Weather "All's Fahrenheit and War." it 43&I iai Editorial India's Refusal Is Severe Allied Loss . . VOL. LII. No. 144 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Japanese Get Stern Warning Russians Demand Strict Neutrality In Siberia On Part OfNipponese British Squadrons Strike At Continent KUIBYSHEV, Russia, April 13.- (A)-Mighty Russia, with hundreds'of deadly bombers and submarines 680 miles from Tokyo, sternly warned Japan today to observe strictly their year-old neutrality pact despite the "blabbering" of Japanese military leaders about a war in Soviet Siberia. "It is necessary that Japanese mili- tary and fascist cliques, whose heads have been turned by military success- es, to realize that their blabbering about an annexationist war in the north may cause damage in the first place and most of all to Japan her- self," the official Communist news- paper Pravda said in a prominent editorial. "If the Japanese side strictly ob- serves the undertakings she assumed, the Soviet-Japanese neutrality pact will preserve its importance for the people of both countries even in the present complicated international situation." Pravda's blunt admonition to Ger-' many's oriental Axis partner was made on the anniversary of the his- torical accord. The editorial cited numerous cases of Japanese aggression in which treaties with the United States, China and Great Britain ' were flaun ted. "On Dec. 7, '1941, Japanese troops suddenly attacked naval bases of the United States and Great Britain and war broke out in the Pacific," Pravda said pointedly. The article noted also that "Japa- nese intervention in the Far East with the occupation of northern Sak- hain (in 198), the seizure of Man- churia, and the Vents SdIet-Jap nese border clashes) at Khassan Lake and in the area of Khalkhingol Riv- er" previously had put Soviet-Japa- nese relations "to very serious trials." British Air Offensive Blasts Italy, Germany (By The Associated Press) LONDON, April 13.-In one of the most prolonged and violentsaerial of- fensives of recent months, British warplanes struck in uncounted num- bers tod y at Nazi-occupied France following up dusk-to-dawn bombing raids from Turin in Italy to the Ger- man war plant in the industrial Ruhr. The English Coast vibrated during the afternoon with the high drum- ming of fighter planes crossing the Channel toward France against only weak enemy opposition, and incom- plete official information indicated that a great pattern of destruction had been spread overnight. Ruthven Declares Japs From Coast Unwelcome Here The University of Michigan, its President said yesterday, does not want to enroll students of Japanese blood who have been evacuated from the West Coast. Refuting a Sunday Seattle, Wash., news story listing the University as one of nine inland institutions which had agreed to accept Japanese stu- dent evacuees, Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven asserted that none has been granted admission to study here. Nearly two weeks ago President Ruthven received correspondence from Prof. Robert W. O'Brien of the University of Washington, inquiring if the University would open its doors to Japanese students. The matter was discussed by the Deans' Confer- ence but it was reported that no specific stand was taken although some of the Deans expressed disap- proval. The President's full reply yester- day stated that "The newspaper re- port that the University of Michigan has agreed with West Coast institu- tions to accept students of Japanese blood from the evacuated areas is incorrect. It is the policy of the Uni- versity to discourage such students from seeking admission here." To Head SRA CONSTANCE TABER * * * Miss Taber Is New President Of Association Six Committee Chairmen Also Named In Election Of New SRA Officers Constance Taber, '44, was elected chairman of the executive committee of the Student Religious Association in the Association's annual election of officers for the '42-'43 school year. Others chosen to fill the offices of the committee were John Baker, '44, Religious Study; Sue Stephenson, '44, Social Service; Liese Price, '43, Re- ligious Arts; Norman Schwartz, '44, Campus Relations; Gregor Hileman, '44, Publicity, and Dorothy Briddon, '43, Cooperation. Miss Taber is from New York City, a member of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman women's honorary soci- ety and is an active member of Le Cercle Francais. She replaces Wil- liam Clark, '42, as committee chair- man. The newly elected members will take their positions immediately, with the retiring officers remaining on the committee in an advisory capa- city until the end of the semester. These retiring officers, named in the same order as those who will re- place them are Clark, Urie Bronten- brenner, Grad., Dorothy Briddon, Ruth Fritz, '42SM. Frank Bender, '43, Elroy Andrews, '43, and Jean Westerman, '42.. The SRA is the center, on campus, for all those students who are inter- ested in religious matters and activi- ties. It is the duty of the executive committee to direct all such activities sponsored by the SRA and to assume administration of Lane Hall, the Association's building. Daring Thieves Steal Officer's Squad Car Just between you and us, this is a touchy subjct with the Ann Arbor Police Department. At about 11 p.m. an unidentified person called the police station and said they needed help with an unruly drunk in the Jefferson Apartments, corner Jefferson and Maynard streets. Officer John Wagner answered the call, drove up to the building in haste and rushed inside. He came out a few minutes later to find that some- body had taken his automobile, lav- ishly bedecked with siren, lights, radio aerial et al. State police later found the aban- doned vehicle in Ypsilanti. 