WPeather UitZIrkIxtt&ft snow flvirrie~s and AOF Ar aijg Editorial ASU Plans For Nationai Meet VOL. L. No. 68 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 13, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS Candidates Listed For Senior, Frosh Dance Committees Kaltenborn Asks U.S. Aloofness From War, Tells Of Peace Hopes v i Business School Also Casts Votes Today In Senior Class Officer Election Five Schools Share Afternoon's Voting Candidates for the three elections today for Senior Ball and Frosh Frolic committees and for senior officers in the School of Business Administration were announced yes- terday by Betty Slee '40, president of Women's Judiciary Council and Carl Wheeler, '41E, president of Men's Judiciary Council. Five women and ten men from the literary school are running for the senior dance committee, balloting for which is from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Room 225 Angell Hall. The women are: Maxine Baribeau, Helen Brady. Anne McCarthy, Jean Thompson and Ann Hawley. The men are: Walter Hinkle, Theodore Liebovitz, Murray Massin, James Barnard, John Thorn- hill, Daniel Shaw, James McCrack- en, Cas Soika, Edward Hutchens and Harold Goldman. Eight Engineers In Race Eight engineers in the senior dance committee election which will be from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., are: John Callouette, John Haigh, Nat Siegel, James Wills, Ken Meyer, Eugene Klein, Richard Adams and Redfield Zittel. The music school's only can- didate, Lee Chrisman, was declared automatically elected. Richard Ab- bott of the forestry school and Anna- belle Dredge of the architectural school were also declared on the com- mittee. Harriet Thom and Sally Connery of the education school will contest the position for that school. The School of Nursing election will be conducted separately in that school to determine the representa- tive. Frosh Frolic Candidates In the Frosh Frolic election, mem- bers of the architectural school will vote with the engineering school, and all other students with the literary school. From the engineering school candiates are: Edward Brunenkant, James Pierce, Gordon Dunfee, Ed- gar Gibson, Bruce Allen, William Schoedinger, Richard Schoel and John Fauver. Literary school men to be voted on, are: Howard Wallach, Robert Morri- son, Loren Robinson, William Daw- son, Murray Markland, Robert De- Long and Richard Briggs. Women (Continued on Page 2) Fi nish Relief Drive Continues Lane Hall Collecting Posts Will Be Supplemented The campus drive for relief for the Finns in their war with Russia will be intensified tomorrow when tables are slated to be placed at different spots on the campus for collection of clothing and money. Toivo Liimatainen, '41E, president of the local Finnish student group an- nounced last night that these new collecting posts will supplement the Lane Hall headquarers. Definite places for collection outside of the table in Angell Hal lobby are not yet known, he said. The drive was progressing smoothly last night, according to Liimatainen. Union Employes To Be Entertained Tonight will see the 1939 version of the annual Michigan Union employe's dinner which will be given in the main ballroom of the Union. E. D. Ashford, chief accountant of the Union is chairman for the dinner which will entertain 325 members of the building's staff. Included on the evening's enter- tainment, is a musical program by Morton's Swing Band, and three dance numbers by the Sylvia Stu- dio. Prof. W. D. Henderson, of the University Extension Service will speak. Charles Forbes, '40E, student $700 Received In Good fellow Drive To Date As fraternity, sorority and other housing units pre-drive pledges con- tinue to roll in, and final street-sale returns ,totalling more than $700, be- come complete, the annual Goodfel- low drive, 1939 edition, is expected definitely to surpass the $1,100 mark. The $1,100 total will also include contributions from private individ- uals and receipts from the advertis- ing included in the special issue. Street sales by Congress were the most successful in collecting funds, final returns revealed. Tau Beta Pi Women's Athletic Association, and the Union, however, also achieved honorable mention as determined by total street-sales. Monday's drive was the fifth an- nual campaign in what has become an established Michigan tradition. The funds, collected in the drive, will be devoted to the assistance of stu- dent and Ann Arbor needy. The drive, led this year by an executive committee of 25 campus leaders, enlisted more than 400 Good- fellow volunteers who scoured the streets for 10 hours Monday in an intense attempt to secure funds for, charity.' The Goodfellow campaign is the only annual all-campus organized and sponsored charity drive admin- istered solely by students. Fairbanks Dies Of Heart Attack 55-Year Old Actor Stricken In Santa Monica Home HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 12.