Y2 LwP41 Rain or Snow. t t Ed itorial FDR's Addressj 'raised For Statesmanship I' . , .. VOL. LII No. 63 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CEN 0 I . _________________- --__--__-__-- Ruthven To Speak To Entire Campus At Mass Meeting Ptesident And Dean Lloyd Plan To Advise Student Body On Wartime Duties Tuesday Is Named As Assembly Date .1By HOMER SWANDER In an attempt to lessen the utter confusion which has so completely gripped an entire student body since the entrance of America into the war, President Alexander G. Ruthven will address an all-campus assembly at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Feeling that the suddenness with which war has come leaves the ma- jority of young people-men and women alike-not knowing just what their part should be, President Ruth- ve will offer his advice to "The Uni- versity of Michigan Student in The Present Crisis." Other Speakers Included The program-sponsored by the Union and several other student or- ganizations-includes a long list of other prominent speakers. Realizing that it is not only the men who need advice, Dean Alice Lloyd has consented to issue her "Challenge to College Women in the Emergency." Lieut.-Col, Francis Brannan, Com- mander of the University ROTC unit, is also scheduled to appear -on Tues-, day's program. In discussing "The Army's Position in National Defense," he will tell the students whether, in his opinion, they should or should not enlist in any- of the armed forces of the nation'. Service Men May Talk Several other porminent public of~- ficials and high officers in the Army and Navy have been asked to speak to the student body. They are ex- pected .to accept the invitations ei- ther today or tomorrow. Presiding over the'assembly will be Dean Joseph Hursley. He will also set the tone of the, program with his opening address. Plans To Get Under Way Plans which are being formulated at the present time, and which will get under way in the near future, are intended to insure Michigan its pro- per place in the national war effort. Campus-wide defense committees * composed of students and faculty members are to be set up. The duty of these groups will be to assist such organizations as the Red Cross to en- courage blood donations for wounded soldiers and civilians and to promote the sale of defense bonds and stamps. -- Buy a Goodfelow Edition -- I1o10or Group Holds Initiation Today Phi Kappa Phi, national honor so- ciety for all colleges, has elected 51 undergraduates and five faculty mem- bers to its ranks. The initiation will be held at adinner at 6 p.m. today i> the League.in. Elected from the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts are Jane Baits, '42, Henry Barringer, '42, Wal- tet Bury, '42, Michael Chiappetta, '42, Elaine Gardner, '42, Jack Grady, '42, Rahl Greenbaum, '42, Doris Jones, '42, Marcia Karn, '42, Jean Kriss, '42, Or- ville Lefko, '4, Henry Levinstein, '42, Phyllis Lovejoy, '42, Richard Ludwig, '42, Sidney Milgrom '42, Grabe Miller, (Continued on Page 7) -- Be a Goodfellow Dec. 15 - Some Seats Still Remai For 'Full House' Musical Don't take the title too literally . Tickets for the three remaining per- formances of the 1942 Union Opera, "Full House," are still available at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater box office. The super-girly show will be re- peated at 8:30 p.m. today, to'morrow and Saturday. 'Daily' To Sell Goodfellow CharityIssue A mounting list of pledges and contributions from campus soror- ities and fraternities yesterday served notice that the seventh an- nual Goodfellows drive, to be cli- maxed with a'special issue of The Daily, Monday, has already start- ed toward its $1,675 goal. Turning a large part of the money received over to the Fam- ily and Children's Service, for- merly the Family Welfare Bureau, The Daily yearly gives much- needed help to worthy families throughout the year. Other donations are distributed to other organizations of charity, as well as turned to worthy pro- jects such as the University's text- lending library. More than 250 student volun- teers will sell Goodfellow Dailys on campus Monday, the final day of the drive. However, advance contributions or pledges from in- dividuals or organizations are re- quested if it is convenient. Pledges may be made by phone to The Daily business staff, Stu- dent Publications Building. A list of contributors to date will be found on page 7 of today's Daily. Is Japanese Foothold In Luzon Reported As U.S Coasts Reiclistag Sinking Of Two Men Of War StunsBritish' Air Raid Blamed A__* Will Meet Guards r PRESIDENT RUTIVEN Hull Proposes, Pan-American MV1eeting To Consider Defense I If t. y _._.._w_._______ WASHINGTON, Dec. 10--(P)-The United. States today called upon its good neighbors, the 20 other American republics, to consult on joint action for defense of the Western Hemi- sphere, against the Axis- Secretary of State Hull formally proposed to the Governing Board f the Pan American Union that the foreign ninisters of the American na- tions convene in Rio de Janeiro, Bra- zil the first week in January to con- sult on defense measures in cnform- ity with good neighbor pledges al- ready made at Pan-American confer- ences. The United States acted at the suggestion of Chile, with its long Pacific coastline. The