Wer Bather Continued Warm Y it 4M1U :4-3 at t Edhorial New Staff Assumes Heritage Of Daisy . ..._. VOL. LII. No. 155 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1942 Z-33 PRICE FIVE CENTS Homer Swander, Edward Perlberg flead'Daily'Staff Board Appoints Ginsberg Sapp, Mintz, Thatcher, Sallade To Fill Positiondi Top Garg, 'Ensian Staffs Are Named Homer D. Swander, '43, of Kala- mazooand Edward Perlberg, '43, of Standish, were yesterday named managing editor and business man- ager of The Daily for 1942-43. At the same meeting the Board in Control of Publications announced the selections of Will Sapp, '43, of Novelty, 0., as city editor and Mor- ton Mintz, '43, of Ann Arbor, as edi- torial director. Fred Ginsberg, '43, of Detroit, was named associate busi- ness manager. William (Buck) Dawson, '43, of Evanston, Ill., was appointed man- aging editor of the Michiganensian, and Benjamin H. Douglas, '43, of Albany, Mich., was made business manager. Gargoyle Editor Olga Gruhzit, '43, of Grosse Pointe was selected editor-in-chief of Gar- goyle, first woman in the history of the publication to receive that honor, while John Zimmerman, '43, of Mil- waukee was named business man- ager. Daily associate editors selected were George W. Sallade, '43, of Ann Arbor and Charles M. Thatcher, '43E, of Escanaba. Swander is affiliated with Chi Phi and is a member of Sphinx, Sigma Delta Chi, and Alpha Nu. He is local and national president of the Student League of America, and has served three years on The Daily. President of Delta Tau Delta, Perl- berg is a member of Sphinx and dur- ing his last year on The Daily was in charge of Contracts and' Local Promotion. Sapp has cnfined his activities to newspaper work with the single exception of membership in Sphinx. In addition to his work on the edi- torial staff the newly named city editor served as Daily photographer and is a member of Sigma Delta Chi. He has been for two years the Ann Arbor correspondent for the Detroit Free Press.- He is affiliated with Beta Theta Pi. News Bureau Head A member of the U. of M. bureau of the Detroit News, Mintz was last month named president of the local chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism society. He too has worked on The Daily for three years. Ginsberg, who is affiliated with Pi Lambda Phi, has been in charge of local advertising and is a member of Sphinx. 'Buck' Dawson's exploits are as well known as his name, but those listable here follow. On the executive coun- cil of Phi Gamma Delta he has been in sucession a member of the track team, publicity chairman of the Soph Prom, and a Student Senator. His varied career also includes the Turn to Page 2, Col. I Air Corps Will Hi oldProguram Deferred Enlistment Plan To Be FullyExplained The new procurement plan of the Army Air Forces, which provides for enlistment of students on a deferred service basis, will be discussed in a program by two Army representa- tives, Lieut.-Col. Joseph H. Carr and Lieut. Rondel L. Cox, at 8 p.m. Wed- nesday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Under the new plan, students may enlist as privates in the Air Force Enlisted Reserve and continue their education until actually needed for Air Force training. Although sub- ject to call to active duty at any time, it is planned to defer such students until graduation, provided they main- tain a satisfactol y scholastic stand- ing. Summer school attendance will be optional, but Reservists who grad- uate or withdraw from school will be assigned to active duty as facilities become available. Students enlisted in the Enlisted Reserve are recommended certain courses in mathematics and sciences to prepare them for future service. New 'Daily' Heads HOMER SWAND ER .. Managing Editor Official Says FDR Favors 40Hour Law: President Will Back Short Week, War Profits Tax In Message Next Week Roosevelt To Relate Plan In Radio Talk WASHINGTON, April 25. -()- A high Administration official said today that President Roosevelt would make clear in his message to Con- gress next week on the high cost of living that he is opposed to suspen- sion of the 40-hour week law, The Presidential message is expec- ted to outline a program calling for freezing most commodity prices at about March 1 levels, drastic taxes on war profits and possible wage control. It is to be sent to Congress Monday. Later, the President expects to dis- cuss the program in a radio