--)-The last reel unwound for Douglas Fair- banks, Sr., today, finis to a magni- ficent career. The great Doug-he of the thil- ing screen acrobatics and the. once- great real-life romance-died unex- pectedly at his Santa Monica beach home, at 12:45 a.m., of a heart at- tack. He was only 55. Tonight his family was still too stunned to think of funeral plans. Friends said the body probably would be placed in Forest Lawn Cemetery, where lie the remains of Jean Har- low, Will Rogers and many other Hollywood celebrities. In Chicago, Mary Pickford, Fair- banks' second wife, said his death brought "a deep sorrow to his family and friends, but I am sure it will prove a consolation to us all to re- call the joy and the glorious spirit i of adventure that he gave to the world . . . It is impossible to believe that that vibrant and gay spirit could ever perish." Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., the actor's son, remained with the grief-stricken widow, the former Lady Sylvia Ash- ley, throughout the day. She was prostrated. Radio Commentator Gives Background Of Conflict; Scores Britain, France By LEONARD SCHLEIDER H. V. Kaltenborn, radio's distin- guished news analyst, last night warned a capacity Oratorical Series audience that the United States must remain aloof from Europe's war, and that, although "we can sympathize with Great Britain and- France, we must not be led into the mistake of active participation." Speaking in Hill Auditorium, the famed "man behind the microphone" said that "this may be only one of a series of wars through which Europe will have to pass until arrogant na- tionalism is subdued." He recom- mended hat the United States retreat from power politics which "doenot concern us," attempt to keep peace in the New World and, when the time comes, cooperate to the estab- lishment of an enduring peace. There will be no possibility of a permanent armistice, Mr. Kaltenborn observed, unless "the 'have' nations- the United States, France and Britain -are willing to share their advan- tages with the 'have-nots'-Germany, Italy and Japan." It will not be possible, he added, if "imperialistic governments, brutal dictatorships, armament races and trade discrim- nations" still exist. "And, pessimistic though it may Selby To Give Third Medical Lecture Here Extra - Curricular Speech Is . Offered Tomorrow In Rackham Building In an effort to acquaint the modern student with the field of industrial medicine, the medical school is pre- senting Dr. Clarence D. Selby, medi- cal consultant of General Motors, in the third of a series of extra-curricu- lar lectures at-4:15 p.m. toiorrow in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. Dr. Selby will discuss "The Rela- tionships of General and Special Practice in Industrial Medicine." Dr. Selby is a member of the Amer- ican Association of Industrial Physi- cians and Surgeons. He served as its director from 1930 to 1934 and as president in 1938. In 1937, he wa>° vice-chairman of the Section on In-1 dustrial Hygiene for the Am^~cal. Public Health Association. Among other positions he has held. are president of the Ohio Medical Association and Ohio Commissione: of the AMA on Hospitals. He is l seem," he continued, "you can't elim- inate the centuries of Europe's cheek- owl hatred overnight. The best I hope for is step-by-step progress towards the ideal peace." Mr. Kaltenborn enumerated the er- rors made in the last war's peace treaties by Britain and France: the victorious nations broke the pledges they had given, did not disarm as Germany did, disregarded the rights of minorities in the realignment of boundaries, and, "most important of all," refused to come to the aid of weaker nations to halt aggression. He pointed out that during the past 10 years the United States was al- ways ready "to take action against aggressors, lighten the burden of rep- arations and support the League of Nations." He repeated Article 10 of the League Covenant-"political and (Continued on Page 3) ASU Will Hold Pre-Convention ParleyToday Delegates Will Be Chosen For National Convention To Be Held In Madison Resolutions on peace, civil liber- ties, American democracy, academic freedom, Negro-white relations, wo- men's rights and the National Youth Administration will be discused and