Weather Fair and colder. CY tr Sit ijatt Editorial Colombia Going The Way Of Miexico? Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication VOL. LI. No. 40 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Evashevski FDR Makes Pledge To Country; ritish Wiliiehakes Plan For Future. Bombers Cripple Italian Wi S Senior) Presidency In Huge Vote Lawyers Choose French; Business Group Elets Wanzer D. Bosworth Gaunt To Preside Over Architects Michigan football captain, Forest Evashevski, Detroit, knocked out all his opponents with one big political block yesterday when he won the presidency of the Literary College senior class, defeating track team hurdler, Geoffrey Hall, Siou Falls, S. D., and his usual running mate, Tom Harmon, Gary, Ind., by a ,arge margin. Thomas Armstrong, Wheatland, Pa., and James Lovett, Detroit were also snowed under the ballots of the Evashevski vote, which secured the secretaryship for .;;his running mate, Warren Breiden- bach, Dayton, O. Breidenbach beat his track colleague miler Ed Barret, Detroit, to the tape by only three votes. Forest EvashevskivJane Krause, of Kenilworth, Ill., captured the liter- ary college vice-presidency with 160 votes and Beth Castor, Crawfords- vle, Ind., became alumni treasurer of the class of '41, with 143 ballots. James French, Detroit, was elected president of the senior Law School class receiving- a total of 104 votes. Walter Knutson, Marshalltown, Iowa, captured the vice-presidency with 105 votes and Kenneth Nordstrom, East Aurora, N. Y., and Stark Ritchie, Ann Arbor, became secretary and treasurer respectively with 117 and 111 ballots. By dint of hard-earned votes, Wan- zer D. Bosworth was elected to the presidency of the Business Adminis- tration school, senior class. Other members of the board of directors of the class include: first and only vice- president, Sidney Davidson, Flint, re- ceiving a total of 48 ballots; secretary, (Continued on Page 8) Artist To Give Lecture Today Amedee Ozenf ant Here To Discuss Purism As a prominent artist of the School of Paris, largest center for modern ideas, Amedee Ozenfant developed an original style of abstract art which he called Purism, Prof. Harold E. Weth- ey, chairman of the Fine Arts De- partment, declared yesterday. Ozenfant, who will lecture on "Mod- ern Art, Beyond Fashions and the Eternal Basis of Art," at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall, has sought to eliminate the third di- mension in his work, Professor Weth- ey said. Purism he noted, endeavors to attain the precision and imperson- ality of the machine. A retrospective exhibit containing works of all periods of Ozenfant's development, will be open from 2 to 5 p.m. daily at Alumni Memorial Hall, Professor Wethey reminded. The exhibit included examples of Ozenfant's early conventional style, he said, and the abstractions which represent the best work he has done. Professor Wethey pointed out that Ozenf ant confines his painting almost entirely to composition and design, and effectively uses unusual coloring, especially exotic shades of red. Ozen- fant characteristically emphasizes the intellectual in his pictures, he said. Ozenfant's work can be roughly divided into three periods, Professor Wethey asserted. His early work was usually in conventional style until the period around 1915 when he col- laborated with Le Corbusier in devel- oping Purism. U.S. And Mexico Confer On Possible Naval Bases MEXICO CITY, Nov. 13.-0P)-The United States and Mexico tonight mprp rpnnortrd riscusscing 'nossibilities Supporters Hear Roosevelt Promise To Cooperate With 'True Americans' WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.-OIP)-A pledge "to work shoulder to shoulder with all who place true Americanism above all other considerations" was President Roosevelt's answer today to the thousands of men and women who congratulated him on h re- election. In particular, he said, messages from those who did not vote for rhe administration "reflect a spiri i f national unity in essential thing;.' Describing these communication. as "most welcome," the President add xi: "In union we shall find our tr u, strength." Telegrams and letters of congir - ulation have been piling up at he White House since last Tuesda; "sj balloting, and extra clerks were re-! quired to handle them. Since it was impossible for Mr. Roosevelt to re- ply personally to all of them, he re- sponded through a formal statement. "To all who have sent their greet- ings," he said, "I give this assurance of gratitude and heartfelt apprecia- tion. In acknowledging these pledges of loyal support and full co-operation in forwarding the interests of the nation, I pledge anew my determina- tion to work shoulder to shoulder with all who place true Americanism above all other considerations." Regents Rule Tuition Refund For Draftees Approve Plan To Establish Student Honor Awards In Fielding Yost's Name With national interest on defense problems, the