, -"_---- Weather Cola Winds t t 4 t Editorial Students' Attitude !Shows Rationalization ... VOL. LII. No. 100 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1942 Z-323 - U PRICE FIVE CENTS Beaverbrook Out As Cripps Gets New Post In Shake-Up Lyttelton -Will Supervise Production; Greenwood, Wood Dropped In Shift Of British War Cabinet Churchill Reverses Stand OfMonday LONDON, Friday, Peb. 20.-( P)- Sir Stafford Cripps, former ambas- sador to Moscow and a rising star in British politics, was named Lord Privy Seal and House of Commons leader by Prime Minister Winston Churchill today in a cabinet reshuf- fle dictated by Parliament criticism over Britain's recent military reverses and by the approach of vital spring offensives. Oliver Lyttelton, known as "one of Winston's bright young men," was made Minister of State in charge of production to supplant the dynamic Lord Beaverbrook, who declined to join the new war cabinet on grounds of health. Goes To United States Beaverbrook, who organized Brit- ain's aircraft and tank production, will go to the United States to carry on the task of pooling the resources of the United Nations. Lyttelton, who has been Minister of State in the Middle East, will join the war cabinet, reduced from nine to seven members, and will exercise "general supervision over produc- tion." Laborite Sir Stafford replaces Clement Attlee as Lord Privy Seal, and will take the place of Churchill himself in facing a House of Com- mons which has shown increasing resentment over the fact the Prime Minister has not shorn himself of some of his portfolios. Attlee, in response to Dominions demands for representation in the war cabinet, becomes Secretary of State for Dominion affairs. Others Also Dropped Dropped from the war cabinet were the veterans, Sir Kingsley Wood, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Arthur Greenwood, Labor Minister without portfolio. The hold-overs who will direct British strategy at a crucial moment in history include Prime Minister Churchill, who remains as Defense Minister and First Lord of the Treas- ury, Attlee, Labor Minister Ernest Bevin, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, and the Lord President of the Council, Sir John Anderson. Churchill disarmed his opponents, gathering for a bitter House debate over British war reverses, by an- nouncing the changes in which he gave way on all major points save one-that of his own retention of the Ministry of Defense. Attlee, as a direct representative of the Dominions, answers the re- peated Australian requests for a place in the war cabinet. Youth To Boss Appointment of Lyttelston was a guarantee that a younger man will boss Britain's production effort. Cripps will lift much work from Churchill's shoulders by being his stand-in for House of Commons ses- sions. On the whole Parliament members degarded the new cabinet as a vic- tory over a stubborn Prime Minister, and there appeared to be no doubt that the new machine, 'shorn of deadwood, would receive better treat- ment in the House. There were persistent reports to- night that a number of other minis- terial changes probably will be an- nounced next week. Rt. Rev. Hobson To Give Public Lecture On War An honored leader both from his pulpit and on the battlefield, the Rt. Rev. Henry W. Hobson will deliver a public -lecture at 4:15 p.m. Mon- day in Rackham Lecture. Hall on "America In War." Bishop Hobson, head of the South- ern Diocese of Ohio and holder of the Distinguished Service Cross for his 1918 heroism, will speak here un- der the sponsorship of the Ann Arbor Chapter of the Committee To Defend America. According to Prof. Bradley Davis of the botany department, CDA s.-hnir a - cim h ,,. e.al- .wil Trackmen Face Irish; Sextet To MeetTigers Submarines Strike At Tadrinidd, By ED ZALENSKI[ Greatest galaxy of individual stars ever to be brought together in a Midwest dual meet will assemble at 7:15 tonight in Yost Field House when Michigan's mighty track squad is pitted against the crack Irish crew from Notre Dame. Leading the Maize and Blue into the opening' indoor meet of the 1942 season will be Capt. Al Piel who is making his first appearance in col- legiate competition this season. Piel, Al Thomas and Notre Dame's Gib- son are undoubtedly among the na- tion's top men at 60 yards. The invading Irish thinclads are led by Capt. Ray Roy who anchors the visitors' one mile relay quartet and is one of the country's outstand- ing quarter-milers. Roy and a team- mate, George Schiewe, took the quar- ter in Notre Dame's dual meet with Indiana recently in 49.9. Both should give Michigan's Bob Ufer some com- petition over the 440-yard route. Incidentally, Ufer is the best in- door quarter-miler in the nation to- day, and his 48.8 record last week is only six-tenths of