formulated at the pre-convention meeting of the . American Student Union at 8 p.m. today in the North Lounge of the Union, according to Hugo Reichard, Grad., chairman of the peace commission. Delegates to the fifth annual ASU convention which will be held in Madison, Wis., during Christmas week, will be elected. Last year more than 1,000 college and high school students debated and discussed problems of campus, national and world-wide importance, Reichard said. A skit, "The Unknown Soldier Re- fuses His Wreath," will be presented by Arthur Klein, Grad.,;Ed Burrows, Grad., and Bill Bestimt, '42. The convention this year will aim at four things Reichard said. It will review ASU policies during the past year, formulate policies for the coming year and discuss ways and means of making them effective, serve as an informal get-together for ASUers from all parts of the country and explain the meaning of the program and how to reach the goals set by the ASU. Today's meeting, Reichard said, is open to the public. German Club Russia Refuses Mediation By League; Finland States Soviet Losses Are Heavy "v Broadcaster Dittos Radio Mien In Talk By PAUL CHANDLER Tall and , distinguished Hans Van; Kaltenborn last night 'flashed' for an overflow audience in Hill Auditori- um the same brilliant mind and tre- mendous energy which has cast him today as the leading character in the world's radio commentator the- atre. Addressing his remarks to more than 2,000 men and women, all of them familiar with the clipped speech which three months are brought the sorrowful story of Europe's war to American microphones, Kaltenborn last night stood on the stage and fired rhetoric-perfect answers to a dozen impromptu questions which were given him by the audience. And in all of his answers Kalten- born displayed no evidences of fatigue -even though he had arrived only a few minutes before from Detroit-a trip that had been made without sup- per or rest after a radio broadcast there. Before he entered the stage he drank two glasses of milk, talked to a newspaper reporter, then went in for a 2-hour address. Before he departed from his dress- in room, the 60-year-old radio veter- an cautioned American college stu- dents to never allow themselves to be caught in a fish net of patriotisms like European youths of today. Answering questions, Mr. Kalten- born also declared that the recent at- tack on Hitler's life was a genuine effort by disgruntled Nazis, and that the Fuehrer will never surrender in the field. He will attempt a bold drive to the west first. Dr. Valentin To Talk Here To Speak Here Tomorrow On Austria,_Germany Education's disregard for war will be demonstrated here tomorrow when a British professor, Dr. Veit Valentin of the University College in London, discusses the history of his homeland, Germany, in a Uni- versity Lecture. Dr. Valentin's lecture will be given at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre under the spon- sorship of the history department. Although he was born and educat- ed in Germany, Dr. Valentin has taught at the University of London for many years and, in the opinion of Prof. Arthur Boak of the history department, "is too much of a learn- ed and impartial scholar to be con- sidered a propagandist." Wartime conditions, Professor Boak believes, will not alter the independence of Dr. Valentin's teachings. His topic will be "Austria and Ger- many." Dr. Valentin's specialty is the history of Germany in the 19th century, while his most notable work deals with policies pursued by Bis- marck. He was formerly in charge of the Imperial German Archives at Potsdam, and is the author of many books and papers on Germany's past. Molotoff Answer Provokes Condemnation As Aggressor; 1,500,000 Soviet Troops May Be Put In Field Of Battle (By The Associated Press) Soviet Russia refused last night to accept mediation by the League of Nations of her undeclared war with Finland. The Soviet note turning down the League's arbitration offer was received in Geneva nearly three hours after the League's 24-hour "deadline" expired. It was published shortly after Finland announced in a communique that her army had crushed a large Russian offensive with "tremendous losses" to the invader. After a day filled with what apparently was the most severe fighting of the 13-day-old war, the Finnish communique said "hundreds" of the enemy had fallen in a vain attack on the Karelian Isthmus. Further north, it said, -------- 0-"three enemy battalions were de- Henry Russel Lecture Prize Given Tonight Outstanding Faculty Man To Present His Paper At MeetingIn Spring Announcement of the 