g- THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVI Nazis Delayed B More Than W By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) Something more formidable than bad fighting weather delayed Hitler armies on all fronts in recent weeks. The Nazi war machine that has shattered army after army # in its conquests in manner unrivaled in history, could not be thus held up by a disorganized mob of armed civilians alone. Orderly Retreat Berlin has admittedbitter Rus- sian resistance and ceaseless Red counter attacks everywhere except in the Crimea. Red forces seem not only to have made an aggressive stand before Rostov, but to have begun an orderly and fighting retreat east of Kharkov in the Donets Basin. On some sections of the Moscow front, Red Army sources said, Soviet troops had switched to winter attack. But activity flared in the Leningrad area, where a stalemate has existed with Germans !laiming a break- through in one strongly fortified zone. Nazi Allies Halted ly Something eather Conditions but under German pressure .refrain from saying so as yet. Far to the south, from Axis-cap- . tured Odessa, come authentic re- ports of Rumanian troops moving westward toward home, not eastward to bolster the German advance in force. With Bessarabia regained,j Rumania seems passing out of the l fight except for a token force still cooperating withthe Germans. While the battle of Moscow still fluctuates uncertainly, and southward of its perimeter the situation re- mains obscure, there is growing pros- pect of a winter stalemate before or about the Russian fighting capital. It is not yet even half enclosed in the Nazi seige ring. Winter is mov- ing up. Winter Aids Nazis There is no assurance, however," mmem!!12" Navy Photo Of. Sunk Destroyer McPhail Goes To Bat For Stock Exchange Hillel To Hear Guidance Talk NEW YORK, Nov. 1.-(IP)-Emil Schram was ousted as head of the B Freedcan New York Stock Exchange and re- .i r i m dlaced by Larry McPhail, big boss of .he Brooklyn Dodgers-all in fun 'H .f course, in the annual presentationTo eterine Snel of the "Financial Follies" tonight. To Determine Special The Follies, yearly dinner and show Aptitud s Of Students of the New York Financial Writers Association, in the Grand Ballroom Iagrtn illFudto' of the Waldorf Astoria, was attend Inaugurating HieFoundation's by 1,050 guests, including top-flight vocational guidance program, S. Washington and Wall Street men, Thomas Freidman, vocational expert and many bankers and industrialists of District Six B'nai Brith Grang .rota other cities. Lodge, will speak on the choice of When McPhail took over the Ex-jjobs at 7:30 today at the Foundation. change, as visualized by the news- Further recommendations on the -apermen who were the authors and subtect of vocations will be given in- ctors, he promptly traded most of dividual students In personal inter- the present exchange for Hollywood ,views to be held by Mr. Freidman to- ralent, ending his swaps with a trade morrow. In the interviews an at- Af Charles E. Merrill, head of the big tempt will be made to determine the fommission, house of Merrill, Lynch, individual's special aptitudes. Ap- ?terce, Fenner and Beane, for Charie I pointments for interviews will be cCarthy. Itth that winter will halt Nazi offensive operations. Reports from the front{ yesterday said freezing weather had hardened the mud and facilitated tank operations. That permits Panz- ur units-upon which the German army has relied primarily in every battle of this war-to punch their way ahead. Short of that, however, over much of the Russian fi'ont the necessity of digging in now or very soon seems indicated for the Nazis. This is an official Navy photo of the U.S. destroyer Reuben James which the Navy Department an- nounced was sunk by a torpedo in the North Atlantic. The Reuben James was described as an 0-type, flush deck destroyer, with a displacement of 1,190 tons. Finnish reports strongly intimate, without saying so, that on the Arctic front northward from Leningrad the Nazi allies have halted or been halted., The Finns may have attained their' own objective in territory regained, * * *n- Commanded Warship Germany Accuses Washington SOf Aggaression In Naval Policy CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING __________________________________________________________ (Continued from Page 1) WANTED STUDENTS to defeat Hitlerism.