Weather Partly cloudy, somewhat warmer today. ig Li iau jIaiti Editorial Next one's on The House . VOL. L. No. 63 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DEC. 7, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS Roosevelt Acts To Help Finns; Red Cross Aid To Collaborate Plans Discussed To Return Baltic Nation's War-Debt PaymentsAlready Made Food And Supplies May Be Sent Later WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.-(A')-The administration marshalled its ec- onomic forces today for indirect sup- port of Finland in her fight against Russian invasion, while President Roosevelt expressed a hope that the. Baltic nation would be able to pre- serve her "free political and social institutions." The President conferred with Jesse Jones, head of the Federal Loan Ad- ministration, and Norman Davis, chairman of the American Red Cross, on a program for aiding Finland. Mr. Roosevelt also took the occa- sion of Finland's Independence Day to address a telegram to President Kallio of Finland, saying: Voices Esteem For Finns "This anniversary on which the Finnish people recall with pride the achievement of their independence gives me yet another welcome occa- sion to voice the wholehearted esteem felt for them and for their govern- ment of the United States. "It is my earnest hope that these tragic days may not be long in giv- ing way to a happier era to permit the Finnish people to continue, un-a troubled, the steady development oft their free political and social institu-( tions which have aroused the admira- tion of the American people." With Jones, Mr. Roosevelt sought to determine what might be done for the Finnish people through the gov- ernment's lending agencies. Jones said later there might be a move to send the Finns things to eat and wear, such as cotton, corn and wheat, sur- plus products in the United States. Discusses Relief For Finland Davis and the President discussed relief for Finland. Davis told report- ers the American Red Cross had tele- graphed $10,000 to the British Red Cross for medical supplies to be flown from Britain to Finland. In addi- tion, $15,000 has been set aside forc further supplies which will be sent from here. Moreover, the Red Cross chapters throughout the United States wlil collect funds for relief distribu-t tion in Finland. Another development was an asser-l tion by Representative Hook (Dem.,s Mich.) that he would draft legislation1 to turn over to Finland the payments she has made on her war debt. Presi-I dent Roosevelt said yesterday he had instructed Secretary of the Treasury Morganthau to hold the Dec. 15 pay- ment of $234,693 in a special account until he could get Congress' permis- sion to return it to Finland. < Be A Goodfellow - Ernest Bates Dies At Home Former Grad Well-Known As Writer And Critic Ernest Sunderland Bates, '02, died suddenly Monday of a heart attack at his home, Edgehill Inn, Spuyten Duyvil, N.Y. at the age of 60. Author, critic, former literary editor of the Dictionary of American Biography, Mr. Bates was widely recognized in literary circles. His work ranged oversa wide field, including such works as "This Land' of Liberty," "The Story of the Su- preme Court," "Hearst,ithe Lord of San Simeon," (with Oliver Carlson), and "The Bible Designed to be Read as Living Literature." He had re- viewed books for many years for the Saturday Review of Literature, the Herald-Tribune and the New York Times. Mr. Bates received his masters de- gree here in 1903 and taught here dur- ing the summer of 1934, at which timehe gavena series of lectures on the modern novel. He also taught at Oberlin, Columbia, Arizona and Oregon. - Be A GoodfeUow Prof. Sunderland Goes To Washington Prof. Edson R. Sunderland of the law school has,.gone to Washington, D.C. to attend a meeting of the Ad- Groups Are Enthusiastic A bout Goodfellow Drive Dormitories Needy Children By Proceeds Like Little Boy Above Are Aided From Goodfellow 'Daily' Sales Preparations for Monday's sale ofi the special Goodfe6ow edition of The1 Daily began in earnest yesterday as fraternities, sororities, honor societiesI and other groups indicated their en- thusiasm and promised their fullest1 cooperation in the one-day Good-+ fellow campaign.1 Competition for The Daily lovingI Today's. Garg Examines Life, Of 1"nyddlick'1 Elementary unnatural history will1 receive good play in the hands of to-' day's issue of the Gargoyle, with its penetrating investigation of the pri- vate life 'of the SNYDDLICK, an un- common