eather Fair and Warmer \'Y G Sic iga j~attE Editorial A College Degree In Less Than Three Years VOL. LIL No. 79 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Sub Torpedoes Tanker Off Atlantic Coast _ _ _ _ ._.__ . _ ------------ 1 Far-Reaching New Changes In Curriculum To BeDrafted Deans Of Three Colleges In University Will Plani Three-Semester Year Summer Program Will Be Organized By WILL SAPP With precedent-breaking changes which call for a shortening of the current academic year already ap- proved by yesterday's Deans' Confer- ence, the deans of three different col- leges in the University will sit down today to draft an even more drastic program which will incorporate a three-semester-year into the curric- ula, making it possible for a student to get a college diploma in two years and eight months. Dean Albert C. Furstenberg, of the Medical School, announced yes- terday that he was arranging a three semester program and\ was expecting all students in his college to remain here for the increased summer work. Dean of the Dental School, Dr. Rus- sel H. Bunting, told The Daily late last night that his school would fol- low the initiative of the Medical School. The Engineering College, Dean Ivan C. Crawford said, will attempt to plan it's activities on the basis of a three semester year. Plans are not complete as yet. As the engine school budget provides only for two semesters plus a summer school, Dean Crawford said that he believed a Federal or state grant would be needed to cover the operating ex- penses of the school. Year-Round Study At this point no three-semester- year has been adopted by any college in the University, but observers could see no other alternative since the ac- celerated program would leave stu- dents with a four month summer vacation. Thus once that the 1942 class was graduated early, the speed- up would be rendered useless unless a year-around plan of study were adopted. Several courses in the School of Architecture will not have finals as laboratory work will suffice for a fair grade. In other cases exams, fol- lowing the literary school program, will be given. Dean Clare E. Griffen, of the School of Business Administration, said he would make a statement this afternoon concerning calendar ad- justments after a meeting with the members of his faculty. Two-Hour Exams Scheduled According to Assistant Dean Lloyd S. Woodburne, the final examination schedule for the literary college will be announced Friday. It will be printed in Saturday's Daily. In gen- eral, it will provide for three exams each day of the one week exam peri- od. Two hours long each, the final exams will be held at 8-10 a.m., 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and 2-4 p.m. Yesterday's action by the deans revamps the old University calendar as follows: (1) A seven-day final exam period, starting thrde days earlierd (2) Shortened registration anid classification periods. (3) Omission of the 10-day spring vacation, originally scheduled for April 10 to 20. (4) Memorial Day commencement, May 30. The accelerated program lops three entire weeks from the semester, making Michigan's 1942 class of more than 2,000 graduates available for war service 21 days earlier. The stepped-up schedule, recom- mended by the newly-created Uni- versity War Board, will go to the Board of Regents for final approval on Jan. 30. Program To Be Announced War Board officials pointed out4 that this action is preliminary to a° general program of acceleration to be, announced shortly, possibly follow- ing a special combined meeting of the University Council and Senate in the Rackham Amphitheatre Mon- day. University Curriculum To Stress War Training New Courses Will Equip Students For Non-Combatant, Military Work; Women Included In Program (Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of articles descri bing University defense courses as approved by the newly-createdi War JBoard.) By DAN BEHRMAN The University curriculum, already jettisoned of its spring vacation and two-week final exam schedule, will stress national emergency training next semester, it was announced yes- terday by the War Board. Courses will be offered to equip Not d Expe rt Colonel Gamoe Heads ROTC students for both military and non- combatant work in the nation's war effort and will range from immediate army and navy preparation to civil- ian defense training. Both men and women have been included in the scope of this program. Details Ready Soon According to Prof. Harlow G. Hene- man, member of the University War Board, a bulletin containing com- plete details will be available in the near future. "The Daily's summaries of defense courses," he declared, "are to be considered as releases, and use- ful to students in planning second semester programs pending publica- tion of the bulletins." First of the war series courses to be released are those intended for students who anticipate immediate military service. They will apply to men planning service commissions and those who intend to enter a speqialized branch of the army or navy. Under the direction of the math- ematics department, two courses have been