Weather Warmner today. L sit igun 4:Aa aiti Editorial Nelson Appointment Clears Track . , VOL. LII. No. 81 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Dorr Delivers Keynote Talk; Parley Begins PanelsToday Speaker Cautions Youth Against Losing Peace In Conflict With Japan Students Will Lead Discussion Groups Stressing the importance of moral, physical and spiritual fitness, Prof. Harld A. Dorr of the political sci- ence department yesterday told the opening session of the Student Sen- ate Winter Parley that "you as young Americans may well win the war against Japan and lose the peace." "This generation must do better than the last one in building a new social and economic order," keynoter Dorr told the Parley which closes to- day with four student-faculty panels on the general theme of "America At War." In citing the unfavorable opinions expressed by many older people about this generation before the war, Pro- fessor Darr 'pointed out the "this- world-is-a-hell-of-a-mess"tattitude prevalent amongst youth in the late 20's.- Address Opens Session Professor Dorr's address opened the annual all-campus forum's two- day session of discussion panels open to every man and woman student. The meeting was presided over by Chairman Bill Muehl, '44L. In commenting on Professor Dorr's talk, Hale ,Champion, '44, told the audience that "the youth who fight this war will be given a part in mak- ing its peace or 'else the peace will be made by the other side." Second student commentator, Rosebud Scott, '42, stressed the problems of demo- cracy at home. William Clark, '42, questioned the value of the Old Test- ament law of "an eye for an eye" in dealing with modern international problems. Will Treat War The four panels' sessions, set for 2:30 and 7:15 p.m. today, will treat the war from its economic, moral and military aspects, and its effect on education. Panel I, "Arms For Amer- ica," will analyze the war's impact on labor, consumers and business. Meeting in Room 304 in the Union, it will be chaired by Norm Call, '42. "War and Education" will be dis- cussed by the second panel under Roger Kelley, '42. This group, which includes Prof. Harlow Heneman of the University War Board, will meet in the Union's Room 323. Panel III will take up the growing problem of religious, civil and politi- cal liberties inra wartime America. "Crisis In Morals" will convene in Room 305 of the Union under Don O'Connor, '42. Dealing with the military aspects of this conflict, Panel IV on "Our Armed Forces" will be chaired by Don Stevenson, '42. It will meet in Room 302 in the Union. Prof. Vlastos To End Series On Skepticism "The Failure of Skepticism" wil be the subject of a lecture by Dr. Greg- ory Vlastos, professor of philosophy at Queen's University, Kingston, On- tario, at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Lecture Hall. This talk is the last of a series on skepticism sponsored by the New- man Club, Hillel Foundation and In- ter-Guild. A reception with refresh- ments will be held after the lecture at Lane Hall. Dr. Vlastos will discuss the prob- lem of skepticism in a time of crisis from the Protestant point of view. The other speakers in the series at- tacked the question from the stand- points of the other major faiths. Dr. Vlastos was the chief speaker at the National Assembly of Student Christian Associations at Miami Uni- versity this Christmas vacation. He is also one of the editors of "Toward Christian Revolution" and has writ- ten "The Religious Way" and "Chris- tian Faith and Democracy." Law School Finals To Be Jan. 24-31 Internal changes in the program iMatmen Face Sparta ns, PuckmenBattle Illinois Quintet Is Underdog In Gopher Fray At Minneapolis; Swimmers Perform In State AAU Meet Knudsen Given High Army Rank In Move To Speed Up Production; Navy Sinks Five More Jap Ships Tonight on the home front the Varsity wrestling team meets Michi- gan State's matmen at 7:30 p.m. in the Field House, while a half hour later Eddie Lowrey's bloody, bent, but still unbowed pucksters step into the rink once more to try their luck against an inyincible University of Illinois sextet. At the same time the Wolverine' basketball five will be seeking its second Conference triumph out of four starts when it clashes with Min- nesota at Minneapolis; while at East Lansing Matt Mann's titans of the waves will dominate the state AAU swimming meet whose headliner will be a duel between Gus Sharemet and Classification For Engineers To Start Feb. 6 Prof. Kessler Announces Registration; Materials To Be Available Feb. 2 Registration cards for students in the College of Engineering will be, available starting Monday, Feb. 2, in Room 244, West Engineering Build- ing, and classification will begin the following Friday, Prof. Clarence F. Kessler of the mechanical engineer- ing department announce?. yester- day. Although engineering students will pay their'fees on Thursday and Fri- day, Feb. 5 and 6, according to the regular schedule already announced by the University, registration cards will be made available in advance, as in the past, to facilitate regis- tration. Also