.....w. Weather Bk Coitinued iid. .._ f,. 4 VOL. LIL No. 82 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 1942 F Gophers Top Cagers, 44-32; Ice, Wrestling Squads Beaten 15,000 Fans Se Varsity Overcome By Minnesota Despite Last Period Rally Battling Pucksters DefeatedBy Illini (Special to The Daily) MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 17.-Minne- sota moved into second place in the Western Conference standings to- night by defeating the Michigan cagers, 44-32, in the Field House before a capacity audience of 15,000 fans. The victory was the fourth in five Conference battles for the Gophers and put them right on the heels of the leading Illinois team, which gained its fourth consecutive tri- umph against no defeats by polish- ing off a hapless Chicago quintet, 54-26. The Wolverines' setback was their fourth in five games. Burly Don Mattson, Minnesota pivot man, and Don Smith, a for- ward, paced the Gopher bombard- ment, dropping 24 points through the basket, or nearly half the winners' total. Mattson was the offensive star of the clash witl 13 tallies on six field goals and one free toss. Smith took runner-up honors for the Golden Gophers with five field goals and three free throws for 11 points. Jim Mandler, Wolverine cen- ter,, led the invaders with five field goals' and one foul toss for 11 points. -Capt. Bill Cartmill, playing with an (Continued on Page 7) Illinois Dynamo Whips Pucksters. Michigan's victoryless sextet took its second straight drubbing from a powerful and fast Illinois outfit last night at the Coliseum, 6-2, in a sav- age hockey match 'marked by terri- fic body checking and countless pen- alties. : After their overwhelming 10-0 win over Eddie Lowrey's sextet on Thurs- day, the Orange and Blue squad was expected to make a rep'eat perform- ance. But its victory was not as de- cisive as the score might indicate. The Wolverines played the Illini to a stand-still for a good part of the game, but the tiring Michigan team just wasn't able to meet the con- stant charges of the fresher Indians. The first period saw the Maize and Blue ;team turn in its best play on the home ice this season. Starting fast, the Wolverines presented a new type of defensive play and kept the game on even terms. Michigan be- gan to take the offensive and better (Continued on Page 6) Powerful Spartan Hatmen Win, 17-13 By HOE SELTZER Friends, we lost. We lost last night by the score of 17-13 to a Michigan State wrestling, team which need concede exactly, nothing to any other mat aggregation in the nation. Although defeated the Wolverines; were in no wise dishonored as they battled tooth and nail for each point either yielded to or wrested from an invading team which boasts five na-, tional champions on its roster. And therefore was staged the most dy- namic and thrill-packed wrestling show ever seen in Yost Field House. Four thousand spectators with throats hoarse from two hours of continuous screaming and cheering will back this statement up. The very opening match provided' the keynote of the entire evening and also presented what ranks as an ab- solutely incredulous upset when Michigan's Dick Kopel, an abject flop in the first two meets of the sea- son, unleashed a furious assault and (Continued on Page 6) Art Cinema League Will Give Comedy Double Bill Today -'the Art Cinema went back to 1910 for a "polite" comedy by the famous Drew combination, shuffled over to Frank Capra for the rat-a-tat ma- chine-gun type of humor-and you can taker your choice when the two pictures are presented at 6:30 p.m. Aid Planned For Labor DisplacedIn War Shift Nelson To Streaikhne Administrative Organization; Knudsen Transfer Indicates End Of OPM Senate Parley d --BULLETIN- WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.-()- The Navy Department announced tonight that an American submar- ine has sunk three Japanese mer- chant ships "off Tokyo Bay." WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.'-(P)- Plans for a $400,000,000 to $600,000,- 000 relief appropriation for workers temporarily displaced by the shift to war production came out of a White 'House conference today, while plans progressed for expediting the conver- sion process. President Roosevelt discussed the relief problem with Congressional leaders and obtained their agreement with apparent ease. The shift to war production, it was estimated, would throw 4,000,000 men out of work for varying periods of time. While they are laid off they will receive 60 per cent of their normal salaries, to a maximum of $24.00 Campus War Stamp Drive University Students Asked To Assist In Campaign To Boost Defense Sales University students and faculty members will be asked Friday to shell all-out for America's war program when campus organizations open a defense savings tag day drive. Every purchaser of a 10-cent de- fense stamp album will receive a tag bearing the government's minute man symbol. He will also take the first step towards acquiring the "savings habit" which has already placed Ann Arbor above every Ameri- can city in per capita defense bond investment. The albums, designed 'to hold 25 10-cent stamps, are the first step to- wards purchase of a Series E defense weekly. If they receive state unem- ployment compensation, the govern- ment is to make up the difference between that and the 