Weather Continued Cold. Y 41P Ap offIt t AW an gatt Editorial Reutler Plan In The News Again . VOL. LU. No. 71 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY JANUARY 6, 194 2-323 missilliI I ____________________________________________________________ PRICE FIVE CENTS University Heads Launch Program Speeding Defense Business Administration School Will Be First To Shorten Curriculum Three May Follow In Cutting Courses With an announcement during the holidays that the School of Busi-. ness Administration would inaugu- rate a degree program designed to speed training of industrial manage- ment personnel, University officials have taken the first step in what may become a general speed-up of cer- tain courses vital to defense. Both the Medical and Dental Schools are this week considering changes which seem sure to involve the continuation of their regular ses- sions through the summer, and al- though the School of Engineering has made no definite commitments it may shorten its second semester to some extent. Defense Problem Another University defense prob- lem was disposed of during vacation when the Board of Regents approved a resolution granting pro-rata credit for work already completed by stu- dents who enter the armed services. Applying the resolution* to Army civilian clerks also, the Regents left the decision of giving equitable credit to the faculty and reserved to that body the right to consider special cir- cumstances. The new program offered by the School of Business Administration, while changing admission reguire- ments, will enable students to begin their professional work one year Additional information concern- ing speed-up of University courses vital to defense can be found on page 6. sooner than the present schedule calls for only if their qualifications meet a high standard. .( After completing their second year in an accredited college, junior col- lege or university, students can by application begin a three-year pro- gram which will lead to a mastir's degree in Business Administratin and specialization in several fields of business. Although admission requirements will be changed, the hew system will involve no lowering of standards. Quality of work must be shown by the student who plans to take ad- vantage of the special programs. Three-Year Program For those students who cannot complete the three-year program be- cause of personal conditions, a bach- elor's degree will be granted at the end of the second year in the School of Business Administration. Such a degree will provide the student with enough training to en- ter business understanding the func- tions and the institutions involved. The third year will be devoted to specialized and trechnical training of those students who are able to spend an additional year in professional study and who wish to qualify as specialists in some phase of business management or service. University Establishes Army Base Hospital The University Hospital has an army base hospital with a base staff of 38 physicians-from instructors to professors-and it was established while students were away for the hol- iday vacation. Di. Albert C. Furstenberg, dean of the medical school, announced that the undergraduate medical curricu- lun has been adjusted to train stu- dents for possible military service. It's all part of a program designed by the University to prepare for any emergency, now that war has in- terrupted the even keel of education throughout the country. FDR To Tali Wednesday On State Of Union Congress Suspends Work Till Roosevelt Speaks Before Joint Session WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.-(A)-The second session of the Seventy-Sev- enth Congress began its official year of life today, then promptly suspeif- ded its operations pending receipts tomorrow of the President's annual message on the State of the Union. It was announced Mr. Roosevelt would deliver the message in person at 12:30 p.m. (EST) before a joint session of the House and Senate. Wednesday he will send to the Capitol his budget message giving an outline of the gigantic war financ- ing job which is ahead for Congress. The legislators were eagerly await- ing the Chief Executive's annual message in belief he might disclose some details of the grand strategy worked out for defeat of the Axis. Mr. Roosevelt already has indi- cated the financial goal is to step war expenditures up to a rate of $50,000,000,000ha year. Reports cir- culated at the Capitol that as an initial move toward this end he would ask for between $15,000,000,000 and $18,000,000,000 in immediate special appropriations for the Army and Navy. The two Houses went through the routine formalities of starting a new session before half-empty galleries. Dr. Seevers Named Pharmacology Head Dr. Maurice H. Seevers, professor of pharmacology at the University of Wisconsin, has been appointed professor and chairman of the De- partment of Pharmacology at the University, it was announced at the last meeting of the Board of Regents. Dr, Seevers, a native of Topeka, Kan., is a graduate of Washburn College and the Rush Medical School. He was a member of the University of Chicago and Loyola University faculties before he went to Wisconsin in 1930. Registration Is Announced ForFeb. 16 1,300,000 New Draftees May Be Made Available For MilitaryService WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.