Weather Y2 Clear Air igu it Editorial Price Control Bill Neededt 0 VOL. LII No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1941 Z_322 6-33 PRICE FIVE CENTS Interfraternity Rushing Ends As University Lists Pledges Council Reports Changes In Regulations Are Aid To Freshmen, Houses 35 Greek Societies To Initiate Classes Following a record registration for fraternity rushing, the freshmen kept right, on going and endedf up as the list below will indicate. Rushing was aided this year by the revision of rules made by the Inter- fraternity Council, which simplified both the freshman's and the frater- nity's problem. The names included here are only those which have been checked by the University; and the nterfraternity Council. Upperclassmen, whose names do not appear here, will be listed later in the week. Acacia: Thomas Buchanan, Roberts Campbell, James Churchill, Albert Eastman, Arch Hal, Elbert Kennedy, Stewart Kingsbury, David Murphy, Phil Reid, Howard Spracklin, John Wunch, Leslie Froelich, Paul Pospesil. Alpha Delta Phi: WilliamBowen, Stratton Brown, Joseph Cox, Peter Frantz, Donald Gerlinger, Charles Godfrey, Joseph Hearn, Donald Laing, John Lyons, John Mummert, Richard Neville. John O'Leary, Howard McC- Orr, Earl Osborne, Edward Potter, Jr,' George Spear, David Strack, Ed.win Uhl, David Upton., Alpha Kappa Psi: George Linzel. Alpha Sigma Phi: Lincoln Aldridge, James Coquillard, Robert Dodd, Carl Engel, Jack Nessel, Albert Ott, Don- ald Sanborn, Robert Springer, George Wolfe, Bert Zahner. Alpha Tau Omega: Edward An- thony, Jack Bauckham, John Corbett, William Davis, William Esslinger, John Herbert, Edwin Howe, Robert Leedpr, Phillip Marcellus, Leigh Smith, Warren Watts, Philip Whelan,. Howard Wikel. Beta Theta P: William Buckey, Mlilledga Bullard, William Cobb, Dewey Doyle, Robert Hargrove, Car- rol McConnell, Henry Peterson, Thomas Reader, Edward Robertson, Harry Saums, Robert Saxton. Thomas Schick, Stephen Selby, By- ron Smith, William Somers, James Todd, John Vyn, Robert Wendling, Thomas Coulter. Chi Phi: Robert Allen, James Beck- er, James Burbott, Bruce Carey, Charles Cambel. Robert Clubb, Lud- wik Daniels, Jr., William Farrar, John Fonda, John Goodsell III, Wilbur Mann. Donald Hutchinson, Jr., James Hipp, Elsworth Kendig, John Knaff, Willard Krebs, Jr., James Lucas, Allan McCurdy, Robert Morris, Jerome Powell, James Quinn, Thomas Roche, William Sellon, Barton Smith, Ben- jamin Sproat, John Stageman, John Tate, John Ward, Almet Broadhead, Donald Straka, Glyn Lake. Chi Psi: Robert Anderle, James Bargmann, Willis Boice, David Car- penter, Arthur Christensen, Russel Fisher, John Galbraith, Richard Gracey, William Hibbard, Herman Kothe, Jr. EdwineKrupp, Richard Kuehn, George McDermott, James Nordlie, Robert O'Conner, Clark Pardee, Rich- ard Ranney, Richard Strickland, Richard Wenzell, Robert Williamson. Delta Kappa Epsilon: James Arm- strong, Jr., Stephen Bryant, William Bennett, Nathan Bryant, Donald Car- gill, John Croul, Jacob Dalm, Jr., Jos- eph Fee, Walter Flannery, Robert Floyd. Henry )Rolzaepfel, Robert Hurley, Maxwell, Earl Roberts, Donald Sykes, Warren Yapp. Delta Tau Delta: Jerry Brown,+ Richard Derby, Clayton Dickey, Ear- nest Qoeckel, William Hampton, Max- well Huntoon, Burton Kelly, Paul" Morgan, Charles Peck, John Platt, Carl Reinhart, Carlton Roeser, Fran- cis Sippy, Kenneth Sippy, Richard Wickes, Charles Yager. Delta Upsilon: William Alexander, Charles Bassett, William Bieluskas, Elmer Covert, Patrick Hays, David Keller, William Kerner, John Laird,I Charles Lemmon, Max Pearse, John Robertson, Harwood Rydholm, Rob- ert Sovern, Rupert Straub, Louis Tel-+ bizoff, Jack Vizena, Robert Will-a oughby. r t M I 'rte. _ - - I Keds Evacuate Vyazma As Nazis Claim Success- Germans Report Moves 'At Top Push East Qf Advance*Soviet Communique Says Speed'; Veteran ReplacenIents Moscow Are SlowingBlitzkrieg BERLIN, Oct. 13.-(IP)-German tank and motorized infantry divisions were declared by authorized sources to be beating forward at top speed tonight through Russian defenses which no longer were able even sub- stantially to delay the invaders, and some military experts expressed belief that certain far-advanced Nazi for- mations already were operating east of the longitude of Moscow. Official military maps published in the German press indicated the main German lines were within 100 miles of the capital. Adolf Hitler's field headquarters announced that in the principal bat- tle areas about Vyazma and Bryansk -the former some 125 miles west of Moscow and the latter 210 below-the number of Red war prisoners now