eather Continued Mild. it .. 11 till 'aili; Editoria A Plan For Peace Ins The Americas .. VOL. LII. No. 86 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1942 Z-323 T _ ___ PRICE FIVE CENTS Hockey Squad Scores Upset Over Gophers In 3-2 Victory Tag Day For Defense To Open Here Today 300 Student 'Minute Men' To Sell Savings Stamps In First Drive On Any Campus In Country Minnesota's Closing Nets Rivals Two But Fails To Win Spurt Goals Game Goldsmith Sparks Team ToTriumph (Special to The Daily) MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 22.-Michi- gan's hockey team won its first game over a Minnesota ice squad since 1938 at Minneapolis tonight, 3 to 2, when a final period rally by the Gophers failed to even the battle. Both teams took better than half the game to give the fans a fast game. In the first period, Michigan's Bob Collins caught the Gopher de- fense-off guard near the boards and made the first score unassisted from beyond the red line. The time was 7:12. Loud Saves Day Minnesota's sextet worked hope- lessly with long shots from beyond Michigan's defense concentration, but Wolverine goalie Hank Loud was too fast. Although the Gophers man- aged to steal the puck for perfect set-up shots, they lacked the coordi- nation, due to inexperienced players, to profit. Michigan's Paul Goldsmith and Minnesota's little Bob Arnold, .cen- ters, did most of the work for both teams. Max Bahrych, Wolverine spare, made it 2 to 0 in the first period with the time 15:22. In the second period, both squads turned on the speed but not the ac- curacy, and' the canto ended with neither team cashing .in. Gophers Fred Heiseke and Bob Graiziger journeyed to the penalty box for hooking and slashing. Scores Come Fast Three scores came within two min- utes in the middle of the last period. Goldsmith and Roy Bradley worked down the ice together and made it 3 to 0. Immediately afterwards, Gopher Arnold took a shot off the back-board from Graiziger, who just came out of the penalty box, and netted the puck from 10 feet out. Again, the Minnesota squad caught the Wolverines out of position and Captain Al Eggleton finally made a long shot click. A final scramble around the Wolverine net ended the game, 3 to 2. The attendance was 1100. * * * THE SUMMARIES Minnesota Pos. Michigan Joseph G Loud Smith . RD Beichert Peterson LD Hull Arnold C Bradley Graiziger RW Collins Eggleton LW Corson Spares: Minnesota - Behrendt, Snapp, Ileiseke, Schneider, Nolander, Thoms. Michigan: Goldsmith, Braid- ford, Bahrych. First Period Scoring: Michigan: Collins (unassisted), 7:12, Bahrych (Goldsmith) 15:22. Second Period Scoring: none, Third Period Scoring: Michigan;: Goldsmith (Bradley) 10:18. Minne- sota: Arnold (Graiziger) 10:51; Eg- gleton (unassisted) 11:12. School Principals To Hold Meeting Here Tomorrotw Three hundred superintendents of Michigan schools will convene at the fourth mid-winter Education and Guidance Conference beginning at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Lecture Room of the Rackham Building. The joint program, to be run un- der the auspices of the School of Edu- cation and the Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion, will consist of a series of re- ports of problems relating to teacher supply and demand, teacher adjust- ments and guidance programs, in ad- dition to roundtable discussions, demonstrations and presentations of new techniques in visual education, The luncheon at 1 p.m. in the Michigan League will provide a sym- posium of "Frontier Problems in the Field of Vocational Guidance and, Vocational Education" and will be followed by an afternoon session in the Michigan League Ballroom. It is recommended that all stu- dents interested in going into the Nearly 300 student "minute-men" will go on active duty today as the University opens the first defense savings Tag Day on any campus in the United States. From 8:15 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., stu- dent and faculty dimes will be ex- changed for 10-cent war savings stamps and albums, first step towards a defense bond share in the future of the United States government. Tags bearing the campaign's min- ute-man symbol will be distributed to every man and woman who intro- duce themselves to the "savings hab- it." Ann Arbor residents have already contributed at the rate of $100 per capita. In the fraternity, sorority and dormitory drive held yesterday, 4500 defense stamp albums were sold to students. These albums hold 50 10- cent stamps and provide a "dime-a- City Workers Vote To Delay Detroit St ritke DETROIT, Jan. 22.