address to the nation. Mr. Roosevelt was represented as taking the attitude that since most war plants were employing shifts of 48 hours or longer, the issue involved in the dispute over the 40-hour law was one of pay that could be handled satisfactorily in any directive he might make to Government agencies to keep wages in line with living costs. The law requires time and one- half pay for work in excess of 40 hours a week. Furthermore, he was said to regard proposals to suspend or repeal the law as being tantamount to chang- ing the rules while the game is in progress. As for other labor questions, it was such issues as strikes and the open and closed shop which were being worked out satisfactorily under exist- ing agreements. Band Festival Ends As 18 Schools Winl 'Excellent'_Ratings The final day of the Michigan High School Band and Orchestra Festival closed yesterday with 18 high schools receiving excellent rating for their instrumental work. Following are the schools who placed high: Marching Festival: Coldwater, Sturgis, Flint; Class A bands: River Rouge, Flint Central, Muskegon, Holland; Class B Bands: Oxford, Granville, Adrian; Class C Bands: Fowlerville, Williamston Webberville, White Pigeon, Paw Paw. Class A orchestras which received good ratings are: Flint Central, Hamtramck; Class C orchestras: Ann Arbor University High; junior high Class A orchestra: Hamtramck (ex- cellent); junior high Class A bands: Pontiac, Lincoln and Washington Schools, (both excellent). Marijuana Deni Is Raided SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 25.- (/)-Military police and federal nar- cotic authorities raided a marijuana smoking den in Sacramento today andarrested five persons on charges of selling the drug to soldiers. Nearly a score of soldiers reported inside the den were placed under military arrest. Reincarnated 'Squalus' Torpedoes Jap-Carrier WASHINGTON, April 25. -(P)- It was the submarine Squalus, sal- vaged from the bottom of the sea and renamed the Sailfish, which torpe- doed and probably sank that Japa- nese aircraft carrier in the battle of Macassar Strait last January. The story of the sub's smashing comeback-last month she torpedoed and damaged a Japanese cruiser, too -became known today when the Navy announced that herhskipper, Lieut.-Comm. Richard G. Voge of Chicago, had been awarded the Navy Cross. No details of the action were available. Twenty-six officers and men per- ished in the Squalus when she foun- dered during diving trials off Ports- mouth, N.H., three years ago, but 33 were rescued through the new diving bell technique. The sub was raised four months later. 3,000 Attend Schoolmaster Meeting Here R. Kazmeyer Is Principal Speaker; J. R. Nelson In Panel Discussion More than 3,000 school teachers from all parts of the state attended numerous conferences and panels on every phase of education at the 56th annual meeting of the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club held here during the last two days. Robert Kazmeyer, veteran news- paper reporter and globe-trotter, was principal speaker of the meeting, ad- dressing the teachers at the recep- tion banquet Friday and at the gen- eral session yesterday. Speaking on "Japan, Rising or Set- ting Sun," Kazmeyer emphasized the necessity of a complete victory over the Nipponese. He said that the day of white, man's domination in the Far East is over and that Asia is awakening to assume its position on a par with other parts of the world. Following Kazmeyer's talk on "Ed- ucation's Contribution to Demo- cracy," at the general session, the remainder of the meeting was de- voted to a symposium on "Education in a World Crisis," which was held as a series of seven simultaneous group conferences in the Rackham Building. At a panel on the necessity of safe- guarding the mental health of school children in time of war, a discussion group led by Fritz Redl discussed the effect of war propaganda and super- patriotic literature on the minds of the young child. In order for schools to best par- ticipate in war activities, Warren Bow, Deputy Superintendent of De- troit Schools urged the necessity of purging our own society of the same type of gangster which we tolerate in international politics. Bathtub Ban Ordered WASHINGTON, April 25. -UP)- There'll be no bathtubs in future de- mountable and temporary houses built in defense areas by the Federal Public Housing Authority. Ordering