*or further details, attend American Student Union meeting. 8:00 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 5, in room'316 of the Union. 105c WANTED TO BUY - CASH for used clothing; men and ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2736. 5c TAILORING & SEWING STOCKWELL and Mosher-Jordan residents-Alterations on women's garments promptly done. Opposite Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. 3c TRANSPORTATION COLUMBIA GAME. Leaving De- troit Thursday p.m. Nov. 13. Re- turning Sunday. 1941 Mercury. $12.50 per passenger. Phone Rum- ney, 100 Adams House. - TYPING MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935. 90c, VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. LOST and FOUND 1940 CLASS RING, initialed R. K. Phone Robert Kerr, 3682. Reward. 100c GOLD BRACELET with four tennis charms at game Saturday. Phone 2-2591. Peggy Polumbaum. 95c LADY'S Banner wrist watch, on Fri- day, October, tenth, in vicinity of Mosher. Cal lJean King, -4561. 96c WRIST WATCH-white gold with black band. Please return to Doro- thy Schulhof, 2-4143. Reward of- ferred to President Roosevelt's state- ment yesterday that the incident had not changed United States-German relations; and said he was "suffering ircm an upset political stomach." "It is noteworthy how cautious has i become," these quarters add. "Apparently he has the feeling thatl h4 bit off more in recent days than he could digest." Vessels Sunk They said they had n7o confirma- tion of the Reuben James sinking. As if to emphasize the implaca- bility of Germany's determination to press the war in the Atlantic, aGer- man resume of operations in the past week said 151,00 tons of British ship- ping had been destroyed in the At- lantic, with planes and submarinesj gression and a declaration from Sec- retary of the Navy Knox that "we are in this fight to the finish." Knox's assertion was made ,n an address to a Marine Corps audience at Quantico, Va.. while his subordinates at the Navy Department hopefully awaited word from the North Atlantic increasing the list of known survivors of the torpedoed destroyer Reuben James. Some hopefully assumed that ships of the convoy had effected rescues which they had not yet reported, and would not report until they made port. The practice has been to use the radio as little as possible, lest the ship's position be divulged to lurking submarines. MISCELLANEOUS ierea. -_ _ _ _ WOMAN'S light yellow suede gloves MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis . bind- in or near League last Wednesday. ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 Reward. Phone 2-2706. E. H. S. S.tate. 6c Gault. 103c WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- WILL THE low living farmer who Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. put the. sleeve on my cordoroy Killins Gravel Company, phone convertible coat during rushing 7112. 7c please return it to Buck Dawson, MIMEOGRAPHING AND MULTI- Phi Gamma Delta. 104c GRAPHING-, illustrated and, typed LADY'S yenbw-gold, rectangular work for fraternities and other stu- Bulova wristwatch on Tuesday eve- dent organizations. 1 cent postage ning, October the twenty-eighth, in on alumni mailings, The Edwards vicinity of the Michigan League Letter Shop, 711 N. University, and Hill Auditorium. Finder please Phone 2-2846. 8c call Alumnae Council Office, F E2-3251. 93c FOR RENT N LAU NDERI NG Lieut.-Comm. H. L. Edwards, 35, a native of San Saba, Tex., was the commander of the Reuben James. Edwards, an all-around athlete, wa captain of the wrestling team on the 1928 Olympic squad. Library Head To Talk Here Lecture On 'Dr. Johnson' To Be GivenTuesday "Dr. Johnson and the Young" will be the subject of a University Lec- ture by Arundell Esdaile, president of the British Library Association, at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Mr. Esdaile will also speak at 4 p.m. tomorrow on "The British Mu- seum" and at 4 p.m. Wednesday on "Bibliography and History." Both lectures, sponsored by the Depart- ment of the Library Science, will be given in Room 110, Library. Mr. Esdaile was for 37 years a member of the staff of the British