Weather Continued cloudiness with snow flurries; warmer. LY Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication Iait j Editorial lkegitwing of . New Regime VOL. Ll. No. 65 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Italians Flee Desperately On All Fronts Regents Accept $14,000 Gifts To Augment Scholarships Dental, Medical Schools, Sorosis, 3 Trust Funds Receive Financial Aid; Total Of$15,800 Given Sabbaticals Granted; Randall Is Honored At its December meeting yesterday, the Board of Regents ac!'epted for the University more than $15,800 in gifts of which approximately $14,- 000 will go to scholarship funds. In addition, ten members of next year's Dental School freshman class will be awarded one-year grants cov- ering tuition of $320, the Regents ruled in establishing the tuition scholarships. Of the scholarship donations ac- cepted by the Regents, largest was a grant of $6,000 from Galens, hon- orary medical society, to be awarded at the rate Qf $1,000 annually be- ginning Nov. 1, 1940. This money will be used for the Galens Loan Fund, designed to aid needy medical stu- dents. Croul Scholarship Five thousand dollars was accepted from the estate of Charles B. Du- Charme, late member of the Board in Control of Physical Education, to establish the Elwood Croul Scholar- ship Fund, from which interest will provide grants to graduates of the Westminster School entering the Un- iversity. The Marguerite Knowlton Bursley Scholarship Fund of $2,000 was ac- cepted as a memorial to the late Mrs. Bursley. Given by Dean Joseph A. Bursley, Miss Anne Bursley, Miss Margery Knowlton Bursley and Mrs. Rebecca Bursley Winder, the fund will be used to provide scholarships for members of Collegiate Sorosis, Mrs. Bursley's sorority. Baird Endowment The Regents accepted, as well, a grant of $1,448 from James Baird of Tucson, Ariz., to be added to the Baird Endowment Fund. This gift will bring the Fund's assets to a total of $23,000. An anonymous grant of $1,115 to the Rackham Post Grad- uate Medicine Fund was also accept- ed by the Board. The retirement of Prof. Harrison M. Randall, chairman of the physics department, was announced by the Board, to be effective at the end of this semester. Professor Randall, who has reached the University's retire- ment age of 70, has served the Uni- versity 40 consecutive years as a member of the faculty. Honoring him, the East Physics Building has been renamed the "Ran- dall Laboratory of Physics." Named to succeed Professor as department chairman was Prof. Ernest F. Barker, appointed by the literary college Ex- ecutive Committee. Williams Retires Also to retire at the end of this semester is Prof. Neil H. Williams, a veteran faculty member of 32 years service as a teacher in the physics department. Seven leaves were granted to mem- bers of the faculty by the Board. Prof. John W. Bean of the physiology department was granted a second semester sabattical leave for research at the Universities of Buenos Aires and Rio de 'Janeiro. Prof. Dow V. Baxter of the forestry school was al- so granted a second semester sabat- tical. Prof. H. R. Crane and Dr. James L. Lawson, both of the physics de- partment, were placed on a half-sal- ary basis from December 1 until the end of the first semester. Theother half of their salaries will be paid by the National Defense Research Com- mission. Prof. John A. Van den Broek and Mr. William Telfer of the engineer- (Continued on Page 2) Goodfellows -- Monday New Ski Club To Slide Into Action With Movies 'Santa' Arrives For 5,000 Kids Britain Has Nazis, Fascists In Bad Spot, Simpson Claims -Photo by obry Studio "Saint Nick" Evashevski was the center of attraction Atthe annual Interfraternity Council Christmas Party yesterday afternoon in Hill Auditorium, a gala event that opened the Holiday Season for Ann Arbor's school children. By WILLIAM NEWTON More than 5,000 laughing, shout- ing, excited school kids filled Hill Auditorium yesterdayrafternoon for the initial 1940 appearance of Santa Claus in Ann Arbor-the third an- nual Interfraternity Council Christ- mas Party. They began sraggling into the. Auditorium long before the official opening time of 4 p.m., in little groups. of three or four, and it was only the promise of refreshments as the pro- gram ended that persuaded the. children, delighted by more than an hour of gala entertainment, to leave, The movie program which opened the entertainment was well-received by the kids, but it was the appear- ance of Santa Claus-Football Cap- tain Forest Evashevski-that made eyes bulge and mouths drop open. The big quarterback remained be- sieged by young admirers, through- out numbers by the Varsity Band, Magician Charles Forbes, '41BAd, and the University Tumbling Club. None of the kids realized who was taking the part of Saint Nick, and Evie was showered with requests for dolls, air-guns, wagons, skates, "a