F9, Weather Generally fair; somewhat lower temperatures VOL. L. No. 67 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN MONDAY, DEC. 11, 1939 Editorial Thanks To You, GoodIfellowsE PRICE FIVE CENTS Goodfellow Army Primed For Campaign Italians Reported Sending 50 Pilots To Finns n Helsinki Says Soviet Attacks Are Repulsed On All Fronts Scandinavian Bloc Leads In League Demands For HelpTo Finland USSR Maintains ArmyAdvancing GENEVA, Dec. 10.-GP)-Italian sources here today said that Italian army pilots and ground crews had accompanied 50 Italian planes to Fin- land and that Premier Mussolini probably would give the Finns "all aid within reason." These sources said Il Duce took the same view of the Russian-Finnish conflict that he did of the Spanish civil war. The Finns' contract with an Italian firm for planes, it was said, called for a certain number of training ex- perts for Finnish student pilots and mechanics to accompany the planes to Helsinki, but the regular army men who actually went far exceeded in number the civil experts who were provided for in the agreement. These *sources said that the more evidence the Finns gave of their powers of resistance the more Italian aid was likely to increase. HELSINKI, Dec. 10-(A)--Violent fighting in knee-deep snow on Fin- land's eastern frontier at the Arctic Circle was reported from the front today where the Finns declared they had repulsed all Soviet attacks. The Russians battered at Finnish defenses in all sectors of the Eastern Front, but were particularly active near the Arctic Circle, leading many observers to conclude they had changed their strategy and were striving to cut Finland in two by driving to the Swedish border and the Gulf of Bothnia. Heavy fighting also was reported on the Southern Front, on the eas- tern side of the Karelian Isthmus, where three brigades of Soviet troops behind a tank corps attempted un- successfully to smash their way to the Mannerheim Line. GENEVA, Dec. 10.-(P)-Norway's delegate led a Scandinavian bloc to- day in a campaign to obtain from the League of Nations concrete aid for Finland and to block help of Soviet Russia by League members At the same time Argentina's Min- ister Rodolfo Freyre made it plain that his country would demand Rus- sia be ousted from the League im- mediately after Finland presents her cas tomorrow to the Assembly fo f i "I i Greeks To leHep Local Children Welcome Santa \I President Ruthven Gives Support To Goodfellow Drive Fraternity Christmas Party To Entertain 5,000 YoungstersToday Movies, music and Santa Claus himself will entertain more than 5,- 000 Ann Arbor school children ex-, pected to attend the Interfraternity Council's second annual Christmas party at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Au- ditorium, Jerome B. Grossman, '41, publicity chairman, said yesterday. James Neilson. '41A; acting as head clow~n, assisted by 18 other fraternity men and the varsity cheerleaders, will start off the program wtih a cir- cus act. Mayor Walter C. Sadler will then introduce Santa, who will be ushered in by the appropriate fan- fare of the Ann Arbor High School Band. Santa will have the task of passing out the refreshments, includ- ing candy, apples and peanuts. The Varsity Glee Club will add to the entertainment by singing Christ- mas carols and Michigan songs. "Joy to the World," "Michigan Men," "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear," and "Friar's Song." The Varsity Band will play "The Children's March," "Jolly Coppersmith," "Over the Rain- bow," and "Concert in the Park." Af- ter these numbers everybody will join in community singing with "Hark the Herald Angels Sing." Finally, the 1 house lights will dim and Walt Dis- ney's "Hawaiian Holiday" will be projected on a"special screen. Some tickets for the party, which (Continued on Page 6) IBal let To Give Performnance Here_ Tonight The American Ballet Caravan rolls into Ann Arbor today for a single per- formance at 8:15 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Established by Lincoln Kirstein, leading American authority on bal- let, to prove the potentialities of American dancers, the Caravan fea- tures in its repertory ballets built around American scenes and charac- ters. Of the three ballets to be present- ed here tonight, two will be Ameri- can in theme. "Billy the Kid" is a ballet interpretation of the life of . the almost legendary Western des- - perado who boasted that he had killed 21 men by the time he was 21 years old, "not counting Indians." Aarson Copland's score incorporates many r fahous cowboy songs. r Second of the native American 400 Will Canvass Campus InAnnual' Drive For Charity Prominent Faculty Members To Support Drive By Aiding Students In Sale Of Special Goodfellow Issue The Goodfellow Army, the University's standard bearers of humanitari- anism, received its marching orders at 7:30 a.m. today and exactly at that zero-hour, its advance guard invaded strategic spots on the campus and downtown area. More than 400 members of the student and faculty body, comprising this Army, thus began the fifth annual sale of the Goodfellow edition of The Daily in an all-day attempt to raise funds to provide year-round aid to underprivileged students and families of Ann Arbor. Predicting a highly successful drive, Dennis Flanagan, '40, editor of the Goodfellow Daily, expressed his appreciation to those fraternities, sororities O and campus housing units that have U A _ (already submitted advance contri- Dennis Flanagan, '40, editor of the Goodfellow edition, and Ann Vicary, '40, women's editor of The Daily are shown here enlisting the support of President Ruth ven in the fifth annual Goodfellow Drive. Concerning the drive President Ruthven said: "One may participate in an activity of this sort with the assurance that it is genuinely helpful to the commtmity in which we are living." 