creature sired by the staff of E. Wunsch's humor magazine for campus consumption. Excerpts from the detailed account, of the Plume Tailed or Sag Belly Snyddlick indicate the creature's in-, herent desire to "haunt downtown sections of cities long after bedtime." Knowledge of the animal should prove useful if not interesting to the cam-, pus, Wunsch said. Supplementing the biological ac- count among other things is a short3 story by Dennis Flanagan called by1 the Garg staff the best of the contest stories yet encountered. James Allen of Perspectives was quoted as "gnash- ing my teeth," at missing the opus for his publication. C Be A Goodfellow Quarterdeck Meets TodayL Anthony Dipalma; '39E, will ad- dress Quarterdeck, naval architec- ture honorary society, on the sub- ject: "Several Interior Arrangements of Different Yacht Types," at its cup, the award given to the organiza-I tion that rolls up the largest bankroll I (including their own contributions)< from the sale of Goodfellow Dailies, was intensified as advance subscrip- tions continued to pour in. The bulk of the Goodfellow Fund, in past years,! has been rather evenly split between advance subscriptions and streetl sales during Goodfellow day., The executive committee of 25 cam-1 pus leaders, however, stressed the im- portance of pre-drive pledges, and en- couraged their submission before Sat- urday. The ,committee, moreover, plotted the sales strategy which they? hoped would boost total drive receipts to a new all-time high. The Good- fellow drive was initiated five years ago. The purpose of the drive was again emphasized by Mrs. Gordon W. Bre- voort, secretary of the Family Wel- fare Bureau, as she cited some of the' case histories of those Ann Arbor needy to whom some of the proceeds of the Gooifellow drive will be de- voted. Mrs. Brevoort gave as typical ex- ample of those aided by Goodfellow contribution the case of the woman, 23 years old, who suffered an accident to her left eye during her childhood and was forced to have that eye re- moved and resort to a glass eye. She still, however, retained the sight of her right eye and was thus able to be employed as a maid in a local household. But recently she has developed a progressive disease in her right eye. She will soon be totally blind. She has not, however lost courage. Sl plans to attend a vocational school for the blind, a school whose tuition is free. But she needs pocket money for various, small expenses. She needs a few new pieces of clothing to give her self-confidence; some pocket money for a few essentials. And it is to the fund derived from the sales To Hold First Open House Students Are Appointed As Guides In Residences From 8-11 P.M. Today President Ruthven To Be Special Guest; Students, faculty and townspeople will have an opportunity to inspect for the first time the housing facilities ofk the West Quadrangle plan for hous-I ing men, at an Open House from 8 to< 11 p.m. today, according to Prof. Karl Litzenberg, director of Residence Halls. A 16-man committee comprised of the eight house presidents and judi- ciary council members is in charge of1 the 100 students who will act as7 hosts and guides to conduct visitors through the 457 rooms which house 945 students, the four dining halls in which 1,000 meals are served daily, the kitchens, lounges, study halls and4 recreation rooms.- President and Mrs. Ruthven, Re- gents of the University and D. R. Kennicott, regional director of the PWA in Chicago, will be special guests, Professor Litzenberg said.1 Members of the Board of Governors of the Residence Halls will be present to receive visitors. Twenty women will preside at cof- fee urns in the dining hall. Resident advisers, assistant resident advisers and staff assistants will act as hosts for the evening and house directors will be in their suites to receiveJ guests. Miss Ruth Danielson, Mrs. Mary Mitchell and Mrs. Martha Ray will be hostesses in the dining room for the evening. Governors who will be present are Prof. Margaret E. Tracy and Prof. Roger L. Morrison of the engineering depatrment, Prof. Charles L. Jamison of the business policy de- partment, Prof. Carl G. Brandt of the English department, Prof. John W. Eaton .of the Germancepartmet, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Dean Joseph A. Bursley and Shirley W. Smith, vice- president of the University. Attendants will be present to facili- tate parking and the checking of wraps. Be A Goodfellow3 . j Commentator To Talk Here