tie for daddy and a new dress for mother." Each kid who approached the patron saint of Christmas had Knudsen Urges Plane Speedup As Output Lags NEW YORK, Dec. 13--(P)-Assert- ing a speedup of defense production was imperative, William Knudsen, Defense Commissioner disclosed to- night that aircraft output was lag- ging 30 per cent behind production schedules made up last May. "Frankly," he said, in a prepared speech for delivery before the Na- tional Manufacturers Association, "we are not doing anything compared to the forecast by the manufacturers and the commission in July, and our hoped-for production figures for Jan. 1, 1941, of 1,000 planes per month, have to be scaled, down by 30 per cent to be correct." Knudsen warned his audience, composed largely of leading industry and labor industrialists, that any fail- ure on the part of industry and la- bor to co-operate for the utmost speed in defense production might have grave consequences for the na- tion. a chance to talk with him, and each kid was quizzed as to his behavior during the past year. Magician Forbes mystified the children, drawing "ohs" and "ahs" from them as he made caged birds disappear, drew glasses of water from empty cloths and caused lengths of ribbon to change color and multiply in length. The acrobatics of the tumblers started rapt attention, and the kids-almost breathless with ex- citement-sang Christmas carols with the Band. Be A Goodfellow ReadingEnters Plea OfGuilty Falsification Charges Held AgainstEx-Mayor DETROIT, Dec. 13.-(P)-Former Mayor Richard W. Reading pleaded guilty today to a Federal charge of making false statements to a bank receiver. Reading pleaded innocent to an- other charge, - perjury, contained within an indictment returned last Oct. 4. He had been scheduled to go on trial next Tuesday. Federal Judge Frank A. Picard deferred sen- tence. The indictment charged Reading with making a false statement to B. C. Schram, receiver for the First National Bank-Detroit, in October, 1937, a month before he was elected mayor. The sworn statement listed Reading's cash assets at only $100, whereas actually, the indictment charges, he had $30,000 in a safety deposit box. Schram was seeking at the time to collect a $16,000 claim against Reading held by the receiver- ship. By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) Berlin rumors that another person- al meeting between Hitler and Mus- solini is in the offing do not occasion any surprise. Il Duce's plight is obviously so ser- ious as to call for pocketing his pride and sending an SOS to his Axis mate. A crisis of some sort is shaping up for him. The Berlin rumor that Mussolini was on the way there was followed quickly by reports of Hitler's de- parture for an undisclosed destina- tion. It may be Brenner Pass again. That seting for the telling of the 1sl To Face Cagers Today At Field House Easy Workout Is Expected For Wolverine Squad In Pre-Vacation Clash An easy workout should be in store for Coach 'Bennie Oosterbaan's Michigan basketball team tonight at Yost Field House when the Varsity cagers entertain their Ypsilanti neighbors, Michigan Normal, at 7:30 p.m. In the light of the Wolverines' op- ening performance against Michigan State last Saturday, tonight's game should be just one of those things -a big timer taking on a little fel- low for a sparring partner in prep- aration for some important future engagements. The Ypsi tilt will be the last soft spot in the Varsity schedule for a long time. Starting Thursday of next week, the Wolverines will launch a stiff vacation slate which calls for them to meet Notre Dame, Butler, Princeton and Pittsburgh within ten days. Varsity Unbeaten in Series Michigan has never lost a game to the Hurons on the five occasions that the two have met on a basketball court since 1930, and only once in the history of the series has Normal (Continued on Page 3) Goodfellows - Monday Grant Canadian Passage To U.S. Student Draftees Students who are draft registrees and must travel through Canada on their way home for vacation by train will not need special permits from their local draft boards, a railway company announced last night. All trains passing through Canada will be bonded by the railway com- pany and passengers will not be questioned by immigration authori- ties, the company stated. Since the bonded trains allow no one to get on or off in Canada, stu- dents of draft age are promised a completely unmolested passage. sad story that Il Duce must relate would at least save him the ignom- iny of going hat in hand to Berlin for help. And he needs help, quickly. Inti- mations of spreading defeatism in Italy seep through Rome's censor- ship. Fascist Party strong-arm squads are reported to have been mustered to deal with defeatists in third-degree fashion. Just what Hitler can or will do questionable. Any direct