Weather No Expectc Change. Icv atti Editorial Democracy Ended In Argentinaa VOL. LI. No. 108 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Wavell Ousted As Far East Commander 'S. Army Stream lin edAs Heavy Offensive Is Seen I I Roosevelt Orders Sweeping Alterations Patterned After German Machine E Huge Fleet U.S. Forces Speed-Up In Preparation; Will Take Initiative Against Axis WASHINGTON, March 2-(A)- President Roosevelt ordered a sweeping streamlining of the entire War Department today, giving the Army Air Forces .full equality with the combined ground arms. After the German model, military functions were grouped into three basic units, the Army Ground For- ces, Army Air Forces and the Serv- ices of Supply, each with its own commander under the Chief of Staff. Involving a general revamping of cumbersome peace-time machin- ery set up two decades ago, the President's Executive Order was made effective March 9 for the duration of the war and for six months thereafter. It abolished Berlin Claims SoVietS Mass T'itanie Army 'Unheard Of Forces' Are Moving Up Behind Red Lines For Heavy Action Russians Advance In Repeated Waves ---BULLETIN - BERN, Switzerland, March 2.-(P) -The Russians are massing "almost unheard of forces" all along the front for what is believed to be a large- scale attack, reports originating in official Berlin quarters said tonight. German planes were said to have observed great columns of fresh So- viet troops and, enormous supply trains moving up behind the Red Army's advance lines. At, some points, Russian attacks already were under way and these were described by German military spokesmen as "on a scale not reached hitherto in the war." The Berlin correspondent of the Zurich newspaper Die Tat quoted re- ports from advance sectors saying Russian troops were attacking Ger- man positions in 40 or 50 successive waves, and that these soldiers showed no hesitation, regardless of the cost. He said the Soviet Siberian units admittedly were demonstrating "al- most unbelievable subbornness." No More Doubt "There can no longer be any doubt," he wrote, "that the Soviets are massing all their forces in men and materil for a fantastic effort to bring about a decision." The Russians reported tonight they were steadily frustrating air-borne attempts to supply the German army trapped in the Staraya Russa sector, were enlarging their free zone around Leningrad 140 miles to the north, and were mounting a new attack on Kharkov in the south. The fact that the Germans are so persistently attempting to supply the encircled 16th Army at Staraya Rus- sa by air was interpreted as an in- dication that the 96,000 men there were in increasingly desperate straits. Free French Rule On Pacific Islands Given Recognition LONDON, March 2. - (0P) - The United States is cooperating in the defense of strategic French islands along the Pacific route to New Zea- land and Australia and for this pur- pose has accorded partial recognition to the Free French regime which controls them, it was announced to- day. bureaus and commands of a half dozen or more generals. Secretary of War Stimson de- scribed the move as a "striking revitalization and sweeping reor- ganization of the entire War De- partment," to help win the war. Existing staff procedure was "too cumbersome," he said. General George C. Marshall re- mains as Chief of Staff and Lieut.- Gen. H. H. Arnold as Chief of the Air Forces. To command the newly- formed Ground Forces, Lieut.-Gen. Lesley J. McNair was shifted from Chief of Staff of Army General Headquarters. Maj.-Gen. Brehon B. Somervell, now Assistant Chief of Staff in Charge of Supply, was given comand of the new Services of Supply. A "small, alert, compact, air- (Continued on Page 6) War Education Should Insure Peace Is Won Lindeman Asks Four-Fold Program For Promotion Of American Ideals The task of education in this war is to insure that the peace is not lost, Prof. Eduard- C. Lindeman, of the New York School of Social Work, Columbia University, declared yester- day before an Ann Arbor High School auditorium ieeture 'audience. Speaking under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Teachers' Club, Professor Lindeman called upon education to undertake the four-fold program of interpreting the ends and means of the war, preserving American cul- ture, determining the roots of Amer- ican ideals and keeping people work- ing on some of the "unfinished ob- jectives of our democratic agenda," such as the extirpation of racial in- tolerance and political intolerance. The present war was described by Lindeman as symptomatic of a revo- lution which grew out of the failure of our economic system to keep the majority of the people living within sight of poverty. "This revolution is on behalf of the standard of living. It will go on until we have broken the vicious cycle which maintains pov- erty." He gave the audience a grim pic- ture of the American people, who, he declared, "are not yet in this war." He scored complacency with the warning: "We are in mortal danger. We can lose in both ways; we can lose the war and become enslaved, or we can win the war and lose the objectives for which it was fought." Threatens Java Base U.S., Dutch, British Forces Counter-Attack Fiercely Despite Critical Situation Enemy Is Unable To Add To Gains. -BULLETIN LONDON, Tuesday, March 3.