Wveather Warmer. i t4311 4a i4 IIIIIAA®MA' AAMAlI-,-I Editorial Vichy 'Trade' Climaxes U.S. Appeasement.. VOL. LII No. 115 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Senate Scraps Spring Parley For Post-War Council's Plan Influential Organizations Join New Movement; Faculty Advisory Body Is Headed By Ruthven Huge April Meeting To Begin Pro gram The Spring Parley, a six-year old tradition, went the way of silk stock- ings and pleasure car tires last night as the Student Senate voted 13-6 to abandon Its own annual discussion forum and back an all-campus pro- gram proposed by the Michigan Post- War Council. In approving this plan for bringing post-war questions to the forum of student opinion, senators joined a fast-growing list of major campus organizations and University author- ities who have already registered their support. Student Support Student groups represented on the council's executive committee now include the Senate, Congress, Inter- cooperative Council, The Daily, In- terfraternity Council, Panhellenic Council, and the Student League of America. The Council's advisory committee in its present form is composed of President Alexander Ruthven, Prof. Harlow J. Heneman of the War Board, Prof. Arthur Smithies of the economics department and Prof. James J. Pollock of the Department1 of Political Science. Proposed by Don O'Connor, '42, the3 parley-killing resolution met little Figures In New Navy Streamlining British Escape Jap Burma Trap In Drive To Merge With hinese; Axis Primes For Spring Attacks v /2. This picture was taken on the steps of the White House after a con- ference at which Admiral Ernest J. King, Commander-in-Chief of the United States Fleet (left), was named Chief of Naval Operations. Admiral Harold R. Stark, (right) received a new post, that of Com- mander of U.S. Naval forces operating in European waters. Between them is Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox. 24-Hour Day, Seven-Day Week ould Double Output -INelson Declares Fullest Utilization Of Productive Capacity Is Needed For Victory WASHINGTON, March 10.-RP)- Donald M. Nelson declared tonight that this country's output of military supplies could be doubled if all exist- ing war production machinery were used 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Unless production is brought to victorious levels, the War Production Board chairman warned in an ad- dress to the nation, neither manage- ment nor labor "could survive the public wrath should that wrath be turned against them; nor could we here on the War Production Board." Nelson said he had become con- All members of the Student Sen- ate planning to attend the Senate luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Saturday in the Union should inform Secre- tary Martha Kinsey. opposition on the Senate .floor., O'Connor stressed the need for stimu- lating discussion on post war issues because "there is little difficulty in creating interest in more immediate problems." "This council is a permanent or- ganization to give students a ineans of complete expression on the most important thing they'll ever face- the problem of attaining a decent post-war world order," O'Connor de- clared. - As~butlined at last night's session, the Post War Council's plan calls for a huge all-campus meeting during the second or third week of next month. Outstanding men in labor, agriculture, business and govern- ment will take part in this program. Speakers Bureau Approved The Student Senate also voted unanimous support to the plan of Senator Max Pearce, '43, initiator of the proposed "speakers' bureau." Yesterday's vote authorized represen- tatives of speech classes to select speakers. This move is aimed at fulfilling the need of local civic groups for lecturers, and would also make for closer relations between the Univer- sity and local communities, accord- ing to Pearce. Before adjourning its weekly ses- sion, the Senate heard a proposal for election procedure revision brought up by Harold Klein, '42. Klein out- lined a plan for adjusting the Sen- ate to a three-semester basis and also advocated changes in election count methods. Elliott Will Discuss Students' Situation In Areas Of War "Students in War Areas" will be discussed by Roland Elliott, executive secretary of the National Council, Student Christian Associations, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Rackham Building in the third Student Relig- ious Association lecture. Mr. Elliott recently returned 'from a trip to Europe, undertaken in re- sponse to a cabled invitation from people wno are working against odds for student relief in countries domi- nated by Germany. From his European study, he has reported an increasing lack of confi- dente in Hitler, "whose policy of re- prisals have outraged the army." Mr. Elliott discovered two points T''Admission Basis Avoids Aptitude Test, Countering a Chicago educator'sJ recent prediction, University authori- ties regstered their conviction yester- day that "Michigan is not among those colleges and universities ready to change their entrance require- ments so that aptitude, rather than secondary school grades, may be con- sidered 'the most important factor' hl admission." Dr. William E. Scott, assistant Dean of Students at the University of Chicago, asserted Sunday that "most American colleges are ready to make the change," in accord with recommendations made after an eight-year study by the Commission on the Relation of School and Col- lege. Dean Erich A. Walter, acknowledg- ing his hope that funds would per - mit fuller investigation and use of aptitude findings, nevertheless de- clared: "The high school, when it offers the traditional curriculum and when it is staffed with capable teachers, remains a sound proving-ground for entrance to the University. "In preparing for such professions as medicine it is absolutely essential for the student to bring to the Uni- versity a strong foundation in math- ematics. To postpone such a prepar- ation until he arrives in the Univer- sity may well mean a loss of valuable time, even when the student shows a marked aptitude for the profes- sion." Dean Walter expressed his belief that "the four-year preparatory cur- riculum, as it is offered by stronger high schools throughout the country, gives the student a beneficial disci- pline, easing his adjustment to the work-load he must assume at col- lege." Craig Will Lecture On Philipp i Film Capt. John D. Craig's complete documentary film of the Philippines caused little fuss when it was pro- vinced of the depth of the public de- mand for all-out production from a flood of telegrams and letters re- ceived after his broadcast last week demanding a 25 per cent production upturn. Tonight's second address was prepared for broadcast over the Mu- tual Network. The production chief mentioned two ways of arriving at the necessary production level "the American way" and "the way of bondage, of force." "If, therefore, we are to achieve victory for the ideals we free men have always loved," he continued, "then we on the production lines must abandon every other considera- tion except increasing production and increasing it every day. If we fail in that, we -shall',burn in the flanes o a public wrath so intense that in its heat it might consume the very standards we have set for free men to live by." "When I say we can increase pro- duction substantially by greater use of existing machinery," the WPB chairman said, "I am thinking of the 20 per cent of war plants operating only 5 or 51 days a week. I am thinking of the many plants closed Sundays. I have in mind the second shifts using only 40 per cent of plant Turn To Page 2, Col. 1 Old 'Majestic' To Close Soon The Majestic, at one time the fin- est theatre in the city, will close its doors for an indefinite length of time following the 9 p.m. show Tuesday. Giving way to the new, ultra-mod- ern State Theatre which opens on the following day, the Majestic brings to an end a 34-year life characterized by some of the greatest stage and screen attractions of all time. Just how long the theatre will re- main closed has not been decided, ac- cording to Larry Mull, manager of both the Majestic and the State. If some way of making it conform to Ann Arbor building regulations can be found it may be opened in the near future. The grand opening of the State brings to a close the long fight against priority and construction dif- ficulties. It is not yet known what will be the first picture in the new theatre. Hitler Changes Strategy To Russian Offensive As Reservists Get Call Sub Sinks Tanker Off New Jersey LONDON, March 10.-(IP)-Haunt- ed by the muddy spectre of spring thaws and fearful that a Soviet push from Leningrad might penetrate Ger- man soil, Adolf Hitler was reported today to be calling up his ultimate reserves for an all-or-nothing offen- sive in Russia as soon as possible. (An Associated Press dispatch from Bern, Switzerland, late last night stated that a German mobili- zation of the entire Axis manpower for a gigantic spring offensive was under way. (In Germany itself, virtually all men able to carry arms are already in the army, but the recent visit of Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel to Hungary and Slovakia is beginning to bear results in the form of ap- proximately 1,500,000 troops.) Reliable sources described as "al- most certainly accurate" confidential advices that the Nazi Fuehrer had abandoned earlier plans for a de- fensive campaign in the North while concentrating on a big drive in the South. Instead, they said, he evidently had determined on attacking all along the line. This was said to be due to his fear that defeat of a defensive force on the Leningrad front would let the Red Army into the Baltic states, be- hind the German Army and with a clear path to invade Germany itself. Red Army successes around Star- aya Russa and a weakening of the Finnish jforces were- said to have raised this fear. A dispatch from a Swedish corre- spondent in Berlin said that early thaws in the south already had bog- ged down the fighting on the Kerch Peninsula and in the Donets Basin. Tanker Sunk Off New Jersey NEW YORK, March 10.