military help for Italy might jeopardize Hit- ler's own war effort against England. Months of German air and sea attack on England did not prevent massing of men and material in Egypt for the expanding British of- fensive. Italian ill success against Greece has made the Balkans more of an unpredictable powder keg than ever. If Hitler dropped a war spark there it might blow up in his face and expose his Rumanian oil re- sources to British air attack. British bomber forces aiding the Greeks are now in easy striking dis- tance of the Rumanian oil fields. Bulgarian and Yugoslavian neutral- ity has served to keep them off thus far. It seems questionable that Hit- ler col ld consider sacrificing that protection just now. Yet he would have to march through one or the other neutral state to outflank the Greeks press- ing Italy toward a crushing disaster in Albania. There is no route save the air from German or Italian aid to the beleaguered Fascist army in Egypt. Goodfellows - Monday = Swim Squad To Face Penn Wolverines Are Favored; Sophomores To Start (Special To The Daily) BUFFALO, N.Y., Dec. 14. - The greatest swimming team Matt Mann has ever produced opens its 1940 dual met season here tonight in the Buffalo Athletic Club against an underdog University of Pennsylvania squad. The Wolverines, ten strong, rolled into town last night from Ann Arbor bristling with confidence and packed with dynamite. Already unbeaten in 18 dual meets over two seasons, the Michigan squad is a top-heavy fav- orite to brush aside the challenge of the courageous Quakers. Penn finished a disastrous sea- son last year ending up in the cellar of the Eastern Intercollegiate League with no victories in six dual meets. Tonight's battle will start both teams on their way for the new season and it looks like the Quakers will start right where they left off, on the wrong side of the ledger. The Red and Blue team, riddled by graduation and ineligibilities, will (Continued on Page 3) MILES BARDIA LIBYA s B ANI (ITALY) *.:BUQBU.'. - A'miray'r e rtssi thaBrssisnh r (neari re) b mbard eed focal ins of the *ali n re .e...e....... cY sr"e{ueeeeee.. * eee Baria(s ara'ri rrrrws),phile lrgerfre Ia oop rre r rogha r ei ra i. () ag s fr ns h d rarr ni: nd ( ) iby ar rurr{rrras ira r rathe s ra wr'r.0i 0 Rslii rr rr ~ iari ght frank w h, h sw e aroud n rwr to the crwwriofs, ararirbuk.ri~ish amdcpueo Y les 3,0 pirer.Shdn rcts arrximaepstos CAIRO, Egypt.i Dec. 13.-Therrr rea hckpwr fB't"' Ipr Fh eie ,,asrt-r yn rrd d d Admiralty reports said that British ships in the Mediterranean Sea (near 1) bombarded focal points of the Italian retreat at Saalum and Bardia (small arrows), while large forces of Italian troops were cap- tured in the "Libyan noos" of Western Egypt. This "noose," British said, was effected by sudden attacks (arrows) from the desert: (2) through captured Sidi Barran; (3) against the front south of Sidi- Barrani and (4) by a thrust at the Italian right flank which swept around northward to the coast at Bubuk. British claimed capture of at least 30,00 prisoners. Shading locates approximate positions of remnants of Italian troops in Egypt. British And Greeks Entrap Tousands (By The Associated Press) CAIRO,, Egypt Dec. 13.-The great shock power of Britain's Imperial Forces of the Middle East-troops, navy and air force---was declared today to be driving the last lingering Fascists out of Egypt, and to the fleeing and much reduced Italian Army the British command applied the flat word "beaten?" "Only remnants" of the major foarce led last September by Marshal Rodolfo Gra7iani into the Egyptian coastline still hold out there, said Gen- eral Headquarters, and these were declared withdrawing in a desperate rearguard act.ion toward Italian Libya. (Reuters, British News Agency, reported the British had seized the entire stock and fuel and, food which the Italians had assembled for their Egyptian invasion.) .The capturo, of uncounted thousands of Italian soldiers, for a total of perhaps 30,000, was reported, the British attempting to give no precise figure officially because of the wide extent of the area of isolated battles- 500 square miles of sand and rock. Among these captives were five generals. The first phase of the British offensive-a spectacular example of desert fwarfare-was clearly nearing an end, and there were signs that after a necessary breather to repair damage to machines and rest the British troops the operation might be turned into a counter-invasion of Libya. This word was given an Associated Press correspondent aboard a British destroyer, who told, too, of the mighty and continuing British offensive ------- - --- " f rom the sea-a series of bmad bombard- ments which British naval authori- . I Final Election I Plans For Monday S Annual Drive Count RevealsR OfficialFigure- (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.