officially confirmed yesterday was the revised final examinalion schedule for the engineering college which will begin Thursday, Jan. 29, and run through Wednesday, Feb. 4. Three exams have been scheduled each day, periods running from 8 to 10 a.m., from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m. The hours for filling out registra- tion cards will be 8 a.m. until noon and 1:30 until 5 p.m. every day start- ing Monday, Feb. 2 and continuing on through classification, Professor Kessler revealed. Classification in the College of En- gineering will start at 2 p.m. Friday, Feb. 6, and will continue until 6 p.m. Saturday classification is scheduled for 8 a.m. until noon and 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Details as to time and method of classification for thevarious depart- ments will be announced in The Daily as soon as they can be de- termined. British Shakeup Hinted LONDON, Jan. 16.-(P)-A drastic shakeup in the Churchill government with heads falling in the War and Colonial Offices because of setbacks in the Orient appeared in the making tonight. Qualified London quarters said the Cabinet changes, gfor which there has been rising clamor awaited only the return of Prime Minister Churchill from Washington. Bill Prew of Wayne over the 100 yard sprint route. Michigan State holds a slight edge over Cliff Keen's matmen by virtue of the fact that they beat Kansas State while Michigan was only able to tie them. In facing Minnesota's high-scoring organization the Wolverine cagers intend to pin their hopes for an upset victory on their high-grade defensive work, which has to date been third most effective in the Conference. Cainpilon Stars In Loss Happy-go-pointless Hal Wilson and his one man basketball team, sopho- more Jack Flagler, fought, shoved and pushed their way to an upset vic- tory over an iron man edit staff out- fit in their annual court battle yes- terday. Led by Long John Erlewine and Handsome Hale Champion the out- numbered edit staff made a heroic Horatius-at-the-bridge stand, until one of Ace Flagler's stooges slipped in a basket while everybody was arguing with the referee, Wilson's roommate. Flash Flagler led an otherwise hopeless band of pseudo-sports ex- perts with 15 strictly-from-hunger points, while H. Luisetti Champion cashed in 10 for the gallant little band from page one. Offensive and defensive star of the game, however, was Lone Star Johnny *Erlewine who covered both backboards like a ba- bushka. The final score, 23-20, will live like Dec. 7 in infamy. New Courses Instruct Coeds In War'Duties Army, Navy' Call Nurses; University To Supply Need ForTraining Class (Editor's Note: This is the third in a series of articles describing University defense courses as approved by the newly-created War Board.) By DAN BEHRMAN Woman suffrage was still a soap- box issue in 1917, but American wo- men enter this war with a man's share of its responsibilities. In order to prepare women for their emergency duties, a special se- ries of war training courses has been announced by the niversity War Board. These courses are supple- mented by defense work offered in regular University departments. The greatest demand for trained women workers is found in the field of nursing. The Army and Navy alone have indicated that they will need 10,000 additional registered nurses. .A growing need has also arisen for dietitians, part-time nurs- ery workers and secretarial personnel. According to a War Board an- nouncement, opportunities exist for women proficient in mathematics and one of the foreign languages re- viewed in yesterday's Daily. First aid training, opened to Uni- (Continued on Page 2) ,. U.S. Asiatic Units Destroy Enemy Craft In Pacific; Luzon Attack Intensified Jap Dive-Bombers Harass MacArthur WASHINGTON, Jan. 16. - (P)- Five more Japanese ships-three transports and two cargo vessels- lay at the bottom of the Far Pacific tonight as the result of hammer blows delivered by the United States Navy. They were sunk, a communique an- nounced, by units of the U. S. Asiatic Fleet, raising to at least 24 the num- ber of enemy craft destroyed by the Navy and Marines in less than six weeks of fighting. In addition to the action by the two sea services, War Department communiques from Washington and For latest developments on the Latin-American front, see story on page 2. from the Army in the Far East have claimed definitely the sinking of eight Japanese craft, including a bat- tleship. The Japanese invaders on Luzon, meanwhile intensified their attack upon General Douglas -MacArthur's depleted defending army, strung across the approaches to Batan Pen- insula. Enemy dive-bombers attacked in- cessantly, the War Department an- nounced. Shock troops with special training stormed the defense line. Japanese artillery kept up a con- tinuous cannonading. The communi- que mentioned neither withdrawal by the American-Filipino forces nor the Japanese troops, and it was ap- parently too early to perceive the trend of the battle. But General MacArthur's head- quarters found time to report to the Department that in occupied areas the Japanese