PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY STRIKE BEFORE DAWN: U.S. Soldiers, Sailors, Marines Swarm Ashore in North Africa (Continued from Page 1) American fighter pilots fresh from colleges, soda fountains and farms stood by their roaring planes on the afterdeck, ready to take over the air- ports occupied by the ground troops or rush to their defense. Technically trained and practical minded, among them was Lieut. Kurt (Ace) Lagberg, 24-year-old fighter pi- lot, of Stuart, Fla. En route Lagberg said with a shy grin: "You probably think I am crazy but every time I climb into my plane to go out against the Nazis I feel just like one of those knights who went out to slay dragons-only a plane is my steed instead of a horse and a ma- chine gun is my lance." To another American fighter pilot, Capt. Peck of Burbank, Calif., the Mediterranean is an old story, for he won the Distinguished Flying Cross as a pilot with the RAF at Malta. General Eisenhower, with his angu- lar chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Mark Clark, stayed up most of the night piecing together fragmentary reports of the progress of the big operation, which appeared unlikely to develop a definite turn for some time. With the American Air Forces are three units of the RAF. Our big convoy arrived at its des- tination with the split-second timing of a subway train despite storms for many days at sea and danger from planes and submarines. The entire operation was carried out with the delicate synchronization of an expensive watch, justifying the months of careful planning by Eis- enhower and his British-American supreme command. The vastness of the project, not only from the number of troops in-l volved but from the distances cov- ered and military problems overcome, far dwarfed the only similar opera- tion of its kind in this theater bf the war-the Nazi invasion of Norway. --_I' PEM Popular. with Freshnan Engineers Three quarters of the freshman en- gineering students questioned in a survey approve Michigan's physical education program it was revealed yesterday. Prof. A. D. Moore, head mentor of the engineering department, handled the survey in which students were asked whether they like, disliked or were indifferent to the PEM program. A total of 584 freshmen responded and 76 per cent of them said they liked PEM'. Only 6.7 per cent disliked the program, while 17.3 per cent said they were indifferent. Of the answers. received, 106 were discarded. Most of' these students were in the band or out for a varsity sport and did not par- ticipate in the PEM program. A small remainder chose not to give any an- swer. This confidential survey was made as part of a study being conducted by Dr. Byron O. Hughes who has been measuring the performance of stu- dents, studying the results statisti- cally and releasing information from time to time. WAR CLOSES 50 COLLEGES NEW, YORK- (R)- The New York Times says that as a result of finan- cial difficulties caused by a wide- spread loss in student enrollment, 50 of the nation's colleges have closed in the past few months and scores of others are facing bankruptcy. Since its organization last Marcha for the purpose of buying war bonds to be used for the assistance of vet- erans returning to the University af- ter the war, the Bomber Scholarship Plan has reached a present total of $9,000 worth of bonds through the contributions of 79 campus groups and one individual. The- following fraternities and so- rorities have added to the Commit- tee's funds: Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Alpha Xi Delta, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma, Delta Upsilon, Gamma Phi Beta and Kappa Delta. Houses Listed Kappa Kappa Gamma, Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Alpha Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Epsilon Pi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Sigma Delta, Pi' Lambda Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,. Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi, Sigma Phi Ep- silon, Collegiate Sorosis, Theta Chi, Theta Delta Chi, Zeta Beta Tau and Zeta Tau Alpha have also contributed. Other groups were Congress, Guild British Commander Watches Enemy Fleet Bvmdier Sdisisiip Reaches, $9,000 through Contributions House, Lincoln House, Robert Owen House, the Architectural Society, Alpha Kappa Delta, Avukah, Barris- ters, Deutscher Verein, the Graduate Council; Hiawatha Club, Inter-Co- operative Council. the Japanese- American Club, Michigauma, Phi Sigma Sigma, Scabbard and Blade, Scroll and Senior Supper. Dorms Contribute Dormitories ,were Adams House, Allen-Rumsey, Adelia Cheever, Betsey Barbour, Chicago House, Couzens Hall, '42 class, Fletcher Hall, Greene House, Helen Newberry, Jordan Hall, Lloyd House, Lloyd House Honor Stu- dents, Martha Cook, Michigan House, Mosher Hall, Mosher House Council, Stockwell Hall, Wenley House, West Quadrangle Council, Williafns House and Winchell House. Other contributors were Frosh Fro- lic, Group 2 Ordnance Course, Hillel Foundation, 1943 J-Hop, Michigan Alumnae Club, Soph Prom,,Alpha Phi Omega, the Michigan Union and the Michigan Wolverines. U Lieut.