Weather Not much change In temperatere, C, r it 4311 aiti1 Editorial New Responsibility of French Navy .., VOL. LIT. No. 95 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Mermen Win Northwestern Meet, 52-32; Martin Loses Hockey Team Will Oppose Paris A.C. As Pucksters Resume Home Schedule Cagers, Trackmen PrepareFor Tilts (Special to The Daily) EVANSTON, Feb. 13 - Meeting with unexpected resistance from an inspired Northwestern team, Mtt Mann's touring Michigan swimmers sunk the Wildcats, 52-2, in Patten Pool here tonight torun their un- defeated dual meet streak to 34 straight. The Wolverines, with their lineup differing from the one that spanked Ohio State Wednesday, encountered a tougher brand of opposition than even the most rabid Wildcat partisan looked for. Nevertheless, the Maize and Blue national champions rolled over the Purple natators to counter six firsts in the nine events. Honors Go To Jaynes But despite the Michigan victory, honors for the night together with the plaudits of glory must go to a hitherto unheralded sophomore Wild- cat-one Howie Jaynes. Scoring the biggest upset of the current inter- collegiate swimming season, Jaynes drove his way to a surprise victory over the Wolverines' heavily-favored Strother (T-Bone) Martin, tallying 144.8 points to the Michigan ace's 130.6. It was just two nights ago that (Continued on Page 3) Wolverine Hockey Team To Play Paris A.C. Today By STAN CLAMAGE Home competition for Wolverine athletic teams in the second semester gets under way at 8 p.m. tonight in the Michigan. Coliseum when Eddie Lowrey's rejuvenated sextet takes the ice against the Paris A.C. With nothing but one victory and a single tie. to its credit in the nine games already in the record books, the Maize and Blue outfit pushes into the background the past accounts and will try to get off on a better footing against the visiting Canadian athletic club. For Captain Paul Gold- smith and his fellow puckmen,' the future looks better right now than at any time during the past two and one-half months. Three big reasons constitute the basis of predicting better successes for the battling puck team. The de- fense will ice a more formidable wall against opposing attacks with John- (Continued on Page 3) Michigan Cagers To Face Illinois Quintet Today (Special to The Daily) CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Feb. 13.-Still smarting from their first Conference loss of the season suffered at the hands of a sharp-shooting Indiana team last Monday night, Illinois' league leading cagers prepared to re- gain their winning form at the ex- pense of Michigan's down-trodden quintet at 8 p.m. tomorrow night in Huff gym. The impressive Big Ten record of the Illini-seven wins and one loss- makes them heavy favorites to cop the 38th meeting between the two schools, but the Wolverines are as unpredictable as the weather an might just as easily pull one of their famous upsets as not. In their last meeting at Ann Arbor early in January, Doug Mills' quin- tet had to fight every inch of the way, and then the Indians won by only four points, 44-40. Tomorrow's battle, however, will find the Wolverine forces somewhat (Continued on Page 3) Injuries Dog Trackmen As First Meet Nears By BOB STAHL Old Man Injury just kind of sneaked up on the Michigan track team yesterday and, on the eve of the opening meet of the indoor sea- son, dealt the thinclads a stab ,in the back from which it will be ex- tremely difficult to recover. Thursday, all was quiet and peace- ful and happy down at track prac- tice. With the team rapidly round- ing into top condition for today's triangular meet against Michigan? State and Michigan Normal at East Lansing, all concerned were confi- deant that the Wolvrineould er1 n- Early Curfew Imposed On University Women London Editors Assail Churchill Weekend Deadline For Coeds As League Council Stresses Will Be Tightened Need For Sleep For Nazi Fleet's Channel Escape; SinaoresDefenses Stabilized By. WILL SA ,P Putting campus love on a war-time basis, the League Council shaved an hour from Friday night dating hours yesterday, making the girls go to bed earlier because: (1) we must save electricity, or the University will have to ration it; (2) coeds must be physically fit during the war; (3) it will "bring the war home to the students;" (4) of the 50 coeds who volunteered as Red Cross blood donors, 48 were so run-down that they had to be rejected. When asked for a medical explanation of the many blood donor re- jections, however, Dr. Clair Healy of the Health Service said last night that rejection had absolutely no reflection upon the health of volunteers. "It just so happens," she said, "that hemoglobin, content requirements of the Red Cross are extremely high and few healthy girls can meet it." Closing Hours Will Be 12:30 A.M. The new regulations, announced by Margaret Ihling, '43, Women's De- fense Chairman, stipulate that closing hours for Friday nights will be 12:30 a.m. instead of 1:30 a.m. Seniors will be denied late hour privileges on Saturday nights. These regulations will go into effect Friday, Feb. 20- so last night was your last "late-hour" for the duration. The curtailment of hours will not apply to major campus dances such as J-Hop and Senior Ball. At another meeting yesterday the Committee of Student Affairs, com- posed jointly of