Weather VAap2"M 5k igau ~atxg Editorial Fair and Warmer. I# Play Production Needs New Home. VOL, LI No. 13 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENT Wolverines Wallop Pitt P anters, 40- .. ._ , Women, Children Evacuate Moscow; Nazis Claim Gains Here Is Michigan Blocking And Running That Defeated Pitt Michigan Gridder Attain Supremac After Slow Star __ Entire Front Moves East, Germans Say, As Red Army Center CrunbleS Moscow Admits Serious Retreats 113ULLETIN- MOSCOW, Oct. 1. -()- Evacuation from Moscow of all women and children not engaged in vital war work was ordered by the government tonight as the warfront pushed closer to the Soviet capital. -(By The Associated Press) BERLIN, Oct. 11.-Destruction of two trapped Russian armies north of the Sea of Azov was claimed tonight by the Iigh Command which' de- clared 64,35 prisoners were captured in a German-Rumanian sweep to- ward the oil pipeline port of Rostov. The entire RuAsian battlefront was reported moving eastward, and Ger- man military spokesmen said Nazi assault forces were pouring like a tide of destruction through the crum- bling Red Army center to menace Moscow in one, of the bloodiest battles " of the war. Battle Concluded In a special communique te high Command announc'd "the battle of the Sea of Azov is concluded." German and Rumanian infantry andG erhman mechanized forces were said to have "defeated and destroyed the mass of the 9th and 18th oviet Armies" The prisoers brought to 106,365 the number of Russians reported cap- tured since Sept. 26 in Field Marshal Gen. Karl Rudolf Gerd von' Run- stedt's poo.er drive eastward from the lower Dnieper toward the in- dustry important Donets Valley. Material Taken The war bulletin listed 126 Rus- sian tanks519 pieces of artillery and vast quantiies of other war material among the booty. HoscowAdmits' Serious Retreats (By The Associated Press) MOSCOW, Oct. 12.-Women and Children were ordered today to leave Moscow and the Russians acknow- ledged officially, that Red armies are "retreating to new positions" closer to the imperiled capital. "In the Vyazma region (125 miles west of Moscow), the enemy suc- ceeded in pressing back our troops," today's early morning communique said. "Retreating to new position our troops continued to put up stubborn resistance, destroying enemy Mlan- power and armaments." Germans Lose 9,000 "In this engagement the Germans lost not less than 9,000 men killed and wounded." The communique added that' 72 German tanks' 222 trucks with troops and ammunition, 41 guns of various calibers and many machine guns were destroyed yesterday. Earlier reports told of another Ger- man advance in the Orel-Bryansk area, 200 miles south and southwest' of Moscow. Rent Problem Is Solved, Says Marriedroup By ROBERT MANTHO Three University graduate stu- dents, four Michigan alumni and a city bus driver-all -happily married y-have hit rn a plan to solvethe rising rent problem. Last June they put their heads to- gether, pooled their money and bought seven acres of land, in the region of West Ann Arbor near Dexter Ave. 'T'an .hp wnrt.- fi ITiwor narniiinr and RushiitgEnds In''Sororities W ith Pl edges Endin~ the forinal rushing season for 1941,.269 freshman, sophomore, junior and senior rushees will become pledges of the nineteen sororities on campus at 3 p.m. today. Alpha Chi Omega: Elizabeth Appel, '45i Detroit; Marion Carlson, '44, Highland Park; Carol Cothran, '45, Detroit; Jean Dillenbeck, '45, Buf- falo, N.Y.; Betty Duwe, '45, Chiago, Ill.; Carol Henderson, '45, New Castle, Pa.; Jean Macklem, '43, Bay City; Louise Mueller, '44, Springfield, Ill.; Glen McDaniel, '45, Toledo, Ohio; Louise Olander, '45, Chicago, Ill.; Marion Orth, '43, Milwaukee, Wis.; Patricia Palmer, '45, Detroit; June Pomering, '45, Detroit; Janice Reid, '45, Ferndale; ISherry Roop, '45, De- trlt; Jean Rowe, '45, Bedford, Ind. Alvira Spencer, '43, E. Lansing band Irene Turner, '45, Iron Mt. Alpha Delta Pi: Mary Carol Almen, '45, Royal Oak; Jean Blomquist, '45, Detroit; Helen Covert, '45;,'Igle- wood, Pa.; Nancy Frank, '44, South Rochester; Theresa Glutsch; Sally Johnston, '45, Port Huron; Eliza- beth Mahiman, '43, Kenmore, N.Y; Elizabeth Rodgers, '44, Shaker Heights, Ohio and Harriet Wiltsee, ' 45, Rub, Pa. Aiha Gamma Delta: Ann Andrews, '44, Toledo, Ohio; Ruth Brand, '44, Freeport, N. Y.; Helen Holiday, '43, Butler, Penn.; Audrey Moore, '43, Plymouth; Betty Newell, '45, Niagara Falls, N.Y.; Jean Paley, '45, Hono- lulu; Eltnor Porter, '45, Ann Arbor; Joanne Pullam, '45, Oak Park, Ill.; Betty Ramsdell, '44, Ann Arbor; Car- olyn Reese, '44, Toledo, O.; Audrey Sheridan, '45, Chicago, Ill.; Carolyn