'weather Jr Possible snow and colder. Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication jIatt~ Editorial How Self-Sufficient Is America?... I VOL. LI. N. 63 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS PhiKappa Phi To Initiate 60 Faculty Men, SeniorsToday Prof. Titiev Will Discuss Peaceful Philosophies Of HopiIndian Tribes Banquet To Be Held At 6:15 In League Five members or the faculty and 55 University seniors will be formally initiated into Phi Kappa Phi, scho- lastic honorary society, at the group's annual winter banquet at 6:15 p.m. today in the League. Principle speaker at the dinner will be Prof. 1ischa Titiev of the anthro- pology department. who will discuss the various aspects of Hopi Indian culture which have given them the name of "The Peaceful People." The students who have been elect- ed to Phi Kappa Phi were chosen because of their scholastic standing, character and leadership. Twenty- eight are from the Literary College, twelve from the College of Engin- eering, four from the School of Med- icine, three from the School of For- estry, two each from the College of Akchitecture, School of ,Pharmacy and School of Education and one each from the School of Music and the School of Dentistry. Faculty Members Faculty members who will be in- itiated are Professor Titiev, Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of the history department, Prof. Arthur B. Moehl- man of the School of Education, Prof. Thomas S. Lovering of the geology department and Prof. Thor Johnson of the School of Music. Those elected from the Literary College are as follows: Kenneth P. Mattews of Ann Arbor; June T. Lar- son of Indianapolis, Ind.; Isabella H. Lugoski of Detroit; Lester Persky of Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Harold D. Osterweil of Long Beach, N. Y.;. Sol M. Wezelman of Omaha, Nebr.; and Richard E. Field of Jackson. The list continues with Alice R., Ward of Detroit, Hervie Haufler of Covington, Ky.; Edna B. Kearney of Detroit; Robert A. Fehr of Royal Oak; Gertrude Frey of 'Battle Creek; Frederick W. Howarth of Republic, Penn., and Betty M. Nixon of Ann Arbor. The List Continues Others are Elizabeth M. Lightner of Grand Rapids; Jean B. Calkins of Detroit; Jean E. Fairfax of Cleve- land, Ohio; Russell M. Braga of Ro- chester; Jane L. Krause of Kenil- worth, Ill.; Victor I. Schoen of Dexter, and Leonard D. Kurtz of Detroit. Donald E. Van Hoek of Ann Ar- bor; Margaret J. Van Ess of Hud- son, N. Y.; Neal Seegert of Waw- watosa, Wis.; William A. Riner of (Continued on Page 6) Chaplin Film To Be Shown Here Sunday Charlie Chaplin, wrld-famous act- or for the past quarter century, will lead off the new Art Cinema League film series at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Mendelssohn 'T'heatre. The be-moustached, right angle toed comedian will appear in five of the most popular Keystone comedies; produced way back in the 1920's. The film will be silent, but a musical score has been arranged as accompani- ment. A few tickets are still available at the League, Union, Wahr's and Ul- rich's Bookstores. Since the Chaplin films are just one in a series of four evenings planned, only a series ticket will be sold, priced at $1. No individ- ual admissions to performances will be sold. The Keystone comedies, which take their titles from the fact that the Keystone Kops are the collective he- roes in the pictures, were the fore- runners of the slapstick cycle in moviedom. Goodfellows -- Monday Exchange Students Will Meet Brazilians _ i ^.- - _ Seniors, Frosh Choose Class Dance Chairmen British Drive For Libyan Border Hubert Weidman and Marvin Bor- man were chosen chairmen respec- cively of the Senior Ball and Frosh Frolic dance committees in yester- day's election'that saw the flip of a coin decide the winners for two posi- ions. Lady Luck deserted Jack Cory and Douglas Gould to give Bill Elmer the third men's Literary College post on the Senior Ball. George Nadler was elected with 18 votes, one less than, the chairman, Weidman, received. Lee Keller and Helen BohnsaoL are the women Literary College mem- bers on the senior dance committee the latter winning her post whet the coin turned up "heads." Inter fraternity Men Prepare Holiday Party Nearly 50 Interfraternity Council staff members worked until well past the middle of last night, preparing packets of refreshments for the 5,000 children expected to attend the Coun- cil's Christmas Party-curtain raiser of the Holiday season for Ann Arbor's school kids--tomorrow afternoon. When the doors of Hill Auditorium swing open to the children at 4 p.m., students and townspeople alike will be ready to do their best to provide 90 minutes of fast-moving entertainment which will be climaxed by distribu- tion of the sacks containing cookies, candy, nuts and fruit. The Varsity Band has arranged a program of Christmas carols for the kids, and the University Tumbling Club's acrobats, under the direction1 of Dr. George May, freshman gymt director, will put on a show. Charles3 Forbes, '41BAd., a self-tyled "semi-( professional" magician, will stage a1 special kids' program, and members1 of the IFC staff, costumed as clowns, will take part in the entertainment. High points of the entertainment, however, are expected to be the show-N ing of a movie program, speciallyr selected cartoons and comedies, ands the appearance of Santa Claus. Foot-e ball Capt. Forest Evashevski, who willY be Santa, has spent several hoursr practicing the role.t Be A Goodfelow . Our Tommy--s. He Still Wantsx A Radio Job NEW YORK, Dec. 11.