-(/P)--City em- ployes voted tonight to delay a threatened strike until a referendum of members of their AFL union may be taken. The action was completed at a mass meeting within five hours of a 4 a.m. deadline for the tie-up of municipal transportation and other facilities. Arthur M. Stringari,, business agent of the union, urged the delay after receiving a telegram from Undersec- retary of war Robert F. Patterson which stated: "A strike on your part would im- peril Detroit production of planes, tanks and guns desperately needed in the- conduct of the war, delay in the receipt of which may cost many lives. Under these circumstances I expect you to settle your dispute by negotiations, mediation or arbitra- tion, resorting to the War Labor Board if necessary." Stringari also read the members a telegram from Dr. Arnold Zander, president 'of .the Union of State, County and Municipal Employes-- AFL. Zander, too, asked that a walk- out be deferred. Detroit's 4,000 police had been placed on emergency duty pending the outcome of the mass meeting. A strike had been voted last Sunday over objections of International Un- ion officials who claim 15,000 of the city's 37,000 employes as members. SovieL Ski Troops Attack Nazi Flanks MOSCOW, Jan. 22.-(A)--German armies floundering back along Na- poleon's road of retreat from Moscow were harried tonight by Russian ski troops that skimmed the snow-drifts on fast, propeller-driven sleds and struck fiercely at their flanks. Riding waist-deep snow in front of roaring plane engines, the far-flung Russian vanguards were reported to have intercepted the Germans west of the Napoleonic battlefields of Bor- odino and, with their light arms, to have spread terror and confusion along the enemy's difficult line of communication. The old Borodino battlefield lies a dozen miles west of Mozeheisk, which was the point of the German's main frontal salient aimed at Moscow. The Germans were in retreat toward Vy- azma, about 60 airline miles farther west. day" plan for the purchase of govern- ment defense bonds. With today's drive only an intro- duction, defense savings stations will be set up next semester in the Union, the League, the Library, and Uni- INSTRUCTIONS TO DEFENSE-STAMP SALESMEN Students working on the first shift should report to Room 2, Un- versiiy hall for tags, stamps and albums. These articles will be re- turned to the same room between 4:15 and 4:30 p.m. by the last shift. Each new shift is to check totals with members of the outgoing shift. No salesman should leave his post. Additional albums will be brought to every station. Fraternity, dormitory and soror- ity representatives should return albums and money collected to Room 2 University Hall today from 9 to 10 a.m. A full list of salesmen and their psts appears on Page 6 of today's Daily. versity Hall. It is now possible to buy stamps at the University Busi- ness Office or at any bank or post- office. The drive will be continued tomor- row in downtown Ann Arbor by the Junior Chamber of Commerce which has already placed this city first in amount of stamps bought per resi- dent in the entire country. Local merchants and University cashiers will take up the drive under the slo- gan "Take part of your change in defense stamps." 'World Famed String Quartet To Play T loday Feri Roth Chamber Group To Give Three Recitals i Rackham Auditorium Feri Roth will bring his world- famous string quartet to Ann Arbor today for the Second Annual Chain- ber Musical Festival. The first concert of the festival is at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Auditorium with others to follow at 2:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the same auditorium. The Roth String Quartet is head- ed by Roth, who plays the first vio- lin. Also in the group are Rach- mael Weinstock, second violinist, Julius Shaier, violist, and Oliver Ed- e, 'cellist, Roy Harris, noted American com- poser, will be in the audience Satur- day evening to hear his own composi- tion. Four Preludes and Fugues, which is included in the program. The complete program for the con- cert series is as follows: 8:30 P.M. Today Quartet in D major, O. 76, No. 5, Haydn Quartet in V by Ravel, Quartet in A minor, O. 41 No 1, by Schumann 2:30 P.M1 Tomorrow Quartet in D major, Op. 11, by Tschaikowsky. "Rispetti Strambotti" by Malipiero, Quartet in G minor, Op. 33 No. 5 by Boccherini. 