Museum staff, and retired in 1940. He was editor of the British Library' Association Record from 1923 to 1935,1 and has been a leader in international library activities. He has published several books on bibliography, including "Autoclycus', Pack," "The World's Great Libra- ries," and "A Student's Manual of, Bibliography." All three lectures will be open to the public. sinking 35 vessels. Official comment on lte extra-f After reading the statements to a ordinary statement issued from Hit- conference of foreign correspondents, ler's headquarters in Russia was lim- an authorized spokesman went on to ited to the remark by a State Depart- make a more direct attack upon Pres- ment spokesman, in response to ques- ident Roosevelt, declaring: tions, that German propaganda "He has started plowing under ecemed to be trying to deny the right American boys. He is mobilizing pre- of self-defense to those countries in judice. H^ is organizing war for Jew- I danger of attack. .ry. But he cannot prevent the defeat This official referred reporters to of either Russia or 'England." President Roosevelt's address of last Mcnciay for a statement of this gov- 'Fight To The Finish,' j ernment's attitude as to who was the aggressor in clashes in the North At- Says Knox To Marines lantic between American, destroyers (By. The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 1--German- American relations entered a phase University Professor of greater tension tonight with a M charge from Adolf Hitler that Ameri- Made Navy Consultant can destroyers had engage' in ag- Workers Hurt IIn AFL Strike Fifty Detroit Police Stop JurisdictionDispute DETROIT, Nov. 1.-(UP)-Detroit's first serious strike violence in 1months, a melee of 'swinging fists and baseball bats at a railway load- ing platform of the Railway Express Agency, Inc., sent six men to hospi- tals today. Fifty policemen dashed to the scene in patrol cars to stop a 15-minute fight between members of two AFL unions who have been wrangling for four weeks over jurisdiptional rights. Four men received firat aid at the scene. The fighting, in which the four seriouscasualties were head injuries, climaxed. a dispute: between the. Brotherhood of Railway and Steam- ship Clerks and the Teamsters' Union over recognition of the unions. On Thursday the clerks' union had called off its stiike, but the Ateam- sters refused to return to work and established picket lines at all loading platforms of the agency. Earlier in the stalemate, shippers of vital de- fense goods had been directed by government authorities to use other means of shipment. FHA Administrator To Discuss Planning In lctureTuesday Earl S. Draper, assistant adminis- trator of the Federal Housing Ad- ministration, will deliver a University Lecturp on "Putting Planning . into Action" at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Room 102, Architecture Building. A graduate of Massachusetts State College, Draper is renowned for his work as a landscape architect. He was director of landscape planning and housing of the Tennessee Valley Authority. In 1932 he served as a member of the President's Conference on Home Building and Ownership, and was also a visiting professor in the Har- vard School of Landscape Architec- ture. Among his several publications are "Southern Textile Village Planning" and "Landscape Design in the South." The lecture Tuesday, to be given under the sponsorship of the Depart- ment of Architecture and Design, will be open to the general public. made ac ti n e ounaaton today. In order to further facilitate mak- ing definite statements about the individual being interviewed' it is necessary to collect data about him. Application blanks for interviews in- clude the necessary information. Staying two days in Ann Arbor Mr. Freidman will continue his tour which will take him to many other mid- western campuses for the same pur- pose. He is being sponsored in Ann Arbor by Hillel Foundation's educa- tional committee as part of a series on the general subject of vocations. Additional speakers will be announced at later dates. v twe dorms Mosher's Tea Dance, the first in a series planned for this year, was held yesterday afternoon. Ellen Batteurs, '43, was general chair- man for the dance and Mrs. Dan W. Poppleton of