both outside and local, capitalized on the provision allowing each student to purchase three adjacent seats with his athletic coupon. The scalpers, Crisler de- clared, obtained their tickets by urg- ing students to allow them to pur- chase the extras, then holding them for resale at much higher prices. Since Monday, when 28,000 student Drama. Group Season Tickets. To Go On Sale' Play Production To Offer Special Weekday Rates For Five Presentations Special season tickets for students, priced at $1.75, will be sold for the five presentations of Play Production of the Department of Speech this year for the first time. The tickets, which will be sold to students by members of the Child- ren's Theatre, are being offeied to encourage attendance on Wednesday and Thursday nights and to make it possible for students to attend allof the plays at a minimum cost. On the weekday nights main floor seats are assured. No special rates will be offered to students for single plays. The Theatre Arts Committee of the League, which is conducting the ticket campaign, has announced that the Children's Theatre will receive the price of every sixth ticket they sell. Assembly, organization of indepen- dent women on campus, will sell sea- son tickets to Ann Arbor residents. Ticket sales will start at the box office for the first play and for the series November 3. Mail and phone orders may be made now to the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre where the plays will be presented. tickets~ were first placed on sale and the ticket office mobbed by anxious students, the campus has been a central turnover spot. Choice seats between the 40-yard lines are report- ed to be bringing as much as $50 a pair, while a bloc of six has brought more than $100. In order to prevent further scalp- ing, Crisler stated last night, a num- ber of F.B.I. plain clothesmen will be assigned to special duty. They will circulate among both student and professional groups, Crisler warned, and violators who are caught will be prosecuted to the limit. Students will be subject to strict disciplinary action by University authorities as well as a stiff fine or imprisonment under the Fedieral band state laws. Ticket Manager Harry Tillotson' also announced last night that the present system of allocation, under which much of the trouble originated, would probably be altered consider- ably for the Ohio State game, last home contest on Michigan's schedule. This new modification, Tillotson ex- plained, would alleviate the conges- tion by providing special times in which certain student groups could exchange their tickets for coupons. Dance Petitions Are Due Today In Union Offices Fraternities Burglarized Four Times Unlocked Doors, Windows Blamed By Police Chief For House Robberies Thieves Ransack CampusBuilding By MARK LIPPER Four fraternity houses and twc University buildings were the settings for a new crime wave which swept through Ann Arbor early Wednesday morning. Police, today, continued their in-, vestigation of the fraternity house robberies which totaled a loss of more than $265 in property and cash. Phi Epsilon Phi was entered and ransacked and the wallets of several of the .members were stolen showing a loss of about f$50. Someone also entered Acacia house, ransacked several of the rooms and took some money and two radios but left the watches and jewelry. The other houses that were burglarized were Delta Tau Delta and Delta Sig- ma Delta where money was also re- ported stolen. A report was filed with local police that someone had ransacked Room 2125 Natural Science Building and that a projector was the only thing stolen. A small bar was used to gain entrance into Rooms 213 and 217 in the Old Dental Building where no- thing has as yet been found missing. At least two of the four fraternity houses robbed did not have their doorsslocked so that the thieves did not have to make a forced entry. Police Chief Sherman H. Mortenson had issued a warning at the begin- ning of the semester that all soror- ities and fraternities be certain that theit doors and windows were locked at night. He pointed out that there were mcre than 45 robberies in the past year due to open doors and windows and asked that all organizations have their members carry keys so that their doors would certainly be locked before the last man returned. Mortenson also suggested that fra- ternities report the presence of any strangers loitering around their houses so that the department can investigate them and see if they have any business around the house. Will. Force 'Ship' Administration Senators Issue; Germans May Be Halted, Councils Aspirant Soph P Will