-()-An Axis submarine torpedoed the 6,766- ton Gulf oil tanker Gulftrade at 12:40 a.m. today only a few miles off Barnegat, N.. J., in the closest ap- proach undersea raiders have yet made to the eastern American coast. Survivors were reported to have landed at New York City. Third Naval District Headquarters, announcing the sinking, said 16 of the 35-man crew were rescued by coast guard boats and landed at Tompkinsville, Staten Island. The Navy said the torpedo split the 22-year-old tanker in two, 60 miles from New York City. She was bound, fully loaded, from a southern port to New York. Capt. Torger Olsen, 56, of Port Ar- thur, Tex., a survivor, said all the crew members left the ship safely and that the missing men were in two lifeboats which were carried away by high waves. ''After we got as far as Barnegat we thought we were safe," Olsen said. "A few minutes before we were struck we saw two ships ahead of us. In order to avoid a collision I ordered the running lights to be put on. We were torpedoed while the lights were burning." Japan's Atrocities In Hongkong Indicted By British Government Helpless Civilians Brutally Attacked By Jap Invaders In Outrages ComparableToNanking Infamies By WILLIAM B. KING tants slain during the burning and LONDON, March 10. -P) - The pillage of the Chinese city.) British government indicted Japan All the garrison survivors (by Jap- today for barbarities at Hongkong anese count 5,072 British; 1.689 Can- paralleling those which shocked the adian; 3,829 Indian and 357 others) world during the 1937 sack of Nan- were herded into a camp of wrecked king, and accused the occupying huts without doors, windows, light or forces of such outrages as the bayo- sanitation, and by the end of Janu- neting of 50 helplessly bound officers ary there were 150 cases of dysentery, and soldiers and the indiscriminate but no drugs or medical facilities, and rape and murder of Asiatic and Eur- the dead had to be buried in a cor- opean women. ner of the camp. Anthony Eden, the foreign secre- Japs Are 'Callous' tary, told the House of Commons the "The Japanese guards are utterly charges were based on statements of callous and the repeated requests of reliable eyewitnesses who escaped General Maltby, the general officer from Hongkong after the island commanding, for an interview with crown colony and its garrison of Brit- the ,Japanese commander have been ish and Empire troops capitulated curtly refused. This presumably last Christmas day. They were with- means that the Japanese high com- held out of regard for the victims' mand have connived at the conduct relatives until they were "confirmed of their forces.- beyond any possibility of doubt," he Civilian European residents, some said. of them seriously ill, have been in- All Japs To Blame terned and fed on a little rice, water Now, Eden assured the nation, the and food scraps. "widest publicity in all languages will be given to these atrocities." In reply Scenc -T'alk to a question, he agreed emphatically * that responsibility for the outrages lies at the door of not only the troops W themselves but also "the Emperor, W ill Be Given the Government and the whole Japa- -g eg nese people." o "I am sorry," he said, "that I have had to make such a statement Two things will be clear from it, to Technical Developments the House, to the country and to the world. The Japanese claim that their willBe, a in Theme forces are animated by a lofty code For Annual Conclave of chivalry-'bushido'-is a nause- ating hypocrisy. That is the first. More than 300 lectures on recent The second is that the enemy must developments in nearly every field of be defeated.... scientific and academic achievement Fifty Bayoneted will be delivered here Friday and In brief Eden's indictment includ- Saturday when several hundred edu- ed these counts: cators gather at the 47th annual Fifty British military prisoners, of- meeting of the Michigan Academy of ficers and men, "were bound hand Science, Arts and Letters. and foot and then bayoneted to The meeting is to be divided into death." 17 sections, most of which will con- "It is known that women, both Asi- vene at 9 a.m. Friday and continue atic and European, were raped and throughout the day, reconvening ear- murdered and that one entire Chi- ly Saturday morning. nese district was declared a brothel Fields of academic endeavor which regardless of the status of the in- will be represented by section meet- habitants." (The same thing hap- ings include anthropology, botany, pened at Nanking, where thousands economics, fine arts, folklore, fores- of women were outraged and killed try, geography and geology and min- and other thousands of the inhabi- erology. The list continues with history and political science, landscape architec, Selectees To Face ture, language and literature, mathe- matics, philosophy, sanitary and SpeedyI nduct iomedical science, sociology and zool- ogy. LANSING, March 10. - ( ) Two general addresses are also Draftees called to induction cen- scheduled for the convention-the ters on or after March 16 for physi- first to be given by Dr. A. F. Blakeslee cal examination should "travel of the Carnegie Institution, the sec- light" and leave their cars home ond by Dr. I. D. Scott of the geology because they will be inducted im- department and president of the mediately if passed by Army physi- Academy. cians, Col. E. M. Rosecrans, state selective service director, said today W 1 UUT . in calling attention to a change in jew draft policy. The present 10-day period be- SovietCh rch tween the examination and induc- tion will be abandoned, Rosecrans said, and draftees are advised to Protestant Says Religion take not more than two days' sup- ply of clothing to induction cen- Survives In Russia eters. Churchill To Reveal Plan For Indian Settlement As UprisingThreatens Nip ponese, Allies Eye Madagascar -BULLETIN - NEW YORK, Wednesday, March 11.