1 Dr. Fishbein Claims U.S. Is Prepared American Medicine Equal To Government Needs Till End 01Emegency Doctors To Receive Questionnaire Soon American medicine can answer ev- ery call of the government satisfac- torily in supplying physicians, treat- ment and supplies to the armed forces and the civilian population for the duration of the emergency, Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Society, as- serted in a public lecture last night. Speaking on "American Medicine and the War," Dr. Fishbein outlined the steps taken by the American Medical Society and other branches of organized medicine in cooperation with wartime governmental agencies since the outset of the defense pro- gram. Questionnaire Planned This week or next, he revealed, every licensed physician in the United States will receive a questionnaire and enrollment blank covering 16 types of opportunity open to volun- teers. In addition to service in the branches of the armed forces, full- or part-time work in industrial medi- cine, community health, and work in institutions will be included on the blanks, he explained. The drafting of 28.000 doctors to assist Selective Service inductions consituted the first type of coopera- tion with the government, he de- clared. The present problem, he add- ed, consists of supplying six and one-half doctors for each thousand men in the Army and Navy, a goal that is rapidly being reached. Procedure Is Standardized Procedures have been standardized for the treatment of all men in the service, Dr. Fishbein explained, and research in such fields as the sulpha drugs, blood plasma and vitamins has been accelerated to meet wartime needs. As an example of the strides al- ready made, he stated in seven cases of gas gangrene resulting from the attack on Pearl Harbor, every one re- covered through the use of recent techniques and no amputations were necessary. S'Prankster' Fires Bullet At Hillel Crashing through a window and embedding itself in the opposite wall, a pellet from a .22 caliber rifle or a high powered air gun, missed Robert Warner, '43, as he sat in the office of Hillel Founda- tion at 9:26 p.m. yesterday. Although Louise Comins, '45, saw a car pull to a temporary halt outside the window at the time of the shooting, both Warner and Sergt. Rolland Gainsley of the Ann Arbor Police Department dis- missed the case as the act of a Iprankster. The fact that the bullet missed Warner by more than five feet, the unusual nature of the pellet, and recent cases of destroyed street lights, contributed towards the theory that there was no real significance to the shooting. Pol- ice believed the bullet had rico- cheted through the window. Corregidor Repels Jap Sea Thrust Enemy' Bombs Miss Mark As Anti-Aircraft Shells Make Raiders Fly High Nipponese Attempt StrafingOf Island WASHINGTON, April 13. -(P)- Corregidor's gunners served notice today of their readiness for a last stand by smashing a Japanese inva- sion fleet 'of small boats and forcing air raiders to drop their bombs from high altitudes. An umbrella of anti-aircraft fire from the beleaguered Philippine fortress island kept swarming enemy aircraft at such ieights, the War Department reported, that 22 attacks in the last two days inflicted "only minor damage" to military installa- tions. Casualties occurred among the de- fenders, but a communique failed to specify losses in killed and wounded. In 24 hours, the island was pounded 10 times, undergoing hammering from waves of bombers reminiscent of the punishment taken by besieged Tobruk and by Malta. Invasion Force Crippled The invasion force crippled by gunfire, which sank or set afire the Japanese boats, was concentrated in the harbor of the fishing village of Mariveles, near the tip of the aban- doned Bataan Peninsula. Shelling was at a range of some six miles, the shortest distance between the island batteries and Mariveles. Two other such fleets of small craft concentrated on the south shore of Manila Bay in preparation for as- saults on the island fortifications from the sea were smashed in recent weeks. Reporting these developments, Lt.- Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright failed to lift uncertainty over the fate of the island and city of Cebu, 375 miles to the south, were an invasion force estimated at 12,00 effectedand- ings under the fire of warships on Friday. For two days communica- tion had been severed between Cor- regidor and Cebu, General Wain- wright explained. Fate Unknown There was likewise no word from Corregidor concerning the fate of the defenders of Bataan, although the Japanese Imperial Headquarters an- nounced at Tokyo that the peninsula had been occupied completely. Belatedly the War Department dis- closed the loss of two freighters of the Army Transport Service, the Lib- arty and the Meigs. The Liberty, twice hit by torpe- does from an enemy submarine on Jan. 11 when 12 miles off Bali in the Netherlands Indies, was beached and the 53 crew m-en and one passen- ger were saved. They were rescued by Dutch planes which flew them to Soerbaja or Bali. Petitioning To Open For Student Senate Positions Tomorrow Streamlined and completely rebuilt from the bottom up, Michigan's only representative body will be opened to the campus at large when petition- ing for Student Senate posts begins at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. Each petition for a ballot slot in the April 24 election must be accom- panied by 25 signatures, an eligibil- ity card and a one dollar registra- tion fee. Candidates may apply this week and