a second off the world indoor mark of Indiana's Roy Cochrane. Michigan's Dave Matthews is head and shoulders above all Big Ten half- milers at this stage of the current campaign, and his 1:56.4 mark is the best turned in during the indoor sea- son up to date. Notre Dame's distance trio of Ma- loney, Hunter and Conforti can be classed with Indiana's distance crew as the best in the country today. Hunter's 9:22 in the two-mile recent- ly, puts him in a class by himself. All three have turned in 4:20 in the mile (Continued on Page 3) Yoshi Gosho Dodges Draft ButNot FBII He believes in democracy and he's a conscientious objector but he didn't report for his physical after register-~ ing for the draft so special FBI agents picked him up in Ann Arbor yesterday for a violation of the Se- lective Service Act. Thirty-three-year-old Yoshi-Hide Lewis Gosho, a Japanese who was born in America, was taken into court in Detroit and heard United States Commissioner J. Stanley Hurd place him under a $1,000 bond sub- ject to investigation by a Federal grand jury. Smiling at John S. Bugas, hlead of the Detroit office of the FBI, Gosho humbly told him, "... If I knew what I know now I would never have reg- istered for the draft. I think the law is unconstitutional. That's all there is to itas far as I'm concerned." Born min Seattle, Wash., the law- breaker graduated from the Univer- sity in 1938 with degrees in arts and chemistry. His record of employment is as follows: Employed at the University Hos- pital. Lost job. Employed as custod- ian of a Boy Scout camp ,in Dexter. Lost job for incompetency. Unem- ployed to date of arrest by Federal agents. Residence: Cooperative boarding house In Ann Arbor. (Special to The Daily) COLORADO SPRINGS, Feb. 19- Ten victory-seeking Wolverine puck- men will arrive here tomorrow to face a Colorado Tiger crew in a weekend series at the Ice Palace. With their claws well-sharpened after two sparkling ties with South- ern California, the Tigers will be a real obstacle for the Michigan sex- tet to overcome. C.C. is just begin- ning to hit its stride, with the team now functioning like a unit. Coach Garrett Livingston, with two equal combinations ready to start, will follow his usual habit of starting his so-called second team. On this squad Ernie Young and Bill Tuten will handle the defense posts, while Clem Roy, Don Ringsred and Capt. Jack Clamney will be on the front line. Livingston, however, will (Continued on Page 3) Senate Scraps Pensions; Lifts ArmyWages House Committee Rejects Unemployment Benefits For War Conversion WASHINGTON. Feb. 19.--)P-In response to angry criticism from all over the country, the Senate voted tonight, 75 to 5, to scrap the "pen- sions for Congress" law and then de- cided to give the nation's fighting men abroad a raise in pay. Soon after the pension vote, the chamber accepted a suggestion from Senator Clark (Dem.-Mo.) and voted for an increase of 20 per cent in the base pay for enlisted men and 10 per cent for officers serving in the Army and Navy in foreign countries, and in Midway, Hawaii and the Philip- pines. A few minutes later, the. House Civil Service Committee sent to the floor, without recommendation, a bill to repeal the Congressional pension provisions. House Shelves Bill WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. -(') - The House Ways and Means Con- mittee dealt the Administration a stunning defeat today by voting, 16 to 8, to shelve a $300,000,000 program of unemployment benefits to workers displaced by conversion of factories to wartime production. Members said afterward that they had decided to table the legislation because state officials had contend- ed they could cope adequately with the problem and feared that the pro- gram involved a direct attack on state's rights. DAILY TRYOUTS{ Prospective Daily editorial and sports staff tryouts who were un- able to attend Wednesday's gen- eral meeting are urged to meet at 5 p.m. today in the Daily of- fices of the Publications Building for general instruction. Aruba Ports In New Nigi Japs Encounter Surprise Resistance Of Sumatra; Allies Also Hold Well In Burma,_Philippines Chinese To Shift India Supply Route By WILLIAM SMITH WHITE (Associated Press War Editor) The arrival of American and other Allied expeditionary forces in Java, the last great center of Allied power in the South Pacific above Australia, was disclosed yesterday while the Japanese invader was striking twice by air at thebAustralian mainland itself and was being bitterly engaged in the Burma theatre far to the northwest. Japanese planes attacked the Allied Naval Base of Darwin in northern Australia today after two heavy raids yesterday in which 15 persons were reported killed and 24 injured. Drakeford Announces Australian Air Minister Arthur S. Drakeford announced the third at- tack on Darwin, now next in import- ance to Soerbaja, Java, as an Allied counter-offensive base. There were no details immediately available. The reinforcements for Java- and the American detachment in- cluded ground troops and fighter and bomber pilots-were described in Batavia as "by no means large en- ough yet" for the historic struggle now approaching. Nevertheless, their mere presence was proudly saluted there as showing the world "that the Netherland Indies do not fight alone." And, perhaps even more important, CHUNGKING, China, Feb. 19.