the East Quad and Mrs. Phelps, house director of Sigma Nu, poured. Residents of Victor Vaughan House, upperclassmen of the East Quad and the Sigma Nus were half of the combinations that danced to the tune of assorted recordings. Stockwell held an informal dance last night in their drawing room. Miriam Dalby, '44, had a hard time finding enough tickets to supply the demands of Stockwellites. Guests at Betsy Barbour's tradi- tional Welcome Supper today will include the Board of Patronesses of the dorm, Miss Jeannette Perry, Mrs. Byil Fox Bacher, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward L. Adams, Mr. and Mrs. John S. Morley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Vibbert, Miss Gertrude Frey and Miss Roslyn Fellman. The last two are former Barbour house presidents, Freshman Honor Society To Discuss Year's Plans Phi Eta Sigma, freshman scholas- tic, honor society, will hold its first meeting of the school year at 7:15 p.m. today in the Union, Herbert Heavenrjch, '44, president, announc- ed. Plans for the fall initiation will be discussed, and the new freshman tu- toring plan will be considered. INnTRUCTOUR will snare turnishedu 4-room apartment with man- reasonable-call after 7, Apt. 1, 611 Packard. 9lC LOVELY STUDIO ROOM for gradu- ate women. Cooking and laundry privileges if desired. Also youpg woman wishes roommate. Inquire 422 E. Washington. 1b2c FOR SALE GUARANTEED 35 millimeter film; 54c per 36 roll, Eastman, DuPont, Agfa. Cohn 6957. 81c 13 SETS of double-'decked beds- Good condition. Call Gunnard An- tell after 5. Phone 2-3169. 94c GENERAL PRACTICE EQUIPMENT of deceased physician. No other Dr. in town. Mrs. C. A. Wilkinson, Kendall, Mich. 101c LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox Careful work at low price. darned. 2c 3 f I 1 C j EiEC I i t V A 4 IV Britain Produces E New Ammunition LONDON, Nov. 1-(A')-The Brit- ish Ministry of Supply disclosed to- night that Britain has "a new and highly secret" ammunition already in use by some British warships on convoy escort duty. The mention of the ammunition was contained in the Ministry's ac- count of how 20 men at "factory X" worked all one night recently to com- plete the production of a truckload of the ammunition for a waitingi warship. Authoritative sources refused flat- ly to discuss the new ammunition or say whether it has any relation to Britain's new aerial bomb which has been described as five times more powerful than explosives used pre- viously. Prof. Lawrence C. Maugh of the civil engineering department has been made consultant on battleship design to the United States Navy Department. Professor Maugh spent three weeks this summer in active navy depart- ment work at the David Taylor Mod- el Basin in Washington State. This basin is. the Navy's most important shipbuilding center, and design mod- els are tested there in a 12,000-foot tank. Professor Maugh's knowledge of statically indeterminate structures and his experience in this field has made his work invaluable to. the Navy Department. INDIVIDUALIZED LAUNDRY SERVICE Each bundle done separately, by hand No Markings Silks, Wools, and Coeds' Laundry Our Specialty All our work is guaranteed Free pick-ups and deliveries SILVER LAUNDRY 607 E. HOOVER 5594 i BOYD I(AEB U R N 1 44 will ploy for the U Meet me NDE1 THE CLOCK at the BILTMORE SPECIAL ROOM RATES extended to faculty and students. The College Department is ever ready to give you 'assistance. Tin, BILTMORE has won the unique distinction of having the largest college patronage in New York because of the thoughtful attention to college needs. SUNDAY SUPPER Served in the Main Dining Room-6:00 until 7:30 o'clock Hot Frankfurters Golden Brown Waffle, Syrup Hot German Potato Salad Grilled Little Pig Sausage Apple Sauce Layer Cake or French Vanilla Ice Cream Pumpkin Pie or Fruit Cup Beverage Beverage at fifty five cents Friday, November 7, 1941, 9 to TICKETS will be on sale ct the Union 'Travel I I I Desk Fresh Mushroom Omelette French-Fried Potatoes Preserves Chocolate 'Mallow Sundae or Apple Sauce Layer Cake Fruit Cocktail Fried Select Oysters, Tartar Sauce Potatoes au Gratin Cabbage Salad Pumpkin Pie, Whipped Cream I starting Monday, November 3rd, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 P.M. ..} e Ii I