that only shower baths be installed, it figured today that elimination of tubs would save 10,000 tons of metal -enough, it said, to build 750 stand- ard 13-ton tanks. Government Rules Paper Non-Mailable Postmaster General Says Issue Of 'Social Justice' ViolatesEspionage Act Hearing To Judge Permanent Status WASHINGTON. April 25. -(P)- The April 27 issue of Social Justice, weekly magazine founded by The Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, was ruled non-mailable today although Post- master General Frank C. Walker said the "tone of the paper" had changed since the April 20 issue was bahned from the mails. Despite change, Walker held that the latest issue "contains statements clearly within the prohibitions of the espionage act." He has set a hearing for May 4 on the question of whether mailing rights of Social Justice should be revoked altogether. Walker announced his ruling on the April 27 issue by making public a letter to the postmaster at Royal Oak, Mich. This letter said that the 12-page April 27 issue disclosed the publica- tion "(a) has changed the over-all make-up of the front and back cover pages, (b) in certain respects more fully identifies and sets out the claimed source of the material pub- lished, and (c) uses language more temperate." "The entire tone of the paper," the letter continued, "seems to be changed, one page being devoted to quotations from the Gospels and an- other page devoted to quotations of the eminent Cardinal Mercier. (Car- dinal Mercier of Belgium became a World War hero of the Allies by his defiance of the Germans who over- ran his country.) "This current issue apparently re- prints entire articles which appeared in the publication after Dec. 7. 1941." A Cappella Choir Will Give Concert The University A Cappella Choir, under the direction of Hardin Van Deursen, will present its spring con- cert at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Today's concert follows a success- ful season of Sunday morning broad- casts over WJR in which the choir has gained great popularity. The program will consist of Con- statius Festa's "Down in a Flow'ry Vale," "The Keys of My Heart," "Chauson De Mar," and "Agnus Der" by Hans Leo Harsler; "God Is a Spir- it" by Kopylov; Tschaikowsky's "Cherubun Song"; "Glory and Hon- or andLand" by Charles Wood; Ran- dall Thompson's "The Paper Reeds by the Brooks"; "Evening" by Zoltan Rodaly; "The Turtle Dance" by Vaughn Williams; "The Breadth and Extent of Man's Empire" by Karl McDonald; "Poor Wayfaring Stran- ger," an early American ballad. "Spirit of De Lord Done Fell" and "Wish I'se in Heaven" conclude the program. CECIL B. BROWN Famed News Correspondent To Talk Here Cecil Brown To Describe' Far Eastern Adventures In Speech Tomorrow Often described as a "long-nosed, persistent" news reporter who man- ages to get into and out of one catas- trophe after another-each time with an exciting story to tell, Cecil Brown, ace correspondent for CBS will tell exciting stories at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium under the auspices of the Oratorical Association. *hFrom Brown's assignment tomcover the Far Eastern front there came the. most sensational story of the war to date. CBS had thought the British in Singapore would set up a powerful new short-wave transmitter, but Brown discovered that this transmit- ter couldn't possibly get going until sometime later, and that the broad- casts relayed through Batavia were muddy by the time they reached the United States. He therefore hunted around for sources and ways to transmit it, and when he was offered a chance to see naval action with the British Fleet there, he jumped at it. The rest, with the thrilling description of the sinking of the Re- pulse and the Wales, is journalistic history. The box office in Hill Auditorium will be open from 10:00 a.m. till 8:15 p.m. tomorrow, during which time the few remaining tickets will go on sale. Troops Reach French Island aps Flank Allies In Burma Aflack; RA isFrancei To Tell Of War In East Invasion Coast Is Bombed . ~..By British Day Raiders; Nazi Factories Struck U.S. Troops Land In New Caledonia ED PERLBERG ... Business Manager Cantilo Chosen Deputies Head' Opposition Coalition Gains Victory In Argentina I BUENOS AIRES, April 25. -(/P)-- The opposition coalition gained con- trol of the new Argentine chamber of deputics today' with the reelection of radical deputy Jose Luis Cantilo as its president. Supporters of Acting President Ra- mon S. Castillo's "neutrality towardI all" government, foreseeing defeat after the opposition earlier succeed- ed in electing a temporary chairman, left the chamber in a vain attempt to prevent a quorum. But 81 deputies---onc more than a quuruim-remained on the floor, giving the coalition its victory. 