in hand had. gone beyond 350,000. Not merely two, but three powerful German columns, it appeared from Nazi accounts, were striking toward Moscow's gates. The third-aside from those based in the Vyazma and Bryansk vicinities - was reported smashing to the southeast from the headwaters of the Volga river in the Valdai hills toward the town of Rzhev and standing, by late reports, within 140 miles northwest of the metrop- olis. This third offensive, said military informants here, was one of Hitler's major surprise movements of the campaign and had caught the Rus- sians wholly unaware. Scholarships Are Awarded To 16Students Sixteen University stdents havet been awarded scholarships totalingt $1,000 for outstanding work in extra- curricular activities.t The awards, announced yesterday by Robert Shedd, '42, chairman of the Student Award Fund Committee,1 were given to upperclassmen with at least a C average on the basis ofr need and service to the University through some extra-curricular ac-E tivity.t Students who received awards and the activities they have participatedt in are: Elizabeth Luckham, '42; De- troit, vice-president of the League1 and chairman of freshman orienta-r tion; Albert Erskine, '42, Aurora, N. Y., Varsity Band; John Middleton, '43, Palmyra, N. Y., Congress andE Student Senate; and Richard Worth- ington, '42, Hobart, Ind., Varsity Band. I Other recipients are Ben Smith,E '42, Fort Myers, Fla., golf; ReubenZ Kelto, '42, Bessemer, football; Hol- br'oke Seltzer, '41, Chicago, Thes Daily; Max Bahrych, '43, Syracuse,k N. Y., hockey; Joe Rogers, '42, Plym- outh, ,football; William MacLeod, '43, Birmingham, The Daily, and David Matthews, '43, Owosso, track. Other winners are Dobson Burton,t '42, Battle Creek, swimming; Paul Goldsmith, '42, Swampscott, Mass., hockey; John Robbins, '42SM, Flint,n (Continued on Page 2) i MOSCOW, Tuesday, Oct. 14.-()- The Russians announced early today the retreat of Red forces from Vy- azma, key rail junction 125 miles west of Moscow, but front-line dispatches said a steady flow of veteran rein- forcements had slowed, although not yet stopped, the German onslaught against the Soviet capital. A Soviet information bureau com- munique said Red forces withdrew from Vyazma "after many days of fierce fighting in which the enemy sustained tremendous losses in man- power and armament." This town of 17,000 population at the confluence of the Berba and Vy- azma rivers, was the second hitherto strongpoint of Russian resistance whose abandonment the Russians have announced in two days. A with- drawal from Bryansk, 210 miles southwest of Moscow, was announced yesterday. Adler Address To Inaugurate Series Today Famous Author-Educator Will Discuss 'Aquinas' In First SRA Lecture Opening the 1941-42 lecture series of the Student Religious Association, Mortimer J. Adler, world-famed au-t thor, educator and lecturer, will speak on "Thomas Aquinas and the Modern World" at 8:15 p.m. today4 in the Rackham Lecture Hall. . , The lecture is free and open to thet public. Adler will address himself tot those who have no knowledge of the theories of Aquinas. His lecture will serve as a beginning for the more de-I tailed studies of the scholastic phil- osopher to be taken up by a seminar series opening at a luncheon meeting Friday in Lane Hall.- Adler, who started the modern movement for the study of Aquinask at the University of Chicago, will1 explain the thirteenth century au-e thor's writings and their significances for the world of the twentieth cen-t tury. The author of "How to Read aI Book" and "What Man Has Made ofc Man", Adler is now professor of phil- osophy of law at the University ofI Chicago. He began his career at thet early age of 13 as an editorial writer on the New York Sun. Prominent among all American ed- ucators, Adler has taught English and experimental psychology at Columbia University. While at Columbia he was also an instructor in John Er- skine's course of great books. He has been visiting lecturer at St. John's College since 1937. Adler is an active supporter of the Neo-Thomist movement which at- tempts to clarify the relations be- tween the sciences and opposes the use of the so-called scientific method in the investigations of religious and. moral questions. HIis last appearance in Ann Arbor iwas in 1938. British Press Asks Russian Aid Increase Suggest American Blood Must Be Shed In War If Allies Are To Win Air Force Begins Non-Stop Offensive LONDON, Oct. 13.