-(W)-Tomt Harmon, Michigan's two-time All-t America halfback, went into a huddle with a New York radio executive to-o day, but Harmon said that the onet thing they did not discuss was ank announcing job for him.- Harmon said that he called onr Donald Flamm, president of Stationc WMCA, merely to get advice on at career from a man whom he admires. Tommy said that he wouldn't con-a sider doing any commercial workt until after his graduation.- As to playing pro football, he stilla is undecided. "I'll do it only if what u I want in radio doesn't work out," hes said. Those elected in the Engineering 'College were Fred Dannenfelser with 19 votes, Robert Buritz with 41 votes and Bill Vollmer with 13. Catherine McDermott was the choice of the School of Music with 7 ballots. In the Frosh Frolic elections Ro- bert Grunder and James Weinstein were the men chosen to represent the Literary College with 42 and 41 Dotes respectively. The women selec- ed were Elizabeth Bunnel with 30 )allots and Jane Pritchard with 23. Engineering College students elec- ed were Bernard Brown with 28 'otes, Charles Neilson with21hand ,uinn Wright with 18. Three students were declared auto- matically elected to the senior ball :ommittee when they encountered no opposition in yesterday's elec- ion. They were Paul Rogers of the College of Architecture, James Lau f the Forestry School and Herbert Brogan of the School of Education. Dorothy Carter was chosen as Senior Ball Nurs.ing School repre- sentative in a previous election held in that school. Goodfellows - Monday Human Angle Makes News, Editor Asserts Influence Of Advertisers On Newspaper Policy Denied By Fitzgerald Human interest is what makes news, Harold A. Fitzgerald, editor of the Pontiac Daily Press emphasized yesterday in the second in a series of lectures sponsored by the Depart- ment of Journalism. "News is hap- penings that interest people," Fitz- gerald declared, "irrespective of its importance" Commenting on the question of whether advertisers control the news, Fitzgerald stated with empha- sis, "Never once in my experience has a single national advertiser ordered, hinted, suggested or begged that my newspaper take sides in any elec- tion." He added that it would do them no good and they knew it. "Al- so," he said, "no local advertiser has suggested anything to me in any elec- tion." Pictures are becoming more im- portant, according to Fitzgerald, who added that they can only be supple- mentary, since cut lines are not enough. Human interest is again a major feature of the value of pic- tures, he said. He pointed out that the winning pictures in the national photography contest last year were of an officer stopping 5th ' Avenue traffic to permit a cat to take its kittens across the street safely, while the shot of Schoolboy crossing the pitching mound in Briggs Stadium. on his way out of the big leagues took first prize in the sports division. In his closing remarks, Fitzger- ald reminded students of journalism that quality and character "in journalistic writing is improving. He advised people interested in goingt nto newspaper work to work on their style, since the days of drab color- less reporting are gone. As Important Italian Base Falls; othian AsksFor U.S. Naval Aid English Envoy Says Amnerican Action Will Decide War Predicts Fierce German Raids BALTIMORE, Dec. 11.-(P)-Mak- ing an implied plea for American naval assistance in keeping the sup- ply routes open to the British Isles, the Marquess of Lothian, British am- bassador, declared tonight that the issue of the war "now depends large- ly on what you decide to do." "If you back us you will not be backing a quitter," he asserted, and "with your help in airplanes, muni- tions, in ships and on the sea, and in the field of finance now being dis- cussed between your treasury and ours, we are sure of victory." Lord Lothian made his remarks in a speech he prepared for delivery to the American Farm Bureau Federa- tion here. Because of illness, how- ever, he was unable to come here to deliver the' address in person, and he assigned Neville Butler, counselor of the British Embassy, to read it for him. "It is for you to decide," the Am- bassador said, "whether it is to your interest to give us whatever assistance may be necessary in order to make certain that Britain shall not fall." Predicting still greater German at- tacks on British shipping in the com- ing months, Lord Lothian declared the British navy already "is strung out terribly thin." "We think that this is a situation which concerns you almost as much as it concerns us," he said. "It has long been clear that your security no less than ours depends upon our holding the Atlantic impregnably and you the Pacific." Lord Lothian declared that no one who had seen what "steady and con- stant bombardment of great cities from the air means could wish any friendly country like the United States of America to undergo any similar experience." -Goodfellows - Monday J-Hop Ticket Applications Are Due Today