set up to fulfill govern- ment requirements in V-7, naval col- lege training program for deck offi- cer commissions. Tough Math Course Mathematics 9, spherical geometry and plane trigonometry, is aimed at students interested in the naval training program who have not yet had solid geometry. Emphasizing ap- plications to navigation and nautical astronomy it will meet at 10 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays in 336 West Engineering under Mr. Jack North- am. Two hours credit will be given. Also of importance to navigators, Mathematics 10 will deal with spheri- (Continued on Page 2) Mayor LaGuardia Will Soon Choose Between Positions WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. -(-P)~ Chunky little Fiorello LaGuardia, tar- get of Congressional critics because of his dual role as New York mayor and Administrator of Civilian De- fense, said today he would choose soon between the two jobs. While offering no definite indica- tion of his ultimate choice, he told a Congressional committee he would remain in the defense post until Congress passed two pending meas- ures to provide funds for defense equipmeit and compensation for those hurt in civilian defense work. He curtly told the committee that Congress should "stop fussing a- round" about whether his office or the War Department should have control over civilian defense spend- ing. COLONEL GANOE * * * replacing Lieut. Col. Francis M. Brannan, recently transferred to the 5th Division, Col. William A. Ganoe has been assigned as Professor of Military Science and Tactics and head of the military department. Colonel Ganoe, who is the author of many stories, magazine articles, and books on military matters, has served as instructor, assistant pro- fessor, and adjutant at the United States Military Academy at West Point. In 1929 he served as U.S. Army editor of the Encyclopedia Brit- tanica. He comes to the University from the headquarters of the Organized Reserves for western Pennsylvania where he served as executive officer. Last summer, when he was loaned by those headquarters to the general staff of the First Army, Colonel Ga- noe was cited in orders by the com- manding officer, Lieut.' Gen. Drum for his work as director of public relations during the maneuver per- iod. U.S. Carrier Is Hit Twice, JapsAssert Ship Is Reported 'Sinking' After Being Torpedoed; Submarine Responsible Tokyo Claims U.S. Sinks Hospital Boat TOKYO, Thursday, Jan. 15. - (Official broadcast recorded by AP)-Japanese Imperial headquar- ters claimed today that a Japanese submarine had scored two direct tor- pedo hits on a 33,000-ton U.S. air- craft carrier of the Lexington type, and the Japanese news agency Domei reported that "the ship's sinking was said to be almost certain although not absolutely confirmed." The Japanese claimed also that an American submarine had sunk the Japanese hospital ship Harbin Maru in Chinese waters Jan. 10 Tok- yo newspapers this morning "scath- ingly denounced this vicious enemy attack," the news agency Domei re- ported, as "one of the darkest blots that has been smeared in the lineage of civilized peoples." The American aircraft carrier was said to have been hit "in the waters west of Hawaii" on the night of Jan. 12 despite "the vigilant eyes of 80- odd planes" and a "protective steel cordon of destroyers and cruisers." The Lexington and a sistership, the Saratoga, were built in 1925 and nor- mally carry a crew of 2,122 officers and men. They carry between 81 and 90 planes. Each ship cost more than $45,000,000, including their aircraft. Dutch Beat Back Enemy In Sarawak'Borneo BATAVIA, N. E. I., Jan. 14.-()- Dutch troops successfully engaged the Japanese invader today in a skir- mish on the wild and mountainous frontier of Sarawak and Dutch Bor- neo, and Allied warplanes beat strongly at the enemy from the Cele- bes Sea northward to the lower Phil- ippines. On the already smashed and black- ened waterfront area of Tarakan off northeast Borneo-the Japanese-oc- cupied oil-producing island to which the Dutch had applied the torch and hammer before yielding it to the enemy-Dutch bombers descended in force and squarely hit at least one Japanese ship. . (The United States War Depart- ment announced in Washington that American army bombers also had participated in attacks against a Jap- anese naval force in the Tarakan area and that while unfavorable wea- ther made it impossible to determine the full results of this raid it was known that two enemy fighters were destroyed.) Other Dutch airmen ranged far to the north to the southern Philip- pine Islands, the Japanese base for the Indies invasion, and bombed run- ways of a Japanese air field and scored three direct hits on barracks. This jump in the tempo of the Allied counter aerial offensive, which was ineffectively answered by unsuc- cessful Japanese attacks on the oil port of Balik Papan, in East Borneo, and the Rhio Archipelago near Sing- apore, coincided with announcement of the arrival in these islands of the Allied commander in chief of the southwest Pacific, British General Sir Archibald P. Wavell. Japs Become Ruthless' In Occupied Manuila WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-(I)--The same harsh, ruthless practices made familiar by Nazi forces in France have been applied, the War Depart- ment reported tonight, by the Jap- anese in Manila and other invaded sections of the Philippines. Residents of the islands have been warned that anyone who injures or attempts to injure a Japanese soldier or civilian will be instantly shot. If he cannot be found, 10 hostages will be taken into custody. The death penalty has also been established for a long list of actions including dis- turbing the "peace." The Denartment announced this Nelson Says Shakeup Due In Production War Board Head Predicts Drastic Changes Ahead In Industries Of Nation Roosevelt To State Powers Of Czar WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. - ()--- Donald M. Nelson, America's war- time czar of industrial production, unofficially took up his gigantic task today with an announcement that he would unhesitatingly order any necessary shakeup in the production organization to get "the job" done. Nelson served notice tonight that "utterly revolutionary . changes" in industrial operation may be neces- sary to win the war. In an address to the country he bespoke "the spirit which refuses either to count costs or recognize obstacles." Blunt Warning The speech, warning bluntly that civilian economy would have to give way to 'war requirements, was writ- ten prior to President Roosevelt's an- nouncement that he would create a War Production Board with Nelson as chairman and was to have been delivered in person in Vincennes, Ind., tonight. Pressure of business here prevented Nelson from leaving, how- ever, and arrangements were made for the speech to be read by Bernard Gimbel of New York. "We cannot afford today to direct our war effort by the ordinary, peace- time 'sensible' standards," the ad- dress declared. "We need to be cracked enough, if you please, to try to do things that sensible men would not try to do under ordinary circum- stances. "Our only hope lies in the spirit which refuses either to count costs or recognize obstacles but which drives furiously ahead with the fixed idea that the important objective will be reached in spite of hell or high water. 'Can't Waste Anything' "We can't waste anything. We can't let one worker or one machine be employed making goods for civil- ians unless those goods are things the country absolutely has to have in order to keep going. We can't use any of our basic raw materials for civilian nanufacture unless the same test is met. "We may have to require manage- ment and labor to adapt themselves to wholly new schedules and methods of operation. We may have to upset commercial and industrial arrange- ments which have endured for many years. We may have to trample on all sorts of privileges and preroga- tives. None of that matters." Nelson said the government would rely on the great mass production in- dustries for the bulk of the increased armament required under the war (Continued on Page 2) ama City, Panama, had gone to the IAdmiral Hart Brings' Fleet To Safe Seas WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. -(N)- Admiral Thomas C. Hart has suc- ceeded in bringing the entire Asiatic Fleet, with its warships intact, to comparatively secure waters from which to wage his fight against the Japanese, it was ascertained tonight. Belief spread here that the feat of seamanship involved in evacuat-' ing the naval base at Cavite, in Ma- nila Bay only 30 miles from the Phil- ippine capital, would one day be ranked one of the notable naval epi- sodes of the war. The Navy's sole comment has been the laconic communique issued im- mediately after the fall of Manila, that "all ships and naval personnel were removed from the Manila-Ca- vite area prior to enemy occupation," along with all records, equipment and stores, and that industrial facilities were destroyed. Not only was the whole combat force-cruisers, destroyers and sub- marines-removed from the unten- able base at Cavite, but also the "fleet train." The "train" was the slow-moving collection of supply ships, tankers, cargo vessels, tugs, tenders, repair ships and other aux- iliaries essential to the fleet. Where the fleet is now located, or whether it has found area for a base, are questions which the Navy does not answer. AIEE Hears Talk Members of the American Insti- tute of Electrical Engineers met at 8 p.m. yesterday in the Union to hear a talk by Jack Cline of the electrical engineering department. Cline, who is an experienced CPA instructor, spoke on the subject, "Radio in Air Navigation." The Student Senate will hold its last meeting of the semester at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. All students are invited to attend. Room number will be posted on Union bulletin board. bottom. The position of the oil carrier, 60 miles south of Montauk Point, which is at the eastern tip of Long Island about 120 miles from New York City, would place it approximately 110 miles due east of New York harbor. Survivors, it was announced, will be brought to both New London and Newport. The Norness was listed in