- (/P)-Dispatches from Batavia said today that a huge new Japanese invasion armada was bearing down upon Java and was being met by continuous relays of U. S. flying fortresses and other Allied bomb- ers. The reports said that the orig- inal Japanese invasion fleet con- sisted of 140 ships of which 50 were able to land troops Saturday. Thus the others which now are returning are believed to consist of from 70 to 80 ships, despite the casualties already inflicted on the enemy vessels. Many Japanese warships were said to be accompanying the new stream of troop and supply ships. BANDOENG, Java., March 2.-(P) - Dutch, American and British troops, in a great comradeshipof arms, struck out together against the Japanese invader tonight in strong, widespread counter-attacks which a guarded official summary declared had "developed satisfactorily," criti- cal though the situation remained. There was no evidence shortly be- fore midnight of any new Japanese landing, or of the approach of new invasion trains; the enemy, though holding vital areas of this island, had not in 48 hours been able to add an- other to his three initial beachheads. Vital Installations Destroyed In Batavia, the island capital, vi- tal installations were destroyed-but only against distant possibilities. An official bulletin at 10:30 p.m. (noon EWT) thus summed up the situation at the hour of supreme cri- sis: "From well-informed circles it ist heard that action against the Japa- nese invasion troops had developed satisfactorily. Although in connec- tion with the character of the opera- tions no details can be published it can be said that the enemy received fair hits. "Up to now, there is no informa- tion received about fifth column ac- tivities, while everywhere our troops are going to meet the Japanese and are enthusiastically welcomed." 1 i ,. -' I By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, March 2.-(A>)- The Navy's top ,Admiral and the Army's ranking General disclosed today that the American armed forces are working with all possible speed to carry the war to the Axis enemies in a grand offensive in Asia, Africa and Europe. Preliminary to the start of this offensive, it was said, the Navy is engaged in keeping open supply lines to the major theatres, of op- eration and at the same time har- assing and weakening the enemy wherever he may be found. The Army, in cooperation with the Navy, has been transporting thousands of troops and vast quan- tities of weapons and supplies to war zones for the battles of tomor- row, even while its initial troops are in combat fight in the Netherlands Indies and'the Philippines. The overall picture of U. S. grand strategy came from Admiral Ernest J. King, Commander-in-Chief of the fleet, and General George C. Marshall, Army Chief of Staff. To some extent, at least, their separate statements seemed de- signed to answer demands in Con- gress and elsewhere that American forces be concentrated in defense of home shores and waters, where numerous submarine attacks have occurred and air attacks are deemed likely. General Marshall, in fact, warn- ed against thus immobilizing strik- ing power. "The time has now come," he declared in a letter to Senator Austin (Rep.-Vt.), "when we must proceed with the business of carrying the war to the enemy and not permit the greater portion of our armed forces and our valu- able material to be immobilized within the continental United States." Given India Post In Poliical Move Japs Expected To Resume Offensives 'At Any Moment' Against Rangoon After Being Halted At Sittang River WASHINGTON, March 2.