Interview ts To J-Hop, rom Positions Petitions for J-Hop and Soph Prom committee positions must be submit- ted by 3:30 p.m. today at the student offices in the Union if the application is to be considered, Bill Slocum, '42, Judiciary Council president said yes- terday. None will be accepted after the 3:30 p.mi. deadline. Each petitionl must be accompanied by 25 signa- tures from the applicant's school. The Men's and Women's Judiciiary Councils will interview petitioners to- day and tomorrow. Men's interviews will be between 2 and 6 p.m. today inj Room 304 of the Union and at the same time tomorrow in Room 316. Women applicants will be inter- viewed between 4:15 and 6 p.m. today in the undergraduate offices of the League. Names to be placed on the ballots will be announced by the Men's Ju- diciary as soon as possible. The elec- tion 4vill be Friday, Oct. 30. Wacky Galaxy Planned By Art Cinema Lea gue It's either all or nothing if you want a good time Sunday nights. If you want to see such stars as Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd, the Marx Brothers, W. C. Fields and Bus- ter Keaton in comedies which in years past have brought the loudest £ guf- faws from American audiences, you can see them all by buying a season ticket to the Art Cinema League's four program series which opens at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Tickets are on sale at the League, Union and State Street bookstores. Sunday's program will feature the Marx Brothers in "Duck Soup" and W, C. Fields in "The Barber Shop." :London Military Authority Declares Nazi Striking Power IsDiminishing Russians Believed To BeWeary Also (By The Associated Press) Hitler's supreme offensives upon Moscow have been beaten down to a halt well short of the city, a high military authority in London de- clared last Wednesday night, and German striking power is diminish- ing both there and before Leningrad. This summary came from a quar- ter where conservatism as to Russian prospects has always been main- tained, and it was emphatically qual- ified with the declaration that Rus- sian exhaustion was no less than that of the invaders and thus that some small factor might yet decide the great issue. It was accompanied by an estimate that the major German drive in the Ukraine was less strong than pre- viously, and this was somewhat sup- ported by an official Soviet claim that all Nazi efforts to extend their advance toward Rostov on the River Don, the gateway to the Caucasus, had been broken and that the in- vaders had been thrown upon the defensive at several points. Abandon City The Soviet Communique for this Thursday morning acknowledged the abandonment of Taganrog, 30 miles to the west of Rostov, but this had been discounted in advance by the fact the Nazis had claimed the town since last week-end and by an earlier unofficial Russian concession that, it had been evacuated. Moreover, the Red Commandepor ted it had cost the Germans 35,000 in killed and wounded to take the town. "Undoubtedly," said the London in- form&1ht in speaking mainly of the Moscow front, "Hitler will order and carry out new attacks, but he vwll not again be able to muster anything like the strength he has used up in the past two weeks. "I think some optimism is justified, and I wouldn't be surprised if one of these days we learned that the embassies and the Soviet government departments, which have moved to Kuibyshev had returned to Moscow." Germans Silent On Moscow The German High Command itself made no single reference to the sit- uation about Moscow in its communi- que for yesterday, and there was no direct Berlin claim of any sort of progress on that front. Instead, Ger- man commentators in general took the line that what was happening in the Donets River Basin of the Ukraine was more important. It was claimed by the Nazis that German occupation of that industrial area had been extended, although details were not given, -and it was thus implied-but only implied-that there had been a continued advance toward Rostov. The general assertion in Berlin was that Soviet production of munitions and arms was being desetroyed, and this ws pictured as objective No. 1. The weather by Russian and Brit- ish accounts was hampering the in- vaders everywhere: on the Moscow battle areas gales wer driving heavy snow, and rain was aid'to be making the roads impassable in the Donets Basin. Police Puzzle. Over Parade, Rally Problem By WILL SAPP Police Chief Sherman Mortenson is going to have a crew of blue-coats on South State street tomorrow. Because they are afraid that there won't be room for both cars and 7,000 students on the same street when the "Beat