8:30 P.M. Tomorrow Quartet in D major by Mozart. Four Preludes and Fugues by Roy Harris Quartet in F major, Op. 135, by Beethoven. No Refunds To Be Made On Contracts Rental In Rooming Houses May Not Be Returned Under Semesterial Plan Dorms Will Adjust Payment On Board Students who have signed rooming house contracts upon the University- suggested semesterial pattern are apparently without grounds to secure any rent money refunds occasioned by the shortened school year. Although the University-printed rooming house contracts provide for the payment of rent by semesters, many householders have struck out The following statement in yes- terday's Daily was accidentally at- tributed to Dr. Karl Litzenberg, director of University residence halls. It should have been attribu- ted to Dean C. T. Olmstead, super- visor of University-approved room- ing houses: "We cannot tell the landladies to make (rental) adjustments as the University is not giving any in the dormitories." Neither Dr. Litzenberg nor Dean Olmstead made the statement that: "... we hope that some landladies will voluntarily make any necessary refunds." the semesterial clause and have sub- stituted provisions for payment upon a weekly basis. Therefore, students with a weekly contract will lose no money. On the other hand, students signed to semester payments in rooming houses will be paying for two weeks lodging which they will not receive, as each semester has been shortened by one week. Despite the fact that the acceler- ated calendar wil graduate seniors three weeks early this May, Univer- sity students will be on campus only one week less than under the old schedule during the Spring semester. The resumption of classes one week early and the omission of Spring Va- cation cut two weeks from the three- week-early graduation. There will be no refund of rent money in the dormitories, Dr. Karl Litzenberg, director of the University residence halls said yesterday. The Board of Governors of the University residence halls has always computed room rent upon an annual contract of two semesters. According to Dr. Litzenberg, a per- diem refund will be made on meals served in all dormitories. This will entitle residents to a refund of ap- proximately $7, Crisler Given New Positlin By War Board The University took another big step Tuesday in its attempt to aid in the nation's defense program when the War Board announced the ap- pointment of Michigan's Athletic Di- rector, Fritz Crisler, as chairman of a Physical Education and Public Health Committee. Crisler, who recently returned from a football coaches' meeting in Phoe- nix, Ariz., immediately took active steps in appointing members and organizing plans of the committee so as to increase the value of the Phys- ical Education and Public Health Departments in the present crisis. The plans of the committee are to make a study of present conditions, take an inventory of all equipment and buildings and to make recom- mendations for future undertakings. Crisler pointed out, "We have one of the most elaborate athletic pro- grams in the country, and certainly we are lacking nothing in equipment, "As far as new undertakings are concerned, I am in favor of compul- sory physical education for the en- tire four years that the boys are in college. Proper physical condition is a prime requisite for all those en- gaged in the war effort. "I would like to see further enmpha= sis on all intramural sports." it's All Very SiMple- At Least So They Say 200,000 Japanese ir3 Enemy Pounds U.S. Lines In Attempt To Conquer By Force Of Numbers MacArthur Faces T 'eine ii(dons Odds WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.-UP)-The Japanese, with 200,000 troops on Lu- zon and reinforcements still arriving, today directed hammer blows at Gen- eral Douglas MacArthur's army in an apparent attempt to crush it by sheer numbers. Reporting that enemy attacks were being intensified all along the nar- row front on Batan Peninsula, the War Department said that the entire Japanese 14th army and other units had now been massed on the island of Luzon. Commanded by bulky, English- speaking Lieut. Gen. Masaharu Hom- ma, the force included possibly ,ten divisions and auxiliary troops num- bering altogether 200,000 or more men. Only in the drive on Singapore are larger enemy forces being em- ployed, observers believed. Bombers Raid Cebu A raid by 17 bombers on Cebu, the Philippines' second city, which was reported at the same time, suggested enemy intent to occupy other island areas which thus far have escaped invasion. Cebu, about 150 miles south of Lu- zon on the island of Cebu, has been a major link in communications be- tween the United States and unoccu- pied sections of the Philippines. Whether radio facilities there were damaged or put out of commission by