Blanks Must Be Submitted' With Identification Card At Union,_League Desk All members of the junior class desiring to purchase tickets for the J-Hop, which will be held Feb. 14 ,and 15 are requested to submit ap- plications for them sometime be- tween 11:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. today at either the League or Union desks. Every applicant must be a member of the Class of '42, it was announced, and each must bring with him an identificatied card and a self-ad- dressed, stamped envelope. Only one ticket will be allowed to each junior and no preference will be given to application which are sub- mitted early, according to Paul Sampson, '42, ticket chairman. If the number of application exceeds the quota of 1200, refusals will be made through the lottery system. Those, who receive applications will receive either an acceptance or re- fusal stamp within a week. Those who receive the acceptances will be required to purchase tickets when they go on sale after Christmas va- cation. SANTA IS ON HIS WAY- French Destroyer Beached At Dakar r I AAEDIT' 0 100 MILES k R "4 v, StA RANI MATRUH ALEXANDRtAm ael riSN SUPPLY RAILROAD TO SUEZ ICANAL+ LIBYA' EGYPT The wrecked French destroyer L'Audacieux is shown as it lay beached after the battle of Dakar, when the British bombarded the West African port in September. This picture was made by a Fench sailor aboard the cruiser Georges Leygues at Dakar. Nazi Blockade Runner Captured WASHINGTON, Dec. 1l-(P)- The German freighter Rhein, which put out from Tampico, Mexico, Nov. 29 to run the British blockade, was "intercepted," it was learned from an informed source tonight, kly a Dutch warship operating "somewhere-in the western Atlantic." Spanish Clu To Give Movie Alla En El Rancho Grande' Will Be Offered Monday In answer to popular request La Sociedad Hispanica will bring to the 'Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 8:15 p.m. Monday, the Mexican movie, Alla en el Rancho Grande starring Tito Guizar, of singing fame, and Es- ther Fernandez, a pretty dark-eyed heroine. According to the film, life on the big rancho runs to song and romance. Senor Guizar sings a number of torchy serenades in his Spanish-style tenor and is assisted musically by Lorenzo Barcelata. A sextette of guitar strummers will do their bit to provide the proper atmosphere for Tito Guizar, in his romantic bid for the fair Spanish senorita's heart. In the screen play, the Cinderella- like heroine is rescued from a vicious guardian by the strong and honest hero who is the foreman of the ran- cho. All seats are reserved and may be secured by telephoning 6300 at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The box-I office will open on December 14.. ! The source who revealed the Rhein's interception was unable to say whether it occurred within a day or two after the ship left port. Fire was observed on the freighter, he said, when the Dutch warship closed in, but he could not say whether the freighter subsequently sank or was taken as a prize. The dash toward a German port which the Rhein started on Nov. 29 was the freighter's second atttempt to slip through the British naval cordon around the western hemis- phere ports. On Nov. 15 the Rhein, together with the Idarwald and the Phrygia, left Tampico to run the blockade but sighted unidentified warships a few hours afterwards. The Rhein and the Idarwald scur- ried back to Tampico but the Phry- gia's crew scuttled her in the belief that the naval units sighted were enemy craft. Gargoyle To Tell Howu To Make, Break Dates How to make a date and how to break it will be explained in an article on "Dates Is Funny Animals," appear- ing in the December Gargoyle, cam- pus magazine, on sale today. Star- dust, that anonymous expert on love and romance, who described the art of osculation in last month's Gar- goyle, is the author. Soph Cabaret and Union Opera pictures will be highlighted in the eight-page photograph section. Sub- ject of this month's Preposterous Per- sons is Virginia Lee Hardy, '41, presi- dent of the League, while Prof. Perci- val Price, carilloneur, will be feat- ured in '"These Are The People." New Gains Reported By Greek Forces In Albanian Battle Rome Admits Egyptian Loss (By The Associated Press) British desert troops fighting to smash the Italians in North Africa announced the capture of the import- ant Italian base at Sidi Barrani, Egypt, yesterday and pushed a fast motorized advance guard westward toward Premier Mussolini's Libyan domain. The British communique reporting the fall of the group of native hovels which represented the farthest point of Fascist penetration into Egypt said a 'large number of troops and three Italian generals were captured. This undetermined total thus was added to the 6,000 Italian troops al- ready declared captured since the British began their westward push at dawn Monday. Further, British advance forces lave been reported near Buq Buq, 35 miles west of Sidi farrani, and the next British objective appeared to be the Italian base at Salum, on the Egyptian-Libyan border. In Albania, the terror of long, ;leaming knives wielded by dark and '7eckless Crete soldiers added to the roubles of retreating Itallans and the 3reek high command reported fresh idvances in every sector. A