-(M)--The War and Navy Departments an- nounced jointly tonight that Gen.hSir Archibald Wavell has been relieved as United Nations Commander in the Netherlands East Indies, and that his command has been taken over by the Dutch. With the approval of King George, the announcement said, Wavell has returned to his previous duties as Commander-in-Chief in India, which now includes responsibility for operations in Burma and cooperation with China. The text of the brief announcement said: "1-After the loss of Malaya and the entry of the Japanese into Suma- tra, which separated Burma from the Netherlands East Indies, it was agreed that command of land, sea and air forces of the United Nations in the Neth- erlands East Indies should pass to the Dutch, who are continuing to receive all available assistance from the United Nations. "2-With the approval of His Majesty the King, General Wavell is re- suming his appointment as Commander-in-Chief, India, which now includes Detroit Race Riot At Housing Project This demonstrator (center) held his ground when police used tear gas to dispel a Negro crowd that menaced white pickets of a million- dollar defense housing project in Detroit intended for Negro occupancy. Several were injured in the fighting, causing occupancy to be post- poned indefinitely. "Bomber-Scholarship'Plan Gets Ruthven' s Stamp Of Approval Proposal Of Campus Committee For Mobilization Of University's Social Calendar Gains Favor responsibility for operations in Bur- ma, and close cooperation with China. "3-There is no change in the present arrangements for the general coordination of strategic policy in the war against Japan." Dominion Status For India The transfer of Wavell from ~the United Nations Command in the Southwest Pacific back to his form- er postas Commander-in-Chief in India may be the forerunner of a British offer of dominion status to India, well-informed London sources said today. This offer might be forthcoming within the next three days, these in- formants said, and therefore the shift, announced simultaneously here, and in Washington, was dictated by political considerations. With the Japanese beating close to India's borders in Burma, it was pointed out that the sprawling do- main must be protected by a topflight soldier. Wavell's job in India will be to take what the British expect will be an upsurge of national feeling on the news of the offer of dominion status and to weld it into a fighting army. India Last Base To many Britons India is the last great operating base of empire and Wavell is just the man to take over the big task there. Apparent to most observers in Lon- don today was the fact that the Brit- ish, outmanned but not outfought, had only a slim chance of holding Rangoon, the fire-blackened Burm- ese capital. Jap Push Against India, Rangoon Expected Soon LONDON, March 2.--()-Battered in the air and held to the east bank of the blood-tinged Sittang River on the ground, the Japanese invaders of Burma nevertheless are expected to renew their westwardrattack toward Rangoon and India at any moment, military observers declared tonight. Communiques from the British de- fenders reported that two Japanese patrols on the east bank of the Sit- tang above Pegu had been ambushed and killed or captured to the last man and that the remainder of the 100-mile front was quiet. Pegu is a rail junction 30 miles northeast of Rangoon and a link in the now al- most useless supply route to China. House Grants Giant Military Ap propria 0tion Passage Follows Earlier Senate Action-,Biggest Money Bill In History WASHINGTON, March 2.--()- Congress, spurred by word from the Army high command that "the time has now come when we must proceed with the business of carrying the war to the enemy," gave swift ap- proval today to a $32,767,737,900 mil- itary appropriation, largest in world history. The big money bill was sent to President Roosevelt when the House unanimously, and without debate, approved Senate amendments which increased the over-all total. Senate Passed Measure The Senate had passed the mea- sure unanimously a little earlier af- ter hearing Senator Austin of Ver- mont, the assistant Republican lead- er, make a plea for national unity in the course of which he read a letter from- General George C. Marshall, the Army Chief of Staff. Declaring that the War Depart- ment had been "deluged" with de- mands for the employment of com- bat troops to guard inland as well as coastal communities and installa- tions, Marshall said the Army could not afford to -disperse its forces in this way. 'Time Has Come' "The time has now come," he deg clared, "when we must proceed with the business of carrying the war to the enemy and not permitting the greater portion of our arihed force and our valuable material to be im- mobilized within continental United States." General Marshall said the enemy undoubtedly was counting on public reaction to submarine warfare close to the American shores to restrain the United States from engaging its planes and ground troops offensively in distant theatres. There will be a meeting of the Student Senate at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. Room number willI be posted on the bulletin board. About As Usual: Purdue Outlasts Cagers, 52-41; Spartan Mermen Beaten, 59-2 5 By DICK SIMON Michigan's basketball charges play- ed their best game of the year last night in Yost Field House, but just couldn't match Purdue's sharp-shoot- ing quintet and lost the season's finale, 52-41. But the real story of the game doesn't lie in the score because the Wolverines, playing inspired ball, out- shot and outplayed the Boilermaker quintet for three quarters of the con- test, only to have thekinvaders put on a sensational attack in the final 13 minutes and pull the game out of the fire. The Wolverine spark was ignited by diminutive Don Holman, playing his last game for the Maize and Blue, when he sank two one-hand push shots to put Michigan in the lead 6-2 before the game was only two minutes old. The Detroit senior kept popping in his one handers all dur- ing the first half and helped push the Michigan team to a 28-22 lead at half time. By BUD HENDEL (special to The Daily) EAST LANSING, March 2.