--(P)-The BBC said today in ' German language broadcast that "several convoys with American re- inforcements have arrived In Aus- tralia," CBS reported. By DREW MIDDLETON LONDON, March 10.,- M)- The British Imperial forces, abandoning the southern tip of Burma, have slashed through a Japanese trap and were driving tonight into central Burma toward their first mass ren- dezvous with their Chinese allies 1i the Shan states for the supreme de- fense of India. These maneuvers were announced almost simultaneously with an offi- cial disclosure that Prime Minister Churchill would make a statement at the next session of CommonsI, probably on Wednesday, of the gv- ernment's intentions toward India's demand for concessions toward Jn- dependence as the price for her all- out cooperation in the war. Unrest In India- The construction of this policy was complicated by the threat uttered by Mohammed Ali Jinnah that the Mos- lem minority of India would revolt if the plan were opposed to its in- terests, particularly if it denied Mos- tem autonomy. Operations on the Burm front in- dicated meantime that Pritain was staking everything on the belief that the battered army of Burma could, with Chinese aid, make a prolonged resistance. A communique from New Delhi an- nounced that the RAF, despite the British retreat and readjustment to new bases, had struck a heavy blow at a Japanese airdrome at Moulmein, dropping sticks of bombs among 14 scattered planes and setting two fires. Fighting planes, too, lifted a shield over the retreating troops. A Japa- nese air raid upon Tharrawaddy was admitted to have killed some Bur- mese civilians. Burma Total Loss Signalling the total loss, for the time being, of extreme southern Bur- ma, American engineers and drillers were carrying out great demolitions at Bassein, the important port 90 miles west of Rangoon, which itself already had been evacuated of -ill- tary forces and stripped of-all ofr- itary value. Afield, Lieut.-Gen. Harold R. L. Vi. Alexander's forces were declared offi- cially to have made a successful with- drawal northward toward centr1 Burma, thus extricating themselves from what had been a most grave position. This was made possible in heaVd separate actions, a subsidiary Britieh force previously isolated around Pegu, 40 miles north of Rangoon, smashi its way through the Japanese towa a junction with the main British bodies, which in turn broke through the Japanese astride the Rangoon- Prome road in two violent and bloody tank and infantry assaults. Rangoon Left In Shambles Rangoon, according to delayed ad- vices, was left a spectacular area of waste by the British scorched earth policy. The great Syriam oil refin- eries 20 miles down-river were smashed and the pipeline 300 miles northward was cut, these dispatches stated. "Great warehouses, docks, qua, jetties-everything of any possible value to the Japanese-were ruth- lessly blown up or set on fire," it was added. Japs, Allies Eye Madagascar LONDON, March 10.-(JP)-A quiet, strategic race was reported to be ei- ther underway or imminent between the Axis powers and the United Na- Apathy Pre ents ProgressiverAction In Gampus Fraternity Government (This is the second in a series of articles on student government as now constituted at the University.) By DAN BEHRMAN When war issues came to the Uni- versity of Michigan, fraternities were in much the same position as the rest of a "business-as-usual" campus. Whatever progress they have since made towards a recognition of the crisis they face-both as Greek let- ter fraternities and as organized stu- tive moves stem from a council made up of all fraternity house presidents. Legislation resulting from this set- up has not been of momentous im- port, nor has the war speeded any consideration of how a fraternity can exist in the face of the draft and high living costs. Stevenson was outspoken in his criticism of the fraternities for their 'don't-give-a -damn" attitude on their Avpln r acnt~ a hn lp T. ET.cni ...n .ait ..-c. its control over campus fraternities with the Committee on Student Af- fairs. The IFC can rule on such questions as fines, and house social probation, but the student affairs committee has the final word in rushing regulations. Housing prob- lems are also beyond the IFC's scope of control. Stevenson was also critical of the present IFC staff organization, which is based on a tryout staff made up Christianity as an institutioh in1 Russia has completely broken down, but it is continuing as a movement with more than one-third of the Rus- sian people still retaining their re- ligious connections, Dr. Adolph Kel- ler, European Protestant leader, de- clared in an interview here yesterday. "There is no longer any church organization in the Soviet Union," Dr. Keller said. The congregations of those churches where services are still allowed offer the'only resem- blance to any form of unifying relig- ious organization. Importation of the Bible into Russia is prohibited by government order while religious education is per- mitted to no one under the age of 18. Dr. Keller predicted that with President Roosevelt exerting his in-