- (AP)-China's governmet disclosed today that Chiang Kai-Shek has .made conerete ~'rrangements to replace the Burma Road with an India - to - China rail - road - river route, now that the approaches to Rangoon are mined and that men- aced city is no longer a practical port of entry for war material con- signed to China. all the circumstances suggested that when the enemy gets down to the Java bastion he is going to be in such a fight as the Pacific has not thus far known. Already it developed, he was hav- inging more trouble than had ap- peared at all likely in Sumatra, the island just to the northwest which he is trying to convert into a major base for the spring, for the Dutch Command reported that strong re- sistance was continuing there and that in addition to the Dutch and native garrisons some British troops -almost certainly survivors of the tragedy of Singapore-were in action Of Immense Importance All this was of immense import- ance as an action delaying the en- emy's major thrust while the mar- shalling of Allied power went on in and around Java, and it was accom- panied by a Dutch recapitulation showing that in the Pacific generally the invader had up to Feb. 14 suf- fered the loss or damage of at least 182 ships, principally to American and Dutch action In their biggest scrap yet with the enemy over the Indies 16 American Army pursuit planes shot down eight heavy Japanese bombers and an en- emy fighter to the loss of only one American craft, according to a late Aneta news dispatch. The agency also said that 12 Jap- anese bombers escorted by 20 fight- ers attacked Bandoeng, inland Java city and site of the N.E.I. AArmy headquarters yesterday. This was accompanied, coincident- ally, by word of new offensive action by the United States Navy, which announced the sinking of a 5,000-ton enemy cargo ship in the East China Sea by an American submarine. Burma Road Threatened In the struggle for Burma the im- mediate military phase was going better for the British, for the imper- ial Command reported that in iight- ing along the Bilin River-this is an area 50 miles or less from the Ran- goon-Mandalay railway leg of the Burma supply road to China. In the Philippines, General Doug- las MacArthur's American-Filipino line upon Bataan Peninsula, Luzon, was meeting increasing Japanese pressure, particularly on the right, and Japanese troop movements again - -imcscnta t. t O - - -U 11-- ..aar2t Failure Of Students To Return Questionnaires Stymies Survey Total Response By Those Not Planning To Attend' Third Term Is Asked Stymied by the failure of a "highly, important minority" of students to return their Regential questionnaires, the University War Board asked yes- terday that all outstanding forms be returned immediately. "The non-responders," War Board secretary Clark Tibbitts said, "are probably all of one group-those who do not intend to return for the sum- mer term." Explaining that an even distribu- tion of opinion could not be expected among the delinquent students, Tib- bitts said: "It is highly important that every-! one-whether or not he intends to return this summer-return the ques- tionnaire. If we base our study on the answers of 80 per cent of theJ students, half of whom state that they will return, we will not know whether 40 per cent or 50 per cent will be here. And that 10 per cent variance represents well over 1,000 students." Tibbitts emphasized that the Uni- versity wanted to study, not to sam- ple student opinion. Any student who has not even pro- cured a copy of the Student Plans Inquiry may yet do so by visiting his concentration school adviser or his academic counsellor. On top of the list in total returns{ Student Help FundsSought Federal, State Aid Asked, Says President Ruthven Recently returned from an im- portant meeting of the Wartime Edu- cation Commission in Washington, President Alexander Ruthven said yesterday that the commission had discussed the possibility of securing aid for those students who will be financially inconvenienced by the war speed-up program. He said that a canvass had been made of possible state and federal aid, as well as of what assistance the colleges themselves could give. Members of the Executive