1939 winner of the Henry Russel lectureship award will be made tonight at a meeting of the University Research Club in the Lecture Hall of the Rack- ham Building. The award is given annually to a senior faculty member who has dis- played unusual achievement in re- search. It includes a financial gift and the honor of delivering the Hen- ry Russel lecture next spring. At the time of the lecture another+ similar award is given to a junior member of the faculty. Faculty members who have re- ceived the Henry Russel lectureship in past years are: Prof. Moses Gomberg, of the chem- istry department; Prof. Frederick G. Novy, of the medical school; Prof. Henry A. Sanders, of the Latin de- partment; Prof. Alfred S. Warthin, of the medical school; Prof. Claude H. Van Tyne; Prof. William H. Hobbs, of the geology department; Prof. Jesse Reeves, of the political science department; Prof. Walter Pillsbury, of the psychology depart- ment; Prof. E. C. Case, of the geology department; Prof. G. Carl Huber; Prof. John G. Winter, of the latin department; Prof. Charles W. Ed- munds, of the medical school; Prof. H. D. Curtis, of the astronomy de- partment, and Prof. Campbell Bon- ner, of the Greek department. 1 Britain And France Reveal Trade Pact PARIS, Dec. 12.-(AP)-Great Brit- ain and France disclosed today a fmin- ancial alliance to last until six months after they make a peace with Germany. This money partnership, hailed by a French finance ministry spokes- man as "the strongest accord in his- tory between two governments," was announced in Paris and London at the moment people of the allied na- tions were hearing that British troops had won their first direct engagement on the Western Front. Military dispatches said the British threw back three waves of German troops Sunday in an attack south of Buschdorf, in the Moselle Valley re- gion. stroyed." The Russian answer to the League opened the way to condemnation by the League of the Soviet as the ag- gressor against Finland and perhaps her exclusion from the League. The Soviet Premier-Foreign Com- missar, Vyacheflaff Molotoff, in- formed the League in a telegram that Russia could not accept the League "invitation" for "reasons outlined in its telegram of Dec. 4." On that date, Molotoff told the League secretariat that Russia re- garded Finland's appeal to the League as "unfounded"; that Russia was maintaining "peaceful relations" with a Soviet-sponsored Finnish "people's" government and that it did not recognize the regular Finnish government which appealed. Soviet' Forces Mass A report that 500,000 troops of the ninth Soviet Russian Army were con- centrating an attack on a Finnish railway just north of the Arctic Circle came from the correspondent of the Stockholm newspaper Dagens Nyneter. He said hard fighting had occurred along a 15-mile front in the last 40 hours. .While the Finnish communique asserted that the little republic's army was holding back the invaders, ad- vices from Moscow said Soviet army casualties were streaming into Len- ingrad. Russia Is Angry A warning that worse might be In store for Finland was seen in the Finnish telegraphic agency's report that Russia, irritated by the Finns' stout defense, was preparing to send 1,500,000 first class troops and 1,000 planes in to an offensive against Hel- sinki. On the Western Front, more than usual activity was reported. The French High Command said its forces had beaten off a German attack between the Saar Rvier and the Warndt Forest. Continuing the diplomatic jockey- ing in Europe's older war, the Ger- man Foreign Minister, Joachim von Ribbentrop, in a white book on war causes accused Britain of being "ex- clusively responsible for the war by which she desires to destroy Ger- many." x c t member of the Wayne County Medi- ill cal Association, the Academy of Medi- cine of Toledo and Lucas County and I the Toledo Hospital Council. Puppet Show Hiawatha Club Will Hold Tickets for the Deutscher Verein's Christmas Mixer Todaypuppet play, 'Dornroeschen,' which y will be presented at 8:30 p.m. todayl The annual Christmas Mixer of in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, the Hiawa Cubhrgmanitn for will be available from 1 to 6 p.m. the Hiawatha Club, organization for and from 7 p.m. until curtain time Upper Peninsula men, will be held at the Theatre box office, Dr. Otto 8 p.m. today in the League Ballroom. G. Graf of the German department All University women are invited to announced yesterday. attend. "Dornroeschen," the Grimm fairy Dancing, refreshments and special tale better known as "Sleeping entertainment have been planned by 1 Beauty," has been dramatized by Dr. the program committee consisting Graf and J.Stanhope Edwards, Grad., of Donald Counihan, '41, Albin Schin- a of the German department The derle, '42 and William Jackson, '41. puppets will be manipulated by David Gibson, '41, a puppeteer of wide ex- ,,ok ' . 