Monday between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. by turning their petitions in at Room 220, Union. There are no qualifications of class, gender, or affiliation in this contest as the nine-member Senate is chosen from the entire campus. The election will be conducted under the Hare system of proportional representation. Although the Senate has been in existence six years, the group to be elected in the forthcoming poll will differ radically from its predeces- sors. Past senates have contained 30 members, but a constitutional re- vision adopted last month provides for a policy making group of nine. The Senate as now constituted will be equipped with a separate adminis- trative staff of its own, leaving the nine elected representatives free to perform their policy-making func- tion. In certain quarters this election has been termed the "last stand" of Powerful Jap War Masses In Bay Of Bengal; Allies Pound At Rabaul r 1 Revelli To Direct Varsity Band I Mrs. In Of In Free Spring Concert Today Harris To Be Soloist First Performance Husband's Concerto . A guest soloist, a guest conductor and a program with "enough variety to satisfy even the most particular critic" will be combined in the form of a free concert at 8:30 p.m. today when Prof. William D. Revelli con- ducts the University Concert Band in its annual spring performance in Hill Auditorium. Topping the list of attractions on the evening's program will be the' appearance of guest Johana Harris, who will join the band as piano solo- ist in presenting the world premiere of the new "Concerto for Piano and Band," written by her husband, Roy Harris. To Conduct Band Here for the first public perform- ance of his composition, Mr. Harris' will also appear in the role of guest conductor when he takes the podium to conduct the band in another of his new compositions, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home." Other equally recent compositions which will be featured on the con- cert's program will be "Newsreel" by contemporary composer William Schuman, "Guaracha" from Morton Gould's Latin-American Symphon- ette, andhGeorges Enesco's "Rou- manian Rhapsody." Marches Will Be Played Although the accent will slightly favor the music of contemporary composers, a rousing program of mil- itary marches is also planned, Pro- fessor Revelli has announced, among them John Phillip Sousa's stirring "Stars and Stripes Forever." From the so-called "classical" field, the Band will draw "Overture to An- acreon" by Cherubini for one of its numbers, as well as Paul Dukas' "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" and Padilla's "El Relicario." Emerson To Talk On Wartime Health. Dr. Haven Emerson, one of Ameri- ca's outstanding medical figures, will lecture on the subject, "PublictHealth in Wartime" under the auspices of the University War Board at 8 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. All students, faculty members and townspeople are invited to attend the lecture, which is the third in a series of five on issues arising out of the present war. Dr. Emerson was a colonel in the U.S. Army Medical Corps during World War I, and is now on leave from Columbia University. A visiting professor here, he is also a director of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, Battle Creek. There will be a meeting of the Student Senate at 7:30 p.m. to- day in the Union. Fleet r. JOHANA HARRIS United China Relief Drive Opens Here, Ann Arbor's drive to raise $3,000 for heroic China rolled into action yesterday as local United China Re- lief campaign workers began per- sonal solicitations and coins began piling up in collection boxes on cam- pus. President Alexander, G. Ruthven, honorary chairman of the Ann Arbor campaign committee, in a special statemen, listed three reasons for support of the drive: "China is a strong ally in our fight to preserve the privilege of individual development and self-realization. "Americans, generally, have come to have sincere admiration and sym- pathy for the determined struggle for freedom which the Chinese have waged against great odds. "We in Ann Arbor, having had the privilege of knowing intimately gen- erations of students from China, re- alize how important it is to preserve the culture of this great people." The drive, which has a $7,000,000 goal nationally, has the four-fold purpose of securing funds for relief and rehabilitation in China, reassur- ing the Chinese people of American friendship and goodwill, acquainting the American people with the nature and significance of what is happen- ing in China and unifying American efforts in raising funds for aid to the people who have fought the Jap invader to a stand-still. Because China has such vast re- sources in manpower and raw ma- terials, relief does not require im- ported supplies, campaign officials pointed out. Funds can be transfer- red to China by radio or cable. Harbor, Pivot Of Enemy Lines Facing Australia, Strafed In Allied Raid British Lose Two .Cruisers, Carrier LONDON, April 13.