Wensink, '43, Wauwatosa, Wis., and Jean Springer, '44, Plymouth. Alpha Epsilon Phi: Marjorie Batt, '45, St. Louis; Ruth Branstetter, '45, Chicago; Harriet Cooper, '44, Detroit; Grace Freuberg, '45, Washington; Marilyn Gross, '45, Toledo; Gerry Harmon, '45, South Bend; Ann Kahn, '44, New -York; Ruth Ribbock, '45, Chicago; Barbara Shure, '45, Chicago; Peggy Wallace, '45, Detroit and Mar- jorie Wolfson, '45, Kansas City. Alpha Omicron Pi: Wanda Baumil- (Continued on Page 5) McCormick Made New Daily Editor Announcement has been made of the appointment of Jay McCormick '42, to. the position of associate editor of The Michigan Daily. A member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, McCormick is this year editor-in-chief of Perspectives, cam- pus literary magazine. During his junior year he was a night editor on The Daily, besides serving on the Perspectives staff. His home is in Detroit. Centennial Of Lit Precise Blocking, Broken Field Runnin Featured In Third Consecutive Victor Five Tallies Produced In Second Ha By HAL WILSON Michigan's fighting Wolverines exploded their gridiron 'fury all over 1 Stadium yesterday, blasting into submission a clawless crew of Pantl from Pittsburgh, 40-0. It took Coach Fritz Crisler's slow-starting outfit 30 minutes to really under way in impressive fashion, but after the halftime intermission Wolverines swung wide the floodgates and poured touchdown after tou down through and over the purged Panthers in a dazzling exhibition sharp, precise blocking and broken-field running wizardry. The final gun sounded with a Maize and Blue second and third str combination hammering away on the invaders' one-foot line, and 34; - Daily Photo by Bob Killins Halfback Tom Kuzma was off again on one of his smashing gains when this picture was snapped dur- ing yesterday's game. It shows Michigan's latest "Ga ry Galloper" about to be brought down by Panther backs Jack Kerr (No. 17) and Joe Adamchic (No. 68). Or you may guess that the efforts of the unidentified Wolverine blocker were not in vain, and Kuzma went on for a further gain past the 15 yard stripe. Marriage Relations Lecture Series Ticket Sales Will Begin Tomorrow Ticket sales for the marriage re- lations lecture course of six talks during the fall semester and five in the spring will open at 2 p.m. tomor- row at the League and the Union. The sale will continue from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the League and the Union and from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Union. Tickets will also be sold from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the League and Union. Identification cards must be pre- sented at the time of purchase of the ticket, which sells for $1. No ticket may be bought by proxy and tickets are not transferable. The course is open to seniors and graduate students only. The lecture series opens Thursday, Oct. 23, with Dr. Raymond Squier of the Cornell Medical School in New York City, who will speak on "The Anatomy and Physiology of Repro- duction." Dr. Squier will lecture again the following day on "The Med- ical Basis for Intelligent Sexual Prac- tice." Dr. Valeria H. Parker of New York City will speak on "Courtship and Pre-Marital Relations" Tuesday, Oct.i 28, and the same subject will be con-! sidered the following day by Prof. Norman ,Himes of Colgate Uniyer- sity. Prof. Ernest G. Osborne of Col- umbia University will lecture Wed- nesday,,Nov. 5, on "Marriage Ad- justments," and Dr. Margaret Mead' of the American Museum of Natural History will conclude the series with a talk on "The Social Basis for Mar- riage.". The date of her lecture, which was postponed from this erary Colleoe Thursday because of her illness, will be announced later. All lectures will begin at 7:30 p.m. and will be held in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham School. The five lectures of the, spring se- ries will explore the topics of family finance, child training, insurance and Varsity Night To Star Gould Sale Of Tickets To Start Tomorrow, Park Says Tickets for Varsity Night, the Uni- versity Concert Band's annual pre- sentation to raise funds, will go on sale at 8 a.m. tomorrow at the Union, investments, housing eand law of'do- mestic relations. Serving on the student committee for the marriage relations course are Gordon Andrew, Jane Baits, William Baker, Dorothy Johnson, Lorraine Judson, Harry M. Kelsey, Marjorie Mahon, Murray Markland, Robert Shedd, Robert Sibley, William Strain, Donald Treadwell and Robert Ulrich. The faculty committee consists of Dr. Margaret Bell, Mr. W. Lloyd Ber- ridge, Dr. Claire