1* .t _N _ -,% g perience, Dr. Graf said, and the own- I European News Briefs By Associated Press I _ rui i~i V ~ nfl - ~ n flfli. fl - w ( . ngMn ho Can akeBpoouneupt To Ma Who CanTakeIt' BROR e est By WESLEY FIRST Out of the six engineering profes- sors who are going to face a veritable barrage of embarassing, soul-search- ing questions at 6:30 p.m. today at the American Society of Mechanical Engineers annual roast, one of them will be designated by those in atten- dance as the "Man Who Can Take It," and will be awarded the famous Spoofuncup, symbol of being the most "popular-unpopular" professor in the engineering school. The roast, which will be held in the Union tonight, is a traditional affair, where engineering students can get back at their professor with- out fear of their grades suffering. Aside from being asked a rapid-fire series of questions designed to deter- mi4ne the ~nir inniiiy rit4 .. a nr , ean-c Spooner, of the mechanical engineer- ing department, Prof. H. L. Kohler,! of the automotive engineering de-J partment, Prof. A. D. Moore, of thel electrical engineering department, Prof. J. Ormondroyd, of the engineer- ing mechanics department. The Spoofuncup, which was won last year by Prof. Axel Marin, of the mechanical engineering department, and will be in the possession of this year's winner for the ensuing year, is the center of a hoary legend among engineers. Originally nothing more than two tin spoons, a tin funnel,{ and a tin cup, it was put together by a scientifically minded member of the ASME into the form of a loving cup. Stumped for a name for the award, they finally evolved the pres- er of the marionettes being used in this production. Members of the Verein reading parts backstage are : Elizabeth Wat- kins, '41; Edward Wetter, Grad.; Carl Petersen, '40; Kenneth Marble, '41; Ethel Winnai, '41; Judith Frank, '40; Lynda Nickl, '40; Dorothy Farnan, '42 and Gibson. Rep. Carl Mapes Of Michigan Dies NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 12.-(PP)- Rep. Carl E. Mapes, assistant minority leader and ranking Republican mem- ber of the House of Representatives, died unexpectedly here today of heart disease. Mapes, 64 years old, had represent- ed the Fifth Michigan Congressional District continuously since 1912 and was an influential member of the powerful House Rules and Interstate Ir l Rival Glee Clubs To Vie Tonight In All-CampusChristmas Sing (By The Associated Press) Helsinki-Three Russian battalions reported wiped out, large scale So- viet offensive smashed, Finnish com- munique reports; Finns say subma- rine sank German freighter in Gulf of Bothnia. Moscow-Unofficial advices say Red Army casualties streaming into Leningrad from Finnish war front; Red Army claims gains "in all di- rections." Copenhagen-Finnish telegram agency reports .irritated Russia pre- paring to send 1,500,000 troops and 1,000 planes against Helsinki. Stockholm-Correspondent reports 500,000 Russian troops concentrating attack on Finnish railway north of Arctic circle. Paris-German attacks between Saar River and Warndt Forest re- pulsed, French High Command says; France and Britain form financial alliance. Bremen Arrives In Home Waters BERLIN, Dec. 12.-(A)-Germany's $20,000,000 adventurer, the Bremen, raced swiftly through the long fingers of the British fleet again today and The lusty tonsils of the Men's Glee Club will vie with those of the Wom- en's Glee Club in leading the all- campus Christmas Sing to be held on1 the steps of the Rackham Building at 8:30 p.m. today.1 Elaborate preparations for the oc- casion have already been made, the Building and Grounds Committee having indicated their cooperation in the complete lighting and spot-light- ing of the Mall and front of the Rackham Building and Prof. Percival+ Price, University Carillonneur, hav- ing planned a 15-minute Carillon who have volunteered their musical services for the Sing. The song-fest, in which all mem- bers of the student and faculty body are urged to participate, will be led; by Prof. David Mattern of the Music School and will include approximate- ly 16 well-known Christmas carols, Gould explained. This will be the first Christmas Sing held here since 1937, he said. It is, therefore, imperative, if the tra- dition is to be continued, he claimed, that the campus body support to- night's revival.