Weather Cloudy Y t e lrk ian Fif~. t v Years Of N W! imu m cU".UAJ PIL'Lfqirt,(,-bn :4Izziti Editorial Machiavelli' Lewis Supports Willkie . . VOL. LI. No. 2. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1940 Z-323 Wolverines Humble Pennsylvania s Harmon And Westfall Lead Offen The Story In Pictures: Tom Harmon In The Clear . .. Francis Reagan Bottled Up-That's The Key To Michigan's Smashing Victory PRICE FIVE CENTS L4-0 sive r Over Quakers LEFT: Harmon in the first quarter-he swept around right end for 17 yards before Pennsylvania's John Dutcher pulled him to the ground. MIDDLE: The highly-touted Francis Reagan was caught just over the line of scrimmage by Center Bob Ingalls. The dancing Wolverine to the left (63) is Guard Ralph Fritz. RIGHT: Quaker Francis McKernan had to leap high to snare this fourth quarter pass from Teammate Dutcher. It was good for a 35 yard gain. Watching Mr. McKernan's show are Tom Harmon (98) and Norman Call (55). France Joins Axis; Dispatch To Petain IS ath Sent By_Roosevelt Vichy Announces Pact As 'Peace' Attempt; Hull Declines To Reveal Text Of U.S. Note; Albanians Battle Greek Soldiers (By The Associated Press) VICHY, France, Oct. 26.-France moved officially into the Axis lineup in Europe tonight with her government's announcement that Adolf Hitler and Marshal Philippe Petain, France's chief of state, had agreed in principle to work together to restore peace in Europe. The announcement, endorsed by the French Cabinet, marked an historic about-face for France and put this vanquished country on the threshold of negotiations on concrete points of agreement with her German conquerors. It followed a 75-minute meeting of the Vichy Cabinet where Petain and his second in command, Vice Premier Pierre Laval, explained what they talked about this week in conferences - Prentiss M. Brown Scheduled To Address Michigan Forum By ROBERT SPECKHARD A beautiful daughter and a loyal son will greet Michigan's Democratic United States Senator Prentiss M. Brown, when he comes to the Mich- igan campus to address the Michigan Forum at 4:15 Wednesday in the main ballroom of the Michigan Union. The daughter is Miss Ruth Marga- ret Brown, a graduate student in the Department of History. The class of '44 counts among its members the Senator's son, James John Brown, who is headed for a career in the field of law. The Senator, himself, will discuss the issues of the current presidential campaign when he speaks before the Forum audience. The meeting is pairt of a regular series of political speeches by prominent party representatives designed to present all possible view- points in the coming campaign. When asked to give a short biogra- phy of her father, Miss Brown sat down and with the memory of a true historian, related the following tale: "My father was born and raised in St. Ignace and began his career there after he received his A. B. from Al- bion College in 1911 and attended the University of Illinois for a year as a student of economics. "As senator dad has supported the New Deal fairly consistenly, though he opposed the method used in Roose- velt's attempt to enlarge the Supreme Court. Reciprocal trade agreements have received his continued support, and he was instrumental in raising the guarantee of Federal Deposit In- surance from $2500 to $5000. "Besides being on the Finance, Banking and Currency Claims and the Manufacturing Committees of the Senate, father also heads a spec- ial committee investigating reciprocal tax relations between state and fed- eral government instrumentalities. "He has given his consistent sup- port to agriculture, social and labor policies of the New Deal. Land Groups End Sessions Final Discussions Attended By FiftyDelegates The 11th Annual Land Utilization Conference closed yesterday morning with more than 50 delegates attend- ing a general discussion session on "Government and Business." A majority of the delegates were owners or workers of timberland areas, and the much-disputed discus- sion centered upon the effects of pos- sible government entry into the tim- ber industry, taking up specifically the application and operation of social legislation as social security in relation to thc industry. Speakers at the final meeting of the two-day conference included Re- gent J. Joseph Herbert of Manistique, Senator George P. McCallum of Ann Arbor and Attorney K. B. Mathews of Ludington. Medical Men Will Gather In Ann Arbor 200 Men To Represent Eighty-Five Med Schools At RackhamBuilding Representatives of medical colleges, all over the North America continent will gather in Ann Arbor tomorrow for the first sessions of the fifty-first annual meeting of the Association of American Medical colleges to be held here tomorrow, Tuesday and Wednesday. More than 200 deans and faculty men are expected to represent 85 major medical schools. Tomorrow's sessions will begin at 9:30 a.m. in. the Rackham Building when Dean Willard C. Rappleye of Columbia University College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons speaks before a gathering on *"The Internship." Following Dean Rappleye's address there will be a general discussion con- ducted by Dean L. R. Chandler of Stanford University Shool of Medi- cine, Dean Currier MeEwen of New York University College of Medicine and Dean R. C. Cunningham of Albany Medical College. President Ruthven will address the convention at a dinner to be given at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. Following the dinner the Little Symphony and the University Glee Club will entertain the delegates. Dr. C. Sidney Burwell, dean of Har- vard Medical School, will speak at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Hospital Amphitheatre. with Hitler and Joachim Von Ribben- trop, the German Foreign Minister. The terse communique said merely that Hitler and Petain had held a "general