the raid, which took place Sun- day, was not disclosed by the War Department. The sombre picture in the China Sea area was lightened somewhat by a report from a high government of- ficial that since Dec. 7 a stream of reinforcements had been started to the southwest Pacific, while, mean- time, defenses on Hawaii and the United States Pacific coast had been made stronger than ever before. The temporary advantage in naval strength that Japan gained by treachery was declared to have been largely offset by the mounting pro- duction and use of American long range bombers. Whether the rein- forcements were other than aerial was left unsaid. Reinforcements Landed In the morning communique, the War Department said particularly heavy fighting had developed along the left flank and center of General MacArthur's line, now believed to be about 25 miles north of the fort- ress of Corregidor. Enemy reinforce- ments were said to be landing both at nearby Subic Bay and farther north on Lingayen Gulf Repulsed in earlier attempts to turn the right flank of the little American-Filipino army and batter it southward along the single high- way leading to Corregidor, the Jap- anese are making their new efforts to advance in exceptionally rugged jungle country. General MacArthur's left flank ex- tends to the Batan Peninsula coast only a few miles from Binanga Bay, scene of a daring motor torpedo boat attack on a Japanese ship. Health Service Makes Appeal ForFacilities A new outbreak of German meas- les which struck 13 students yester- day, has overtaxed the facilities of Health Service and the Contagious Ward of the University Hosital and has resulted in an appeal for aid. Any landlady with a number of empty rooms and facilities for feed- ing patients is asked to get in touch with Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, direc- tor of Health Service. Students exposed during the first outbreak, which occurred immedi- ately after Christmas Vacation and reached a high water mark of 27 patients in the first week of school, are now coming down with the highly, contagious disease. German measles requires from two to three weeks to develop but takes only three days to run its course, and is often not even as serious as some bad colds. The current crop started off slowly with only two cases reported Tues- day and three on Wednesday, but yesterday the Health Service received 13 more patients which overcrowded the contagious section of the Service and University Hospital's Contagious Ward-both already well filled with more serious cases Rio Conclave Is Deadlocked By Argentina New Difficulties Attributed To Resentment Aroused By Words Of Connally RIO DE JANEIRO, Jan. 22.--- Argentina deadlocked the Pan-Amer- ican conference again tonight with efforts to weaken still more the al- ready revised resolution calling for an eventual diplomatic rupture with the Axis, and some observers attribu- ted these new difficulties to Argen- tine resentment over Senator Con- nally's remarks yesterday in Wash- ington, Political leaders here said that Ar- gentina apparently had swung into line last night about the time the U. S. Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee head declared "We are trust- ing that Castillo (acting President of Argentina) will change his mind, or that the Argentine people will change their President." Connally's statement had followed one by Castillo in which the Acting President in Buenos Aires declared. that, "right or wrong," Argentina would not modify her opposition to the rupture resolution. rn Buenos Aires tonight, Castillo, in another published interview de- clared that Argentina was " in soli- darity with the American nations, but we do not agree that an attack on one of the nations of America signifies that all others take the posi- tion of belligerency." Marines Reported Landing On New Britain; Harbor Installations Destroyed Counter-Offensive Started In Malaya (By The Associated Press) MELBOURNE, Australia, Fri., Jan. 23.