II. V. Kaltenborn To Give Series Lecthre Tuesday Catapulted into sensational ac- claim by his spot-news interpreta- tions during the 18-day September crisis last year, H. V. Kaltenborn, who will give the Oratorical Associa- fion lecture at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, ,ill bring into full play the re-, sources and experiences of a story- book career. The well-known commentator was the first American journalist to in- terview Mussolini on the Ethiopian venture and has Hitler and General Chiang Kai-Shek on his list of "conquests." Kaltenborn became radio's first news broadcaster in 1922, and for 16 years has been a solid, though unsensational success. Suddenly, at the age of 60, his life became dom- inated by events in Europe which kept the world on the brink of war, his friends report. During that period, he lived, ate and slept in a radio studio; reading news, talking by radiophone to European capitals, listening to speeches and then giving an immediate, impromptu digest and explanation of the talks. This fall, Kaltenborn was again in Europe during the days before the declaration of war, broadcasting his appraisal of the fast-moving events in London. Fraternity Men S ta rt Working On Xmas Party Bags Of Fruit And Candy Will Be Distributed To Town Kids in preparation for the coming Christmas party, 100 sophomore and junior staff members of the Inter- fraternity Council began the nerve- wracking task yesterday of appor- tioning 600 pounds of peanuts, 5,000 apples, 750 pounds of hard candy and 400 pounds of candy kisses into more than 5,000 cellophane bags. The bags will be distributed to Ann Ar- bor grade school children at th sec- ond annual Interfraternity Council Christmas Party, at 4:15 p.m. Mon- day in Hill Auditorium, Jerome B. Grossman of the Council said yester- day. Dye Hogan, '40, president of the 'M' Club announced yesterday that members of the Club will be on hand Monday to help out. In addition, fraternity pledges, replete with pots, will act as ushers to the more than 5,000 children expected. IFC mem- bers will take the role of Santa Claus' assistants to dole out the large num- ber of bags of candy. Several local dairies have donated 5,000 ice cream cups, and the Loyal Order of the Moose, a non-profit or- ganization, has agreed to donate $25 to help defray the cost of the other refreshments. Entertainment, as previously an- nounced will be provided by the Ann Arbor High School Band and the University Glee Club, and a short novelty motion picture will be shown on a special screen, Grossman said. In addition to Santa Claus, James Neilson, '41A, will perform as head clown assisted by 18 other fraterntiy men all dressed in circus costumes. Be A Goodfellow Rodkey Tells Banking Group Of Standards First Session Hears Past History Study Needed To Form Firm Basis The same general line of attack can be followed in setting up standards for all banks, though no two have identical problems, Prof. Robert G Rodkey of the School of Business Ad- ministration told more than 150 Mich- igan bankers attending the first study session of the second annual Bankers Study Conference yesterday in - the Union. The first thing that bankers can learn from a survey of the history of operating results for the past few years, said. J. V. Norman, Jr., of Louisville, Ky., at the same session, is that "each bank must study with care the record of its own past ex- perience in respect to losses on loans and investments, as well as the av- erage record of banks in the nation, to get some idea of what should be placed in the reserve account." Not until this is done, he continued, can a sound dividend policy be formulat- ed. L. R. Lunden of the University of Minnesota, editor of "Investment and Financial Review," said that bankers must develop "the will to follow busi- ness doctrines based on their past ex- perience," at the second study session of the Conference yesterday afternoon in the amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. In application of this theory, how- I (Continued on Page 3) Northwestern Meets Debate SquadToday Michigan varsity debaters will end their semester's schedule when they meet Northwestern on Government ownership of the railroads at 8 p.m.i today in the North Lounge of the Union. Edgar Clinton, '41, and John Hus-1 ton, '41, will take the affirmative in the non-decision contest on the topic, "Resolved: That the Federal Govern- ment Should Own and Operate theM Railroads." Charles