60 per cent of salary standard. To be eligible for the payments, displaced workers will have to enroll for training in needed new skills. Mr. Roosevelt, it was said, will transmit a message to Congress on the subject next week, and legisla- tion, originating in the House Ap- propriations Committee will be in- troduced and pushed through as swiftly as possible. Donald M. Nelson, the Director of War Production, meantime was un- derstood to be perfecting plans for streamlining his organization, with a view to simplification and the elimination of any cumbersome ad- ministrative machinery that might hamper production by unnecessary red tape. It appeared that the Office of Pro- duction Management would be vir- tually dissolved, a prospect made the more unmistakable, by the transfer of William S. Knudsen, its director general, to the Army with the job of seeing to it that industry produces the things the Army needs. Speculation was that Knudsen's principal task would be supervising the conversion of the automobile in- dustry into a rapid-fire producer of airplanes, guns and tanks, a job for which he is donsidered eminently fit- ted. Knudsen is considered the nation's foremost production man. His tal- 'ent for mass production engineering carried him from the status of an im- migrantmachinist to the presidency of General Motors. J=Hop Ticket Sale To Start Next Tuesday Reservation Card Holders Are To Apply At Union; Booths Still Available Juniors holding reserved applica- tion cards should present them from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m., Tuesday in the Union for tickets to J-Hop, Bob Begle, tickets chairman, announced yesterday. The new dates for the 1942 J-Hop are Feb. 6 and 7. Identification cards will not be re- quired, Begle said, and fraternities or any other group may have one person turn in several applications. Cash or checks must be for the exact amount and no service charge will be required for checks. Only the J-Hop representative from each ,fraternity or independent group awarded a booth may buy nec- essary chaperon tickets. No more than two of these will be allowed per house. Applications are not need- ed but the chaperons' names must be listed and these names must have been approved previously by the Dean's office. Those organizations which have not turned in their chaperon lists to Bruce Renaud, booth committee chairman, by 9 p.m. today will not have tickets reserved for the cha- perons. Renaud also said that any organi- zation which has not obtained a booth and which has at least 20 members going to J-Hop may still apply for a booth by contacting him immediately. Closes Annual Open Forum Prof. Weaver Sums Up Four-Panel Discussions Of Major War Issues Diverse Opinionsr Noted In Review The tumult and the shouting died yesterday with Prof. Bennett Weav- er's summarizing address to the clos- ing session of the Student Senate Winter Parley as the annual all-cam- pus forum closed its two-day dis- cussion of "America At War." Professor Weaver, a member of the English department, reviewed the Parley from Prof. Harold A. Dorr's keynote address to its four-panel an- alysis of the economic, military, mor- al, and educational aspects of the war. Throughout his entire summary, Professor Weaver noted the diversity of opinion on several basic issues such as the question of economic or A summary of each of the four panels in yesterday's Winter Par- ley discussions may be found on Page 8 of today's Daily. Every group held an afternoon and eve- ning session. nationalistic causes for this war and the last one. There was also a line of cleavage between those who hoped for eventual world peace and those, who had stopped hoping.l In reviewing the panel on "Crisis In Morals," Professor Weaver cited a wide split on the question of whe- ther hate should enter our viewpoint on our enemies. Professor Weaver commented that "a man may fight with considerable determination and not give himself to hate."j The record of the panel on "Our Armed Forces" caused Professor Weaver to decry any over-emphasis' of the value of college men to the leadership of the nation. In a simi- ai lgh-v .n, he told of the panel's unity of opinion-on the question of college students' fitness for actual military service. In summing up the discussion of the economic front in the panel on' "Arms For America," Professor Wea- ver condensed his own viewpoint on the nation's attitude into a tale of the Wisconsin professor who had been thrown onto the highway after an automobile accident. "Don't worry about me," said the Wisconsin aca- demician. "Check the tires." VU To Sponsor New Civilians' Training Study New War Board Approves Seven Courses T Deal With Air, Morale Attacks By DAN BEHRMAN (Editor's Note: This is the fourth in a series of articles describing Uni- versity defense courses as approved by the newly-created war Board.) Determined not to let the lesson of Coventry and London go un- learned, the University War Board has set up a second-semester civilian protection training program for stu- dents, faculty members and towns- people. Destruction wrought by both en- emy bombers from the air and sabo- teurs in defense production will be dealt with in this program's seven- course series. While not as imme- diate a problem as sabotage and civilian morale, anti-air raid