date for the Senior, Frosh Dance Election Will Be Today Candidates Vie For Posts On Annual Committees; Voting Places Are Listed, The greenest and the grayest classes on campus will elect their annual dance committees in today's Senior Ball and Frosh Frolic elec- tions. The exact times and places for balloting follow: Senior Ball: literary college, 1 to 5 p.m., 25 Ange'l Hall; engineering college,1tno 5 p.m., West Lobby; architecture school, 11 a~m. to 12 and 3 to 5 p.m., Lobby; education school, 2436 University High School; for- estry school, 10 a.m. to 12, basement seminar room, Natural Science. Frosh Frolic: literary college, 1 to 5 p.m., 25 Angell Hall; engineering college, 1 to 5 p.m. West Lobby; architecture school, 11 a.m. to 12 and 3 to 5 p.m., Lobby. It was stressed by Robert Samuels, '42, director of elections, that every- one must vote in his own schooland that no balloting by proxy will be permitted. Also, identification cards must be presented. The chairman of the Senior Ball ,committee will be the engineering candidate who receives the highest number of votes, and the head of the Frosh Frolic is to be the highest man from the engineering or architecture schools. There will be three men and two women from the literary college on the Senior Ball committee. The men candidates include Dale Chamberlin, Jim Collins, Ray Dietz, Jack Edmon- son,, Ira Katz, Ted Member and Burt Rubens. Women to run are Lee Cleary, Jean Hubbard, Eleanor Don- ahue, Nancy Gould, Janet Hiatt and Kay Ruddy. One senior each is also to be chosen from the architecture, education and forestry schools. The architecture candidates are Bruce Hardwick and, Phoebe Power, those from the educa- tion school include Barbara Alt and Betty Johnson and candidates from the forestry school are Chester Ewing and Jim Vardman. meeting is expected to be set Dec. 17, when the Pan-American Union will have replies from the other countries to the United States' note. Nine of them already have declared war on Japan and others have given the Uni- ted States assurance of support. The United States' note to the other republics declared Japan's "treacher- ous attack" on American territory in the Pacific made it urgently necessary for all the nations on this continent to take defensive action. Argentina, Honduras Act To Freeze Jap Funds Latin American moves today in- cluded: Argentina and Honduras froze Jap- anese funds, following the lead of Brazil and Uruguay. Paraguay and Ecuador declared solidarity with U. S. President Boldomir of Uruguay warned that war operations threat- ened to come to the River Plate and added: "We are practically at war." Argentina was reported ready to -reconsider previous objection to for- tifying Straits of Magellan at Chile's suggestion for cooperative effort. Argentine senator suggested special session to consider war declaration or rupture with Japan.- Japanese store windows were smashed at San Salvador by demon- strators parading with El Salvador and U. S. Flags to locked Japanese legation. ---Buy a GQodfellow Edition - Soviet Claims New Advance Gains Made By Red Army Along Moscow Lines MOSCOW, Dec. 10.-()--At least 14,000 more German troops have fall- en on the snowy Moscow front and the advancing Red Army has recap- tured ten or more villages, the Soviet radio announced tonight. Russian troops in the south also were advancing, and the radio quoted Major-General Petrov in Red Star as saying the Germans had lost 15,- 000 men, 150 tanks, 131 planes and more than 70 guns in 30 days of as- sault on the Red naval base of Se- vastopol in the Crimea. The radio cited these gains: Seven towns retaken in the Kalin- in area, 95 miles northwest of the capital; 1,400 Nazis killed. Several settlements rewon in the Tula sector, 100 miles south of Mos- cow; 600 Germans killed. Recapture of Olets in the Orel sec- tor, 200 miles to the south, the rout- ing of two German infantry divisions. and 12,000 German casualties. U.S. Hanoi Consul Held By Japanese WASHINGTON, Dec. 10--WP)--The State Department announced tonight that O. Edmund Clubb, American consul at Hanoi, French Indo-China, had been arrested by Jananese mili- I (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Dec. 10-Twogreat Brit- ish men of war, the 35,000-ton battle- ship Prince of Wales and the 32,000- ton battle cruiser Repulse, were sunk today by the Japanese in action off Malaya. The full story had not yet unfolded here tonight. There was no informa- tion as to how they had been destroy- ed aside from Japan's claim they had gone down under air attack-an un- precedented feat, if true, recalling reports that Japanese pilots have been making "human torpedoes" of them- selves by diving headlong at the ob- jective. Dispatches from Sydney reported the loss of the Prince of Wales and Repulse had stunned the people of Australia and altered the whole con- ception of Australian preparations. Australian Prime Minister Joh a Curtin immediately promulgated re - ulations for the conservation of vital stocks for essential services. "There can no longer be business 4s usual in Australia," lie proclaime , "but only concentration on war pro- duction and war necessities. Frankly, the enemy's striking power in the air has given the enemy, an initial mo- mentum which only a maximum ef- fort can arrest. There