-P)-Of- ficials estimated tonight 1,300,000 men would be made immediately available for the armed services by the Feb. 16 registration of those aged 20 to 44, inclusive, who are not al- ready on Selective Service rolls. President Roosevelt's proclamation today setting the mid-February date for listing of unregistered men sub- ject to combat duty under the new 'Selective Service law will affect about 9,000,000 men. Officials said it was expected this group would include the following class 1-A men, available for im- mediate call to duty: 20-year-olds, 600,000; 21-year-olds (who have reached that age since the last registration), 300,000; 36- to 44-year-olds, 400,000. Army expansion plans are military secrets since the start of the war. However, the last official word was that some 915,000 men in the pres- ently registered 21-35 group would be called before the Army dipped into the new registrants. With more than 1,800,000 men al- ready fn the Army, the new registra- tion will place the nation in position to put more than 4,000,000 men un- der arms without calling any classes under 1-A and leaving out of ac- count any men under 20 who may be accepted as volunteers. The new Selective Service Act pro- vides registering of all citizens and most aliens aged 18 to 64, inclusive, although only those aged 20 to 44, inclusive are subject to combat duty. Mr. Roosevelt's proclamation made no mention of those outside the 20- 44 group. There were unofficial re- ports, however, that two additional dates would be set-one for registra- tion of 18- and 19-year olds, and the other for the 45-64 group. Finns May Quit Russian War Sweden Reports Finland Wants Soviet Accord (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Jan. 5.-Finnish discon- tent with continuance of a difficult war is mounting with German re- verses on the Eastern Front and dis- sension in the German High Com- mand, reports from northern Europe indicated today. The Stockholm correspondent of the Swiss newspaper National Zei- tung ofaBasel, said "Criticisms are raised against the ambitions of the (Finnish) military High Command to create a greater Finland. "The opinion is growing that an agreement with Russia to settle the war and frontier questions under honorable conditions would now be found much easier." OPl Scheme Will Revamp Auto Industry WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.-(IP)-The automobile industry embarked today on a broad program of conversion to war production along lines markedly similar to the so-called Reuther plan long advocated by union labor. Out of a meeting of OPM officials, top-ranking motor manufacturers and workers' representatives came appointment of a ten-member union- management committee charged with planning the revamping of the in- dustry. On it were Edsel Ford, pres- ident of the Ford Motor Company, and Walter Reuther, CIO official and author of the "Reuther" plan. The OPM presented to the 200-odd industry spokesmen here its own pro- gram for transforming the hitherto highly-competitive industry into a unified military arsenal pooling ma- chines and tools and swapping pat- terns and processes between plants. The management-labor committee will hold its first meeting and choose a chairman tomorrow. Stepping up military production schedules so that the auto industry will turn out five to six billion dollars worth of war goods this year, in- stead of the previously scheduled two-and-one-half billion dollars Japs U.S. Air Force Smashes Invaders In Philippines, Bombs Battleship; ThreatenBritish In Malaya Jap Detachments Attempt Landing Behind British Defenses In Selangor Allies Make Stand Near Perak River --BULLETIN - ST. PIERRE, Jan. 5.-()-The Free French Information Service declared tonight Free French forcees had not evacuated St. Pierre and Miquelon and that no diplomatic pressure had been ex- erted to this end. SINGAPORE, Jan. 5.-(P)-Jap- anese detachments landing in coves along the West Malayan Coast from small boats and junks threatened the Kuala Selangor area 240 miles north of Singapore tonight with the apparent object of forcing the Bri- tish to withdraw from their lines farther north, Kuala Selangor is the capital of Selangor Province, just to the south of Perak State, and is about 50 miles south of the mouth of the Perak River along which the British forces have been making their stand. It is nearly 50 miles north of Port Swet- tenham which is connected by rail with the important interior city of Lampur. The same communique which an- nounced the Japanese activity in the Kuala Selangor area told of con- tinued Japanese air activity over Malaya, but said two invading planes were destroyed and another prob- ably destroyed at Kluang, near Port Swettenham. The threat to Selangor followed by a day the announced withdraw- al of British forces in North Perak State to new potions. _ Despite the series of retreats, how- ever, confidence mounted here that when the real test comes Singapore will stand. Of the eastern battle area, where fighting had for days centered about Kuantan, 190 miles above Singa- pore, there was no new word. Likewise, there was nothing new as to the situation on Borneo, where the Japanese had made a weekend landing on Weston after having ear- lier gained a foothold in nearby Sarawak. Attack Salum, IMal faya Posts CAIRO, Egypt, Jan. 5 -Assaults to smash the Axis' last two holdout gar- risons near the Egyptian-Li1yan bor- der, strongly-held positions at Salum and Halfaya, have been launched by the RAF, Middle East headquarters disclosed today. While a heavy drive thus devel- oped to remove those thorns from the flank of Britains' long line into Libya, the war bulletin said press- ure was being kept up against the main body of German General Er- win Rommel's remaining forces in the Agedabia sector, 300 miles to the west. Hammering also at Axis sea-power in the Mediterranean and potential sources of water-borne reinforce- ments, the RAF was reported to have raided Salamis, a German submarine base on Greece's coast west of Pirae- us, and Tripoli, the main Libyan port for Axis reinforcements Besides hits on the