E. ,Healey, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Prof. Howard Mc- Clusky, Miss Ethel McCormick, Mr. Kenneth Morgan, Dr. Theophil Ra- phael, Prof. Arthur Wood and Mrs. Alvin Zander. Navy Finds Nazis' In Greenland Base Music Coeds To Perffor m For Audition Ten golden-voiced Michigan coeds will take the stage of Lydia Mendel- ssohn 'Theatreat 4 p.m. Wednesday in the inal competition of the $1,000 School of Music-Hour of Charm tal- ent search. Survivors of Friday's preliminary auditions, the finalists areJoan Reu- tter, '43SM, Donna Weiss, '43SM Jean Westerman; '42SM, D6nna E. Baisch, '42SM, Margaret Martin, '42- SM, Harriet Porter, '43SM, Marjorie E. Gould, '43SM, Louise Margolis, '42SM, Esther Williams, '43SM, and Ellen Was, '42SM. 'I The Hour of Charm's "Three Little Words"-Frances, Connie and Fern- will arrive by plane Wednesday to help the music school's voice faculty judge the competition. Three winners will be picked Wed- nesday. Recordings of their voices (Continued on Page 8) "Volga-Volga' ClosesToday Ending a two-day run at 8:15 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohnr Theatre, the new Soviet musical com- edy, "Volga-Volga," will be shown by the Art Cinema eague along with a short subject of the Red Army en- semble, the latest newsreel from the Eastern Front and an English docu- mentary film of an RAF raid on Nazi-held islands. The geieral artistic calibre of "Volga-Volga" is perhaps best sug- gested by the fact that four of the leading artists' connected with the production were awarded a collective 1941 Stalin prize of 100,000 rubles. Probably the most astonishing fea- ture of "Volga-Volga" is its use of action gags, character-gags and just plain slapstick with an expertness that would evolve cheers from Mack Sennett himself. 000 Names, ' Wille' On Time' the League and a book store, busi- WASHINGTON, Oct. 11. - (P) - ness manager Stuart Park, '42, an- Blocking of a bold Nazi attempt to nounced. establish a radio station on Ameri- ican-protected Greenland for dis- Featured on the program, this year,,ptho ete n te nom in addition to the University's 100! patch of weather and other informa- .n a t tt-tion of military importance was re- piece concert band under the direc- ported today by the Navy. tion of Professor 'William D. Revelli, A "German sponsored expedition" will be a special appearance of Mor- of about 20 persons and a small Nor- ton Gould, nationally-known com- wegian steamer were seized by a .osadmUnited States naval vessel, and at poser and musician. Ithe same time radio equipment and Due to the demands of the national other supplies ashore were "disposed defense tax program, the price of of," the navy announced, Varsity Night tickets will. be slightly An agent of the German Gestapo higher than last year, Park reported. and "two other Norwegians" were At its second formal appearance of ashore to operate the radjio, said a th year at the Pitt game yesterday, brief statement of the incident. the band presented a series -of na- tional defense formation, forming the number 158 in honor of the first Culprits Pilfer 2 draftees, a cannon for the army, an Cu p isPif r2 airplane for the air corps and an an-B t ro chor for the navy. But Direcetory The concluding formation of the' series was a bugle, to the accompany- ing strains of "From Taps To Rev- The good names of 2,000 University eille." Other formations included of Michigan, students have been spellings of "Pitt" and "Mich." stolen. ' bowl looking forward to next week and Northwestern. The overwhelm- ing defeat was the wort in the his- tory of the Panthers, more eruhing even than the 47-12 drubbing they took in the Rose Bowl from Southern California years ago. Michigan'sthree ace tailbackl, Tommy Kuzma, Davie Nelson andl the much-heralded Don Robinson, all turned in brilliant performances Wingback Tippy Lockard, playing probably his best game for the WQl- verines in two years of competition. Capt. Bob Westfall and sophomore Don Boor at fullba*k, and field gen-. eral George Ceithami at the throttle of the powerful .gricljron maiint- all generated and kept moving a last- half display of offensive might sel- dom seen on the Stadium tuif. Line Shone But none of their fine feats would have flashed across the gridiron scene had it not been for the superb performance of the Wolverine for- ward wall. Thoroughly out-charg- ing, out-fighting and out-manning the game Panther forwards, Line Coach Clarence Munn's charges time after time ripped gaping holes for the backs to stream through. On defense the -statistics tell the story. Pitt's vaunted ground attack moved for only 27 yards net total compared with 274 for the Maize and