--lP)-A call for more direct British-American action to aid embattled Russia was heard in many quarters tonight despite au- thoritative assertions the German drive on Moscow had been slowed and may even bog down 70 or 80 miles from Moscow. Some of the London Press called for shedding of American blood and asserted Britain and Russia alone cannot prevail against Hitlerdom, while informed quarters suggested Britain might put its forces into a land campaign against the Axis in Italy, North Africa or perhaps the Russian Cauasus. RAF Strikes Britain flung its air force into a non-stop offensive against the Reich to cripple its war industries and tie up transport. Appeals were made to both British and United States work- ers to boost production to sustain Stalin's armies in the campaigns to come. Both Lord Beaverbrook and W. Averell Harriman, heads of the Bri- tish and American Moscow missions, worked long at their desks today to give effect to promises to send Rus- sia everything she wants in the way of material aid, and the British said that a procession of trucks and trains loaded with planes and tanks already was moving to ports. Most agreed the Russians prob- ably will stand or fall on their own in this big battle, and that for Bri- tain and America the important thing was long-term aid. U.S. Criticized In this atmosphere the tabloid Daily Sketch said "the sooner Ameri- cans are in with the Russians and ourselves, mingling their blood and sweat and tears in a common drain, the sooner the war will be won." , "The idea this titanic struggle can be won without any shedding of American blood may be dismissed by every American as insane," the Sketch said, adding that a "declaration of total war at this juncture by Ameri- ca against Germany" would be more helpful than delivery of 3,000 Ameri- can tanks every month. In addition to the air offensive, re- liable observers looked to Britain to take the initiative elsewhere. Med Smoker Set For Today Get-Together Will Begin At 8 P.M. In Union Plans for the present year will be presented to members of the Pre- Medical Society and interested pre- medical students at a smoker to be given at 8 p.m. today in the Union. At this time the officers of the club will be introduced, and those present will hear short talks on the various aspects of medicine. A pam- phlet on the "Choice of a Medical School," printed by the American Medical Association, will be passed to juniors and seniors interested. As an innovation this year, the Pre-Medical Society will have a page in the 1942 'Ensian. Plans for this page will be explained to members. There will also be a discussion of the psychological tests which the Bureau of Human Adjustments is offering club members this year, to determine their respective aptitude for the prac- tice of medicine. Plans for the rest of the year in- clude visits to local. hospitals and clinics, in addition to talks by au- thorities in the medical field.. Refreshments and cigarettes will be served at the smoker, and all in- terested pre-medical students are cordially invited to attend. Marriage Relations Tickets To Be Sold Tickets for the marriage relations course lecture series will continue on sale from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the League and the Union. Tickets will be sold to seniors and -rt+ tt fn ettt .nr -c .I'l t hn .tt FDR Pledges U.S. To Aid Russians As Cabinet Men 'Denounce Neutrality Act, Governor Praises 1' . . . Lansing, October 13 My Dear President Ruthven: It is a privilege and a pleasure to congratulate you on the one- hundredth anniversary of the beginning of instruction in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts of the University of Michigan which ybu will celebrate Wednesday next. It is a source of great satisfaction to me, and I know it must be to you, that our University has played such an important role in the development of higher education in Amperica. Michigan and the Uni- versity's hundred thousand alumni can be justly proud that the insti- tution, because of its pioneering efforts along many lines, has im- measurably influenced the traditions of our nation's educational organization and has come to bear the title, "Mother of State Univer- sities." It is well, then, that you celebrate the centenary of the University's first College by looking back upon its achievements and progress. More important, however, is the fact that a part of your anniversary program will be devoted to the future of liberal education in America. I am sure that you and your colleagues in the University have faith that cultural values will survive to bring better ordered existence to all mankind, and that, therefore, the second hundred years of the University