Commit- tee of the National Association of State Universities will meet here Monday with President Ruthven to consider the entire problem. The University presidents who will attend include Frank Graham of North Carolina, J. F. Zimmerman of New Mexico, John West of North Dakota, J. R. McKissick of South Carolina, H. B. Wells of Indiana and' Herman James of Ohio. are the dental, business administra- tion and engineering schools. Prof. Harlow J. Heneman, execu- tive director of the War Board, said that returns through yesterday were "very heartening" and urged Univer- sity students to "take advantage of an opportunity to participate in the formation of the University's summer school plans." As soon as total returns reach a "reliable and usable" percentage, War Board clerks will complete tabu- lation of student plans and prepare a war calendar which will be sub- mitted to the Regents at their Febru- ary meeting next week. State Highwa Head Stresses Post-War Plan G. Donald Kennedy Ends Parley; Van Wagoner I Called To Lansing An unexpected call to Lansing kept Gov. Murray D. Van Wagoner from attending the twenty-eighth annual Michigan Highway Conference ban- quet yesterday, but State Highway Commissioner G. Donald Kennedy was on hand to climax the two-day parley and emphasize the need "for continued post-war service planning in the face of great difficulties and immediate plans for the post-war period." With the conclusion of the ban- quet, only the business meeting of the Michigan Association of Road Commissioners and Engineers, sched- uled for 9:30 a.m. today, remained on the conference program. Second speaker on the banquet program was M. W. Bingay of the Detroit Free Press, who predicted that the war tide would not totally favor the United States until the fall of 1944, and warned that we must prepare for many disappoint- ments until that time. Earlier in the day 0. K. Normann of the U.S. Public Roads Adminis- tration opened the morning session with his talk on "Highway Capacity," followed by W. H. Harvie of the State Highway Department, who pre- dicted that "the future of transpor- tation was probably completely changed on Dec. 7." Opposing the general trend of the conference, Maxwell Halsey of the Michigan State Safety Commission urged 100 per cent attention to the problem of war transport, and "don't worry about post-war preparations until victory is won." The morning session was con- cluded by S. J. Williams of the Na.. tional Safety Council, who advocated (Continued on Page 2) it Raids; Troo ps Attackers Fail In Attempt To Fire Oil Refineries; Unexplained Explosions Damage Two Vessels Stimson Says U.S. Offensive Is Near (By The Associated Press) New U-boat attacks were reported yesterday in the Caribbean but they failed to set fire to the huge oil refin- eries on Aruba with shelling from deck gunnery and failed to sink two ships which were, however, damaged by unexplained explosions off Trini- dad, the southern anchor of the is- land perimeter defenses of the Pana- ma Canal. However, a tanker flying the Pan- ama flag was reported torpedoed by a U-boat Thursday morning off Aru- ba, less than 700 miles from the Canal. Attacking Submarine The submarine attacking Aruba may have been sunk, for U.S. Army bombers, already flying the dawn patrol, spotted it quickly and dropped a heavy charge of explosives as the prowler crash-dived. No casualties were reported either at Aruba, well inside the island de- fenses, or at Trinidad, 600 miles to the east, where the presence of en- emy subshsuggested some might be making their way out of the Carib- bean and down the South American coast. There are U.S. troops on both Aru- ba, where they are cooperating with the Dutch hosts in defense of vital oil, and on Trinidad where a base was acquired from the British in the 1940 destroyer swap. The American troops on Aruba were Uider fire in the new raid, which concentrated on shelling with appar- ent intention of setting afire the vital oil works. Shells Fall Short All the shells fired from the sub lying three or four miles off-shore fell short of the oil refineries and reservoirs but they whistled through the advance posts occupied by Ameri- cans. None of the shells exploded, which raised the suspicion that they may have timers for belated detonation. In this connection it was recalled that a "dud" torpedo fired in last Mon- day's raid on Aruba was found on the beach and then exploded the next day, killing four Dutchmen who wefe dismantling it. Stimson Says U.S. Offensive Is Near WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. -(RP)-- Secretary Stimson said today the na- tion was massing its forces for the earliest possible offensive and would not disperse its strength to combat such coastal raids as the German attack on Aruba, the