Jr Cloudy and Warmer Lie igu t Editorial Colleges Must Aid Defense Program..w ~?A~V TTU ~. fl 1 V VA.. JUH. NO. Z5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1941 -Z-112.14 PuT~a M FTVE , ~ , .. .. -.. .. - -a aa3 r7 £b&Lr Wolverines Edged Out By Minnesota, 74 ~' * * * Frickey Carries Ball Over For Lone Tally In Yesterday's Grid Tilt... Gopher Power Gets Under Way Early As Daley Picks Up Three Yards A7G/L.L&& V1' LL L ti Sh ip'Bill Debate 'RIGHT-Bill Daley (No. 45, arrow), University of Minnesota fullback; moves along behind his blockers in the first period of the game with the University of Michigan at the stadium for a three-yard gain. The mighty Minnesota Gophers toppled Michigan from the undefeated ranks by scoring a second period touchdown and winning, 7 to 0. It was the eighth successive time Minnesota defeated Michigan. The game drew 85,753 spec- tators... ..LEFT--This play gave Minnesota its victory over Michigan as the Gophers turned on the heat in the second period of the game yesterday. Herman Frickey (33) plunged over from the two-yard line. Here he gets the stop signal from an official telling him he is over. TeamLoses~g To Bierman'.I,, e..: i Nazi Troops Launch Three New Drives AgainstRussians, Soviet Report Says Cigarette Slogan Parody Wins PrizeFor Alpha Sigma Phi's Slapstick Rules As Art League Holds Revivals F WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.-(AP)- The Senate will begin debate Monday on the controversial bill to permit armed American ships to sail to any port. in the world. Senator Barkley, (Dem.-Ky.) Dem- ocratic leader, said today he had no Idea how long it would take the upper house of Congress to reach a vote. The Senate Foreign Relations Oom- mittee voted 13 to 10 to submit the nmeasure to the Senate. The momentous bill, a substitute for the House-approved measure lim- ited to ship arming1 was accepted af- ter the committee had voted 12 to 11 to take it in lieu of similar legislation proposed by Senators Pepper (Dem.- Fla.), Lee (Dem.-Okla.) and Green (Den.-R.I.). Senator White (Rep.- Me.), who voted with the opposition on the first tally, jo ned the Admin- istration majority on the final ballot. Senator Nye (Rep.-N.D.), an Ad- ministration opponent, said there would be additional speech-making WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.-(1P)- President Roosevelt shunted aside the usual routine of callers and conferences today and devoted his time to composing a Navy Day speech for tomorrow expected to contain important statements on foreign policy. because the committee" approved re- peal of the Neutrality Act's provision forbidding American merchantmen from entering belligerent ports or designated combat areas. Nye and Senator Vandenberg (Rep.-Mich.) another Administration foe, said there was no intention to filibuster, but Nye added that "this is the last step we take before ac- tually entering the war, and it is an issue which quite normally would call for speeches by close to 96 Sen- ators." The committee bill, approved after four days of hearings, would carry out President Roosevelt's recent rec- ommendations regarding shipping. Independent Girls To Start Ticket Sale Assembly Association, independent girls' organization on, campus, will open its Play Production tickets drive with the sale of the first season tick- ets tomorrow. Twenty-five members of the group under the chairmanship of Jane Cris- well. 42 w i circlte among the KUIBYSHEV, Russia, Oct. 25.-(YP) -German armies reinforced, by troops from the Leningrad front are hurling mass assaults against Soviet forces in revitalized offensives at the western approaches to Moscow, into the Crimea, and toward Rostov on the road to the Caucasus, Russian frontline dispatches said tonight. A supreme test, Moscow's defenders admitted was rapidly developing in the 23-day-old Nazi offensive in which the Russians say Adolf Hitler has lost 300,000 men. Six successive attacks by the Ger- man 129th motorized division upon the Soviet left flank in the Mozhaisk sector, 57 miles west of the capital, were declared repulsed in three days. Here a howling wind shrouded the fallen with drifted snow. In the Maloyaroslavets sector, 65 miles southwest of Moscow, the Ger- mans were reported thwarted in at- tempts to cross the Oka River. A second mighty Nazi offensive is underway in the Crimea, where Rus- sian accounts said. the first was beat- en off with 5,000 German and Ru- manian dead. Despite these losses, it was admitted the Germans had made new gains at the approaches of the isthmus. (There was no Soviet confirmation of a German announcement of the capture of Kharkov, the biggest in- dustrial center of the Ukraine 150 miles northwest of Stalino.) By EUGENE MANDEBERG Two cigarette packages, a takeoff on modern design, and four butts won Alpha Sigma Phi first place in the annual homecoming display contest, with Sigma Chi, Kappa Sigma and Trigon receiving honorable mention. With a twist of the wrist, the Al- phas changed a well known slogan to "Their Roasted," as applied to the Golden