0 In.The Goodfellow Drier' s Seat Following is the list of Goodfellow salesmen with posts and times. General instructions for all Goodfellows: (1) Contrary to previous announcements salesmen scheduled at 7:45 a.m. are to report to the Student Publications Building at 7:30 a.m. for papers, aprons and instructions. Those not preceded by anyone at their post are likewise asked to report to the Publications Building to obtain materials. (2) Any questions or difficulties should be reported immediately to the Goodfellow Editor, 2-3241. (3) Salesmen scheduled for 12:00- posts on the diagonal, in the engineering arch and in the League are to turn over their aprons to faculty salesmen and stand by ready to take over whenever the faculty wish to leave. (4) Post should not be left until successor appears: materials may be turned over to him. Last salesman at each post should turn in his material to The Daily. Helen Arthur, Play Director, Is Dead At 60 Was Head Of Ann Arbor Dramatic Season;- Led New York Productions Miss Helen Arthui.. one of the grand old ladies of the American the- atre and director of the Ann Arbor Dramatic Season for the past two years, died Saturday in New York City. She was 60 years old. A native of Lancaster, Wis., Miss Arthur was a graduate of Northwestern Univer- sity Law School and became one of the first woman attorneys to prac- tice in New York City. From 1914 on, she worked in amateur theatrical productions, as manager and director of the Neighborhood Playhouse on Grand Street in New York's "East Side." Later she was instrumental in bringing the company into the Little Theatre in the Broadway the- atrical district. Until her retirement in 1927, she presented an annual re- vue, the "Grand Street Follies," there. During the pastrfive years, Miss Arthur was director of the Casino Theatre in Newport, Rhode Island, a summer "tryout" playhouse. It was her custom to go to Newport immedi- ately after the conclusion of the Dramatic Season. Miss Arthur last year spoke of her work here as "an attempt to make Ann Arbor a first-class producing center for new plays," and "a logical step in the creation of a national the- atre." The people who are working for such a theatre, she said, realize "the college towns of the country have a very special place in their plans." Fire Department Squads Save Three Trapped Men butions to the Goodfellow fund. "We are thus given a running start," he said. The drive, supported by President Alexander G. Ruthven and backed by 25 campus leaders, is the only annual all-campus organized and sponsored charity drive administered solely by students. Continuing the tradition initiated last year, prominent members of the faculty, including such campus fig- ures as Dean Joseph A. Bursley, Dean Walter B. Rea, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Prof. John L. Brumm of the journal- ism department, Miss Ethel A. Mc- Cormick, social director of the League and many others will begin at high-noon today to patrol the Diagonal, contributing their energy toward the success of the Goodfellow Drive. The Goodfellow Drive was origi- nally conceived five years ago at a meeting between a group of under- graduate leaders and Mrs. Gordon W. Brevoort, secretary of the Family Welfare Bureau in Ann Arbor. The group, agreeing upon the necessity for a single, coordinated drive to raise funds for the indigent, began the Goodfellow drive that has now become an established Michigan tradition. For more than 10 hours today, therefore, members of the Goodfel- low Army will devote their time to the raising of money for the indi- gent. Last year amore than $1,100 was contributed; and in the past as much as $1,675 has been raised in a single day's campaign. The bulk of the fund is derived from both sales of the special issue of The Daily and contributions from private indi- viduals. The Goodfellow drive, character-' ized as the student body's most hu- manitarian project, is designed to aid the needy not only during the Christmas season but throughout the whole year. Though the allocation of funds is not constant each year, the Deans' Discretionary Fund and the Family Welfare Bureau annually receive a share of the proceeds re- Jen hmpo ANGELL HALL LOBBY 7:45 Jane Mowers Sue Potter 9:00 Dorothy Nichols Betty Gross 10:00 Phyllis McGeachy Mary Frances Reek 11:00 Patricia Matthews Rosalind Fellman 12:00 Jane Mowers Maxine Baribeau 1:00 Janet Clark Madeline Krieghoff 2:00 Roberta Moore 3:00 Jane Dunbar Ellen Redner 4:00 Alberta Royal 5:00 Maxine Baribeau CENTER OF DIAGONAL 7:45 Dorothy Shipman Ellen Redner Stanley Swinton Hadley Smith Doris Merker Annabel Van Winkle 9:l,0 Ann Dredge Jean McKay Forrest Jordan Don Treadwell Jane Grove Lee Hardy 1:00 Roberta Leete Stew Robson Jim Rae Pedo Ortmayer Elinor Sevison 2:00 Patty Haislip DorothyNichols Bill Davidson Hal Benham Jane Krause Margary Allison Betty Clement 3:00 'Mary Honecker Zelda Davis John Nicholson Dye Hogan Margary Allisop Betty Clement 4:00 Dorothy Nichols Ralph Schwartzkopf Norma Kaphan Jean Thompson 1:00 Mary Jane Woodley Marjorie Mullin 2:00 Sue Bentley Nancy Gould 3:00 Connie Bryant Jane Hart 4:00 Betty Whitely Margaret Neafle 5:00 Jean Davis Ruth Barber LIBRARY STEPS 7:45 Jack Grady 9:00 Charles Heinen 10:00 Sandy Harris Irl Brent Elmer Foster 11:00 Dick Strain Harold Singer 12:00 Warren Solovich Robert Ulrich 1:00 William Slocum Robert Samuels 2:00 MarshallnBrown Ted Spangler 3:00 Charles Kerner James Rossman