must be an end to holiday plans." The Australian War Cabinet and War Advisory Council at once began discussing measures to meet the new position. The sinking of the two mighty ships was the worst single tragedy to befall 'Garg' Delays Mcidemoselle .issue Onte Day Womnan has always been conceded the privilege to change her mind-or at least she has garnered such a rep- utation-so far be it from Gargoyle's Mad Damselle to make her public ap- pearance today as originally sched- uled. Garg's largest issue of the year, the parody on "Mademoiselle," nationally read woman's magazine, has offered her apologies to the campus, for she must remain unseen until tomorrow. An erratic individual, the Mad Damselle is out to give her own sex a picture of what the men have been saying about her since time immem- orial. She has twisted the interpre- tation of all that is fine and beautiful and necessary to women until these things seem hardly what they are. She has spared no effort to give the majority sentiment of the oppo- site sex an extensive airing within her covers, and she believes that they will wait patiently for one extra day to see the fruits of her efforts. Till tomorrow, then. One other thing, the lady has re- quested announcement of a slight raise in price, on the one big day only. Year's subscriptions, however, she will honor with no strings at- tached. - Buy a Goodfellow Edition - Students To Elect Santa Claus Today For PartyMonday Michigan students will have a gold- en opportunity to exercise their right to vote today when they go to the polls to select a man to wear the red suit at the annual Interfraternity Council Christmas party at 3:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium. Ballot boxes will be placed in the lobby of Angell Hall, on the Diagonal, and in the engineering archway, each box presided over by a smaller edi- tiAn of Santa Claus. The hAes the Royal Navy since the war began. Nevertheless, it left Britain with at least 19 battleships afloat or building. Jap Leaders Jubilant Over Naval Success TOKYO; Dec. 10--(Official Radio Received by AP)-Imperial head- quarters jubilantly announced tonight the sinking of two British capital ships, the new 35,000-ton Prince of Wales and the 32,000-ton battle cruis- er Repulse, by Japanese bombers off Malaya; the landing of troops in the Philippines, and the occupation of the U. S. island of Guam. Acknowledged Japanese losses in the communique broadcast by Domei were two transports sunk and two damaged without-loss of life; 51 miss- ing Japanese airplanes, 131 of them army planes, 38 naval. Excited crowds were told by loud- speakers that "the British Far East- ern fleet has been obliterated." r For Berlin, Ro With U lints A Searches Coast Fifth Columnists pane Cut All Communications mited States; Axis Spokesman. At Joint Declaration Of War BULLE TINS SINGAPORE, Dec. 10-(P)-Ce- cil Brown of the Columbia Broad- casting system was rescued today af- ter the sinking of the British battle cruiser Repulse, on which he had embarked as a correspondent. NEW YORK, Thursday, Dec.11- (A)-The British radio, in a broad- cast heard by CBS this morning, said 600 to 700 survivors of the Prince of Wales and Repulse had been landed at Singapore. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 10.-(P)- Headquarters of the Fourth Inter- ceptoi Command at Riverside, Calif., said tonight unidentified planes were sighted circling over, the Los Angeles vicinity during a blackout of Southern California to- night. The Army spokesman said the planes were first reported about 8:15 p.m. in "the general locality" of Los Angeles. At 9:55 p.m., he said the planes were believed to be "a little bit south" of this city. ** k SAN DIEGO, Calif., Dec. 14--MP -A blackout of San Diego was or- dered at 7:54 p.m. tonight by the. San Diego Defense Council.1 The Council said it was acting under instructions from the fourth interceptor command. San Diego's three major radio stations also were silenced.' - Be a Goodfelow Dec. 15-_ Off icials Ask Postponement On Strike Bill WASHINGTON, Dec. 10-(P)-Ad- ministration officials asked Congress today to hold up anti-strike legisla- tion until an effort can be made to eliminate any work stoppages through an employer-employe conference. Plans for a conference of labor and management representatives to adopt a formula not only for industrial peace but for increased wartime pro- duction were laid before the Senate Labor Committee by Secretary of Labor Perkins, Sidney Hillman, As- sociate OPM Director, members of the Labor Board, the Defense Media- tion Board, and other governmental officials. Chairman Thomas (Dem.-Utah) disclosed President Roosevelt had asked this group of oficials to draft plans for a labor conference, and said that until they had received the Pres- ident's approval or disapproval the Labor Committee would not act on the anti-strike bill by Rep. Smith (Dem -Va.) recently annroved by the (By The Associated Press) Adolf Hitler's Reichstag was called to meet at 3 p.m. today (8 a.m., East- emn Standard Time) to hear "a dec- laration by the German Govern- ment."