'The election of Cantilo as presi- dent of the chamber may be the forerunner of a liberal movement to seek adoption of a resolution asking that Argentina break off relations with the Axis. Argentina, and Chile are the only two American republics still maintaining diplomatic ties with Germany, Italy and Japan.) The outcome of today's balloting augured a union of socialist and radi- cal forces to oppose policies of Cas- tilo's conservative government. The combined parties have a majority of two votes; RelaxedBy OPA WASiJNGTON, April 25. --f/)- The Office of Price Administration relaxed a IitIomoble rationing regu- lations today in an effort to speed up sales. Price A(iministrator Leon Hender- son said the action was taken in ac- cordance with his plan to dispose of some 400,000 cars by next March, leavinl 135,000 in a Government stock pile. Thus far, since rationing be- gan March 2, sales have lagged 40 per cent under quotas. The relaxed regulations leave Un- changed the classes of persons eli- (By The Associated Press) Intensifying a drive'aimed at stra- tegic control of all Burma's vital regions before mid-May monsoons immobilize their superior mechan- ized force, the Japanese pounded for- ward in an offensive that held grave danger for the Allied left flank manned by the dogged but weary Chinese troops under U.S. Lieut.-Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell. In this critical theatre of opera- tions-one that must be held to in- sure China's successful continuation in the war, and one equally essential to the mounting of the Allied coun- ter-offensive-the invaders employed the full weight of their greater num- bers of men, planes, tankssand artil- lery. Japs Are Checked Fanning out in three arms from their original line of advance, which already had put them within 100 miles of the Allied supply .base at Mandalay, the Japanese were checked at one point six miles west of Taung- gyi-apparently the heart of the Stil- well positions-and lost heavily in men and equipment. But the Chi nese gave no indication that the other two spearheads had been halted. On the central and western Burma fronts, meanwhile, heavy fighting was in progress. But neither the Chinese nor their British Allies re- ported any essential change in the situation. Operations elsewhere in the Far Pacific were in a minor key, with two notable exceptions: 1. Announcement by the War De- partment in Washington that U.S. troops have arrived to garrison the Free French-controlled island of New Caledonia, a strategic point along the Allied supply routes between the United States and the southwest Pacific. Tokyo Confidence Shaken 2. Word that Japanese navy and army bombers during the last three days have attacked Chinese air bases nearest to Japan's home islands- further evidence, if any were needed, that Tokyo's confidence in her ocean-bound immunity was shaken badly by the raid on four key Japa- nese cities carried out by U.S. bomb- ers just a week ago. There was every indication that the terrific RAF coastal raids were forcing the Germans to keep a large proportion of their air arm in the west and thus may be easing the already considerable enemy aerial pressure on the Russian front. RAF Strikes At French Coast LONDON, April 25. -(R)- From Calais and Dunkerque to Cherbourg and Le Hlavre hundreds of RA fight- ars and bombers fought over the French channel coast in a daylight aftermath today to a second violent night attack on Rostock in continua- tion of the British Baltic blitz. Fifteen RAF fighters and a bomb- er failed to rturn from the forays against Calais, Cherbourg, Le Havre Abbeville and Dunkerque and eight German fighters were destroyed, the Air Ministry said, Docks at Cherbourg, Dunkerque and Le Havre, a factory at Calais and railway yards at Abbeville were bombed. "Enemy fighters were encountered in strength during the attack on Abbeville, and there were many com- bats," said the communique. Hardest blows however were dealt at Rostock, second of Hitler's great Baltic bases for the German armies of