THE MICHIGAN DAILY Chinese Present Resolution To Ruthven1 - Daily Photo by Bob Killins Shown above is the presentation to President Alexander G. Ruth- ven of the resolution, pledging full support to the war effort of the United States, adopted by the Chinese Students' Club. The resolution is being sent to President Roosevelt. From left to right are Raymond Chen, '44, President Ruthven, Florence Wong, Grad., and Paul Lim- Yuen, '43. s Foreign Students Forget Wars / In Christmas Party At Center By GEORGE W. SALLADE Wars were forgotten as a true spirit of internationalism prevailed at the annual Christmas party given by the International Center for University foreign students on Sunday. More than 10 of them, some with. wives and children and representing 38 nations, joined in celebrating Christmas with the traditional Amer- ican festive spirit. The troubles of their homelands and the tense inter- national situations seemed' far away to them as they ate and talked in the friendly air, so charactefistic of the Center4 Their voices, accented by many dif- ferent languages, rang out with the melodies of the familiar world-wide Christmas carols. "Oh, Come All Ye Faithful," was sung simultaneously in the native tongues of three nations- German, Turkish, English and in Latin. Gaily decorated in holiday style, the Center amply filled its role of sym- bolizing Christmas. A huge tree, which was beautifully adorned and surrounded by gifts, was situated in the main reception room. A gift of a luggage case was pre- Drunken Motorists Pay, Pay And Pay It might be the cold weather but police don't think so. Two men, driving while under the influence of alcohol, were arrested Saturday and both their driving li- censes revoked. One was fined $83.70 by Justice Jay H. Payne-and paid it. The other was ordered to pay only $57.60. He couldn't and began a 60- day term in jail yesterday. Nor was the weather to blame for the burglary of two public school buildings Saturday night, police be- lieve. Tappan junior high school and Jones school were broken into and the rooms ransacked. But typewriters, radios and fountain pens were left untouched. If tre thieves were after money, police are cdnfident they had a bad night's business. Foresters Choose Allen Prof. Shirley W, Allen of the fores- try school was elected vice-president of the Society of American Foresters last week. He has been a member of the governing council of the Soci- ety for the past two years and is also a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Forestry, official or- gan of the Society. He will repre- sent the University in the annuql meeting of the Society, which will be held' this week at Jacksonville, Fla. sented to Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, counselor to foreign students and di- rector of the Interantional Center, on behalf of the University's foreign students, by Orhari Bati, '42E. The gift was in appreciation of Professor Nelson's cooperative aid to',students. Bati, who made the presentation, was born in Turkey. His father, now the Turkish Under-Secretary of State, was a former Turkish ambassador to Japan and to Belgium. Bati's grand- father was the first ambassador of the Turkish Republic to the United States. Professor Nelson presented the Cen- ter with 60 copies of a book of Ameri- ca's favorite songs. James Crowe, '43, who was born i Angus, Scot-* land, acted as Santa Claus and dis- tributed the gifts brought by the stu- dents. Prof. unham Says French Retain Idealis "The ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity which prompted France to war' against Europe for 22 years during the French Revolution still live despite the ultimate failure of the French attempt at that time and the present success of the Nazi con- quest," declared Prof. Arthur L. Dun- ham of the history department yes- terday in a lecture sponsored by the Cercle Francais.I France went to war in the first place, he said, because she feared her absolutist and conservative neigh- bors, who in turn feared her as we feared Russia until 1941, "But France also went to war because of her en- thusiasm for freedom, democracy and the rights of oppressed people." It is these ideals which, he said, still live and motivate the French. Her defeat in the 22-year attempt he attributes to, France's use of force, which turned her gift of nationality against her. "Yet that gift was never rejected, though it was misunderstood by Ger- many, whose great philosopher Fichte laid the basis for the Nazi doctrine of complete subjection of the indi- vidual to the State." "We now know," he closed, '"that no nation can be free if its individuals are not. In order to find hfs life, the individual must lay it down of his own volition and before God." Professor Dunham's talk was the third in the series sponsored annu- ally by the French club. The next lecture, to be given Tuesday, Jan. 20, will be by Prof. Andre Morize of Har- vard University, who will speak on "La Reconstruction de la France apres 1871." DR Reports On Japanese 'Peace' Talks Reveals Emperor Replied To Message Three Days After Attacks Started WASHINGTON, Dec. 15. -(P)-- President Roosevelt sent to Congress today the documented story of the peace talks that smoke-screened Ja- pan's sudden Sunday morning attack on Pearl Harbor to start the war. His message characterized it as a record "for all history to read in amazement, in sorrow, in horror and in disgust." He revealed it was not until three days after the treacherous attacks on United States ships and men and ter- ritory that he received an answer to his eleventh hour message to Em- peror Hirohito Dec. 6 asking his co- operation in further efforts to pre- serve peace. Desire For Peace This answer was to the effect that the Emperor's "cherished desire" was establishment of peace in the Pacific and that "His Majesty trusts that the President is fully aware of this fact." The President summarized the his- tory of Japanese-American relations from the time Commodore Perry "knocked on Japan's doors" in 1853. For many years after 1853, the President