base itself, the RAF communique said, bombs fell on munitions factories and workshops at Salamis and started large fires. A further tally of Axis prisoners captured at Bardia, which surren- dered to the British last Friday, raised the total here to 7,500. Cold To Continue Until Wind blows Thernoineter In Weather for today: Br-r-r ! It all started up in the North some- where when a big, cold wind began to blow. The wind blew and blew, It stirred up a lot of snow somehow and they both finally got to Ann Arbor. This was last Friday. The mercury in thermometers got scared and scurried down to near zero. Yesterday it went below zero. Prof. Bartlett Will Lecture On Far at An authority on the Far East long before Manila and Corregidor be- came military watchwords, Prof. Harley H. Bartlett of the botany de- partment will speak Sunday in the Rackham Lecture Hall on "America and the Philippines." Professor Bartlett, whose talk is sponsored by the Ann Arbor Chapter of the Committee To Defend Amer- ica, made special studies last year of the Philippines as a potential supply source for quinine and rubber. He undertook -this work as an agent of the United States Department of Agriculture. As a botanist for the United States Rubber Company, Professor Bartlett first began his East Indies work in 1918. In 1926-27 he undertook simi- lar studies for.the same company. Professor Bartlett's wide acquaint- ance with American territory in the Far East was further augmented in 1935 when he spent the year as ex- change professor with the University of the Philippines. He then became a charter member of the islandW National Research Council. Swander Heads LiberalGroup New Youth Organization Has First Convention In its first annual convention the Student League of America, newly formed liberal youth organization, chose Homer Swander, '43, as its na- tional president. Representing over 5,000 college and high school students, the group has an active campus chapter known as the Student Defenders of Democracy. Its program, adopted during the vacation, stresses the importance of increased efficiency and effective- ness both in government and de- fense industries. As a means of se- curing this, the League urges more consultation with labor concerning production problems and the crea- tion of a Civilian Ministry of Sup- ply with full power to order, pur- chase and allocate raw materials. The students also condemned any legislation prohibiting strikes or aimed at prohibiting the closed shop. They supported the "clear and pres- ent danger" theory of civil liberties during wartime and emphasized that freedom to criticize governmental policies must be strictly maintained throughout the emergency. Russian Army Recaptures 30 Villages In Counter-Attacks In Leningrad Area After Sustaining Nazi Bombardment Chinese Forces Deal Crushing Blow To ThirdChangsha Drive WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.-(P)-American air forces struck back savage- ly at the Japanese invaders in the Far East today, sinking an enemy de- stroyer and scoring three bomb hits on a battleship in a raid on enemy- occupied Davao in the southern Philippines. The War Department announcement topped a series of official reports of American successes tending to brighten the somber outlook for General Douglas MacArthur's beleaguered Philippine defenders. His little American-Filipino army Sunday repulsed a strong Japanese frontal attack on Pampanga Province, northwest of Manila, killing at least " 700 of the foe while suffering rela- Kaufman-Hart Play Will Open Here Jan. 14 Speech Group Substitutes Michigan Repertory Hit For Production By Rice "George Washington Slept Here"' by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, a Broadway hit last season, will be presented at 8:30 p.m., Jan. 14 through 17, as Play Production's third offering of the semester, in- stead of the originally scheduled play, Elmer Rice's "Flight to the West." "Flight to the West" was an at- tempt to dramatize the debate going on in America at the time of writing as to our attitude toward the second world war. Inasmuch as this question is no longer a pertinent one because of our involvement in the conflict, the speech department felt that an- other play should be chosen. Since the extreme lack of time made it im- possible for a new play to be under- taken, it was decided to revive "George Washington Slept Here," which proved to be the hit of last summer's Michigan Repertory Play- ers' series. It was sold out for every performance and turned away be- tween 300 and 500 people who came to or called the boX-office. Play Production will 'refund ap- proximately a fifth of the price of the season ticket to those subscribers who saw the play last summer and do not care to see it again. The exact amount of the refund cannot be an- nounced for a day or two, as it is as yet unknown whether a fifth of the government tax can also be returned. The Kaufman and Moss comedy ran 173 performances on Broadway and is included in Burns Mantle's "Ten Best Plays of 1940-41." tively small losses. The garrison of Corregidor fortress almost simultaneously shot down four more enemy bombers during the third successive raid on the island fortress at the entrance of Manila Bay. The smashing air attack on Jap- anese naval forces at Daao, more than 500 air miles south of Manila on the island of Mindanao, was made apparently today by heavy Army bombers operating from an uniden- tified base. All returned undamaged from the raid, the War Department said. It was a third body blow at Ja- pan's overwhelming naval superior- ity in the Western Pacific, tending to help restore the balance upset by the Dec. 7 sneak raid on Pearl Har- bor and the subsequent sinking of Britain's battleship, the Prince of Wales, and the battle cruiser Re- pulse, north of Singapore. The Navy added to the day's score by reporting the small seaplane tender Heron successfully fought off a seven-hour attack by 15 Japan- ese bombers, bringing down one of the attackers and severely damag- ing another. The Heron, a communique said, sustained one direct hit and three very near misses. Altogether, the Navy said, the foe dropped 46 100- pound bombs, and launched three torpedoes. Admiral Thomas C. Hart, the Asi- atic Fleet Commander, at Secretary Knox's direction, awarded -the Navy Cross to the Heron's commander, (See JAPAN Page 2) Russians Make Gains In Leningrad Sector KUIBYSHEV, Russia, Jan. 5.