Weather Cloudy. C, r afr 4Iaittj Editorial Mexico Grants Oil lAnd To Japan. Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication VOL. LI. No. 28 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Draft Officials Arrange First Encampment Of Conscripts Available Camp Facilities To Be Opened To 30,000 Men Of Various Areas; Numbers Found Missing Detroiter Considers Court Proceedings By RICHARD L. TURNER WASHINGTON, Oct. 30-(/P)--Fac- ing a possible legal test because the Great Draft Lottery ended with six missing numbers, selective service of- ficials pressed forward today with plans for getting the first contin- gent of conscripts into camp. It is to consist of some 30,000 young men drawn from regions where camp facilities are already available. Of- ficials intimated voluntary enlist- ments might cover that entire num- ber, but beyond that point, plans were to have 400,000 in uniform by Feb. 28, and 800,000 by June 15. Es- timates were this would involve an average of about 130 men from each draft area and about one out of each 20 registrants. Six Capsules Missing When, after 17 hours and 31 min- utes, the drawing of the now familiar blue capsules from the long famous golfish bowl was completed early to- day it was discovered six capsules and their numbered slips had been lost. The last draw was the 8,994th. It should have been the 9,000th. Rejecting the theory that souvenir seekers among the many whose hands were thrust into the bowl during the drawing might have made away with the tiny cylinders, officials began an immediate check of their records to determine just which numbers were missing. The records indicated that not six but eight were absent. They were: Numbers 6,542, 7,192, 7,635, 1,033, 5,108, 6,771, 1,835 and 7,839. 'Little Lottery organized' A "little lottery" was organized immediately. The numbers were in- serted in capsules, drawn and given order numbers running from 8,995 to 9,002 inclusive. Then another discov- ery was made. Two of the numbers in the supplementary lottery had ac- tually been drawn earlier, it was ascertained. So they were canceled out of the little lottery and reverted to their previous place in the draw. Later in the day, Clarence A. Dyk- stra, the director of selective service, said he had been informed that on the basis of these developments, a Detroit youth who held serial num- ber 158, the first drawn, was con- templating court proceedings to con- test the drawing. It was assumed, al- though not known definitely, Dykstra said, that the youth lacked any ground for deferment, such as physical dis- abilities or family dependents. Art Cinema To Present Third Film The third film in the Douglas Fair- banks Sr. revival series will be shown at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre under the aus- pices of the Art Cinema League. One of the most famous old-time moving pictures, "The Three Musket- eers" will feature the 1920 sirens Mar- guerite de la Motte and Barbara La Marr, as well as the still popular Adolph Menjou. The picture was di- rected by Fred Niblo. A few tickets for the performance may still be procured from Albert Stutz, Grad, manager of the Art Cin- ema League, or at the Men l ?lssohn box-office before the showing on Sun- day. This moving picture, based on the classic Dumas novel, was the first Fairbanks film produced from roman- tic literature and was so popular that it was followed by more than 15 of a similar type. Although the film is silent, it will be accompanied by a musical score. Selected short subjects will supplement the program. Play Production Presents 'Three Men On A Horse' Lee Perry And Bernard Hendel To Head J-Hop, Soph Prom Nutiiber OfJBallots Doubles In Dance Elections; Thirteen Juniors, Eight Sophomores Win Posts It may or may not have been the interest of the impeding national election, but twice as many Michigan students as last year cast their bal- lots in the J-Hop and Soph-Prcm election yesterday and chose Lee Per- ry and Bernard Hendel, respectively, as chairmenof thendance commit- ees. Perry, who received 57 votes, com from New Bedford, Masachust ' Hendell, who hailsdfrom Pittsur h Pa.. captured the chairmanship of the Soph Prom with a total of 46 bal- lots. Richard Arbuckle, of Erie, Pa. played the best second fiddle to Per ry to capture a post on the J-Ho' Committee with 42 votes. A Michi- gan boy from St. Claire Shores - Paul Sampson, insured himself a place on the Committee by tallying a tot- al of 35 