Gophers, and built the Wol- verines up to king size in two packs,' 10 players in each, commenting "Where Particular People Congre- gate." , Below a cloud of smoke, the butts of Michigan State, Iowa, Pitt and Northwestern rested in an ashtray; next to it a match box with the in- scription "The Wolverines are a Match for Any Team." Standing alone, king size, were two numbers 86 and 54, for Captains Westfall and Smith. Backing up the entire display was a public address system with a com- plex, but complete repertoire which included Michigan cheers and a Michigan version of "Modern De- sign." In the background, through all this, the "Victors" sounded vali- antly. Sigma Chi went rustic in a big way, using Paul Webb's Esquire cartoons as a starter. Beginning with an out- house and the legend "We ain't gona plumer this one," they completed the hill-billy establishment with live chickens (no eggs reported)- a bale of scattered hay and an old ricket fence. Trigon used a "not Harmonized, but Michanized" team display, throw- ing in a Gopher grinder-they go in whole, come out hash idea--and four other grinders for the last four games. The final angle was packed ground Gophers, with a whole one looking 'on. Kappa Sigma also used a hill-billy theme, having the previous games commemorated in small brown jugs, and Minnesota bottled up in a huge little brown jug. Hillbillies were scat- tered around the lawn, drinking from the jugs. Biggest what might have been award went to Sigma Chi who at- tempted to have a cow in their dis- play with the slogan "This ain't no bull, beat Minnesota," but the idea was given up after several men lost several tussles with the obstinant bo- vine, who refused to leave the rural area. Union Opera Heads Await MaleTryouts Echoes of male chorus-girls and football players waltzing in soft lights will once again reverberate through the collegiate corridors of Ann Arbor. The Union Opera is coming again. The show this year will be staged from December, 9 to 16 and tryouts are urged to sign up from 2 to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow and Tuesday in the Union. Actual tryouts for actors will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday and Friday. But to- morrow and Tuesday all are urged to come out-writers, actors, make-up' men, committee men, ad infinitum. General chairman of this year's cpera is Jim Gorman, '42. and Chuck Boynton, '42, is production manager. Gordon Hardy, Grad., is music di- rector, and Tom Goodkind, '42, is in charge of publicity. Bob Titus, '42,' will be ticket chairman. Personnel chairman is William Todd, '42, and house chairman is Bob Shedd, -'42. Robert Sibley, '42, will be script chairman. Shades of "Koanzaland," "Take a Number" and "Four Out 'of Five"- they're at it again! And this year's Union opera will be bigger and better than ever. At least that's what the boys on the inside say about it., Student Cyclist Injured In Automobile Accident John Munson, '43E, suffered minor Chaplin, Lloyd And Others To Return To Screen Of LydiaMendelssohn There's nothing like horseplay on the screen to make you lose your dig- nity by having a good, hearty laugh. So the Art Cinema League is offer- ing the hit films of the best fun- providers in the movie business-the Marx pranksters, muttering W. C. Fields, ambling Charlie Chaplin and screwball Harold Lloyd-for the pur- pose of making freshmen out of se- niors and breeding intellectuals with low-brows. Opening today at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre is a twin-bill fea- turing the Marx brothers in "Duck Soup" and W. C. Fields in "The Bar- ber Shop." Harold Lloyd and Charlie Chaplin will appear on the screen Nov. 9 and Nov. 23 to finish the job of making you forget "yer bringin' UP. The comedies will be presented only on Sundays. No single tickets for the performances will be sold. Season tickets are on sale at the Union and State Street bookstores and at the League. You can even take your mother-in- law. She might chuckle. Rogers Suffers Spinal Injury In Battle Frickey Scores Lone Gopher Marker By HAL WILSON (Daily Sports Editor) Sometimes when the fire and desire to win burns too brightly, smok gets in your eyes. Thus it was for Michigan yesterday as Minnesota's mighty gridiro machine, rolling relentlessly toward another national championship, ou manned the Wolverines, 7-0, before a record capacity crowd of 85,753 in tr Stadium. Fighting with a frenzy born of seven consecutive defeats at the cleats these Golden Giants from the Northland, Michigan's highly-keyed grit men had three wonderful opportunities to score-but couldn't quite do Minnesota's poised gang of Gophers made just one outstanding scorin threat-and capitalized. That'was the game. Statistics show that Michigan drove for 13 first downs to Minnesota's 1 while the Gophers held a slight advantage in net yards by-rushing, 179 135, and a scant margin in the yards gained by passing department, 87 to 8 Outweighed 16 Pounds To Man But they don't tell the manner in which the Wolverines poured every thing they had into