-(P)-At least three Japanese battleships, five air- craft carriers, a number of heavy and light cruisers and several flotillas of destroyers are in the Bay of Ben- gal at this moment, Prime Minister Churchill told the House of Com- mons today in a report which made clear the stark and deadly peril of India. London observers quickly predict- d that this mighty fleet soon would support an invasion, probably by the Japanese troops now smashing at the British-Chinese defenses in Burma. Disclosure of the operations of the Japanese battleforce off India and Ceylon, in strength far greater than 3ritons had guessed, came in the Prime Minister's discussion of the loss last week of the British cruisers Dorsetshire and Cornwall and the aircraft carrier Hermes-all victims of planes from the Japanese carriers. One of the Japanese battleships is a 16-inch-gun vessel of the modern- Jzed Nagato class, 32,720 tons, Churchill disclosed. When the Japanese four days later struck at the British naval base of Trincomalee every British fighter, bomber and torpedo plane available soared into battle, but near misses on one Japanese carrier constituted the only report of blows against the enemy fleet, Churchill stated, and added these bitter facts: "But whether any damage was done I have no knowledge. Practic- lly all our aircraft- tak4ng part in the attack (on the fleet) were knocked out, or seriously damaged, r became unserviceable." Churchill noted that the Japanese raiders suffered heavy aircraft losses at both Colombo and Trincomalee, but announced that British plane osses, though less, were serious and hat damage also was done to shore establishments and ships in harbor. Rabaul Is Attacked 13y Allied Air Arm MELBOURNE, April 13.-(A')-Ra- baul, pivot of the Japanese lodge- ments in the southwest Pacific islands facing Australia, bore the brunt of weekend offensive opera- tions by the Allied air arm and offi- cial reports indicated today that an enemy ship was damaged in harbor there yesterday. Australian observers have said that this former capital of New Britain is the base to knock out if the whole 2,400-mile island and sea front of the enemy is to be collapsed. The Sunday raid on Rabaul capped weekend operations in which the base already had been raided, along with Koepang, in Dutch Timor; Lae in New Guinea and Faisi in the Solo- mon Islands. American flying fort- resses figured prominently. Reconnaissance reports apparent- ly submitted following Saturday's bombing and strafing of Rabaul and a neighboring airdrome indicated the presence of a particular Japanese ship in harbor there. The circum- stances-such as the ship's anti-air- craft defenses-suggested that it was a war vessel but reports made public left it unclassified. Unofficial re- ports said it was large. 57 Students Enter Hopwood Contest Fifty-seven University students submitted 67 manuscripts yesterday in the annual Avery and Jule Hop- wood literary contest, as contrasted with 53 contestants entering 70 scripts in last spring's contest. In the major award division, open to senior and graduate students, six scripts wegre entered in the field of drama, six in essay, nine in fiction and three in poetry. Last year drama rated seven; essay, two; fiction, seven; and poetry, six. Undergraduates competing for minor awards entered eight scripts in drama, seven in essav 23 in fiction. U.S. Is Out For Blood: Union To Register 'U' Students In Newest Blood Donor Drive By GEORGE SALLADE Eyeing a goal of more than 1,000 registrants in its newest blood donor drive, the Union will conduct regis- tration of volunteers from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today through Friday in the Union lobby. Actual blood donations will be taken from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday in the Women's Athletic Building. The purpose of the new drive is to get all interested University students reg- istered whether they are called for a donation on Friday or not. The United States Government is now asking for thousands of units of human blood a month to be used in transfusions to save the lijes of sol- ties, dormitories and cooperatives is urged. The Red Cross Blood Donor Service is an answer to the pleas of the gov- ernment. Through its service volun- teer blood donors the nation over have an opportunity to take a vital part in the nation's war program. The blood donation process itself takes only a short time. Donors are given orange juice before and sand- wiches after the process is completed. By the miracle of modern science all blood donations are so treated that the plasma or liquid content, from which the white corpuscles have been removed, may be dried and kept indefinitely. The blood is thus ready for emergency transfusion even in the chaotic conditions of battle. Ruthven, McMahon, Kingsley To Address Post-War Meeting By HOMER SWANDER in the movement to plan now for the Keynoted by President Ruthven peace which is to come. and tvo other nationally famous Co-author of the recent book, speakers, the Michigan Post-War "Straty of Deocrc," Kin Conference will begin with a general Strategy of Democracy, Kings- Conference wl begin wida gneral Icy's talk here will consider some- meeting at 8 p.m. Friday in the what the same subject. It is entitled Rackham Auditorium and will con- "The Strategy of the War and the tinue at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Peace." Union with three discussion panels President Ruthven, also scheduled on various phases of the post-war to speak at the conference, has long problem, evidenced flis interest in obtaining In addition to President Ruthven, a permanent peace after victory is the trio of keynote speakers includes won. His talk will particularly con- Dr. Francis McMahon, of Notre sider the part colleges and univer- Dame University and chairman of sities should play in planning for the the Indiana Fight For Freedom post-war period. Committee, and Prof. J. Donald The following day-Saturday-stu- Kingsley, member of the political dents will be given ample opportun- science faculty at Antioch College ity to discuss their own ideas onpost- and editor of the Antioch Review, war problems. The three panels Dr. McMahon-who will speak on scheduled are: "The Fight For Freedom"-was one 1. Can we establish world-wide