Weather Cloudy, possible light rain. LL Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication jDIaiti Editorial Council Action Halts Airport Plans .. VOL. LI. No. 48 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Powerful Climaxing As Tom HL Wolverines Wallop Great Season With Ohio State, 40-0, armon Scoring I Grange Rampage s Record Shatters Red Nazis Warn Turks Buckeyes Spill The Hoosier Hurricane - But Not Often! To Join Axis Bloc As Rumania Signs Von Papen Talks With Minister Saracoglo On Acceptance In 'European Order'; Bulgaria, Slovakia Expected To Enter ANKARA, Turkey, Nov. 23.-(W)-German Ambassador Franz Von Papen conferred with the Turkish foreign minister for nearly an hour tonight in an interview in which the future of Turkey may have been decided. The nature of the conversation Adolf Hitler's ace trouble-shooter had with Foreign Minister Sukru Saracoglo was not disclosed, but it was pre- sumed he delivered terms for Axis acceptance of Turkey in the projected "new European order." In an interview later with the official newspaper Ulus, Von Papen de- nied he issued a statement in Berlin to the effect that Turkey should submit to the new European order and that Russia is interested in naval bases on the Persian Gulf. These'reports had been widely circulated in the Turkish press. The German Embassy likewise declared without foundation reports that Von Papen would fly back immediately to Berlin. Saracoglo received Von Papen following audiences with the Greek and British Ambassadors, who called separately. The Turkish cabinet meanwhile discussed enforcing of regulations in areas put under martial law yesterday. Commenting on .Rumania's joining up today with the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo- Budapest, axis, the Turkish radio said tonight: "It makes no difference; Ru- This was a rare scene on the Columbus gridiron yesterday, but All-America Tom Harmon is shown being stopped for no gain near midfield during the first period of the game in which the fighting Wolverines over- whelmed Ohio State's Buckeyes, 40-0. This Associated Press photograph was wired from Columbus to Chicago and sent by air express to Detroit, where the airliner was met by a representative of The Daily. Retreating Italian Army Is Split By Greek Troops mania already is in German hands."< However, the impending Berlin vis- it of Bulgaria's Prime Minister and Foreign Minister appeared to under- line the gravity of the situation, since Turkey has warned Bulgaria not to adhere to the Axis, and, more directly, to refrain from attacking Yugoslavia or Greece. 'Drang Nach Osten' Nears Dardanelles By LOUIS P. LOCHNER BERLIN, Nov. 23.-(VP)-Rumania entered the German-Italian-Japan- ese Hungarian Axis today-and thus the German march to the East moved bloodlessly on to within 250 miles of the Dardanelles-and word was put about that Slovakia would sign up tomorrow as No. 6 in that extraordin- ary.alliance. Bulgaria is expected to sign early this week. Then nearly all Europe to the Soviet outposts-save only em- battled Greece and Turkey-would be under the Axis pact or its influ- ence.I Rumania, which until only recently was in the British camp, joined up at a stiff ceremony in the chancellory which was distinguished by the ab- sence of Adolf Hitler and the open frigidity between her delegation and that of another recent recruit, Hun- gary. In the glittering grand reception room there were palable memories of a recent axis-enforced revision of territory by which Hungary got northern Transylvania from Ruma- nia. German Picture To Be Presented, At League Today The pre-Hitler German film "Cob- bler Captain of Kopenick" will be shown 3:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. today today in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre under the auspices of the Art Cinema League. Holders of the recent Douglas Fair- banks series tickets will be admitted free of charge to either of the per- formances, although Albert Stutz, Grad, manager, urges students to at- tend the afternoon showing for bet- 1> British Cash At LowEbb, Lothian Says NEW YORK, Nov. 23-(/P)-Lord Lothian, British Ambassador to the United States returned from his bomb-battered homeland today with the cryptic declaration that Britain's financial problem was "becoming ur- gent." His country, he said, was "begin- ning to come to the end of her finan- cial resources." The envoy was one of 14 passen- gers who came from Lisbon on Pan- American Airway's Atlantic Clipper. Another Clipper, the Dixie, immed- iately followed with nine passengers, also from Lisbon. Lothian foresaw a "difficult year" for the British and an emphatic need of all kinds of war materials, includ- ing airplanes, munitions, ships and "perhaps finance." He emphasized that England "def- initely does not need men" as part of this country's assistance. (By The :Associated Press) SALONIKA, Greece, Nov. 23-(/P- Greek troops, inspired by the fall of Koritza, were reported today to have split the retreating Italian Army