Minnesota" pep-rally begins at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow. And also because they are supposed to protect public property. Besides. they got a taste of that little-brown-jug-fever themselves' Monday when they had to beat off thousands of students at the ticket distribution. It's going to be the biggest pep- rally in the history of the University tomorrow. The torch-light parade forms at the Union (right in the mid- dle of the street) at 7:45 p.m. A short, peppy Field House pro- gram of cheers, talks by coaches and Tommy Harmon is on tap. Then the bonfire. Four truckloads of firewood all ready for the match. The cheerleaders will introduce two new Michigan cheers for use at the Gopher game Saturday. tU Press Club, Connally, Says Amendment May Allow U.S. Vessels To Enter Combat Areas Committee Hears Opposition Leaders - BULLETIN - NEW YORK, Oct. 22-(/P)- The New York Times tonight quoted marine circles as saying that the 9,552-ton American- owned tanker W. C. Teagle was sunk late last week while bound for the United Kingdom. WASHINGTON, Oct. 22.-(PR)-In- dicaglons were multiplying tonight that administratfon forces would take the lead in an effort to expand the armed ship bill so as to permit An era ican merchant vessers to sail any- where on the high seas. After the Senate Foreign Relations Committee had spent the day hearing opposition witnesses contend that the House-approved measure authorizing ship arming would push the country closer to war, Chairman Connally (Dem.-Tex.) told reporters he was "having some amendments prepared for possible use later on." Elimination Favored Connally reiterated previous state- ments that he favors elimination of the Neutrality Act provisions which prevent American-flag ships from en- tering belligerent ports or combat areas. He said, too, that "hooking up the armed ship and the belligerent port questions in -one bill probably would take less debate in the aggregate than passing the ship arming now and considering the other problem later." SConnally added, however, that Ad- ninistration leaders. had not yet reached a decision regarding pro- cedure.' There is no thought in ad- ministration circles of accepting Wendell L. Wilkie's suggestion that the neutrality law be repealed com- pletely, Connally declared, adding: "There are some provisions we ought to preserve-a few little gad- gets that we might leave around for ornamental purposes." Provisions Include These provisions include those for- bidding the use of the American flag by foreign ships and granting the government control over munitions, exports. Although the administration trend in the Senate appeared to be in the direction of broadening the ship arm- ing measure, there were authoritative reports that some House leaders were opposed to that procedure on the ground that it would only tend to delay the pending measure. 'Garg' ,Dissects Engineers' 'Life In First Issu It Faculty To. See Decorations To Celeb rate Homecoming Members of Michigan's 41 social fraternities will be working like go- phers today and tomorrow hammer- ing and glueing together decorations that will greet Michigan's largest homecoming crowd in the history of the University aturday. Pasteboard, wood, tin and ribbons will be plastered all over fraternity houses and lawns in competition for a silver loving cup, donated by a local fraternity jeweler. Judging for the most attractive decorations will be made at 10 a.m. Saturday, according to Don Steven- son, '42, president of the Interfra- ternity Council. Assisting Stevenson in the judging will be Robert Sibley, '42E, Union president; Frank Oakes, social director of the Union, and Gus Sharemet, '42, "M" Club president. Stevenson said that no house would be allowed to spend more than $15 on the display. This is a $3 increase over the previous contests. All houses will be out to dethrone Sigma Chi, winner for the past two years. Last year'stop-ranking Sigma Chi display was of a toastmaster shooting out slices of Michigan's vic- tims burned to a crisp with Pennsyl- vania next in line. Directory Sale Brimi iPlay Students Will Take Roles In Professor's Farce; Hugh Norton To Direct "The Bingham Bingles of Birming- ham," a farcical comedy by Prof. John L. Brumm of the journalism de- partment, will be presented at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre for members of the faculty and the University Press Club of Michigan. The play, which makes no attempt at being intelligent or educational, is directed by Hugh Norton, graduate teaching fellow. Norton also plays the lead as Bingham Bingle. Play Production students will take part in the