-Gen. Bernard L. Montgomery (above), commanding officer of the British Eighth Army, stands in the turret of his U.S.-built tank while watching the enemy flee in the Egyptian desert battle. (This photo was radioed from Cairo to New York.) MONDAY ONLY! 12 NOON 'TIL 8:30 P.M. Opportunity Special NO MORE SATURDAY MOBS: Football Crowds of 25,000 Are 'Drop in Bucket' to Police I.! U, Yhe Quapry ON STATE AT THE HEAD OF NORTH UNIVERSITY WE DELIVER * By PAUL ]MARSHA Football crowds of twenty-five and thirty thousand such as yesterday's are a "drop in the bucket" to Chief of Police Sherman H. Mortenson and his large crew of policemen, state troopers and sheriff's officers who maintain peace and quiet on football Saturdays. Chief Mortenson recalls the pre- rubber shortage seasons when he called into Ann Arbor as many as sixty state troopers to supplement his own football force of thirty officers. Still Has Problems But even with a paltry thirty- thousand crowd, the Chief, as coordi- nator of the three Ann Arbor divi- sions of the law, has his problems. For every game this year a force of thirty-two uniformed police officers, including three detectives, is on foot- ball duty. And their colleagues, the State Police, ship into town from thir- ty to fifty more troopers. Control Crowds At Ann Arbor's outskirts, the Sher- iff's office posts another six men. Virtually the entire Ann Arbor po- lice force is shifted on Saturday after- noons to controlling football crowds. Only two squad cars remain on regu- lar duty, and they take careful check on possible thieveries of parked cars. During football seasons the Chief spends a. day a week making out a Carillon Program Will Consist of Theater Music Prof. Perpival Price will present a group of carillon selections consisting of music composed especially for the theatre at 7:15 p. m. today. Four groups of music will make up this program, starting with operatic arias. Music from the ballet, songs from plays and instrumental selec- tions will also be presented by Profes- TABU detailed assignment sheet for every man under his charge at the game. Policemen and state troopers, work- ing hand in hand, patrol every aisle in the stadium, and every main arteryj outside it. They respond to motley calls of accompanying teams into the, stadium, walking to the Stadium with the band; stopping fights in the crowd or removing an occasional drunk. Marc'hing andl Will Parade Armistice DayT An Armistice Day parade, swelled by city and University war delega- tions, will step off behind the 108-1 man Michigan Marching Band at 10:10 a'.m. Wednesday, Nov. 11, from State and Liberty streets. University, local and state organ- izations will be represented in the procession-which will march down State to Hill Street, down Hill to Main and down Main to Huron. When on Main St., the parade will stop for a simple Armistice Day cere- mony. After a moment of silence, the band will play taps and a salute will be fired. Then the destination of the pa- rade will be the reviewing stand in front of the Allenel Hotel. Here Col. W. A. Ganoe of the University ROTC, Capt. R. E. Cassidy of the NROTC, Col. Edward H. Young of the Judge Advocate's General's school, Presi- dent Ruthven, and Mayor Leigh J. Young will view the marchers. AEF Strikes at French Africa (Continued from Page 1) Announcemenu of the landings was timed to coincide with the actual de- barkation of the troops on their desti- nations at 9 p. in., Eastern War Time (3 a. n. Sunday, West African Time), and was made only after a reassuring message from Mr. Roosevelt's own lips had been broadcast to the French people, asking for their aid to rout their own enemies. The landing, the announcement said, was being assisted by the British Navy and Air Forces, and "it will, in the immediate future, be reinforced by a considerable number of divisions of the British Army." U.S. Claims Hall's Services Professor Enters Strategical Work One more name was added to the list of University professors engaged in government service Friday when Prof. Robert B. Hall of the geogra- phy department left to 4efin work with the Office of Strategic Services in the Pacific area. Professor Hall is considered a lead- ing authority on Japan and the Far' East and has directed the Institute of Far Eastern Studies for some time.. He has traveled throughout the'Far East and Europe; 'in 1925 he visited the Republic of Haiti and this past year made a trip to Brazil. Professor Hall received his bachelor of arts degree from the University in 1924 and his doctor's degree in 1927. Ross, Rhead to Give Concert Tomorrow . .. r .. 