faculty members and students, passed a resolution requiring all campus dances (except special functions) to end at midnight. This ruling will apply to fraternities, sororities, dormitories and the Union and League weekend dances. The 16-member League Council passed the hour-shortening measure with 15 "ayes", and one person not voting. Council members said priv- ately that the measure originated ino the Dean of Women's Office and passed- through sundry deans and committees. So University students, already dizzy from clock changes and on- Responding to vigorous protests of students learning of the new rule yesterday, the League Coun- cil announced late last night that the entire question would be re- opened Tuesday when further dis- cussions will be held with the Dean of Women's Office and the Women's Defense Committee. again-off-again war time, will lose another hour next Friday. Student reaction to the "speed-up of love" (elsewhere on this page) seems to tally with Purdue Univer- sity opinion as recorded in the Pur- due Exponent. Following a similar "speed-up" there, approximately 85 per cent of the men and 75 per cent of the women said the shortened date (Continued on Page 5) Burmese Aid British, Battle Jap Advance RANGOON, Feb. 13.-( )-A sec- ond strong Japanese attempt to smash through the British-held Sal- ween River line at Paan was under way tonight with fierce fighting re- ported in a communique which said results of the battle still were ob- scure. The Japanese, fighting to widen a rooting on the west bank of the broad sftream, massed their forces ;nd struck out in their second push rarely 24 hours after their first at- ;empt collapsed before a British and Indian bayonet counter-attack. "Further south," the British war report said, "the situation is quiet .t the moment." That is the sector where the Jap- anese were stopped at Leaet tempor- nrily after crossing the estuary of the 3alween from Moulmein to Marta- ban, 30 miles south of Paan. Naval Report Describes Blow To Jap Islands Concerted Raid From Sea Cripples Enemy Power On Gilbert,_Marshalls PEARL HARBOR, T. H., Feb. 13.- (P)-A crippling blow at Japanese power in the mid-Pacific-possibly a preview of what Japan itself may ex- pect-was graphically pictured today by naval officers in revealing results of the attack by the Pacific Fleet Feb. 1 on the Gilbert and Marshall Islands. Striking in a surprise raid at dawn, the naval units and fleet air arm exe- cuted their first major offensive to clear the Japanese from island bases flanking the U. S. supply route to Australia and New Zealand. Attack Covers Large Area The attack was conducted over an area of 350 to 400 miles located some 2,000 miles from Pearl Harbor. The ships participating had been at sea for at least three weeks and covered around 10,000 miles. "This long distance attack by the task force," said one naval officer, "demonstrated how war can be taken directly to the enemy's doorstep re- gardless of distance." Results Tabulated Results of the successful offensive were announced by the Navy Depart- ment in Washington as follows: Five Japanese warships sunk, in- cluding a 17,000-ton converted air- craft carrier. Eleven Japanese auxiliary vessels sent to the bottom. At least 41 enemy warplanes de- stroyed, either in aerial combat or on the ground. Important naval and air bases on six islands plastered with shells and bombs, their batteries and radio sta- tions destroyed, buildings laid in ruins-in short, a mass of wreckage at every point under fire. Water Reservoirs Of City Menaced; Population Is Confident Of Success British Successful In Counter-Attacks (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Feb. 13.-Under massive air and artillery bombardment, Sing- apore still held out tonight and a surprisingly optimistic Reuters dis- patch filed from the island metropo- lis in mid-morning said positions of the British defenders had been stabi- lized and that counter-attacks about seven miles north of the city "have met with some success." Water Supply Gone Although later official advices in- dicated the city's known major water reservoirs were gone or imminently menaced and that the British line still was being slowly beaten back by the overwhelming Japanese force, the Reuters correspondent presented an amazing picture of a population con- fident that the invaders would be stopped short of their goal. His dispatch, filed at 10:30 a.m. Singapore time today (11:30 p.m. Thursday EWT) said British coun- ter-attacks were carried out in the Jurong area, about seven miles to the Northwest, and that they were be- lieved to have stabilized the defense positions. West of the city, heavy fighting was reported along a line running from Pierce Reservoir to Bukit Timah and Jurong and ending at Pasir Jan- jang on the south coast, about five miles from the island metropolis. Reuters Optimistic Then, in contrast to the pessimistic feeling in London, the Reuters cor- respondent presented a picture of buoyant residents of the city going about their business as usual full of hope that the worst was passing and that the hard-pressed defenders would stem the Japanese tide. Great demonstrations of enthusi- asm were declared touched off by reports of heavy punishment dealt the invader by the British. Japs Maintain Bataan Attack Planes Continue Staccato Raids On Peninsula