recalled, during a period when Japan was weak and needed friends, the United States "used ev- ery influence it could exert to pro- tect Japan in her transition stage." "This barbaric aggression of Ja- pan in Manchuria," said the Presi- dent's message, "set the example and the pattern for the course soon to be pursued by Italy and Germany in Africa and in Europe. In 1933 Hit- ler assumed power in Germany. It was evident that, once rearmed, Ger- many would embark upon a policy of conquest in Europe. Italy-then still under Othe domination of Mussolini -also had resolved upon a policy of conquest in Africa and the Medi- terranean." Stage by stage the collaboration between these three aggressor na- tions grew closer. Japan in 1937 opened new large-scale military oper- ations against China. Two years later Hitler started the wr in Eur- ope with his invasion of Poland and in September, 1940, after the defeat of France, the three Axis Powers concluded a tripartite treaty of alli- afnce "deliberately aimed at the Unit- ed States." Precarious Situation With Japan on the rampage, the situation in the Far East became steadily more precarious and "it be- came clear that, unless this course of affairs in the Far East was halted, the Pacific area was doomed to ex- perience the same horrors which have devastated Jurope." So the United States "in an en- deavor to end this process by peace- ful means, while there seemed to still be a chance," opened last April the discussions with Japan which were still going on when the Japanese attacked. 'U' Graduate Addresses AIEE Meeting In Union Student members of the AIEE met yesterday at 8 p.m. in the Union to hear a talk by George M. Ch te of the General Electric Corporatio. Mr. Ch Ite, who was graduated from the Univrsity in 1923, spoke on the subject, "Motor Application in Indus- try." He emphasized particularly the defense aspects of his topic. . In a short business meeting which followed Mr. Chute's talk arrange- ments wore made for 'Ensian pictures and plans for a joint meeting of the Detroit, Ann Arbor and East Lansing sections were discussed. --4 - Skiing, Woodcraft Training Courses Offered By State LANSING. Dec. 15-1P)--Adventur- ous Michigan youths are weldome at a special school in skiiing, snow-shoe- ing, map-work and woodcraft offered by Michigan State College in the Up- per Peninsula during the Christmas holidays. The College said the course was in- tended primarily for fo'estry stu- dents, but would give practical train- ing in winter army maneuvers. It will be held at the Dunbar Experiment Station near Sault Ste. Marie from Dec. 27 to Jan. 4. P. A. Herbert, head of the forestry department, said the course was open to the students and alumni of all Michigan colleges and that winter traveling equipment had been prom- ised by the army command at Fort Brady. The school will operate on a cooperative basis, students being asked to, bring their own bed-rolls, do their own cooking and work several hours each day in the woods to pur- chase their food. Counters Are Cleared Of Japanese Products (By The Associated Press) Made-in-Japan merchandise, once so familiar to shoppers, became vir- tually extinct on the Michigan mar- ket at the same time that Federal authorities disclosed further restric- tions on the Japanese himself. The merchandise from Nippon, business experts pointed out, has de- creased greatly in volume iin recent years and the remaining quantities removed Tuesday were small. Imports fell off, particularly since the Japan- ese sank the U.S. gunboat Panay, and American manufacturers. stepped in to supply much of the goods for- merly bought from Japan. The S. S. Kresge and F. W. Wool- worth stores announced they were withdrawing all Japanese-made goods from sale. A Traverse City roofing company made a bonfire of 5,000 cal- endars which bore the stamp "Made in Japan." Magnesium, Cinderella Metal,' Plays Part in Plane Production Emphasizing the integral part mag- awarded a copy of Perry's Engineering nesium has begun to play in airplane Handbook for his excellence in the production, S. D. Kirkpatrick, na- short quizzes held at the beginning tional president of the American In- of AIChE meetings. The second award stitute of Chemical Engineers, related of the evening, given to the junior s ,AIChE member with the highest the wonders of that "cinderella scholastic average, went to Charles metal" to student members of the Thatcher. '43E. AIChE and the American Institute of Toastmaster for the evening was Metallurgical and Mining Engineers Prof. A. H. White of the chemical eh- tgineering department, while Dean, at a banquet m'eeting last night. Ivan C. Crawford of the College of Special mention was made of the Engineering presented the scholar- role Michigan's own Dow Chemical ship award. Co. is playing in the production of In addition to being national presi- magnesium. A pioneer m the produc- dent of the AIChE, Mr. Kirkpatrick is also editor-in-chief of the Chemical tion of bromine from sea-water, the and Metallurgical Engineering maga- Dow company has recently developed zine. He is a graduate of the Univer- a process for extracting magnesium sity of Illinois. from the same source, and a large plant for the process is being con- Life Insuranee; stl structed in Freeport, Tbx., under gov- WAR IS] ernment supervision. Thomas E. Osborn, '42E, was PROVIDENT MJJTUAL LIFE %N ..r. 11 For a *~1VIite l, ritinay... I MOTHER WIFE SISTER AUNT SINCE 1185 ' I * ri *1 EXTRA TRAIN SERVICE FOR STUDENT TRAVEL DECEMBERS19th. Student Section Train No. 44 (all points East) leaves 3:45 P. M. Student Section Train No. 8 (all points East) leaves 6:30 I. M. To Chicago -and Intermediate Points Leaves Ann Arbor 1:00 P. M. Se of Tools The most attractive and original gift idea you have ever seen. Containing the every- day utility tools every household needs (10 selected items) each in the correct smaller size for ladies' use, stylishly finished in Blue and Ivory and Gift-packed in a truly unique twotone blue and silver con tamer. See it and buy its in our store today.'r i 11 III I