Norway, Finland and northern Russia to be turned into a black wreck by British bombs. Nearly a million pounds of explosives were used to blast that old town in two of the most violent Allied air raids of the war, the British said. Several enemy planes were over districts in the west of England dur- ing the night and one town was the target of high explosive and fire bombs. A German bomber was shot down Nine Defeats Purdue, 5-3; Thinclads Tak Tw-Mie Reay ete Wi By MYRON DANN The power-laden bats of the Wol- verine baseball team, dormant for seven long innings, burst forth with fury in a big eight-inning rally to enable Michigan to overcome a two- run deficit and defeat Purdue 5-3 at Ferry Field yesterday afternoon. The victory gave the Varsity a sweep of their two-game series with the Boilermakers and first place in the Big Ten standings. Michigan went into its half of the eighth inning behind 3-1, and from the way Purdue's Paul Petrich was hurling not even the most optimistic of Maize and Blue fans thought that the Wolverines would stay unbeaten in Conference competition. But Ray Fisher's boys showed the 750 fans witnessing the game that they were Big Ten titleholders when the Varsity broke through with three hard hits combined with some smart base running to amass fbur precious runs. Sophomore Bill Cain started on (Special to The Daily) DES MOINES, April 25.-A power- packed, speedy Wolverine two-mile relay team, competing before a crowd of over 10,000 howling fans, collected Michigan's only title in the finals of the thirty-third annual Drake Relays here today, but the Wolverine thin- clads displayed an abundance of team balance as they swept to places in five other university relays. Performing in a variety of weather conditions, the Wolverine baton- passers finished third in the 440 yard relay of the midwest's biggest out- door track carnival. The same sprint relay team came back later in the afternoon to capture fourth place in the 880 yard relay, and Michigan quartets also finished fourth in the mile relay and the 440 yard shuttle hurdle relay, and copped a fifth place in the four-mile relay. The Wolverine baton-passers that rang up Michigan's solitary victory put on quite a show for the mob of athletes and spectators assembled (special to The Daily) LAFAYETTE, Ind., April 25.-With a smashing 6-1 victory over Purdue at Lafayette, Ind., Michigan's tour- ing netters come home with a per- fect record for their weekend trip. As in both other Conference matches the Maize and Blue swept through the singles to clinch the match and lost only the number two doubles, Jim Porter and Gerry Schaflander bowing to Bill Stettner and Ed Armstrong, 6-4, 6-2. Other matches were repetitions of the Wis- con.in and Illinois frays, the Wol- verines experiencing little trouble in racing through their opponents, A quick survey of the weekend's play reveals two things. The first, is that Michigan need not worry about their singles play; Tom Gamon lost to Bert Clapper of Illinois in three sets for the only singles loss of the whole trip. The second is that Michigan's doubles setup is a ques- tion mark but should be a pretty good one from any standpoint. The American Forces Land On New Caledonia WASHINGTON, April 25. -(MP-- The United States announced today it had landed troops in New Cale-' donia to assist the Free French in the defense of that vitally strategic island which flanks the supply route' between this country and Australia. The action, which the War De- partment said was taken "with the approval of local authorities," was the first anouncement of American troops moving into French territory. The size of the American force was not disclosed. In view of the new collaborationist regime of Pierre Laval at Vichy-and of the previous angry outburst from Vichy when the United States sent a consul-general to Brazzaville in Free French Equatorial Africa-ob- servers expected a new outcry from Vichy over the troops in New Cale- donia. Relations between the Washington and Vichy governments have steadily deteriorated since announcement that Laval was returning to power. Ambassador William D. Leahy has been called to Washington for con- sultations. This country has enunciated a pol- icy of maintaining relations with French citizens who are in actual control of French territories. Thus, the way for the troop landing in New Caledonia was paved last month with an announcement by the