Board of Regents, at its November meeting, turned its atten- tion to the question of student parti- cipation and ruled that students on active duty with armed forces would be given tuition refunds. Students quitting the University more than two weeks after the begin- ning of a semester to take duty with the Army, Navy, or Marine Corps will be given refunds of fees equivalent to the fraction of the semester not completed. Students returning late to the University after armed service will be given a reduction of fees pro- portional to the amount of the Uni- versity year they have missed. An alumni plan to establish awards known as the Fielding H. Yost Honor Awards, for the encouragement of good citizenship and high scholarship among University students, was also approved Tuesday by the Board of Regents. WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.-{1Y-An impression prevailed in Republican quarters today that Wendell L. Will- kie is planning a career as a writer and speaker on public events, to fol- low a bent which he enjoys to lend force to his leadership of the Repub- lican Party in the four years to come. Although the defeated Republican presidentialdnominee has yet to come to a final decision, his friends here expect him to settle down on or near his Indiana farms, contribute regu- larly to the magazines and emerge from time to time for speaking trips. In no event, they think, will he re- turn to Commonwealth and Southern. the public utility holding company whose presidency he resigned to wage the presidential campaign, or to take any other post immediately associated with big business. The idea is that he would be in a much more effec- tive position to guide the pa'rty and help shape its policies from rural Indiana. Fleet In Raid, Admiralty Reports; Greek Army Claims More Gains Molotoff Prepares For Hitler Conference In Berlin Prof. Slosson Delivers Talk (hi Rosevet President Roosevelt's rc 1'ion was not enr ly a personal triumph, bt:t also a victory for the entire Dem- ocratic party, Professor Preston W. Slosson on the University's history department stated yesterday in aI speech before the American Associa- tion of University Women at the Rackham Ampitheatre. The congressional elections showed the desire of the people as well as the presidential campaign, as can be witnessed by the large number of Democrats swept into office with the president. Professor Slosson stressed the fact that President Roosevelt has definite- ly ended the third term tradition, but that in no way can he become a dictator unless the people themselves submit. A dictator, he said, would not have had to wait for a second or third term to carry out his plans. It is of interest to note, Professor Slosson continued, that Wendell Will- kie received more votes in the recent election than any other Republican candidate whether he was elected president or not. This fact, combined with the anti-Roosevelt position of most of the newspapers proves that the election was as completely dem- ocratic s possible. Ordnance Association Elects New Officers Premier and Foreign Commissar of Soviet Russia Vyacheslaff Molotoff (left) talks with German Foreign Minister Joachim Von Ribbentrop (right) in Berlin before Molotoff's two-day conferences with Adolf Hitler. Nazi observers believe that Russia will emerge from this series of parleys a partner of Germany, Italy and Japan. Absolute secrecy has shrouded all negotiations thus far, but reports of the meetings are expected late today or tomorrow. This picture was radioed from Be'lin to New York. New, Old Staffs Will Co-m-memorate Dfaily's 50th An nirersaryJTomorrow U - i By JEAN SHAPERO It will be "Hail, hail, the gang's allI here" in the Union Friday night when members of Michigan Daily staffs from 1890 to 1,10 hold their banquet to commemmorate the paper's 50th anniversary of continuous publica- tion. Daily alumni are coming from all parts of the country for the first re- union of its kind in the paper's his- tory. George H. Hobart, '08, is coming from Green Cove Springs, Fla., while Clarence E. Eldridge, '09, will travel from New York City. The Pacific coast will be represented also, as Mau- rice C. Meyers, '14L, of Los Angeles has accepted the invitation of the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations to be present. Other outstate alumni returning will be E. C. Mechling, '03M, of Pitts- burgh, Tuure Tenander, '38, of Fitch- burg, Mass., and Stanley A. Joffe, '37, of Rochester. All periods in The Daily's history will be represented. Business Mana- gers from the first 10 years, when the paper was called "The U. of M. Daily," who are returning are Charles H. Farrell, '98, Henry M. Butzel, '92L, at present a member of the Michigan State Supreme Court, Junius B. Wood, '00, Harry Jewell, '92L, Ralph Stone, '89, H. J. McElree, '92, and one of the earliest co-ed members, Carrie Virginia Smith, who married Charles M. Stebbins just before taking her teaching