Dutch oil island. Forays of that character, the Secre- tary of War told newspapermen were to be expected "all along our coasts" and at "other places." Demands from "thoughtless persons" that the coun- try's forces be scattered to meet them were foreseen, he said, but "yield- ing to that pressure would be the surest way to lose the war." The Cabinet member assured the people that the United Nations would "seize every opportunity for counter- attack and the offense. Cinema League's Spring Program To Open Sunday Paul Robeson, in the title role of Eugene O'Neill's famous play "Em- peror Jones," will open the Art Cin- ema League's annual spring series at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Sunday in. the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The noted Negro baritone's pro- duction will be followed on the Sun- day night series by the outstanding films "La Maternelle," "The Thir- teen" and "The Lady Vanishes." Tickets are on sale at a State Street bookstore and the League. Single tickets will be sold. "La Maternelle, a film which has drawn heavy aplpause at its earlier appearances here, is said to be one of the finest foreign pictures pro- dned. Tt will be nresented March 8 Make Up Your Mind, JWashington; 'Shuttling Of Conditions' Stymies Local Authorities At Willow Run Only One Year's Supply Left: Prof. Bartlett Urges Immediate Exploitation Of Amazon Rubber (This is the third in a series of ar- ticles on Willow Run. The article is based entirely on FACTS obtained ini colaboration with Dr. Otto K. Engelke, director of the Washtenaw County Health Department, and Robert Cam- eron, county sanitation engineer, be- sides other loca" officials seeking to avoid a bottleneck.) By BOB MANTHO Chief factor that has stymied hard-working local authorities bat- tling to house an influx of laborers in the critical Willow Run defense area is the over-night shuttling of conditions-a factor caused by the government's time-consuming policy of holding back decisions relative to the number of workers who will be housed around the big bomber plant. This obstacle has harassed county officials all along the line. They don't know how to go about planning for the new community-how many to house, how many to transport, how to provide sanitation, how to finance Iliri-ic- ri anfnn s h n rapi- progress is nullified the next day be- cause the estimated number of work- ers jumps to new proportions. The result of all this jack-rabbit change of affairs is delay-delay which causes hit-and-miss methods of control over housing and sanita- tion, delay which renders the control efforts of local authorities effective for only a short-run period of time. If the government doesn't make up its mind soon, the whole situation threatens to run away with itself and a bottleneck of serious consequences may develop. The water supply and sewage dis- posal problem is urgent. The facili- ties available are in Ypsilanti, Ann Arbor and a few of the smaller towns. These are municipally controlled. But the areas not served by these districts are crying for utilities to handle the workers. Should there be individual sewage and water disposal facilities on each lot of ground or shall there be some I s,,,iiirnt nn tr 1 n rn r.fincr th Warning that our present supply of rubber will last us not more than a year, Prof. Harley H. Bartlett, chair- man of the botany department, yes- terday recommended the immediate expenditure of between 100 and 250 million dollars for the exploitation of rubber trees in the Amazon valley and in the scuthwestern United States. speaking befo-e a meeting of re- presentatives from Michigan Church- Related Colleges, Professor Bartlett asserted that in less than two years "we will be on the spot as far as rubber is concerned and we will re- main there for at least five years if things continue to go badly in the Orient." "The money spent immediately for rubber exploitation may save our ba- con. If so, it is worth it." Bartlett said that even though the rubber supply in the Western Hemisphere and utilize to the utmost the already available supply. In an attempt to solve the first of these problems, Bartlett said that he had recently transplanted 7,600 rub- ber trees of the finest strain from the Phillipines to Haiti. "It will take at least 20 years for this source of rub- ber to become as good or better than that in Sumatra." "If we are willing to spend the money, however," he continued, "we can get at 'least 100,00 pounds of rObber from the Amazon valley in the next year or two."t "A second immediate source of rub- ber is in New Mexico and Southern California where the .guayule plant can be exploited immediately and can be cultivated for future use." Bartlett pointed out that we should ni _c n_ _. _acr .n A ci"_ "4 1- - n .__