ballots. Jeanne Goudy, Lakewood, Ohio. took first place honors for Literary College girls in the J-Hop race by receiving a total of 22 votes. Francis Student Senate Will Use Hare Voting System Straw Vote Will Register Attitude On Candidates For U.S._Presidency When students mark their ballots in the Student Senate election Fri. day they will have the opportunity of registering their attitude on the five national presidential candidates running in the current campaign, through the device of a presidential preferential straw vote. Voters will number candidates in the order of their preference. As a. result, in addition to determining the most popular candidate on the cam- pus, the poll will show the strength of each candidate, directors of the election William Elmer, '41, and Ro- bert Speckhard, '42 assert. 35 studentsrhave filed petitions for a position on the ballot for the 16 Senate posts. Voting will be conducted under the Hare system of choice vot- ing, sometimes known as the Single Transferrable Vote, the voter marking the figure "1" in front of his choice for student senator, the figure "2" in front of his se'cond choice and so on, as many choies as he wishes. Within the last week political ac- tivity has increased, on campus as a result of rivalry between the Mich- igan Party, a conservative organiza- tion and the newly organized Univer- sity Progressive Party. The Michigan Party has entered 2 candidates while the liberal group has 11 students on the ballot. Seven of the 16 senators elected in the spring election are Michigan party men. In their platforms which are printed on the Battle Page in this issue of The Daily, the Michigan Party em- phasizes "loyalty to the University." The Progressives in their plank state that they believe student government should be increased in power and scope. Aaronson, Washington. D. C., ran a very close second with 21 ballots to clinch a post ondthe junior dance committee. Lou Carpenter, Scharsdale, New York, became the sixth Literary Col- lege member of the J-Hop by a quirk of beneficient fate, when no one from the Nursing School entered a pe- tition. James Rossman, Jackson, led the Engineers from across the campus with 25 votes to capture a position on the J-Hop. S. Che Tang, came all the way from Hongkong, China, to become a member of the J-Hop com- mittee with 24 votes, one less than his Michigan opponent. Robert Collins, Detroit followed his Chinese class- mate with 23 votes to clinch the third Engineering College J-Hop post. Bruce Hartwick and Carolyn Den- field, both of Lansing, captured J- Hop posts from the Architecture and Education Schools with 24 and 12 votes respct"-'e1- Sidney Aronson, Norwick, N. Y., clinched the J-Hop position from the Forestry and Pharmacy Schools with 12 votes. Buck Dawson, Evanston, Ill., with 34 ballots, and romer Swander, Kala- amazoo, with 30 votes captured Lit- erary College positions on the Soph Prom Committee. Ruth Willets, Pleas- ant Ridge, and Jeanne Clare, West Utica, New York, became the other Literary College members of the Soph Prom with 33 votes each. Ted Sharp, Detroit, John Rust, De- troit, and William DeCourcy, Corn- ing, New York, captured' the three Engineering College posts on the Soph Prom Engine School Plans Courses To Aid Defense Faculty Approval Needed Before New Subjects Are Added To Schedule Dean Ivan C. Crawford announced yesterday that the United States Commission on Education had re- quested the Engineering College to add a number of courses to its curricu- lum "to help prepare the engineer for essential war work." These courses, which will be about 12 weeks in length, are known as "re- fresher" courses and will be open to all students and members of the fac- ulty who have not been selected for the draft but who have completed three years of college engineeering work. Among the various types of instruc- tion which will be offered include training in tool engineering, machine design and production and marine engineering. Tuition and all other expenses will be provided by the gov- ernment. Before the various "refresher" courses are taught in the University, the approval of the faculty of the Engineering College must be obtain- ed, Dean Crawford declared. He ad- ded that the decision would be made in about three weeks. '166 Engineers Choose Senior Class Officers Drickamer And Jeffrey Elected To Presidency And Vice-Presidency Two Freshmen Named To Council Harry G. Drickamer and Douglas G. Jeffrey. Jr., were