1. ii ) ' i .. 1 ! J/ :/#.. : . = '' 5/he 6Z'zatei/t 2 L-ShP 'round the Corner on State Fashion hit dresses you want for Fall thru Winter wear - ray- ons, crepes, wools,.gabardines - all at one wonderful low price! Beautifully styled, expensively detailed dresses - lots of smooth casuals too! Of course you'll want :more than one . . . and you can afford them at this budget pleasing price of: $700 The dress at left i§ one of, our Gabardine Specials. It is a two- piece wonder for campus and casual date wear. Sizes 9-17; 10-44. 1I r _11 -tL 'I Smouldering TABU-heady, sultry fragrance-even more disturbing when worn on gowns or furs where it remains for days- even weeks. And now you no longer have to wait for someone to bring your pre- cious TABU from Mexico, Cuba or Spain - we have it here. The Parfum $35.00 -Cologne $6.00 - also other sizes of both., THE MICHIGAN DAI LY SERVICE EDITION 4 VOL. I, No. 12 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN NOVEMBER 8, 1942 I Earl.C. Michener to Con- gress by a 2 to 1 majority over his progressive Demo- crat opponent, Redmond M. Burr ... final Ann Ar- bor tabulations showed ev- ery Republican candidate on the state ticket with a majority over his Demo- crat opponent. MILDLY INDIGNANT engineering students are slowly accustoming them- selves to the sight and sound of rhore than 60 girls and womenin the formerly cloistered, halls of East and West Engineering . .. the women are training under Col. H. W. Miller in the engineering drawing de- partment to work in the ordnance program as ma- terials inspectors . . . sig- nificant comment on the engineers' reaction to hav- ing women in their midst was given by one of the trainees who exclaimed, "they're all terrible wolves! I like the fellows in De- troit." . . . others backed her judgment, although one grudgingly admitted that "they're not bad look- ing." . . . crowning blow for the engineers was de- Winners in 100-Ton Scrap Drive you-may-never-get-it" at- titude, Dr. Bowman said that Women should not think of marriage as a "feminine counterpart of selective service." . . . he contended that women must fully understand the -values of lasting marriage, in order that great num- bers of divorces may be avoided following the war. WARNING an intent Oratorical Association au- dience that "Only by giv- ing India the partial free- dom which she asks for, can we enlist her 400,000,- 000 people on our side and at the same time eliminate one of the causes of future wars," Louis Fischer, for- eign correspondent recent- ly returned from India, said Thursday that India may be the key to the strategy of the war be- cause of the danger that Japan and Germany may meet there . " .. only when we become during the war what we profess to be after the war can we have a basis for true peace," he said ... M. W. Fodor, accompanying Fis- cher in the joint lecture, Gilbert Ross, visiting professor of music from Smith College, and Mabel Ross Rhead, professor of music of the University music school, will present a concert at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. This recital will consist of three numbers, "Sonata in E-flat Major, K. 481" by Mozart; "Dondo Brilliante in B minor, Op. 70" by Schubert and the "Sonata in A major, Op. 13" by Faure. Two other such concerts also have been planned by Mr. Ross and Mrs. Rhead. These will be presgnted Nov. 9 and 23. Although all programs are open to the general public, children will not be admitted. r PU FFYCORD x-OVER BYj09e C A LI F 0 R N I A Your favorite cross-strap scuff in a soft, puffy cotton chenille. White, pink, French blue, Scrap collectors extraordinary are these Theta Delts pictured here with just a little of their 35,560 pound total that won them leadership in the week's scrap drive over hard-fighting Lambda Chi . . beauty red. 1.95 f/' 4 that's scrap director Dick gratulating the boys. "Double Dick" Dick con- nrnramfnr .ire,*pff; in cifon n In r,'Aa,'.toha ,,51r, a mrinu I