E. Kerner, '41, will intro- duce the speakers. The Michigan de- bates are sponsor'ed by the Union Ex- ecutive Council and no admission charge is made. An open forum dis- cussion period will follow the debate.I This is Clinton's first year on cam- pus. While attending Grand Rapids Junior College he debated for two years, was an officer in the Interna- tional Relations Club and the Quill Club, and a member of the Men's Union Cabinet. Huston debated for two years, was1 on the Ann Arbor high school team which progressed to the elimination contests in the Michigan High School Forensic League, participated in de- clamation, oratory, and senior play. He was a member of Masquers dra-! matic society, business manager of1 the Optimist, a member of Quill andI Scroll, Student Council, National1 Honor Society, and as a member of' the Washington Club promoted class trips to Washington, D.C. Since he entered the University, Huston has been a member of the Anti-War committee, a member of the assembly council of. the Student' Religious Association, and is now in the tutorial system of instruction. Karl Olson, '40, and R. Erwin Bow- ers, '41, met a negative Illinois squad in the first non-decision home debate last week. Be A Goodfellow German Play Casting Given Verein Plans Puppet Show For Next Tuesday The official cast for the Deutscher Verein's puppet play, "Dornroes- chen" or the Sleeping Beauty, which will be presented at 8:30 p.m. Wed- nesday, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, was announced yesterday by Dr. Otto G. Graf of the German department.% David Gibson, '41, a puppeteer of wide experience, according to Dr. Graf, is presenting his Scaletta Mar- ionettes in an expanded dramatiza- tion of the famous Grimm fairy tale. The dramatization of the legend was prepared by Dr. Graf and James S. Edwards, also of the German depart- ment. Members of the Verein cooperating in the production are: Elizabeth Watkins, '41, Lynda Nickl, '40, Judith Frank, '40, Ethel Winnai, '41, Dor- othy Farnan, '42, Carl Petersen, '40, Edward Wetter, Grad., Kenneth Marble, '41, and Gibson. Independence Celebrated By Finns; Heavy Snows Slow Down Maneuvers Staff Communique Announces Assaults By LYNN SEINZERLING HELSINKI, Dec. 6.-(P)-Reports from authoritative sources in London today disclosed that British firms had arranged to supply a score of fighting planes and "a considerable quantity of other materials" to Finland. Meanwhile Finland celebrated the 22nd anniversary of her independence by fighting in the snows of her eas- tern frontiers for her liberty. At the end of the day a general staff communique announced that as- saults of 200,000 soldiers of the army of Russia estimated to be engaged in an attempted invasion had been re- pulsed on all three fronts. Eighty Russian tanks had been wrecked since the war started last Thursday morning, the staff an- nouncement said, and 36 Russian air corps planes brought down. In today's battles on the southern front, it was announced eight enemy tanks were destroyed near Valkjarvi, near the center of the Karelian Isth- mus. Valkjarvi is about nine miles from the Russian border. On the northern front, where the Finns were fighting with machine- guns and automatic rifles in snow- drifts six feet deep, the )'inns an- nounced the Russians had bombed Petsamo, Arctic port, and Pitkaranta "without success." The Finns said they brought down two of the planes. In Central Finland, a government spokesman announced that Russian reconaissance planes machinegunned civilians, killing one and wounding sit. Moscow Says Forces Have Pierced Finn Lines MOSCOW, Dec. 7. --P)-- Soviet Russian military commanders an- nounced tonight they had broken through the main Finnish defense line-"known among Finnish white guards as the Maginot-Kirke line"- on the Karelian Isthmus. The break-through, a communique from Leningrad military headquar- ters asserted, was on the eastern sec- tion of the isthmus after artillery preparation. The Soviet troops "forced the river Taipaleenioki and are advancing northwards," the communique said. In the center of the isthmus, the Russians -said their forces occupied Korpioja on the branchline which runs from Viipuri to Valkjarvi. The Russians reported occupation of Val- kjarvi yesterday. Be A Goodfellow Waugh To Give Fourth Lecture 'Humanity Out Of Doors' Is SubjectOf Speech In his fourth :euvare of a' series of five, Dr. Frank A. Waugh, Profes- sor Emeritus of Landscape Architec- ture at Massachusetts State