--( -Frontline dispatches declared to- night the Red Army had beaten off a new German offensive in the Len- ingrad sector and had recaptured 300 square miles of territory and 30 vil- lages in a five-day counter-attack. Four American-made Curtiss Tom- ahawk fighter planes were credited with their share in the victory, shoot- ing down eight German Messersch- mitts and routing others, thus rob- bing the Nazi drive of some of its air support. The Tomahawks were 'Un- touched. The Russian accounts said the Ger- mans made the attack after pulling up all available reserves and bom- barding the Red Army lines with more than 30,000 shells. The defenders, under Major Gen- eral Fedyunisky, withstood the charge, then countered vigorously. The Russians announced today the Germans have been routed from al- most the whole of the Kerch Penin- sula, Crimean gateway to the Cauca- sus, by Red armies which blasted the Nazis from town after town in a 45- mile advance within two days. The new and smashing victory in the south was matched by the re- capture of Belev in a central front thrust that shoved the Germans back 100 miles from the nearest point of their now threat-in-reverse to Mos- cow from the south. Chinese Trap Jap Troops, Wipe Out Changsha Drive CHUNGKING, Jan. 5.---Strong Chinese forces were reported clos- ing in hard tonight on four bat- tered Japanese divisions caught in. a pocket north of Changsha, from which two other divisions were hurled back in full retreat. It's A Cold, Hard Winter: Purdue Whips 'M' Quitet 36-18; Drive Begins Tomorrow: Men, Women Ma Sign Up For Volunteer Defense Work Ann Arbor will commence firing on the home front tomorrow with the opening of a four-day general registration of all men and women for volunteer civilian defense work. Local residents and members of the University staff will register on Jan, 7, 8, 9, 10 from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the Armory, headquarters of the local Civilian Defense Volunteer Of- fice. Men students, according to a statement issued by Dean Joseph A. Bursley of the University defense committee, "will register separately on campus, using blanks now being prepared by the student defense committee. Women students will co- ordinate their enrollment with the CDVO, using the same registration cards." . University students will be regis- with the February 16th registration under selective service regulations, At the time of his or her applica- tion, the volunteer will be asked to give information on physical condi- tion, skills, hobbies, and available hours of service. Special qualifica- tions, such as an automobile, tool- handling ability, or teaching experi- ence will also be recorded on each volunteer's card. The functions of the CDVO, under Director John F. Moore, have been divided into two groups: physical protective services and civilian mor- ale preparation. Classes will be ar- ranged after the opening registration in conjunction with recognized social service agencies such as the Wash- tenaw County Chapter of the Amer- ican Red Cross, Pucksters Lose (special to The Daily) LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. 5.T-I ability to crack Purdue's defense for a single point for the last 14 mini- utes of the first half proved costly to Michigan here tonight as the Wol- verines suffered their second suc- cessive Big Ten defeat of the sea- son at the hands of Purdue, 36-18. It was the second straight confer- ence win for the Boilermakers and extended their collegiate string for the season to seven. Michigan started out fast, but finished slow, the Wolverines, largely due to under the basket work of Jim Mandler, rangy center, took a 6 to 2 lead in the first four minutes of play, and it momentarily appeared as though the Boilermakers were going to have a real fight on their hands. The Boilermakers, however, cut loose with one of their typical scor- ing bursts, hitting one-handers and two-handers on fast breaks down the floor, while Michigan with the ex- ception of a free throw by MacCon- fough Battle, 4-1 (Special to The Daily) IIOUGHTON, Jan. 5.-In one of the most thrilling hockey games seen in years at the Amphidrae, the Michigan Tech puck team defeated a scrappy Wolverine sextet from Ann Arbor, 4-1. It was indeed a rare spectacle for the packed rink. Although the three- point margin might appear to show a definite superiority on the part of the engineers, the difference be- tween the two squads was not sig- nificant. A break at any time dur- ing the battle could easily have pro- duced an entirely different final score. But the big Tech team still won, Speed was.the key to the Miners' victory. They poured it on in every period, scoring once in the first, once in the second and twice in the last. Big, guns for Tech were wing- man Jack Ruhl and Captain Petaja. Ruhl' powered two markers through Michigan's goalie, Hank Loud. His first came in the first period, and the other bulged the back of the nets in the second. Petaja tallied his in the final frame, followed closely by teammate Cronenworth's clin-