- It undoubtedly concerns the Unit- ed States and the war in the Pacific. In the fast-breaking zero hour de- velopments leading up to the Ger- man radio announcement of the Reichstag meeting, both Berlin and Rome isolated themselves from com- munication with. the United States. Two previous-and devious-re- ports of the fateful Reichstag meet- ing reached the United States before the confirming announcement was heard on the German shortwave radio in New York. A possible clue to the Axis position was seen in a statement of the Itali- an Foreign Office spokesman in Rome that Italy and Germany woul adopt the attitude that the-United States had brought them into th Japanese war. This conversation was reported by the Swiss News Agency. - Be a Goodfellow Dec. 15 - Sen. Johnson Delays Action On AE Plar Dispatch Of Drafted Me Outside U.S. Territor' Is Temporarily Halted WASHINGTON, Dec. 10-UP)-Ser, ator Johnson (Rep.-Calif.), vetera foe of the Administration's foreig policies, temporarily - blocked Sena action today on a measure lifing 1 ( gal restrictions upon the use of s lectees and National Guardsmen ou side the Western Hemisphere. Explaining to reporters later th he wanted to "help the President ke his promises," Johnson said he desir additional time to study the bill b cause he felt it would permit sendir American soldiers to fight on foreig territory. "The President has promised again and again," Johnson said, "that he would never send American boys to die on foreign soil. I want to help him keep that promise." Reminded that Congress had de- clared war on Japan, Johnson said he thought there was no need to rush through the bill before the Senate knew fully what was involved in it. The measure, offered by Chairman Reynolds (Dem.-N.C.) not only would lift the hemisphere restrictions, but would extend the service of all Army personnel for the duration of the war and six months after. Reynolds said he would 'press for action on the measure tomorrow and Chairman May (Dem.-Ky.) of the House Military Affairs Committee an- nounced he would ask the House to accept the Senate version of the bill in order to speed enactment. May said he had received no word from Army officials about a re- ported proposal to expand the draft age limits to include all men between 18 and 45 years old. The present law takes in only those from 21 through 35, with those above 28 being de- ferred. MANILA, Dec. 10. -(/)- Invading Japanese ?troops and parachutists were reported tonight to have won footholds of'uncertain tenacity along 160 miles of the north and north- west Luzon Coast of the Philippines, despite a smashing assault by U.S. Army and Navy fliers on one trans- port convoy of six ships. The U.S. Army announced official- ly that the Japanese, in heavy force, ;wept against northern Luzon from Virgan to Aparri, that landings were 3ffected at Aparri and perhaps sev- >ral, contiguous points on the north coast and that the six-ship convoy had been crippled in early morning landing operations near Vigan, on the northwest. The Philippine constabulary said nrain Japanese forces also had suc- ceeded in landing near Vigan and there was one report the town had been taken by Japanese parachutists. Luzon Situation Unchanged A second Army communique late in the afternoon said the situation in North Luzon was unchanged and that no other landings had been confrmed aside from those mentioned, (A Washington communique in- dicated the air attack on the six ships had defeated attempts to land ,etween Vigan and San Fernando, ;he latter about 150 miles from Ma-. nila.) Manila and its own naval and nilitary establishments were under terocios and sustained aerial at- tack. Smoke columns were visible from Nichols air depot; fires burned at the Oavite Naval Base, and the raiders 3truck at a line of, merchant .ships inchored outside the breakwater of Vianila Bay and at Fort William Mc- 'Kinley. More than 100 bombs were dropped in the first hour of the attack. Sev- 'ral Japanese planes were reported shot down. U.S. Forces In Action American, forces swung into im- mediate action in the north and west o fight off the first full-fledged in- vasion of U.S. territory since the war of 1812. In the early morning Army and Navy fliers roared to the attack rgainst the Japanese transports off Vigan on the west coast, scoring di- rect hits on three, capsizing and sinking one and damaging three others with near misses. The ships, a communique said, were heavily es- corted. The Japanese used both naval and aerial bombardment to cover the landings which, a communique from the headquarters of General Doug- las MacArthur, the U.S. Command- er in Chief, said were "in heavy force." Hunt Fifth Columnists In Seattle Area WASHINGTON, Dec. 10-(1P)-The Army announced tonight it had 'ringed the nation with men and steel sufficient to "meet any threat" of invasion-and added that a search was on for fifth columnists who lit beacons to guide enemy airmen to Seattle. In two communiques, its first of the war, it told of both success and set- backs in the far Pacific, and disclosed what had been done to protect the nation's coastal areas, their dense populations and mighty war indus- tries against Axis attack. The fifth columnist search was on in the region of Port Angeles, Wash. In that vicinity stat nnlie lst ,niht ONLY! University To Study Results Of Draft F Acting upon the request of the National Selective Service Board, the University will make a survey of every student registered for the draft.,