College, will speak on "Humanity Out Of Doors" at 4:15 pa. today, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. This lec- ture, as the others, deals with the environment as a natural resource, with reference to the relation of the environment to recreation as an im- portant form of land use. During William T. Jardine's term as Secretary of Agriculture, Dr. Waugh was appointed a member of the expedition which climbed Mt. Hood in Washington to investigate forestry and landscape conditions there. At present Dr. Waugh is a consultant of the U.S. Forest Serv- Britain Sends Aid To Finnish Army; Russians Advance open meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in i of the Goodfellow Daily that she htopes the West Engineering Building. to find this assistance. Dewey's Entrance In Campaign Brings Forth Opposing Opinions __ Twelfth Annual Soph Cabaret By WILLIAM B. ELMER There are two existing viewpoints on the early declaration of Thomas Edmund Dewey, '23, to run for the Republican nomination for presi- dent, Prof. Harold M. Dorr of the political science department said yes- terday. One of these maintains that Dewey is making a bad move while Van- denberg and Taft are playing a more cautious game by waiting until the Democrats name their entries for the race, Professor Dorr said. The other view is that allz the Republican aspirants should remain quiet for the time being. But, under the cir- cumstances, Professor Dorr ex- plained, the early declaration on the part of Dewey was the wisest and perhaps the only course open to him. For Dewey has not been in the limelight as long as either Van- denberg or Taft. and moreover, in his position as district attorney for portant part in the campaign, Pro- fessor Dorr pointed out, is the tre- mendous popularity Dewey has won for himself through his vigorous action as district attorney, for this appeals to the public more so than positive stands on foreign and na- tional questions. Perhaps an insight into the nature of Dewey's plan of action is offered by his desire to deliver his first speech, as a declared candidate for nomination, in Minneapolis yester- day, Professor Dorr explained, inas- much as Minnesota has the youn- gest man to ever enter actively into a presidential race, and these fac- tors may indicate that he is making a play for the, younger voters. A very important barometer to Dewey's popularity and possible suc- cess in a presidential campaign, Pro- fessor Dori pointed out, is his con- sistent holding if top place in the national public oninion nolls. I Hopes To Attract 6,000 People Technic Cover Shows Tree That Isn't There Apparent failure of Building and Grounds officials to conform with the cover scene on the December issue of the Technic brought editors of the engineering publication anxi- ous moments as the first day of sales opened today. Depicted on the cover of the Tech- nic is the decorated Christmas tree _.t. . .. . . - e _ _llnwr -m a '. More than 6,000 are expected to at- tend "Winter Wonderland," 12th an- nual Soph Cabaret, which will be held tomorrow and Saturday at the League, Rosebud Scott, '42, ticket chairman, said last night. This year the proceeds from Soph Cabaret will be turned over to the Crippled Children's Benefit Commit- The following houses are leading the ticket sales for Soph Cabaret: Per Cent Alpha Xi Delta ...........90 Lambda Chi ..............80 Alpha Epsilon Phi ........66 Acacia ...................60 Delta Gamma ............45 Kappa Delta Rho .......30 ' T31-, nhiT o TI.a .5 munity sympathy for the crippled children whose opportunities for nec- essary corrective treatment have been curtailed, Carl Petersen, '40, chair- man of the Benefit Committee said. "Winter Wonderland" will be open from 3 to 5:30 p.m. and from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow. It will be presented from 3 to 5:30 p.m. and from 8:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Fifty girls will participate in the floor show which will be given at 4:30 p.m. and 10:15 p.m. on both days. More than 200 girls will act as hostesses according to Margot Thom '42, hostess chairman. Woody Macki and his orchestra will provide music for dancing. One of the cases that will be helped Uf- A f-" m:_ u+mr - fjn -anr $1 x r s ,, e , ice. 'Third Of A Nation' Has Near Full House Play Production presented Arthur Arent's " . . . one third or a na- tion . . ." last night in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre before a near- enariy wleneenn