Lloyd's Register of Shipping as a vessel of 9,577 gross tons, owned by the Tanker Corp., and sailing under Panamanian registration. Under Norway Flag Before 1939, the Norness flew un- der the flag of Norway and traded between Liverpool, Trinidad and Key West, Florida. The test of the Navy Department's statement said: "The Third Naval District an- nounced tonight that the tanker Nor- ness from Panama City was torpe- doed early this morning about 60 miles south of Montauk point. ."Naval craft from New London, Conn., and Newport, R. I., were dis- patched to the rescue of the sur- vivors. It was known that a num- ber of survivors have been rescued." Earlier in the day, reports from Washington said that a Navy patrol plane had spotted the striken vessel, her decks awash and her crew bob-. bing up and down in lifeboats on the Iwintry North Atlantic. The original position was given as about 60 miles south of Block Island, R. I., a positionr that would place the vessel only a few miles north of the spot the Navy officially desig- nated as the place of her attack. Aircraft To Rescue The patrol plane's alarm sent naval aircraft speedily to the rescue of sur- vivots-and presumably on a death hunt with depth bombs marked for the skulking submersible. For hours after the wave-tossed tanker crewmen first were seen, how- ever, there remained some doubt as to the manner in which their craft was damaged-the possibility that it may have been a matter of elements remaining until official announce- ment was made that a torpedo had done its lethal work. The attack on the tanker followed the torpedoing yesterday of a large armed steamship 160 miles off Nova Scotia with a loss of perhaps 90 lives and was reported simultaneously with a Navy Department warning that the U-boat menace to the Atlantic coast was on the increase. Beyond Playgrounds Montauk Point, at the far eastern end of historic Long Island, lies be- yond such south shore society play- grounds as the beaches at South- ampton and Easthampton. From the point, which is a New York state park and is the site of the famous lighthouse that guides vessels into Long Island Sound, may be seen the shores of Connecticut and the Rhode Island summer playground of Block Island. Attack Is Closest To U.S. Mainland Panamanian Ship Sunk Only 110 Miles From New York; U-Boat Escapes NEW YORK, Jan. 14.--(P)-The Third Naval District announced to- night that the Panamanian tanker Norness was torpedoed by a submarine early today 60 miles south of Montauk Point, Long Island-the closest approach yet made to America's east coast by enemy warcraft since the United States entered the war. The terse Navy announcement said that naval craft had been sent to the rescue from New London, Conn., and Newport, R.I., and that a num- ber of survivors was known to have been picked up. The announcement did not identify the nationality of the submerged attacker, nor did it say whether the damaged tanker, enroute from Pan- r Wolverines Face Stiff Battle: 111inois' Hi his-Riding Pucksters W-ill ivade t nn Arbor Today 52y STAN CLAMAGE riig ig enIllinois' high-rdn i e hoc :...:::r,:":" :::". key championship team invades Ann Arbor today for the first of a two- .:: game series against the Wolverine s:r: : ': puckm en The game will start at 8 Well rested after splitting a bril- liant series with Dartmouth on Dec. 22 and 23, perenially the finest sextet in the East. the Illini will ice a team of veterans and promising sopho- mores. Coach Vic Heyliger has eight lettermen back from last year's Al-Campus War Forum:. Student Senate Winter Parley. Will Open Sessions Tomorrow GRAND RAPDS,. Jan. 15.-(/P) -The University of Michigan's mighty Wolverine swimming team swamped a collection of Grand Rapids YMCA tankers tonight in an exhibition dual meet by a score of 38 to 19. championship crew, and with more capable reserves on hand, he again has another strong aggregation, Biggest gun on the Illinois team is Amo Bessone. The only returning de- With the almost-too-immediate subject of "America At War" as its theme, the Student Senate Winter Parley will open its two day session at 2:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Union with Prof. Harold A. Dorr of the political science department as key- noter.; The parley will conclude its four- panel discussion Saturday when Prof. Bennett Weaver of the English de- partment evaluates the first campus war forum in his summarizing ad- dress, This parley will mark the first break away from previous long har- angues by both audience speakers and panel members. All speakers will be limited to two minutes with an additional minute of grace upon dis- cretion of the panel chairman. "Arms For America" and "War And Education," the first and second pan- els, will be headed by Norm Call, '42, Play Production Presents Comedy For Second Time "George Washington Slept Here," a comedy by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, wil be presented at 8:30 p.m. today for the second time in its four-day run. The play, which is being given in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, is JOHNNY BRAIDFORD I PROF RENNETT WEAVER I