Blue. The Panthers picked up a meagre three first downs, failing to penetrate beyond the Wolverine 34, while Michigan smashed for 11. Concrete proof of the Wolverin deadly blocking efficiency which featured the second half is furnished by the tremendous total of 237 yards which they piled up on kick returns. Wolverine scoring was split fiv ways with sophomore Kuzma driving 48 and, seven yards for two, Nelson 28 for another, Lockard seven, Boor one, and Robinson five yards for the r.emaining three. Opening touchdown march after the kickoff and an exchange of punts, Michigan staged a sustained drive for 72 yards, and finally scored afte 10 minutes of the first period. Kuz- ma's long pass to Ceithaml on the Pitt 43, which was ruled complete after halfback Jack Stetler inter- fered, set the stage for the score, which came just 12 plays later. Powgr Combination The Wolverines' devastating, pow- er combination of Westfall-Kuzma moved the ball down to the 25. With fourth down and three to go, Mich- gan sprung a man in motion forma- tion with Lockard swir ging wide o the left from his wingback posi- tion. Kuzma at tailback roceived the ball from center, powered his way off left tackle, turned, and flipped a low lateral to the speeding Lock- ard, who gathered it in nicely and went on to the 14 before the Pitt secondary could bring him down. Then after three smashes whiff went for eight yards, Lockard tools the ball from the spinning Westfall on a reverse, skirted left end and dove over for the touchdown. End Whitey Fraumann missed the con- version attempt. That finished scoring fireworks foi the first half. Each team made one serious scoring attempt but failed Pitt bid for a marker in the second quarter on a tremendous pass froa'j tailback Edgar Jones to the speedlng end Stan Gervelis on the goal lite Will Be Celebrated Wednesday. i i i With no classes being held Oct. 15, students and faculty members alike will join in the cele ration of the cen- tennial of the College of Literature, Science and the Ats in a day-long program of activities. The morning will be devoted to ad-I dresses on the development and achievements of the college by pres- ent members of the faculty. In the afternoon, several distinguished guests will discuss the problems and the future of liberal arts education in the United States. Prof. Jesse S. Reeves, William W. Cook Professor of American Insti- tutions, will open the morning session, with an address on the general de- lems and future of liberal arts from the points of view of endowed insti- tutions, the large state universities, I educational and scientific founda- tions and college women. Mortimer J. Adler The representative of these varied aspects of liberal arts education will Will Le tu Here be Dr. Martin ten Hoor, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Tulane1 University; Dr. George Clarke Sel- Mortimer J. Adler, prominent au- lery, dean of the College of Letters thor and lecturer, will open the Stu- and Science, University of Wisconsin; dent Religious Association's series of Henry Allen Moe, secretary-general lectures at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in the of the Guggenheim Memorial Foun- Rackham Lecture Hall. dation; and Judge Florence Ellinwood Adler, who is the author of "How Allen of the U. S. Circuit Court of to Read a Book" and "What Man Has Appeals. The principal event, how- Made of Man", will speak on "Thomas ever, will be the convocation in the Aquinas and the Modern World." He I evening which will be addressed by is now a Professor of the Philosophy F The dastardly crime, committed at the Student Publications Building, was revealed yesterday morning by Gerald Hewitt, '42, editor of the Student Directory which is to be is- sued in the near future. Cards bearing the names, addresses and phone numbers of 2,000 Unver- sity students had been stored in the offices of the Michiganensian. Fri- day night they were there; yesterday morning they were gone. "But there is no need to become reading-checking the type against the original cards. However, duplicates can be ob- tained from University offices, so no harm has been done, Hewitt says. nBut rather perturbed is the Direc- ory's guiding light, for cornered last night by a Daily reporter for a statement, he said: "It's sabotage. That's what it is, sabotage by some misanthropist that doesn't want the Directory to come out." Edito Hewitt went on to declare that this is the second act of its kind, in the past week. Last Wednesday a galley of type disappeared, and has not been found. The type had to be reset, resulting in some delay and an additional headache for mempbers of