the terrific battle with the massive Golden Giants w. ,outweighed them 16 pounds to a man. Concrete evidence of the fierceness wigth which the clash, number or grid attraction in the nation, was waged is found in the hospital lists. Mc serious casualty and a vital blow to the Wolverine grid team for the r mainder of the season is the permanent loss of husky Joe Rogers, senior ern who suffered a spinal injury early in the first period. He was rushed the hospital immediately for treatment and Dr. George Hammond, tea physician, declared that Joe, a regular at his right flank' position for to years, had incurred three fractures in the transverse processes of the lur bar vertebrae that have terminated his collegiate grid career. Minnesota's number one casualty was Helge Pukema, veteran startin guard, who incurred a serious injury in the kidney area which forced Coac Bernie Bierman to leave him behind Everything From Soup To Nuts : Annual Varsity Night Piogram Will Be Given Tuesday By Band 1 For Your Dance Committees: Judiciary Council Announces,- J-Hop, Soph Prom Candidates Candidates for J-Hop and Soph Prom committees were announced yesterday by the Men's Judiciary Council. Three men and three women will be elected from the litearary college to the J-Hop Committee. Candidates from that school are Nancy Gray, Leanor Grossman, Margaret Ihling, Rosemary Mann, Dorothy, Johnson, Lyons Howland, Buell Morley, Bob Bartlow, Bob Ungar, Bob Burstein, Bob Begle, John Vezima and Elaine Barth. Three candidates from the archi- tecture college were announced. They are Mildred Christa, Michael Kane anr Wnir utters. One cnmmittee Poyser, Bruce Renaud, David Robert- son, Ted Sharp and Kimon Vasiliou. One committee member will be chosen from the pharmacy and for- estry schools combined. Candidates are Casmira Buzek and Reuben Fried of the pharmacy school, and James Snodgrass of the School of Forestry and Conservation. Three men and three women will be elected to the Soph Prom commit- tee from the literary college. Can- didates are Harold Cooper, William Kehoe, William Berms, Bob Shopoff, Jack Hooper, Marty Feferman, Dor- othy Bales, Mary-Jean Czysz, Nancy Hattersley and Phyllis Present. Four members will be elected from By CHARLES THATCHER It's called Varsity Night, but the University Band's annual program to be presented at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium might better have been named Versatile Night, for just about every type of entertainment in the books and a few more besides will be available at that time. Opening the evening's program will be the University Concert Band, un- der the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli, playing a new march, "Amer- ican Champion," by Leonard Smith. After several more numbers by the band, Morton Gould, guest conductor and soloist, will take the podium and conduct the band through several of his own compositions, including the second movement of his "American Symphonette" and such familiar --nlr ncm se "T i an"Pia; Tnannan the band's original "Stump Me If You Can', quiz program, interlocutoi Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour- nalism department vs. football cap- tain Bob Westfall, '42, Pan-Hellenic president Patricia Hadley, '42, Wallie Weber, freshman football coach, and Gould. In appreciation for his work done as former faculty manager of the band, Professor Brumm will be made an honorary member at a special ceremony immediately after the quiz program. Having already appeared as guest conductor, Gould will then return to the stage asnguest soloist, and will feature piano improvisations on themes to be suggested by the audi-l ence as well as offer several of his own original compositions. At the end of the program a ten- dollar cash prize will be awarded the winner of the band's current forma- tions contest (see story on page 3). in University Hospital. Also hit ] 4njuries 'in the tough contest we 3opher tailbacks Bruce Smith ar tierm Frickey, both of whom su ained mirpr knee hurts. The game-winning touchdown car in the second period with t gophers handing Michigan a moc Ied version of the famous old pu ;ass and pray.! Captain Smith, weaving, driving true All-Americ; 'alfback until he got injured, loft % tremendous punt from his own 1 yard line that' soared over- the hei >f Michigan sophomore Tom Kuzu who was playing it close, and roll an for 70 yards until it stopped de an Michigan's 12: Kicks Out Of Bounds Forced to kick frqm his end zor. Kuzma, who punted marvelously , day long, sent the ball out of boun on Michigan's 48. Smith then toss a short pass which was down by guard Merv Pregulman. Withc warning Smith diopped back in similar formation and rifled long accurate aerial to Frickey dov in the southwest corner of the gri iron behind Westfall. Kuzma roar over from his safety position to ma: the tackle on the five. With the capacity crowd roaring fever pitch Minnesota lined up wi first and goal to go. Smith dent left tackle for a yard, but it w costly for he had to be removed fro fhi filf . 'ih hc n- i- r-.