WASHINGTON, Feb. 13. -()- The Japanese were reported today to be sending wave on wave of dive bombers against the American-Fili- pino forces on Bataan Peninsula, pre- sumably in an attempt to soften up the defenses for new infantry on- slaughts. Two bombers, a War Department communique said, were shot down by American anti-aircraft guns. General Douglas MacArthur ad- vised, too, that the Japanese aircraft had inflicted heavy losses on some of their own troops mistaken for the American-Filipino Army. Victims of the erroneous bombng were identified as elements of the 122nd Regiment of Lieut. Gen. Akira Nara's division, one of the six divi- sions facing and overwhelmingly out- numbering MacArthur's little army. The identification placed the at- tack on the defenders' right flank, joining Manila Bay, presumably in the vicinity of the village of Pilar. Here the same regiment was mauled Feb. 2, along with two others in one phase of the latest large-scale at- tack made against MacArthur's lines. Military men said it was logical to believe that the boomerang bombing inflicted severe losses. Federal Jury Convicts Aviatrix Laura In galls WASHINGTON, Feb. 13. - (R) - Laura Ingalls, speed flier and self- styled "international Mata Hari," was convicted by a Federal District Court jury today on a charge that she acted as a paid agent of the German Reich without registering with the State Department. The jury of ten men and two wo- men deliberated only a little more than an hour before returning the verdict. The maximum penalty for 1:30 Kiss - Historical Society Please Note -Photo By Stu Gildart It will take a track star with the speed and technique of Dye Hogan, '40, to get a good-night kiss next week. Esther "Reggie" Williams, '42SM, apparently willing to have this kind of thing go on for another hour, took part in a last minute campus rush to beat the University's love-rationing plan. Said Hogan, still staggering slightly, "This is a sure cure for anyone's anemia, and look how you can save on lights." Hugh Gibson To Lecture Here Tuesda. On War-Torn Europe "We can take it from a man who knows-" and Hugh Gibson, former ambassador to Belgium and Brazil is that man. Gibson, who recently. returned from England, where he lived since the fall of France, will speak here, under the auspices of the Oratorical Association at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday. Abroad since March, 1940, Gibson has been representative of the Com- mission of Polish Relief in Europe. As chief representative of that or- ganization, he remained on the conti- nent until the occupation of France and has since made his headquarters in London. Here he expanded his representation to include relation- Dutch Set Fire To Own Bases At 'Macassar BATAVIA, N. E. I., Feb. 13.-W)- The harbor district of Macassar, chief port of Celebes, has been set aflame by the Dutch defenders and the torch also has been put to other vital areas in the south of the island -the area which the Japanese are seeking to consolidate as a base for the expected attack on Java. This was announced today by the N. E. I. Command with the sardonic observation: "The enemy will not find anything of use to him." Along with this immobilization of Macassar Port (the Japanese already have claimed its occupation) the af- ternoon Dutch communique reported, on the basis of new information from the Macassar garrison, that previous announcements of enemy landings across the peninsula at Balangnipa had been found erroneous, and thus that the whole position on Celebes was not quite so critical as had ap- peared earlier. From Borneo and other fronts there was no new official word. But a general lessening of enemy offen- sive activity was indicated by the fact that Japanese aerial operations were confined during the day principally to reconnaissance over the outer provinces. Cairo Claims Tunis Aids GermanLibyan Army CAIRO, Feb. 13. - (iP) - New evi- dence that German Marshal Erwin ships with the exiled governments in Great Britain. Gibson has had access to the best sources of information on the unrest prevailing in the occupied countries. His intimate association with thea leaders in exile from the Nazi-occu- pied lands afforded him full- oppor- tunity to meet men and women who have escaped to join their govern- ments and military divisions now fighting side by side with the British. Present at the outbreak of the war, Gibson for years acted in a diplo- matic capacity in London, Paris, Warsaw, Bern, Brussels, and Geneva. During the first World War, he was secretary to the American Legion in Belgium, and there acquired much of the experience which enables him to direct the difficult activities of relief groups abroad today. Tickets for this lecture, "The In- ternational Situation as Viewed through the Eyes of an American Observer," will be on sale Monday and Tuesday at the box office, Hill Auditorium. Box office hours Mon- day will be from 10-1 and 2-4; Tues- day the office will be open from 10 a.m. until 8:15 p.m. Soviets Enter WhiteRussia Reds' Offensive Achieves Greatest Advances Yet MOSCOW, Feb. 13.