spokesman said the Greeks were ,arrying out "important moves which are now in full development" but ;hey were not explained. Italy, meanwhile, admitted reverses iround Sidi Barani but said the Bri- tish paid dearly in fighting- of "ex- ;eptional violence." Marshal Rodolfo Graziani, com- 'mander of Italian troops in Egypt, won Sidi Barrani in September after aunching a sudden drive across the lesert. The town, 70 miles from the Libyan-Egyptian border, became the iub of Italian preparation for a drive against Alexandria, Egyptian city where the British have a huge naval 'ase. and the Suez Canal, prime link n the British Empire life-line. But Greece's stand against Italy- urned into an Italian defeat of ma- or importance-Bulgaria's failure to .all into line with Berlin and Rome, md Turkey's announced determina- tion to resist with 2,000,000 bayonets my invasion attempt apparently re- tarded the Axis moves. And now the 3ritish have given Mussolini more to think about than a drive to th Suez. French Indo China Batte Is Raging MANILA, Dec. 11-(')--French Indo-China, having yielded northern footholds to Japanese armed forces, now is fighting to put down native uprisings which may give Japan an axcuse to move into the south to flank British Singapore, a step to- ward control of the Dutch East In- dies. Faced by increased Japanese pres- sure for economic concessions, at lesat, and armed conflict with Thai- tand (Siam) -aside from the serious native uprisings-only a handful of French officers and administrators appear to be holding the colony to- gether and under the power of the Vichy government. This, broadly, was the reliable re- port as of late November, brought to- day to Manila by travelers. It did not pass through the strict censor- ship which the French have imposed, apparently in hope of concealing the situation from Japan, lest it move her to action. (Nevertheless, the Japanese seem to be informed. Domei, Japanese news agency, said today Major Gen- eral Raishiro Sumita, head of the Japanese military mission in Indo- China, would go shortly to Saigon to study thes ituation in "the undis- turbed region.") Be A Goodfellow Tau Epsilon Rho To Hold ured in "These Are The People." Goodfellow Edition Monday: Entire Campus Will Participate In S ixth Good fellow Campaign Union Opera Wows 'Ei: - Take A Number' Takes A Bow; Critic's Plaudits Go To Lewis By CHESTER BRADLEY In early December, 1935, campus leaders inaugurated the Goodfellow Drive to aid local families in need and students who required financial assistance. Featured by a special Goodfellow edition of The Daily, the project was launched by request of Univer- sity officials and the personnel in local welfare organizations. Active in initiating the original Goodfellow Drive were the leaders of fraternities, sororities, dormitor- ies and senior honorary society, The Daily staff, and the Dean of Stu- dents, Joseph A. Bursley. These persons agreed that the money raised to aid needy students would be handled through the Dean of Student's office, and that the Instantaneous and emphatic was the response of the campus. The Daily printed enthusiastic letters of approval and eulogy from many per- sons, including President Alexander G. Ruthven and Regent Junius E. Beal. In his letter, Prof. J. P. Dawson of the Law School pointed out that "the Family Welfare Bureau exists for the purpose of organizing the limited resources available in the community for the caring of families still on the margin of subsistence. If cash gifts to the Family Welfare Bureau can take the place of enter- tainment for a few selected children, there can be no doubt that real needs will be cared for in a far more systematic and effective way. The program of The Daily deserves By PAUL CHANDLER If you threw a collegiate kind of the Brooklyn Dodgers on the stage of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, gave them a comedian named Bob Lewis, and put the whole thing in a musical background,then maybetthe resem- blance would be close to "Take A Number," 1941 Union Opera. The play was too long, concluded with a feeble gasp, and suffered a series of lulls almost as exasperating as the wait in a dentist's office, but it brought a lot of laughs. And that's what Ann Arbor audiences will be seeking at future performances Thursday, Friday and Saturday eve- nings and Saturday afternoon. The Pie-eyed knave named Lewis carried the humor of the play in his own basket. Occasionally other mem- bers of the cast drew their chuckles, biologically impossible knee knobs. and an unattractive foliage of hair. A- good sun lamp would have. done wonders for the whole crew-except Lewis. He wore long pants. Most of the boys were anxious to make good, perhaps too anxious. The result found the cast trying to stuff their lines down unwilling throats, and then jumping up and down on the body's stomach to hasten the digestion. Parts were overacted. The plot itself stuck to a fragile theme of how to put a midwestern uni- versity on a "mass production basis," but that didn't alter the show much. Many of the actors found the chance to step out of role and do a song-and- dance. Even the University Glee Club was there, rendering songs from other operas which have been pre- sented over a 32vear sn of history.v :I 11