and of the College will be as fruitful as the first. I sincerely extend to you the blest wishes and congratulations of the people of Michigan on this important occasion in the educational history of the State. Very truly yours, MURRAY D. VAN WAGONER, Governor Students Should Realize Heritage CnaDean-Kraus Says Emphasizing the importance of student participation in the day-long centennial celebration to be held to- morrow, EdWard H. Kraus, Dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, pointed out that "as the' heirs of a century of notable growth and achievement in higher education, the responsibility for further progress in the century ahead will rest largely upon you and future generations of' students." No classes are to be held in the literary college throughout the day, so both students and faculty will have ample opportunity to take advantage of Dean Kraus' invitation. The morning session, convening in Rackham Lecture Hall, will be de- voted to a discussion of the history and achievements of the College. The general historical development will be traced by Prof. Jesse S. Reeves, William W. Cook ,Professor of Ameri- can Institutions. Other speakers on the morning program are to be Prof. J. G. Winter, chairman of the Latin department, discussing the record of the College in language and literature; Prof. A. F. Shull of the zoology department commenting on scientific achieve- ments; and Prof. A. E. R. Boak of this history department speaking on advancement in the field of social sciences. The afternoon session, also to be held in Rackham Lecture Hall, will consider the problems and future of liberal education in America from the points of view of the endowed insti- tutions, large state universities, edu- cationarl and scientific foundations and college women. Representing these varying points Cinema Group Will Give New 0 0 Chinese Movie "China Strikes Back," a picture filmed in the hitherto inaccessible regions of Shensi Province and North China, will be shown here at 8:15 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.1 "China Strikes Back" shows ex- clusive pictures of the former Eighth Route Army, its leaders and guerilla warriors in training. Critics have termed it "a striking document of the unification of Free China." Competing the second Art Cinema program of the season will be a Walt Disney cartoon and a Mexicai "dra- matic film symphony" entitled "Time in the Sun." Based on Sergei Eisenstein's un- firi:h A flm 1na 1 ivm Axvi- n " - of view will be Dr. Martin ten Hoor, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Tulane University; Dr. George Clarke Sellery, Dean of the College of Letters and Science, Uni- versity of Wisconsin; Henry Allen Moe, secretary-general of the Gug- genheim Memorial Foundation, and Judge Florence Ellinwood Allen of the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals.. The principal speaker of the con- vocation ceremonies to be held at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium will be James Rowland Angell, president emeritus of Yale University, talking on "Persistent Problems of Higher Education in a Democracy." J.Hop, Prom Petitions Now Are Available 25 Signatures Demanded For Soph, Junior Posts, Elections To Be Oct. 30 Petitions for J-Hop and "Soph Prom comittee positions may be ob- tained at the Student Offices of the Michigan Union between 3 and 5 p.m. today, Men's Judiciary head Bill Slo- cum, '42, and Jane Baits, president of Women's Judiciary Council an- nounced yesterday. Petitions will be due, along with 25 signatures from the applicants re spective classes, by noon Thursday, Oct. 23, and may be obtained any time until that date. All-campus elections will be held Oct. 30 to choose the thirteen-person 1943 J-Hop and the eight-person 1944 Soph Prom committees. Both chair- men will be from the engineering school this year. Eligibility cardstmust be shown with the signed petitions and all ap- plicants must schedule five-minute interviews with either the Men's or Women's Judiciary Council. Interviews for men will be held be- tween 2 and 6 p.m. and between 4:15 and 6 p.m. for women on Thursday Oct. 23. Those students deemed qual- ified by the judiciary bodies will have their names placed on the ballot, Slocum said. Both men and women must secure their petitions at the Union. Football Blitzes Iceland As British Stand Agape! REYKJAVIK, Iceland, Oct. 11.- (delayed)-(AP) -American football m- A ifo ire} or--nnr n-n n" +j i N President Announces Full Delivery Of Munitions AccordingTo Schedule ull, Stiumson, Knox Ask Ban Removal WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.