degree in 1896. A popular and well-known alum- nus who will be on hand Friday is J. Fred Lawton, '11, author of "Var- sity," University marching song. The men invited have gone into various occupations. Besides Butzel, other state and federal Supreme Court justices who were Daily staff members are George Maxey, '02, of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, J. C. Travis, '91, of the Indiana bench, and Frank Murphy, '14, who is serv- ing as a federal Supreme Court Jus- tice. The legal profession and journalisnr, work are only two of the many fields into which former-Daily editors have Gargoyle Goes on Sale Today ,, Woodrow Frailing, '41, Was elected; temporary president of the University, Army Ordnance Association which was organized in the Union last night. Other officers are William Wood, '41, vice-presi l Mystery Thriller Gieson, '41, sec Continues Today Membership dents who areE "The Bat," Play Production's sec- who are register ond presentation of the year, opened technical schoo a four-day run in the Lydia Mendel- dues for this n ssohn Theatre last night. There is to be The mystery play by Avery Hop- other obligation wood and Mary Roberts Rinehart will be presented again tonight, tomorrow As the organ and Saturday. Tickets can be pur- fifty members chased at the Lydia Mendellssohn the parent orga box office for -75, 50, and 35 cents. ton D. C. is The story concerns the search for a million dollars believed hidden in fifty studentsl a summer home rented by a weaithy ROTC headqua old woman. to membership. ent; and Jacque Van retary-treasurer. s open to all men stu- American citizens and red in the University's ls or colleges. Annual membership are $2.25. no initiation fee or a. nization is limited to until a charter from anization in Washing- applied for, the first paying their dues at iters will be admitted ew Earthquakes Shake Bucharest BUCHAREST, Nov. 13. -(I'- A new series of earth shocks of minor intensity shook Bucharest tonight, widening cracks in buildings and streets left in Sunday's disastrous earthquake. Tonight's tremors were a continu- ation of those felt intermittently since the major one Sunday which killed upward of 2,000 persons and deyastated great areas of Bucharest and other cities. With the country's efforts con- centrated on rehabilitation, the army deferred until Mar. 10 the calling up of tens of thousands of 21-year-old men. gone. The alumni coming back havet listed merchandising work, Comnjun-k ity Fund directorship, insurance sales,. motion picture production, trade daily publication and directorship of the World Fellowship, Inc, as their present occupations. The Daily staffs are coming backt and the only dark note in the affair, as expressed by several letters re-s sponding to the invitations is "that nobody ever had such a wonderfulx idea before." Completing the program of the Cel-z ebration, the alumni and their wivesi will be guests of the Board in Con-3 trol at the Michigan-Northwesterni football game Saturday. The Daily will hold open house Friday afternoon and Saturday, with exhibits illustrat- ing the history of The Daily.t McCune Gives Student Senate Appointments, Student Senate committee appoint- ments were announced last night by John J. McCune, '42, president. Jane Sapp, '41, was named chair- man of the functions committee and she will be assisted by William Lang- ford, '42, Robert G. Brown, '42, and Ruth Basye, '42. The parley committee will be under two co-chairmen. William Todd, '42. and Helen Corman, '41. The rest of the group includes Julie Chockley, '43, Edward Tann, '42, William Ses- sions, '41, William Hurley, 42, and Robert Titus, '41. Roger Kelley, '42 will head the stu- dent government committee. William Ellman, '43, John Aldrich, '43, Robert Warner, '43, and Arnold Moore, '43, will assist him. Robert Krause, '42, was selected as chairman of the student rights com- mittee. The others serving on that body are William Irwin, '42, William Bestimt, 43E, Lee Perry, '42, William Rockwell, '41, Lawrence Lindgren, '41. George Shepard, '41, will be chair- man of the student service committee. Herman Epstein, '40, William Clark, 42. and Charles Boynton, '42, will work with him. Union Holds 26th Annual Open House More than 2000 students and facul- ty dropped in out of the cold last night to accept the hospitality of the Michigan Union's 26th annual Open Soviet Envoy And Fuehrer Confer Today' Premier Molotoff, Hitler Negotiate Four Hours; Alliance Is Expected Grecian Troops Speed Eastward (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Nov. 13.