elected as president and vice-president of the senior class in the Engineering College yesterday by a record-breaking vote of 166. At the same time William E. Voll- mer was chosen to serve as class secre- tary, Harold E. Britton was made treasurer and David Wehmeyer and Lawrence Kelley were selected for one year terms as freshmen Engineering Council representatives. Voting Heavier Polling in this the first class elec- tion of the year was 44 votes heavier than last year's, George Hogg '41E chairman of the elections announced. Previous to yesterday's balloting the largest vote cast during the past few years was in 1938 when 140 engineers went to the polls. In the election of the president and vice-president two votes were given to first choice candidates and one to. the second with the runner-up receiving the later position. Total number of ballots cast in the Class of '44E, elec- tion, conducted in the freshmen as- semblies, was 325. Engineering Council Representative The newly elected president, who also becomes automatically a repre- sentative to the Engineering Council, transferred to the University from Vanderbilt in 1938. He is a member of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering scholastic society, and last year was finance director of the Union Opera. Jeffrey, who has been on the var- sity wrestling squad for three years, is a member of Tau Beta Pi and Scab- bard and Blade, honorary ROTC group, and has served on the com- mittee for the Military Ball. A member of Delta Tau Delta fra- ternity, Vollmer has been admitted to both Triangles and Vulcans, junior and senior honorary engineering soci- eties. During his freshman year he won his numerals in football and in his sophomore year played on the varsity. Britten in Eta Kappa Nu , Britton, a member of Triangles,; Vulcans and Tau Beta Pi, belongs to Theta Xi fraternity and is, in addi- tion, business manager of the tennis team and a member of Eta Kappa Nu,, electrical engineering honorary soci- ety. Other candidates for senior posi- tions were John P. Lord, Merrill N. Johnson, Stanley L. Mleczko, Doug- las Jeffrey, Jerome Mecklenberger and Charles A. Kerner. Italian Invaders Begin Two-Pronged Advance; Mountains Halt Thrusts Brown Pleads For Retention Of Democratic Administration Stubborn Resistance Of Greeks Check Motorized Assault ©- _ By ROBERT SPECKHARD "It would be a mistake of the grossest character to replace the pres- ent administration in power with a party that predominantly represents the upper . class," declared Michi- gan's junior Senator Prentiss Brown, in an address before the Michigan Forum yesterday. "The democratic Party represents a cross-section of the American people." With this as his central theme, Michigan's Democratic member of the United States Senate pleaded for the reelection of Franklin Delano Roosevelt to the Presidency. Although I have always been op- posed to ta third term, the Senator said, I believe that the country needs a capable leader today, and that leader is not Wendell L. Willkie. It is imperative that the one who leads this country through the perils of a war-frought world today must rep- resent all American interests, the Senator maintained. The Democratic Party draws its members from the aristocrats of the Sc.h and the working masses of the North, Brown said, and through its New Deal program has ben mak- ing every effort to alleviate the dis- paragy of income between the eco- nomic classes of this country. In a period of immense crisis the Mrs. Olimstead, Wife Of Dean, Dies At Home Democratic Party offers as its presi- dential candidate a man who has spent a life-time in political life and statesmanship, Brown declared. The Republicans offer a candidate who never faced a voter until a few short months ago, he added. Before leaving for the Law Club where he was to be guest of the Young Lawyers' For Roosevelt-the group instrumental in bringing Brown to the Forum audience-the Sena- tor declared that the defection of CIO head John L. Lewis to Willkie would prove negligible among Roose- velt's labor support. Dean Yoakum Ends National Medical Meet More Than 200 Attended Three-Day Convention; New Officers Elected Professional and graduate educa- tion in any field must be carried on detached from all other pursuits if the student is to most fully grasp his subject, Dr. C. S. Yoakum, Dean of the Rackham School of Graduate Stu- dies, declared in an address given yes- terday morning before the closing