-Ad- miral Matt Mann, digging deeper and deeper into his watery bag of tricks, came up with some new combinations as his titleholding Michigan swim- ming team powered its way to its most lopsided win of the season, de- feating a hapless Michigan State crew by a score of 59-25 here tonight. The wily Wolverine mentor switch- ed his lineup in the opening 300 yard medley relay, and continued to enter surprises in almost every ensuing race as the Wolverines captured all but one first place and broke two dual meet marks. Mann used Capt. Dobby Burton as anchor man on the medley relay team in place of Gus Sharemet, put Gus in the 50 yard freestyle in place of Burton and shoved senior Art Dob- son in as the Great Gusto's running mate. Then, to further confuse the 500-odd spectators, the Maize and I 1 7 l A 1 7 E 1 1 l t i 1 f f By DAN BEHRMAN The "bomber - scholarship" plan, launched last week by a representa- tive campus committee, gained fur- ther momentum yesterday when President Alexander Ruthven gave it his stamp of approval. "If any funds can be raised for the purpose," Dr. Ruthven declared in discussing the proposal for aid to student World War II veterans, "they certainly can be used effectively after the war." Under the chairmanship of Art Rude, '42, leader of Lincoln Coop- erative's "bomber-scholarship" party held Feb. 20, the committee proposes social mobilization of the University. Contributions aimed at a $100,000 goal from campus parties would be turned over to the government in re- turn for defense bonds. The contributions' immediate use will be the placing of a U. S. Army bomber over Axis forces. After the war, revenue from the defense bonds will be turned into scholarships for qualified student servicement desir- ing to continue their studies. Adding his own O.K. to official University approval of the plan, Dean Joseph A. Bursely told The Daily yes- terday that "the idea is excellent." It gives the government the use of the money now," Dean Bursely point- Frosh Frolic.. . Frosh Frolic tickets will con- ed out, "and it gives returning stu- dents use of the money later on. I hope it gets the whole-hearted sup- port of both organizations and indi- viduals on campus." Precedent for the plan was found by Assistant Dean Walter B. Rea in (Continued on Page 6) Air Cadet Rally Set ForToday Draft Deferment Granted Wolverine Squadron With the announcement yesterday that no "Wolverine Squadron" mem- ber would be eligible for the draft or forced to leave school before the end of this semester, the Washtenaw County Air Force Sponsors Associa- tion will hold an open rally today in the Union's Room 302. Featured speakers on the program, open to any and all interested in joining the nation's air forces, will be Major Floyd Showalter-president of the Army traveling cadet examin- ing board-and the board's public re- lations officer, Lieut. George Comte. According to W. M. Strickland, chairman of the sponsors association, Washtenaw County enlistments have fallen short of its quota of 13 pilots Pianist To Give Concert Today; Mozart's 'Impresario' To Open Vitya Vronsky and Victor Babin, the brilliant piano team, will present their two piano interpretations of musical compositions in a Choral Union concert at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. The two young pianists, who have successfully combined marriage and career, will be playing in their first concert in Ann Arbor. Not only do their musicianship and technical skill inspire enthusiasm in listeners, but their artistry in enlarg- ing or reducing the tonal frame of "One night of song" under the com- bined auspices of Play Production of the Department of Speech and the School of Music will be presented at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow through Satur- day in the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. "The "Impresario" by Johann Wolf- gang Mozart will open the evening. The four soloists will be Robert Hol- land, '44L, the Impresario (suppos- edly Mozart himself); Donald Plott, '44SM, Buffo; Marjorie Gould, '44SM, Mrs. Heartfelt, and Roberta Murno