-The British annoukced today their bombers had left half of Italy's elusive battleships crippled and reeling in Mussolini's main naval base of Taranto, and claimed the blow had altered decisive- ly the balance of Mediterranean naval power. "This glorious episode," Prime Min- ister Winston Churchill told an ex- ultant House of Commons, will, more, over, leave its impression" on the naval situation in every quarter of the globe." The Admiralty said photographic evidence showed two battleships were lying part way under water, one of them beached; that the third "pro- bably" was severely damaged; that two cruisers were leaning tipsily in he inner harbor of Taranto and that the sterns of two fleet auxiliary ves- Jels were submerged. London naval circles, doubting that British bombs alone could have wrought such damage against the battleships because of their armor, ;uggested torpedo planes took part in the attack. More in the traditional style of naval warfare was the reported sink- ing of an Italian supply ship, the firing of two others and the damag- ing of an Italian destroyer off Valo- na, Albania, Monday night, as an- nounced by the British Admiralty. A communique said the attack was delivered the night , of Nov. 11-12 when a squadron on patrol along the main line of Italian communications with Albania, in the Strait of Otranto, Intercepted the convoy. Greek Forces Reported Moving Rapidly Eastward ATHENS, Greece, Nov. 13-(MP)-A fovernment spokesman said tonight that Greek forces were speeding east- ward, mopping up territory aban- doned by Italian invaders in the Pin- lus Mountains along the Greek west wing. There was little or no activity in the Macedonian sector, he reported, :dding that Greek troops still were holding fast the positions they oc- :upied some days ago." A British air communique issued 'rom Greek headquarters told of new successful attacks by the RAF. It said: "Valona and Durazzo (Albanian ports) were again bombed by aircraft of the Royal Air Force on the night of Nov. 12-19. Long range bombers successfully attacked oil refineries at Bari (Italian base across the Adriatic and west of Durazzo.) Fuehrer And Moloto ff' Confer In Chancellory BERLIN, Nov. 13--UP)-Adolph Hit- ler and Vyacheslaff Molotoff, the Soviet Premier and Foreign Minister, talked for four hours in the Fuehrer's chancellery today and most of that long period, said informed persons, was devoted to "negotiations." On tomorrow, the third and perhaps the final day of his visit, Molotoff - and his accompanying 32 Soviet exec- utives and experts -fprobably will have still more conferences. His talks 'with Hitler - today's was the second and the longest - were described by certain informed Issue Features And Candid Harmon Shots Newsman Says SuccessfulNavalPush By British Will Force Fuehrer 's Hand By KIRKE L. SIM'PSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) Successful British blows at Italian naval power, coupled with Greek vic- tories against the Fascists, are tend-. ing to force Herr Hitler's hand. The logic of events may compel him to go to Italy's aid soon, even at the risk of complicating Russo-Nazi relations. If British claims of having de- stroyed or crippled virtually half of Italy's capital ship fleet by a single air blow are as well founded as they seem to be, it is a far graver situa- tion for the Axis than the dimming of Ttalian nrestiae hy the Grees.a breaking the British sea blockade in the East. Numerous British warcraft can be spared for convoy duty else- where, and to hunt down German surface raiders in the North Atlantic. Prime Minister Churchill touched upon that aspect in his gleeful report to Parhliament on the Taranto bomb- ing raid and its results. He held that the balance of naval power in the Mediterranean had been "decisively" changed in Britain's favor by this one action. He also said it would carry with it "reactions upon the naval situation in every quarter of rhe~ a~aho " Jervis Bay incident, and thus fresh doubt was cast on similar Nazi out- givings. The London Admiralty also re- ported British warships had smashed an Italian convoy of the Albanian' port of Valona. Presumably that action took place in the narrow straits of Otranto. If so. it means British ships as well as aircraft are striking at the vital communication line between Italy and Albanian territory which is being used as a bridgehead for the attack on Greece. Reinforcement of that attack, already beaten back by It might be called a fall football issue, since it features pictures of Tom Harmon (on the cover) and candid shots of the whole team, but Dave Donaldson, '41, editor-in-chief, prefers to call it "just another issue of the bigger and better Gargoyle. in- troduced to campus last month. The "bigger and better" campus magazine goes on sale today, again including a variety of articles, stories and pictures designed to cover every campus interest and activity. John Brinnin, '41, Hopwood poetry w. inner, is the subject for another edition of "Weethe People,"ra depart- ment which had its inception in last month's Gargoyle.Other new and regular high spots are serious stories by Dennis Flanagan, Grad., and Jay McCormick, '42. Prize winning short story for the month was contributed by Gerald Burns, '42. Eight pages of photographs include a "Panorama" of campus scenes con-