session of the fifty-first annual meet- ing of the American Association of Medical Colleges. The student must develop in his studies his own standard of reference aside from that of the established authorities, he said. This self-reli- ance, Dr. Yoakum pointed out, will stimulate self confidence in the stu- dent and encourage him to individual research work. Dtiring the morning session various medical men attending the conven- tion discussed questions relating to the teaching of medicine in the many fields of specialization. Delegates at the closing session were shown a film entitled, "Know Your Money," released by the Treasury De- partment of the United States in an effort to prevent the passage of coun- terfeit money. More than 200 delegates, deans and underfaculty men, came from 86 med- ical colleges all over North America to attend the three-day convention here. In the executive sessions held Tuesday officers for the coming year were elected, and plans were made for next year's convention to be held in Richmond, Va. All the papers and discussions which were given or held during the meeting will be published in the Journal of the Association. London Sees Funeral In St. At 3 Will Take Place Andrews Church A.M. Saturday Funeral services for Mrs. Mary D. Olmsted, who died at 1:30 p.m. yes- terday in her home, will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday at the St. Andrews Episcopal Church. She was 43 years old. Wife of Prof. Charles T. Olmsted of the engineering mechanics depart- ment, assistant dean of students, Mrs. Olmsted is survived by her hus- band and two sons, Charles Davies, aged 15, and Peter Bache, aged 19. Born Mary Dennison Bacon in Ft. Hauchuca, she received her early schooling in Van Couver, Wash., and Portland, Ore., later attending Pine Manor in Wellseley, Mass. During the last war she was at the army nurs- ing school at Camp Meade, Md. Mrs. Olmsted was a prominent member of Ann Arbor society, being a member of the Faculty Women's Club, St. Andrews League, the St. Andrews Episcopal Church and the Ann Arbor Garden Club. She came here in 1920 shortly before her mar- riage. Intensive Fire (By The Associated Press) ATHENS, Greece, Oct. 30.-Italian invaders began a two-pronged drive today through the mountains toward the lakeshore industrial city of Ioan- nina (Janina), 30 miles from the Al- banian border, but made little pro- gress against the fierce Greek de- fenders. Under cover of an artillery barrage, the Italians attempted one thrust from the Northwest. Stubborn Greek resistance, plus tortuous mountain terrain, which all but stymied the Fascist mechanized power, was re- ported to have made the going dif- ficult. Second Drive Nearer the coast, a second 'drive was pointed toward a highway lead- ing to the city ruled a hundred years ago by the conquering Ali Pasha, "Lion of Janina," but here, too, no considerable gains were reported. Greek advance guards withdrew slowly from the immediate vicinity of the frontier to their main de- fenses in the strongly-fortified Metax- as Line, some distance back, in acs cordance with prearranged plans, neu- tral military observers said. The Ital- ians were said to still be far from this line. These observers expressed the be- lief that the Greeks could hold their main defenses, commanding the nar- row mountain passes Which the as- cist legions must negotiate to offer a real threat to this little kingdom. No Air Activity With the first major Italian drive under way there virtually was no Fascist air activity reported. The only raid yesterday was said to have been on Ioannina, a city of 25,000 population. (The official Rome radio broadcast a virtual promise that Italy would refrain from bombing Athens so long as Rome is spared from aerial at- tack. The radio denied the Greek capital already had been raided.) The British Admiralty announced the British Navy, swiftly carrying promised aid to Greece, hadmined approaches to important ports on both the east and west coasts of Greece. British Maintain Intensive Fire Over Long Front LONDON, Oct. 30-0P)-British ground guns howled tonight all the way from the coast to the capital, and villagers along the Germans' night bombing routes reported plane after plane had jettisoned explosives in the open fields and fled for home. It was the first time in all the weeks of the aerial siege that inten- sive anti-aircraft fire had been main- tained over such a long defensive front. Nevertheless, some raiders