in two, driving a spearhead from the Pindus Mountain sector straight through the Fascist lines.. Military observers declared the pursuit into Albania was so relentless that the Italians were unable to form a warfront for defense against fight- ers of the nation they sought to in- vade. (The Greek Legation in Sofia, Bul- garia, said it had been informed two Italian divisions - about 24,000 men - were surrounded south of Argiro- castro, in the central Pindus sector.) While the civilian population cel- ebrated what was termed Greece's greatest military victory since the days of the ancients, the army - fighting entirely on Albanian soil - had started a three-pronged drive. The Greek forces were drawing on large stores of guns and equipment captured in Koritza and it was re- ported that Italian tanks manned by Greek crews were being used in the campaign in the north. Officials here expressed the view the recent victories give their forces impressive strategic advantages. They pointed out that, while Albania is almost all mountainous, the river val- leys - the only feasible travel routes - run from the present Greek po- sitions straight into the heart of Al- bania and thence to the Adriatic. In Koritza, the troops surrendered the task of policing the city to 350, gendarmes. Their instructions were to restore civil life in the city to nor-1 mal as soon as possible. Leahy Chosen French Envoy By President New Ambassador Takes Over Bullitt's Position; Vichy Cabinet Pleased HYDE PARK, N.Y., Nov. 23.-U)- The selection of Admiral William D. Leahy, retired, as ambassador to France was announced today by President Roosevelt. Leahy, who climaxed a 42-year career in the Navy by serving as Chief of Naval Operations from 1937 to 1939, has been Governor of Puer- to Rico since his retirement a year ago. The resignation of William C. Bul- litt, present Ambassador to France, has been in the President's hands since Nov. 7. Its acceptance becomes a matter of course. Whether Bullitt would be offered another Government position or would return to private life, the tem-, porary White House was not prepared to say. It had not been determined either, when Leahy's nomination would be sent to the Senate. Pre- sumably, he will be allowed time to wind up his affairs in Puerto Rico. Mr. Roosevelt had asked Gen. John J. Pershing to become envoy to France because of his close friend- ship during the World War with Marshal Henri Petain, head of the Vichy Government. Pershing's doc- tors forbade him to accept. Dispatches from Vichy said offi- cials there were "delighted" with the Pauli To Talk On Statistics, Atomic Effect Physics Dept. To Sponsor Lecture About Nuclear Relationships Tomorrow Relations of the atomic nucleus to statistics will be the subject of a Uni- versity lecture by Wolfgang Pauli, Professor of Theoretical Physics at the Technische Hochschule at Zur- ich, Switzerland, to be given at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Am- phitheatre under the auspices of the physics department. Professor Pauli who is now carrying on work in the theory of atomic nu- clei at the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton, is noted as the discoverer of the Pauli Exclusion Principle which forbids two electrons within an atom to move in identical orbits. The Pauli Principle has led to a satisfactory explanation of the Per- iodic Table for the elements as well as many results in spectroscopy. Professor Pauli's lecture will deal with the relation of the choice of statistics to the magnitude of the spin of the atomic nucleus. _____ Contest Features Inspired Playing ByWholeTeam Sellout Crowd Witnesses Power Display Which Gives Buckeyes Their Worst Drubbing Since 40-0 Setback In 1905; Kriomer, 'Evy' Have Share In Scoring By DON WIRTCHAFTER (Special To The Daily) COLUMBUS, OHIO, Nov. 23.-Michigan's thundering football forces roared all over the Ohio Stadium today before winding up one of the greatest years in Wolverine gridiron history. With brilliant Tom Harmon leading the way, Michigan battered a com- pletely demoralized Buckeye squad, 40-0, to carry off its seventh triumph of the campaign. In his final collegiate appearance, the Hoosier Hurricane treated a sellout crowd of 73,648 spectators to a dazzling display of football, if there ever was one. All in all, he drove over the Ohio goal three times to smash Red Grange's former Western Conference three-year touchdown record of 31, passed to teammates for two of the other Wolverine tallies, place-kicked four points after touchdowns, and maintained a punting average of 50 yards per kick. Spark Behind Devastating Drive If that were not enough, Harmon was the spark behind a devastating Michigan drive that handed the battling Buckeyes their worst defeat since 1905 when the Wolverines trounced them, 40-0. Michigan was an inspired football team today. It was alert, determined and spirited. The Wolverines' complete superiority was never in doubt. Even a steady autumn downpour failed to stop their merciless plun- dering which