examination of the situation and, in particular, the means of re- constructing peace in Europe," and were in accord on "the principleof collaboration." Meanwhile the United States' deep concern over the German-French ne- gotiations was evidenced today by disclosure that President Roosevelt has sent a message to Marshal Henri Phillippe Petain, chief of the French State. The communication was delivered to Gaston Henry-Haye, the French ambassador, Thursday by Sumner Welles, Undersecretary of State. The fact of its dispatch was a closely-held secret until today. Secretary Hull, in disclosing Mr. Roosevelt had communicated with the 84-year-old World War hero who now heads the Vichy Government, declined to reveal the nature of the message. No reply, he said, had been received. Albanians Repulse Greek Troops, Italians Report ROME, Oct. 26--')-Italy an- nounced officially tonight that Al- banian troops had fought off "armed Greek hands" in a frontier nash on Legislator Hits Tfax Collecting As Inadequate Neller Presents Problems At First Meet Of Tax Research Organization Over 400 members of the first In- stitute on Problems of Taxation yes- terday heard E. Jack Neller, state representative from Battle Creek, de- nounce Michigan's tax collection sys- tem as one of the most decentralized and uncoordinated in the United States. "Collecting of public funds is scat- tered illogically throughout 14 agen- cies," according to Neller, a member of the Committee on Reorganization of State Finance. "From 15 to 20 mil- lion dollars is lost to tax payers an- nually as a result of an obsolete sys- tem." Neller reported the Committee as suggesting a unified and standard- lia cve+m o ~efnfa annmi+nc r a- -Daly Photos by Will Sapp 1Do u ble AttackSie Quaker Lin Dfes By DON WIRTCHAFTER Michigan poured its mighty gridiron potion over a challenging Pennsyl- vania menace in the Stadium yesterday and smashed all doubts of its great- ness before 59,913 howling spectators. Capitalizing on an early break and applying the wizardy of all-American Tommy Harmon thereafter, the undefeated Wolverines staggered George Munger's pride of the East with a thundering 14-0 triumph. It was Michigan's double-barreled attack that knocked Penn's vaunted forward wall into a state of dizziness yesterday. When Harmon. wasn't slicing off tackle or skirting the ends, fullback Bob Westfall was bolting through the center. If one didn't gain yardage, the other did. All told, Tornado Tom streaked 19 yards for Michigan's first score, rifled a brilliant pass to Ed Frutig in the end zone for the second, and successfully converted on both occasions to add eight more points to his season's total which now has swelled to 87, A Band Of Battering Rams With Michigan's powerful front line, from end to end, charging like a band of battering rams, Harmon's publicized duel with Francis Reagan never materialized. Terrible Tom completely stole the spotlight from Penn's heralded ace. He out-ran, out-passed, out-punted and out-classed Reagan from begin- ning to end. Carrying the ball 28 times, Harmon rolled 142 yards from scrimmage, while the Quaker halfback gained but 10 yards in 12 attempts. In passing, Harmon completed three out of eight for 51 yards. Thi's was sufficient to hold off Reagan, who tossed home three of seven for 32 yards with two going astray into waiting Wolverine paws. Only in the punting department was Frank able to hold his own against his sensational Wolverine rival. They each finished the afternoon with a 37-yard kicking average. The Quakers were by far the toughest nut Michigan has been forced to crack all year. On first downs, they.held the Wolverines even with 12. But under fire, and when plays meant points, Michigan's brilliance shone through. Within Two Yards Of Goal In the fourth quarter, the gallant men of Munger, 14 points behind, charged within two yards of the Wolverine goal, with two plays to score. But a courageous Michigan line held Reagan's center-thrust without gain, and then rushed quarterback Gene "Stinky" Davis fast enough so that the Quaker's toss into the end zone on fourth down sailed where Westfall easily battered it down. Aside from that threat, however, Penn never got closer than Michigan's 18-yard line. Despite their even break on first downs, the Quakers strolled only 130 yards along the rushing route, while Michigan plowed its way over 223. The Wolverine cause appeared dismal yesterday when soon after the opening kickoff, halfback Davey Nelson was forced out of the game with a knee injury. Then in the second quarter, seven points out of front, the Wolverines were riddled by a barrage of disheartening breaks. First Rube Kelto, then Al Wistert and finally Capt. Forest Evashevski were wounded in New Deal Spokesmen Answer Lewis As Schism Develops In CIO Ranks The Roosevelt Administration struck back yesterday at John L. Lew- is' denunciation of the New Deal and support of Wendell Willkie while evidence piled up that a deep politi- cal schism had developed in the CIO itself. Stephen Early, Presidential secre- tary, said Lewis had "chosen to go down the lonely road." Many CIO leaders. Early declared, had "rendit- itely to make a political address in Boston next Wednesday in addition to one Monday night in New York then began a week-end of speech- writing in the seclusion of the White House. Willkie campaigned again into the. New York City area, telling crowds we are going on the march - we are going to win. I promise you we can't lose." Rebuhlican headaumarters The CIO, he said, was "torn with dissentation, divided polically be- cause its leaders seek to compel it to support a poiltical party." The AFL, he added, "has evolved and followed a non-partisan policy." Some officials of the United Mine Workers, foundation stone of the CIO organization, disagreed with TL.wis . iHrh V .Rrnw nresidint