pre- cautions will be taken to prepare University students for any possi- ble emergency. This program, to be given from time to time during the year, is de- signed to stop the enemy "by anti- cipating his attacks and by training and organizing civilians according- ly." Time schedule of every course will be announced immediately be- fore they are offered. Whilethese courses are not com- pulsory, students, faculty members and townspeople are "strongly urged" to take them by the University War Board. First in the Civilian Protection (Continued on Page 3) 'U' Council And Senate Pan-American Countries Agree To Split With Axis; TIAF Hits Back In Malaya Singapore Defenders Take Offensive Through Air With Concerted Attack Philippines Outside Luzon Are Mystery -BULLETIN-- TOKYO, Jan. 17. - (Official broadcast recorded by AP)-A Domei war summary claimed to- night that Japanese tanks had driven through Australian defense lines to within 50 miles of Singa- pore and declared that in the Phil- ippines Gen. Douglas MacArthur's troops finally were withdrawing down the Bataan Peninsula. By C. YATES McDANIEL SINGAPORE, Jan. 17.-(P)-Relays of British fighters and bombers, which have been longing for a chance to catch the Japanese at a disad- vantage, have found their opportun- ity and wrought havoc among troops, freight cars and truck convoys along the Gemas-Tampin line, 110 to 120 miles north of Singapore Island, an official statement said tonight. As this vigorous air attack was pro- ceeding inland, other airmen struck at concentrations of barges and small ships along the west coast where a picked Japanese spearhead was at- tempting to enlarge its foothold among the mangrove swamps south of the Muar River, within 90 miles of Singapore. "While our bombers were plaster- ing the marshalling yards at Gemas, fighters were machine-gunning a long serpentine line of transport vehicles from a low altitude" on the Gemas- Tampin road, the statement said. The pilots said they caught the motor transports stretched for two miles along the narrow road from Tampin toward the east, and that they left many fires among the 1,000 or more vehicles. Bombers unloaded scores of large caliber bombs on the railway yards and convoys at Gemas, scoring hits and starting more than 50 fires, the pilots said. Japanese Strike At MacArthur Flank WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.-P)-Re- establishment of direct trans-Pacific civilian communication with the Philippines failed today to clear up official uncertainty as to the situa- tion in island areas not known to be occupied by the Japanese. While Gen. Douglas MacArthur's little army fights on the main island of Luzon, replies to urgent messages have shed virtually no light, officials reported, on the course of events elsewhere in the Philippines. Japanese forces on Luzon Island were believed tonight to be attempt- ing an encircling movement which would prevent the American-Filipino troops on Bataan Peninsula from ef- fecting an escape to the almost im- pregnable Corregidor Island. This line of reasoning was ad- vanced after the War Department today announced that strong Japa- nese forces were smashing at the right flank of Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur's heavily out-numbered de- fenders of the peninsula. r , Jond. This Uond, costing $18.75 and maturing to $25 in 10 years, is aimed especially at those people who cannot afford a high ini- tial outlay. A pre- liminary drive will be conducted on Thursday in frater- nities, sororities and residence halls, while downtown Ann Arbor will be * * * Dr. Gregory Vlastos, professor of philosophy at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, will deliver the third and -concuding lecture in the series on 'The Failure of Skepticism" at 8:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The series has been sponsored jointly by the Newman Club, Hillel Foundation and Inter-Guild. A re- ception will be held at Lane Hall after the lecture today. Dr. Vlastos will attempt to answer the question of whether there is still a place for the uncertainty of skepti- cism in the embattled world that asks unity and immediate action of a nation. A leading thinker in Protestantism, Dr. Vlastos was born in Athens, Greece, and graduated from Robert College in Istanbul, Turkey. He re- ceived a Bachelor of Divinity degree at the Chicago Divinity School and earned his Doctor of Philosophy de- gree at Queen's University. In 1937 he studied a year in Europe. He has written "Christian Faith and Demo- cracy" and "The Religious Way" and is an editor of "Toward Christian Revolution." k b Lombard Plane Ruins Found In Mountains LAS VEGAS, Nev., Jan. 17.