netted two touchdowns in the first quarter, one in the second, two in the third, and one in the fourth. It was Michigan's battering, double-barreled attack that knocked the Buckeyes' defenses into a state of dizziness. When Harmon wasn't smashing off tackles or whirling around ends, Bullet Bob Westfall was crashing over the cente: of an outclassed Ohio line. Statistics clearly show how badly the Buckeyes were beaten this after- noon. Michigan rolled up 22 first downs to Ohio's six. Wolverine backs rambled over 299 yards of sloppy stadium turf through the rushing route while the Buckeyes dented Michigan's adamant forward wall for only 82 yards. In passing it was the same story. Harmon completed 11 out of 23 aerials for 148 yards while Don Scott, Francis Schmidt's heralded back- field star, and substitute halfback Don Sexton found the mark on only four out of 14 tosses for 33 yards. 'Shut The Gates Of Mercy' Schmidt was handed a dose of his own medicine today. Nicknamed 'Shut the gates of mercy" because of his treatment of gridiron foes, the Buckeye coach found the doors jammed closed when the powerful Wolver- ines went into action. It took Michigan 11 minutes to cross the Ohio goal line, but once Fritz Crisler's battering rams hit pay-dirt, touchdowns followed with amazing regularity. The first tally came on an 80 yard sustained drive. Westfall and Har- mon alternated in tearing the Buckeye line to shreds before Terrible Tom flipped a pass from the Ohio 28 to Paul Kromer, starting his first game of te year at the right halfback post, and the Lorain Flash, grabbing it in the left flat, roared to the seven be- fore Ohio's Captain, Jim Langhurst, ccessor: :ulled him down. From there it took just one play, a power drive over left guard by Harmon, to throw i tedForeign the Wolverines out in front. His . " attempted place-kick for the extra mittee Chairman point dribbled off to the left of the posts, but little did it matter. There were more points to come, plenty far of Administration support for more. such a step. President Roosevelt said Just two minutes later, the Wol- yesterday the question had not been verines scored again. With shades discussed in the Government. of the renowned touchdown twins of George was the unanimous choice two years back, senior Kromer of the Senate Democratic Steering grabbed one of Scott's punts on his Committee for the chairmanship of own 20, and behind deadly blocking the Foreign Relations Committee, left by Harmon, Ed Frutig and Ralph vacant by the death of Sen. Key Pitt- Fritz, who celebrated his 23rd birth- man (Dem.-Nev.). A resolution for- day today, he raced into the clear mally elevating him to the post will along the right sidelines, slid through be presented to the Senate Monday. two Buckeye tacklers and scampered George said he would call the com- 80 yards across the goal. mittee into session Wednesday, and In the second period, the Wolver- that he hoped to obtainefavorable ines' drive deep into Ohio territory action at that time on a treaty affect- was climaxed by an aerial from Har- ing customs of the Dominican Repub- mon to Evashevski which the Michi- lI,. gan quarterback carried over from The meeting of the Senate Demo- the 15. cratic Steering Committee was the Thus three different Wolverine only official business on Capitol Hill seniors, winding up their collegiate today, but on the House side Speaker (continued on Page s) Coast To Coast From Ann Arbor: Barbirolli To Conduct Concert Of Philharmonic Here Today John Barbirolli will bring his world famous New York Philharmonic- Symphony Orchestra to Hill Auditor- ium at 3 p.m. today for their second Choral Union Concert. Sponsored by the University Mus- ical Society, the orchestra has chosen a special program for Ann Arbor. It includes Handel's "Concerto Grosso in B-Flat," Op. 6, No. 7; the Mendel- ssohn "Symphony in A major," Op. 90 (Italian); and the Sibelius "Sym- phony No. 2 in D. major," Op. 43. Two precedents are being broken in today's concert. It is the first time that the Choral Union recital has been presented in the afternoon, and the first time that such a concert will be internationally broadcast. Since the Philharmonic must give its He'll Be Key Pittman's Sut Sen.George Appc Relations Com WASHINGTON, Nov. 23. --()- Sen. Walter F. George, veteran South- ern Democrat, was selected today to be chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and immediate- ly declared he would pursue a policy of working in "close harmony" with the State Department. In a talk with reporters, the grey- haired Georgia Senator also indicat- ed he thought it would be unwise to seek Congressional action at this ses- sion on "controversial matters" in the field of international relations. "It will be difficult to maintain a quorum," he said. Only 45 Senators -four less than the quorum neces- sary for transaction of business-at- tended yesterday's Senate meeting. George's attitude appeared to rule out the possibility, talked by some ICan.rC of ,nrinn of this c.raionn I i