-Japanese marines, in their first invasion of Australian territory, were believed today to have landed on New Britain Island 800 miles off the northern mainland after a withdraw- ing garrison fired and dynamited dock installations at Rabaul, its capi- tal. A radio flash from Rabaul at 4 p.m. yesterday (1 a.m. EST) said that eleven Japanese vessels including warships had been sighted 45 miles offshore bearing down on the island. That was the last word from Ra- baul which had undergone two heavy Japanese air attacks during the day. Town Is Evacuated An Australian army bulletin issued last night said: "It is considered that the stations were demolished by our forces and it is probable that the town has been evacuated. "It is not known presently whether any Japanese forces have attempted to land." The communique said the eleven Japanese ships were seen 30 miles off Watom Island, which is 15 miles northwest of Rabaul in St. George's Channel between New Britain and New Ireland, both Australian man dates in the Bismarck Archipelago. (The London radio also reported that three Japanese aircraft carriers had been sighted off New Guinea, the British and Dutch mandated island lying west of New Britain on the road to the Netherlands East Indies.) Australia Electrified For two days officials had warned that heavy Japanese air raids on both New Britain and New Guinea were the prelude to invasion, but last night's announcement electrified Australia. While newspapers cried out for Al- lied air reinforcements, defense offi- cials planned to blackout all cities on the mainland, and also began accepting enlistments from resident aliens-Germans, Austrians, Danes, Italians and Czechs. Counter-Offensive Started In Malaya SINGAPORE, Jan. 22.--(P)-The British Imperial line northwest of Singapore lunged out today in what appeared to be the first strong coun- ter-offensive yet launched by the de- fenders, and reinforcements of Huf- ricane fighters went into action to shorten the ratio of the enemy's aerial superiority. British, Australian and Indian troops, covered in their initial ad- vance by heavy artillery fire, were engaged in a great and perhaps de- cisive struggle with the bulk of te invading forces in the rough Bukit Payong hill area above Batu Pahat in western Malaya-a wild battle ground 70 miles above Singapore itself, This strong counter-thrust, which was planned by general officers in a war council held under the shade of the rubber trees, was intended to solidify the western British anchor in northern Johore State and to rescue the survivors of two Australian bat- talions and one Indian battalion which had been isolated just to the north below the Muar River. It was accompanied by new fight- ing on the eastern end of the front -also in an area about 70 miles north of this base--below the port of Endau. II 'WINDY"I Mass For New Drive On Batan; Invade Australian Island Blitzkreig Threatens 'Ensian: Prof Has To Shovel Way Out: V-7 Math Work 'or Lawyers' Is Requested Other Stidents "JA~ma ui~A -9-.3ul NRk For Yearbook Staff At May By CHARLOTTE CONOVER cluding the intense work du DlPM and Donald Nelson may think spring vacation, will give sophs they are rushed but they have no- second-semester freshmen an ur thing on t Fe 'Ensian! ual opportunity to rise quickly on Blitzkreig, dive bombers and pan- 'Ensian ladder. zer divisions have really hit home at Besides the two senior and e the 'Ensian staff, and a desperate junior positions on the editorial st struggle against time is on; because all salaried, there are freshman now that Hitler and the Japs have sophomore tryouts, each of which struck, yearbook workers find them- ceive a complimentary copy of selves with a May 1 deadline to meet. book. The call is out to all sophomores Each member of the junior s and second semester freshmen to has entire charge of one sectior rally to the colors and help the 'En- the yearbook, and the senior st 1 ring and nus- the ight taff, and re- the taff n of taff, I've been snowed under" And thus, in the words of :Prof. H. 1 H. Goldstine of the mathematics de- partment, is described the response to the recent University offer to ar- range special math courses to en- able law students to qualify for the Navy's V-7 classification. But more interesting, according to Professor Goldstine, is the fact that only part of the students he has in- terviewed have been law students, the remainder coming from the lit- erary college, the College of Phar- macy, the education school and even the School of Music. As administrator for the program degree, Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Law School pointed out." V-7 requirementsdstate that the applicant be credited with two one- semester courses in mathematics of college grade. A number of programs, varying with the amount of previous mathematics credited the applicant, have hence been drawn up. It will be necessary for each stu- dent wishing to pursue this program to consult Professor Goldstine be- tween 2 and 4 p.m. today, the last day of interviewing, in Room 20A, East Hall, in order that the specific course open to the applicant may be determined. 1 a Don't fret, my pretty Theta Don't fret and I I I