broke through these outer defenses and big bombs were reported bombs were dropped on London - 40 in one district loosed by planes coming in very low. The action was heavy in other parts of Britain - the port of Liverpool, the Merseyside shipping area in general, the indus- trial Northwest, East Anglia and the Southeast coast. ASU Discusses Election Issue At a panel discussion held last night in the Union under the sponsor- ship of the American Student Union, representatives of the Young Demo- crats Club, the Young Republicans Club and o fthe ASU discussed vot- ing in the national election. Fred Niketh, '41, supported Roose- velt on the contention that if re- alniru n a mm wil1 ni,, m4 a t1, n.,1 ,. Declining Faith Results In Loss Of Freedom, Silver Declares Loss of man's freedom and moral' stature are the result of his declining faith that contact with a divinity can be maintained, Dr. Abba Hillel Silver, leader of the Temple of Cleveland, largest Jewish liberal congregation in the United States declared in the third in the series of lectures on the "Nature of Man" here yesterday. Religion summarizes the biological, sociological, economic and political views of man, the humanitarian lead- er outlined. It has always viewed man realistically, he insisted, and has deprecated his exclusive ability. In its conception of man as imperfect, religion has pointed out the chaos caused by man's anti-social instincts and also his original endowment of an image of God. * Nature's battleground in man has been a struggle between the opposi- tional forces for moral equilibrium, the noted lecturer and writer contin- ued. Character, or the result of this Engineer Society Taps 12 Juniors, Crawford, Sadler Dean Ivan C. Crawford, of the College of Engineering, Prof. Walter C. Sadler of the Civil Engineering department and 12 juniors in the college were tapped last night by Triangles, Engineering Honor Soci- ety. The newly admitted students, who were tapped on the basis, of scholar- ship and campus activities, will un- dergo an informal initiation ceremony at 3 p.m. tomorrow near the Arch of the West Engineering Building. Those who were accepted for mem- bership into the group include Verne Kennedy, Alex Wilkie, Robert Sum- merhays, Allen Hamilton, Henry Fielding, George Gotchall, William Shomburg, Ted Kennedy, Jack But- ler, Carl Rohrback, Tom Gammon and Robert Getts. Explosion May Cause Student To Lose Sight A test tube that exploded Monday in a chemistry experiment may cost Arthur M. Rickel, Jr., '44, his sight. University hospital physicians re- ported yesterday that the operation performed Monday on Rickel's eyes may have been successful, but it is too early yet to tell. Earlier it was be- lieved certain that his left eye was Malcolm S. MacLean Brands School System 'Undemocratic' l By EMILE GELE "American schools have been fun- dementally undemocratic," Mr. Mal- colm S. MacLean, president of Hamp- ton Institute of Virginia, told mem- bers of the 11th Annual Parent Ed- ucation Institute in the first lecture of the three-day meeting here at the Rackham Building. MacLean pointed out that the stu- dent's family income determines what kind of schooling he gets, no matter what his abilities may be. Hundreds of thousands of brilliant students drop out of school annually for lack of funds, he noted. Observing that modern schools train for only two things, academic and cultural knowledge and vocation- al skill, MacLean stated that the two fields compete against one anoth- er and that the system sends millions of students driving toward white col- lar jobs with a sneering attitude on Court of Chicago told a luncheon aud- ience that any judge can send a boy to the House of Correction and save society from a thief, but warned against the effect on the thief. "My philosophy says that I should save the thief if I am to ultimately save society." Judge Braude listed the motivating forces behind most juvenile crimes as toy guns, improper literature, shadey movies, cellar clubs, drugs, alcohol radio thrillers and comics, automo- biles, and nagging parents. All are results of inadequate homes, he stat- ed. Commenting on the immediate out- look for American education, Mr. Howard Y. McLusky of the Amer- ican Youth Commission called at- tention to the imminent cutting of educational appropriations in favor of armament, and the repression of academic freedom which marks a RABBI ABBA HILLEL SILVER *f * * fend himself against the state, group I