-(/p)-In an apparent effort to encourage Rus- sian resistance to the vast German offensive, President Roosevelt pro- claimed to the world today the United States was rushing large amounts of supplies to help the Soviet's "brave defense. A formal statement issued by the White House declared: "The President announced today that within the past few days large amounts of supplies had been sent to Russia. He further stated that all of the munitions, including tanks, airplanes and trucks, promised at the Moscow conference for delivery in October, will be sent to Russia before the end of the month. "These supplies are leaving United States ports constantly. Staffs Work Hard "The staffs in the Army and the Maritime Commission have worked over the past weekend rushing sup- plies to the seaboard and everything possible is being done to send the material to Russia to help the brave defense which continues to be made." Tie President did not disclose spe- cific amounts of war supplies the United States had promised to place in Russian hands this month or in the future. Shipment routes also remained secret. There was nothing to indi- cate whether the stream of supplies was flowing across the Atlantic to Russia's Arctic ports, around Africa and up the Persian Gulf for trans- shipment through Iran and the Cau- casus, or across the Pacific to Vladi- vostok. A few hours earlier Congressional leaders who attended a White House conference on lend-lease legislation reported they had received a predic- tion from Harry L. Hopkins that Russia would "keep up the fight" even if the Nazis succeeded in taking Moscow. Hopkins Confers Hopkins, the lend-lease supervisor, recently conferred with Joseph Stalin and other high Soviet officials in Moscow. Legislators who attended today's meeting said President Roose- velt expressed some concern over the Russian situation, but agreed with Hopkins Soviet armies were far from defeat. At the White House meeting Presi- dent Roosevelt was reported to have urged speedy passage of a new lend- lease appropriation of $5,985,000,000, already approved by the House. Sen- ate leaders expressed' hope it would be passed by their chamber next week. Hull, Stimson, Knox Ask Ban Removal WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.--(P)- Three cabinet members and other officials called on Congress today to remove the ban against arming Americantmerchant ships and one of them declared even "the risk of war itself" must not deter this country from aiding Britain. Secretaries Hull, Stimson and Knox told the House Foreign Affairs Com- mittee also that the Neutrality Act's prohibition against American 'mer- chantmen entering combat zones ought to be removed in the interest of insuring delivery of lend-lease supplies to British ports. "The risk we incur in arming our ships and sending them to sea," said Knox, "is far less than the risk of allowing England to lose the war." In one of the bitterest official con- demnations yet of the Nazi cam- paign of conquest, the usual mild- mannered Hull told the committee: "The blunt truth is that the world is steadily being dragged downward and backward by the mightiest move- ment of conquest ever attempted in all history. Armed and miliant pred- atory forces are marching across con- tinents and invading the seas, leaving desolation in their wake. With them rides a policy of frightfulness, pillage, murder and calculated cruelty which fills all civilized mankind with horror ' ,,,;' ' f _: 4_ . X.....4_'. 4 =F r Henry J. Allen, Humanitarian, To Be Honored Here Saturday Henry J. Allen, chairman of Save the Children Federation, will be guest of honor at a dinner at 6 p.m. Sat- urday in the ballroom of the League. Allen, who recently returned from a six weeks' survey of the Child Aid problem in Great Britain, will talk on his findings at a public address in _ the auditorium of the Rackham build- ing at 8 p.m. the same evening. a One of Kansas' crusading publish- ers, he worked his way through Wash- p burn College and soon traded a shoe- string investment into ownership of the "Wichita Beacon," where he gained a nation-wide reputation as A a fighting editor. Elected. Governor of Kansas while still in France with the AEF, he served two terms, and was author and sponsor of the "Industrial Court Plan for the Arbitration of Labor Dis- putes." Following two years as United States Senator from Kansas, he be- came director of publicity in the Republican campaigns of 1928 and 1932, and was editor of the "Topeka HENRY J. ALLEN +fiata ninvneil" fnr fyip v~ov