-Presi- dent Roosevelt polled 27,241,939 votes to win the first third term in the nation's history last Nov. 5, when a new record of 49,808,624 ballots were cast. Wendell L. Willkie, the Republi- can candidate, received 22,327,226. Final official figures from 46 states and unofficial totals from Nebraska and Rhode Island, as compiled by the Associated Press, show the Chief Executive's plurality of 4,914,713 was the smallest of any candidate since 1916 when Woodrow Wilson won re- election over Charles E. Hughes by only 591,385. Although losing, Willkie hung up a record popular vote for the Repub- licans, exceeding by 935,036 Herbert Hoover's previous high mark of 21,- 392,190 in defeating Alfred E. Smith in 1928. Minor parties as a group-with 239,459-polled fewer votes this year (Continued on Page 6) ties said had put the fleeing Fascists along the Mediterranean. coast un- der one of the most destructive naval shellings in history. This sea campaign, supporting the British armored units which fell so suddenly upon the Italians in their fortified bases along the coast, sent many thousands of Italians in dis- ordered flight. The British fleet, throwing six to 15-inch shells, started at Matilka, 15 miles to the east of what had been Graziani's strongest advance base at Sidi Barrani, and smashed it in an hour's firing. Fascist Forces Caught By Greek Movement (By The Associated Press) ATHENS, Dec. 13-The Greeks were reported edging desperately- fighting Italians back against the sea tonight in a two-pronged drive that threatened the last two ports of escape for Fascist forces in south- ern Albania. By Goodfellows Nears Completion) Defense Contract Awarded Ford Co. Despite Protests WASHINGTON, Dec. 13--(P)-The long controversy as to whether firms accused of violating the Wagner Act should be denied defense contracts came to a head today wit? the dis- closure that Sidney Hillman, labor member of the Defense Commission, By CHESTER BRADLEY1 Plans were proceeding apace yes- 1 terday for the Sixth Annual Good- fellow Drive to be held on campus Monday, according to Laurence Mas- cott, '41, chairman of the Drive. Lists of Goodfellow salesmen were being reported by the heads of var- ious campus organizations and honor societies. 7rwo years ago the leaders of the Goodfellow Drive discovered Dr. Katherine L. Crawford, the first Ne- gro woman ever to receive a medical degree from the University, living in a dingy, tiny apartment in dire need of financial assistance. Dr. Crawford, who was graduated with the class of 1898, began the practice of medicine here immediate- ly following her graduation, but a conspiracy of circumstances worked ,iifoA.Vrahlv aginst her until in her Fnd, the Bureau set about helping Dr. Crawford. Soon she was able to move into a home with friends, and to have her own room there. Members from the Bureau persuaded her to take meas- ures to preserve her health. They saw that she secured a special kind of shoe, so that she could walk out and visit her friends. From contribu- tions to this year's Fund, they are planning to purchase a radio for her. In 1938 Dr. Crawford was living on a 30 dollar a month pension from the Old Age Assistance Bureau. Twenty-five dollars of this amount went for rent, leaving only five dol- lars for food and other incidentals. At that time she was deriving a small income from a property investment, but the returns from this had been steadily dwindling in late years. Dr. Crawford was forced to give up her local practice after only two years because of family difficulties. In the next few years she traveled from state to state, including Cali- fornia and Florida, practicing only a short time in each place. She met prejudice against woman doctors, a lack of reciprocity laws allowing per- sons to practice in a state where they had not been specifically au- thorized to follow their profession --f Can You Sing --? It's Carol Time Tomorrow Night All students are invited to par- ticipate in the Annual Carol Sing sponsored by the Student Religious Association at 9 p.m. tomorrow at Lane Hall. Everyone is asked to bring an in- exnensive washable gift as a con- Despite fresh troops thrown into the vital Klisura Pass protecting Tepeleni and the heights around Coastal Chimara and Palermo, dis- patches from the front said the Greeks pushed steadily on, taking new prisoners and inflicting heavy losses on counter-attacking foes. (An exchange telegraph dispatch to London said the Italians were evacuating Tepeleni after a fierce fight and British military circles said the capture of that town and Kli- sura remained "merely a matter of time.") Klisura lies about ten miles north- east of Tepeleni, which is an import- ant junction of the road leading to the port of Valona. The Greeks yes- terday said Valona, second in im- portance only to Durazzo, was vir- SANTA IS ON HIS WAY- z .I