-({P)- High up on Table Mountain search- ers today found the blackened ruins of a luxurious TWA sky-sleeper in which glamorous Carole Lombard, her mother, her press agent, a Mich- igan soldiers' wife and 15 soldiers perished last night. The searchers found the craft, broken and charred, late this after- noon after an 8,500 foot climb, and a deputy sheriff telephoned back that bodies were strewn hundreds of yards up the mountain side, most of them burned beyond recognition. With the popular movie star, over whom all Hollywood grieved tonight, were her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Pet- ers and press agent Otto Winkler of the M-G-M studios. covered Saturday. Following the drive permanent defense savings sta- tions will be set up on campus. Personnel for the campaign will be provided by major campus groups including the League, the Union, Panhellenic, Interfraternity Coun- cil, Congress, Assembly and the Stu- dent Senate. In addition to this tag day effort, other organizations have proposed defense savings for their members. The J-Hop committee originated a plan to substitute 1,400 25-cent stamp albums for favors at America's most popular college dance. The University is cooperating with the Ann Arbor Junior Chamber of Commerce in conducting this cam- paign with Prof. Charles Jdmeson of the Ousiness administration school, and Burton Rubens, '42, co-ordinat- ing campus effort. They are working through the Committee of 1942. Many Talks Many private talks outside the con- ference rooms were directed toward, swinging Argentina to approving sev- erance of diplomatierelations. Earlier, Chile appeared veering to- ward Argentina's previous stand against a complete break. The impression persisted that the Chilean decision would be dictated by her own national interests and geographical considerations, espec- ially in view of her long, exposed Pa- cific coast line. . Chile's delegation here declined to throw any light on the subject and the Santiago regime's attitude is not expected to be clarified until debate starts Monday on the resolution spon- sored by Colombia, Mexico and Ven- ezuela for a unanimous break with the Axis by all 21 American repub- lics. The resolution calling for a unani- mous break with the Axis declared that Japanese, German and Italian aggression against the United States was part and parcel of their "con- certed plans for world conquest." .Piano Concert T'o Be Played, By Casadesus Concert-goers of this city will have a chance to hear the talented French pianist, Robert Casadesus, in the seventh concert of the Choral Un- ion Series at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. Both composer and pianist, Casa- desus has had a brilliant career. He has studied under Louis Diemer and Xavier Leroux. His concert engage- ments have taken him to all the cor- ners of the globe. His first Ameri- can performance was in 1935 with the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra. He has had the rare dis- tinction, accorded to only three other pianists, of appearing with, Arturo Toscanini. Tomorrow Casadesus will play Ga- votte, Le Rappel des Oiseaux, Les Sauvages and Les Niais de Sologne by Rameau; Carnaval, Op. 9, by Schumann; Ballade, Op. 23, Berceuse, Op. 57, Tarentelle, Op. 43, by Chopin; Le Retour des Muletiers by de Sev- erac; La Soiree dans Grenade by De'- bussy; and Alborada del Gracioso by Ravel. Lewis, Green Are Agreed On Need Of Labor Unity WASHINGTON. Jan. 17.-()--- 'War's Greatest Reporter': Michigan Pastors' Conference , ToStudy Tasks Of Churches War Correspondent Reynolds Will Lecture Here Thursday By MORTON MINTZ The ace foreign correspondent who Walter Winchell says is as "popular on every dirty little English trawler as he is in the Stork Club" will give an eye-witness account of Russia at war, the British conquest in Africa and London under fire at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. Quentin Reynolds, sponsored by the Oratorical Association, will give his first lecture here following his return from Egypt during the week. The Hill Auditorium box office will be open Wednesday and Thursday. His outstanding war reporting, year. Sent to Europe on a roving commission when war came, he lived in London after the fall of France, writing and narrating his two spec- tacular motion pictures, "London Can Take It" and "Christmas Under Fire." During this period, 4eynolds wrote his best selling book "The Wounded Don't Cry" and on his voyage back last year, he pieced together his notes which appeared under the title of "A Londoner's Diary." Returning to the combat zone this winter, he was the only foreign cor- By EUGENE MANDEBERG Ministers from throughout the state will register at 1 p.m. tomorrow in the lobby of the Rackham Build- ing for the third annual Michigan Pastors' Conference which will con- tinue through Wednesday. With "The Present Day Church- Its Tasks and Its Resources" as the Conference theme, the delegates will assemble at 2:30 p.m. in the Rack- ham' Lecture Hall for the first gen- eral session of the day. The Rev. Robert C. Stranger, Bethel Evangel- ical Church, Detroit, will preside. The meeting will open with wor- ship led by The Rev. Owen Greer who will speak en the subject, "The Real Self." Immediately following Dinner will be held in the First Pres- byterian Church for the ministers. The Rev. H. 0. Yoder of Ann Arbor will deliver the invocation and toast- master for the dinner will be Rabbi Leon Fram of Detroit. Address at the dinner will be given by The Rev. F. E. Johnson, Research Secretary for the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America. He will speak on "A Crisis in Christendom." The general session of the evening will begin at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall with the theme, "The Churches of America and the War." The Rev. Harold J. Carr will pre- side and participants in the discus- sion which will be open to the public will be The Rev. Herbert B. Hudnut,