presentation. Veitch Pur- dom, '42, will play the role of Edith Bingle; Ray Ingham, Grad., is cast as Inglefoot; Hal Cooper, '44, as Wal- ter; Carol Freeman, '42, Camay; Judy Fletcher, '43, Clorox, and Esther Counts, '42, Palmolive. The cast continues with Claire Cook, Grad, as Mazda; Mildred June Janusch, '43, as Anon; Jim Bob Stev- enson, as Vilim; Larry Vincent '43, as Johnny; Phyllis Cone, '43, as Clar- ice; Joseph Lynn, '42, as Pete; Rich- ard Arbuckle, '42, as Capt. Philip ,Tweeds; Buzz Stuch, '43, as Corp. Rex Reynolds, and Jeff Solomon, '43, as Corp. Wallace Kirk.' In addition to the presentation be- fore the Press Club, a public showing will be offered at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in the Mendelssohn Theatre. This second presentation is sponsored by the League of Women Voters. University Press Club Opens Twenty-Third Annual Meeting Conference On Land Utilization Will Study Efficiency Problems Two hundred Michigan editors will take their fling at making the news instead of editing it when the twen- ty-third annual convention of the' University Press Club' of Michigan opens here today. The three-day conference, which will attract editors from all over the state, will have as its general theme "The World in Prospect." Registration for the convention will be from 10 a.m. to 12 noon today in the Union, which will be general headquarters for all sessions. ,Four University of Michigan pro- fessors will conduct a symposium on "The World in Prospect" at the open- ing session at 2 p.m. in the Union. Members of the panel will be Prof. I Preston W. Slosson of the history de- department will speak on "Post War Problems of Democracy," and Prof.' Lawrence Seltzer of the department of economics and formerly with the United States Treasury Department, will speak on "The Economic Conse- quences of the Recent Tax Meas- ures,"at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow. The session at 2 p.m. Friday will highlight talks on "Science and the War" by Waldemar Kaempffert, sci- ence editor of The New York Times, andt on "Post War Planning," by Prof. William Haber of the economics department. A reception and tea for wives of Press Club members will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the home of Presi- dent and Mrs. Ruthven. President Ruthven will deliver the ClosesToday Greater Part Of Issue Sold In First Day Effort Today will be the last time stu- dents will be able to purchase Stu- dent Drectories, at 75 cents a copy, from 'Ensian staff members, selling on the campus. Reputed to be the one student pub- lication which always sells out, the Problems of efficient'land utiliza- tion will be viewed by numerous ex- perts in related fields of conserva- ion, forestry and lumbering at a Land Utilization Conference meet- ing tomorrow and Saturday in the Union. Sessions tomorrow morning will hear Prof. Willard S. Bromley of the forestry school report "Preliminary Results of Pulpwood Logging Studies," and Prof. Donald M. Matthews of he forestry school discuss recent de- velopments in the same field. Preceding a luncheon at which 'Dr. Leon Glesinger of the International ton, manager of the National Lum- ber Manufacturers Association, who will discuss "The Place of the Lum- ber Industry in the Defense ,Pro- gram." Concluding the afternoon session will be a member of the United States Forest Service who will point out "De- mands of the Defense Program on the Forest Resource," and a report on Social Security litigation by Regent J. Joseph Herbert and K. B. Mat- thews. The main topic of the morning meeting Saturday will be forest regu- lation. There will be a general dis- Have you ever wanted to know what makes engineers the way The Daily says they are? Gargoyle, Michigan's magazine of college life, will answer this and other questions of import in their first issue of the school year, which will be available to the campus at 8 a.m. today. The feature relative to the engin- eers is the first in a series of monthly articles on the various colleges in the University. For their first, the edi'- tors will give odds that they have un- covered many places and facts about the engineering college that even its "inmates" haven't known. But despite increased printing and engraving cost, Gargoyle, with all it offers, remains. at the price of 15 cents per issue. For this, its 35th year, the student magazine offers along the editorial line material of a more permanent value to replace a merely temporary humorous outlook; more gepuine hu- mor in cartoons, satire and jokes; selections from the best available' fic- tion on campus and numberless photographs of activities, persons and