-(A')-Knifing through German lines for the deepest. and most significant advance yet of the Red Army winter offensive, Russian ski troops have entered White Russia, on the old frontier with Poland, and Soviet submarines have destroyed seven more German warships in Arctic waters, war front dispatches reported tonight. News of these successes in the north and west were accompanied by accounts of an uninterrupted Sov- iet drive in the south, where numer- ous more villages were liberated and in the Crimea, where Russian marines routed the Germans from a height dominating the Crimean naval base of Sevastopol. The point of entry into White Russia was not disclosed, but it could have been achieved by advance units thrusting ahead of strong Soviet forces operating both above and be- low Smolensk,threatened key Ger- man base on the Dnieper 230 miles German Battleships Reach Helgoland After Fighting British For 700 Miles 'Britain Hypnotized' News Writers Assert LONDON, Saturday, Feb. 14.-VP)- The full fury of a bitter editorial barrage against the Government fell for the first time today upon Prime Minister Churchill himself on the heels of the German Fleet's dash through the Channel, and one news- paper suggested bluntly that Britain had been "hypnotized by the force of his rhetoric." The Prime Minister, who hereto- fore has had to defend only his col- leagues, this time found himself one of the main targets of an attack which was the most severe since he took office in May, 1940, Methods Need Revision The News Chronicle said: "His methods of government must be recast quickly and with a single aim in view-to retrieve as dangerous and humiliating a situation as any that yet confronted us. "Have we not been hynotized by Mr. Churchill's personality, by the force of his rhetoric, by his hold .in the House of Commons?" The Herald remarked "we look pretty foolish" and added the British public "now feels apprehension about the whole strategic direction of the war which no mere formal inquest on past events will remove, however thoroughly conducted." The Mirror asked: "Is it any longer true to say we trust the Prime Min- ister though we do not trust his government?" Limit War Cabinet The Daily Sketch said that "Mr. Churchill must be brought by one means or another to a clearer recog- nition of some essential truths. Does he take too much upon himself? Should he not limit the numbers of his war cabinet and improve its qual- ity?" Lord Beaverbrook's Daily Express came to Churchill's defense, declar- ing that "the horse Churchill is pull- ing a heavy load up hill. What do we do to that horse? Beat him with sticks? Or get behind the wagon and give him a hand?" German Battleships Escape British Blockade LONDON, Feb. 13.-(AP)--The Allies faced a bitter fight for control of the North Atlantic tonight after two Ger- man battleships and a heavy cruiser, battered but menacingly afloat, had gained the safety of Helgoland after a dash through the English Channel and the North Sea that flouted more than a century of British naval his- tory. Fears were expressed openly in London that the 26,000-ton Scharn- horst and Gneisenau and the 10,000- ton cruiser Prinz Eugen, now at safe anchor for repair and supply at the end of a 700-mile fighting race from their bomb trap at Brest, would ren- dezvous with a Nazi Atlantic fleet strong enough "to go whereever it likes-from the Orkneys to Lone Island." Criticism Swells Coming as it did on top of the battle of Singapore and the British reverse in Africa, the humbling of British Navy and Air Force in their own waters measurably swelled the roar of criticism of the present cabi- net. Some persons thought that Prime Minister Churchill himself might have heavy going to stay in office. But against this was the be- lief that there was no one of his stature to take his place. The battle, involving hundreds of planes and warships of varied sizes, was broken off after an almost sui- cidal attack by British destroyers off the mouth of the Netherlands' Scheldt. Red Cross Renews Blood Donor Plea With a total of only 110, student blood donors signed up after a three- day drive, the Red Cross and the Student Defense Committee yester- Coeds To Count Corpuscles: Campus Women Protest Move To Snip Hour Off Date Nights By HOMER SWANDER and HALE CHAMPION 'Love on the run' doesn't appeal to he average Michigan coed. Union dancers, sorority stay-at- aomes, and athletes alike were but lightly amused at the antics of a Momen's Defense Council which had ust cut an hour from their Friday aight dating time. Seniors like Reggie Williams, '42- SM, were even more indignant at the news, for as she declared, "I've spent three years waiting for that extra ;iour on Saturday night and now some silly committee takes it away from me." Refuting the arguments set forth for the change, Margaret Harmon, ,A 9t m - u ~e ni + a viri " f rvar l do you think we use in our rooms when we get in, candles?" Others chimed in with, "We've got to have a doorstep signal. I suppose we'll teach the house mother to whis- tle." An unidentified University of Illi- nois man took a dirty look at his date, and remarked, "If I lived in this town I'd be glad to get rid of a girl an hour earlier." His remains are still unidentified. Quick on the comeback, Jean Whit- temore, '44, declared, "This is neat. A legal way to get rid of him before dawn." Local girls like Hope Tappe, '45, looked on the discussion like so many Cheshire cats, gloating happily, "Competition gets another jolt." In the midst of all the girlish chatter a few masculine voices were raised. Phil Swander, '44, having a