were "systematically looting and devastating the entire countryside." It was another indi- cation that MacArthur is receiving numerous reports of activities behind the enemy lines. Church Heads To Assemble Here Monday Michigan Religious Group, Extension Service Join To Sponsor Meeting Sponsored under the joint aus- pices of the Michigan Council of Churches and Christian Education and the University Extension Serv- ice, the third annual Michigan Pas- tors' Conference will meet Monday through Wednesday in Ann Arbor. In conjunction with the Confer- ence, the University School of Music and Extension Serviceare sponsoring a conference of church music for all ministers interested in the subject. Featured in the Conference pro- gram are Dr. Walter M. Horton, pro- fessor of theology at Oberlin College, and Dr. F. Ernest Johnson, research secretary of the Federal Council of Churches in America. Dr. Johnson will speak Monday, and Professor Horton will deliver a series of four lectures on theological questions. Taking as its theme, "The Present Day Church-Its Tasks and Its Re- sources," the Conference will open at 10 a.m. Monday with a business ses- sion at the First Methodist Church. All delegates will register at 1 p.m. in the lobby of the Rackham Build- ing, and at 2 p.m. the first general session of the Conference will open. President Alexander G. Ruthven will extend a welcome to the University, following which Professor Horton will deliver his first address, concerning the imprisoning forces from which men have sought .to be saved. A fellowship dinner will be held at 6 p.m. in the First Presbyterian Church, with Rabbi Leon Fram of Detroit as toastmaster. The evening general session of the Revised Examination Schedules ENGINEERING COLLEGE Time of Exam Subject 8 - 10 German, Spanish. EM 1, 2; CE 2 Thurs., Jan. 29: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 11 2 -4 Tues.at9 8 - 10 Tues. atl10 Fri., Jan. 30: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 1; English 1, 2 2 - 4 Mon, at10 8 -10 Tues. at 11 Sat., Jan. 31: 10:30 - 12:30 Tues. at 3, Economics 53 2 - 4 M.E. 3; Dr.1, 2 8 -10 Mon. at 9 Mon., Feb. 2: 10:30 - 12:30 Tues. at 2, EE 2a, Phys. 46 2 - 4 French, Surv. 1, 2, 4 8 - 10 M.P. 2, 3, 4 Tues., Feb. 3: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 8 2 - 4 Tues. at 8 8 --10 Mon. at 3; Dr. 3 Wed., Feb. 4: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 2 2 - 4 Tues. at 1 LITERARY COLLEGE Time of Exercise Time of Examination Mon. at 8 Tues., Feb. 3, 10:30-12:30 Mon. at 9 Mon., Feb. 2, 8 -10 Mon. at 10 Fri., Jan. 30, 2 - 4 Mon. at 11 Thurs., Jan. 29, 10:30-12:30 Mon. at 1 Fri., Jan. 30, 10:30-12:30 Mon. at 2 Wed., Feb. 4, 10:30-12:30 Mon. at 3 Wed., Feb. 4, 8 -10 Tues. at 8 Tues., Feb. 3, 2 - 4 Tues. at 9 Thurs., Jan. 29, 2 - 4 Tues. at 10 Fri., Jan. 30, 8 -10 Tues. at 11 Sat., Jan. 31, 8 -10 Tues. at 1 Wed., Feb. 4, 2 - 4 Tues. at 2 Mon., Feb. 2, 10:30-12:30 Tues. at 3 Sat., Jan. 31, 10:30-12:30, German 1, 2, 31, 32 Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32 Music 31 Pol. Science 1, 2, 51, 52 Thurs., Jan. 29, 8 -10 OPM Head Is Given Free Hand In Directing War Department's Program Senate To Receive FDR Nomination WASHINGTON, Jan. 16.--MP) - President Roosevelt handed sweeping, over-all supervision of the war pro- duction program to Donald Nelson today, then plucked William S. Knudsen from the OPM, gave him the three stars of a lieutenant-general, and placed him in charge of expe- diting production for the Army. An executive order formally es- tablishing the War Production Boar contained no "ifs," "buts" or reser- vations of any kind in placing su- preme production under Nelson and, in a clinching phrase, it declared "his decisions shall be final." OPM Is Subordinated The effect of this was to make the OPM, of which Knudsen has been director, completely subordinate and open to possible general reorganiza- tion at Nelson's direction. What Knudsen's attitude would be was a matter of wide speculation when a second announcement came from the White House. It said the former General Motors chief was being given entire charge of directing and expediting the gi- gantic production involved in the War Department's munitions pro- gram. Mr. Roosevelt referred to Knudsen as "one of the great production men of the world," said the country al- ready was "immeasurably indebted" to him, and announced that on Mon- day he would send to the Senate his nomination to be a lieutenant- general. Plans Formulated It was indicated that much of Knudsen's work would be in the field where his production genius could best make itself felt. The, White House said he and his staff would "visit the great arsenals and muni- tions factories with the object of helping them constantly to improve and speed up their lines of produc- tion." Knudsen will be a member of the War Production Board and, in his War Department post, will be under the general supervision of Nelson. Kaufman-Hart farce To End Four-Day Run Ann Arbor audiences will be given their last opportunity to see "George Washington Slept Here" at 830 p.m. today in -the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The play, written in the typical Kaufzihan-Hart style and dialogue, concerns the troubles whic confront Newton Fuller after he buys 'an old country house in order to "go native" in a big way. Tree bores, Japanese beetles, no water, no dirt (except in the house, and a kitchen with one wall out are only a few of the problems which he attempts to solve with a' diastrous expenditure of money. The comedy is the'third offering on the five-bill program by Play Production of the Department of Speech. Valentine B. Windt, director of Play Production, is in charge of the play and Robert Mellencmp is art director. War Stamp Drive Will Begin Friday Approved yesterday by the Com- mittee on Student Affairs, the Uni- versity defense savings tag day will open Friday, Jan. 23 when student minute-men cover the entire campus in a war stamp drive. They will be selling 10-cent stamp albums, first step towards the pur- chase of the Series E government bond for those persons who cannot afford to set $18.75 away all at once. Personnel for the drive will be fur- nished by the Union, the League. Zoology 1 Botany 1 Psychology 31 Music I1 } Sat., Jan. 31, 2 - 4 Tues., Feb. 3, 8 -10 French 1, 2, 11, 31, 32, 41, 71, 111, 112, 153 " Speech 31, 32 English 1, 2 Econ. 51, 52, 53, 101 Mon., Feb. 2, 2 - 4 Fri., Jan. 30, 10:30-12:30 Sat., Jan. 31, 10:30-12:30 - BULLETIN - LOS ANGELES, Jan. 16.-(P)- Transcontinental & Western Air reported tonight a 21 passenger Douglas Sky Club transport, carry- ing 12 passengers including actress Carole Lombard, was missing near Las Vegas and was feared to have cracked up. BULLETIN - NEW YORK, Jan. 16.-(P)-The tanker Coimbra has been de- stroyed, presumably torpedoed, by an enemy raider within seeing dis- tance of Long Island's south shore, it was announced by the U. S. Navy Department in Washington today. Medicine For Moscow: Russian Bazaar Will Be Held By War Relief Society Today _ ', $5,000,000 Buying In 1941: Conservation Is Working Rule Of Every Branch In University / By MARY RONAY Inaugurating a local fund drive, the student division of the Russian War Relief Society will hold a Rus- sian bazaar from 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. and from 7:30 to 11:30 p.m. today in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League. In order to make the bazaar more effective, the 7-11 Club will hold a dance. today in the neighboring Kal- amazoo Room. The dance will carry out the theme of the bazaar by hav- ing decorations and settings of a Russian nature. Of further interest to those attend- ing the affair will be an auction which will be held in the room of the bazaar at 9 p.m. Myron Dann, '43,. will be the official auctioneer for this special sale. Many of the articles to be sold at the bazaar will reflect the spirit of ley; an antique amber necklace from the Balkans; a sheet with lace insets, woven by Russian nuns before the Revolutidn; a handkerchief bag from Austria and some authentic Russian dolls are but a few of the articles which have just been obtained. Many interesting and educational objects will also be on display. One of these is a hand-woven table run- ner, made before th first World War in Poland. This piece has an origi- nal design, portraying the long strug- gle of the Polish people. All the funds raised by this bazaar will be given to the national Society for the purchase of medical supplies which will be sent to the Soviet Army. But the bazaar is just the begin- ning of the efforts of the student committee to obtain funds in the Russian War Relief Campaign. They plan to contact all students and cam- By MORTON MINTZ Conservation-usually confined to the University's forests and class- rooms-is today the working rule of every branch of the $80,000,000 in- stitution. War dealt a heavy blow to the Uni- versity's tremendous purchasing, which last year exceeded $5,000,000, and new plans of economy are being worked out to save a myriad of §carce commodities. No supplies have been cut out en- tirely as yet, except for tires and autos, and the University is reassured by a flow of materials sent on gov- ernment preference ratings for work in research, maintenance and educa- tion, considered vital to the war ef- fort. But University purchasing agent Walter L. Bulbick reported yesterday reissued if deemed safe. This prac- tice, necessitated by a shortage of these materials which even stringent economy can make last only till the end of the school year, was hereto- fore considered inadvisable. Bulbick disclosed that important Hospital supplies such as formalde- hyde, acetone, alcohol, cresole, U.S.P., and certain chemicals are still ob- tainable, but only with "great diffi- culty." In the same category are such of- fice materials as rubber bands, paper clips and staples. Rubber bands, used in the Hospital for surgical dressings, bottles, food serving and the phar- macy, will rarely be issued for office use any longer, Bulbick said. Dr. Harley A. Haynes, Hospital director, expressed confidence, however, that ,adequate substitutes will be found if the estimated two-months stock is