PAGE TW O Landon Asks Foreign Policy Plank Reports Says Backgronmid Is Needed if Democrats, GOP Are To Agree TH E MlC H IGA\N IAt . '[itM, 'IY -r ~l]m -.11..1'343 - . ' -~' - - ','""'- By'The Assoiated Press MILWAUKEE. Wis.. Dec. 13. --Alf M. Landon disclosed tonight he had told Secretary of State Cordell Hull' that before Republicans could agree to the proposal for identical foreign policy planks for the two major par- ties, they must have complete reports on background and implications of "any agreements or understanding that have been arrived at, either orally or in writing." Asks Full Report "First," he said, "before the Re-j publican leadership could write or agree to a plank they would have to have a full and detailed report on what has taken place at these con- ferences and all the background and the implications of any agreements or understandings that have been arrived at, either orally or in writ- ing. In brief, they would have to have the kind of a full. detailed and complete report that the Secretary of State is expected to make to the President following any important foreign conversation and negotia- tion." Commitment Requested He said the two parties, secondly,, would have to reach agreement on. ''every word and every comma" in such a plank, and on "just what those words mean-and they must mean exactly the same thing to both parties and not be subject to a dif- ferent interpretation." "Third," he said, "having agreed to such wording and its meaning, if the Republican convention adopted the plank, there would have to be a firm commitment- a commitment Jtbilaitt Se 1bees Returti from Overseas LITE RARY TALENT: Recent U' Hopwood Wiuncr Novels, Poems Are Published Numerous Hopwood winners have ems pubihed ecenlly Come Cloc had books and articles published in to Me" appeared in the autumn num- the last few months ber of the Sewannee Review and The Literary Guild has chosen as The Gothic Waotetne in i a top-ranking novel "Winter Wheat" Christian Science ]Vonoi'. ior July by Mildred Walker. who won the 27 Hopwood award for her first novel in John Macoim Brinnn. winner of 1933. "Winter Wheat" appears in the i a major avard in poetry. 1940. hda a December "Ladies' Home Journal" poem entitled "Obs ratory Hill" inI and will be published in book form the summer humbei' of Ac'ent. early in the new yea Roamond Haas has two poems Chad Walsh, Winner of a major coming in the Satiurda: P xew ci award in drama in 1931 had two po- Lfterature and t 1Co others in Sprit 1 _31_ Of the six awards made nnually by Poetry, a Magazine cf Vse, two this year have gone to Hopvooders. Larry Cl .Mr. Brinnin won the Levinsron prize of $100 for "Spring Ritual," a group Tw ice rtees of eight poems. The Oscar Blumen- thal Prize for Poetry, also $100, went to John Ciardi, major poetry award :. > ._ 1 n ' erman n ; s winner. 1937. - f t I *1 C E 1 Their fondest dreams were realized when these Seabees of the 14th Battalion returned home for Christmas after 14 months on -Guadalkcal. Not until the ship was enroute were they told they were homeward bound. They are shown as their ship docked in San Francisco. AMERICANS ARE LUCKY: The beginning of the new year will NEW YORK, Dec. 13.-(')-An ac- see the publication of two Hopwood count of two sensational attempts to books. "Delay Is Song," major poetry escape from German custody in Italy, award volume of last spring, by Ros- the second one ending in his recap- amond Haas, will be published by ture within 30 miles of the Swiss Dutton. border, has come to friends here , Rosemary Obermeyer Formolo's from Larry Allen, Associated Press prize-winning novel of 1942. "Golden war correspondent. Apples of the Sun," will also appear under the Dutton imprint. This novel Allen, winner of the 1941 Pulitzer has been chosen by the Catholic Prize for international reporting, was Guild. captured Sept. 13, 1942, while with British naval forces raiding Tobruk, Libya, and subsequently was taken FluA Eide je to an Italian prison camp. In a letter dated last Oct. 25 which came through German and American cen- O t 1c_ S sorship, Allen wrote: In Officer's Camp Cold \Nave il "Si ) "I was hoping that by this time 4 Sir Oswald Mosley, Britain's pre-I war fascist leader, walks out of a building at the Oxfordshire village inn where he is staying following his release from prison. This is the first picture of Mosley since his re- lease. uIssian a elief Asks AidL Volunteers Neded To Knit, Salvage Clothes Workers to sew and pack clothes 'and volunteers to knit are being re- By ' lieAssciatd Prss I oUCLC ht- lt' 1~iiotU 'xl v i-mec if [-ery PurfhidJ 97 Ye)ar-Old 'U Employe, Dies Henry Purlield. 9i years old and a University employe for three-quar- ers of a century. died at his home ecre yesterday morning after a brief ilness. Mr. Purfield. English by birth, ar- rived in Ann Arbor in December, 1869, and was first employed by the Univei'sity as a jauiwor and carpen- ter. Some alumni of the last century ay remember him as the man who rang the campus bell to call classes together. Eeginning in 1875. Mr. Purfield was employed for 32 years as janitor and custodian of the dentistry build- ing. From the establishment of the school, he followed it from building to building until the present' struc- ture was erected in 1907. He was placed on a semi-retire- ment basis in 1919, but continued to spend a great deal of time repairing University cabinets and desks at the dental school and performing, many odds jobs. Trained in England as a carpenter and joiner. he also held a position as booking clerk on an English railway, having studied bookkeeping and ac- counting. For several years Mr. Pur- field served as an accountant in charge of gold and other materials used in the dental laboratories. FDR's Aide, fies WASHINGTON. Dec. 13. -- )- Marvin McIntyre, slight but firm buf- fer for President Roosevelt through- out his years in the White House, died today after a long illness, Death of the white-thatched 65- year-old secretary meant the loss, said the President in a message to the White House, of "a public servant whose whole career emphasized fi- delity and integrity." Billion Dollars Expected WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.- (AP)- Another billion dollars is expected by the Bureau of Internal Revenue to roll into the federal Treasury by Dec. 15 from income tax payments. WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE! Continuous from 1 P.M. r'AIsARnor. Ntw T Prpsholm.PssengerTells O Aife il Internment Camp "Coming into America here I think I recognize what a wonderful country -4- --A .., -- nil v- 1 'tt" n the keeping of which would not be it1isandihow lucky we allaterroi. open to question-that the Demo- Phillip Sullivan, who has just re- cratic party in its. convention would turned to the United States on the adopt the same plank, without so exchange ship Gripsholm, said Sun- nmuch as the change of a word. And day in a speech at the International if there was so much as the change Center. of a, word, we would have to have a He spoke of how Shanghai was ta- commitment that Mr. Hull would re- ken over--"quite peacefully." For a pudiate the plank." few days the inhabitants lived in I z I I - . boy Scout Cubs Attain, Record M'Yembership fear-"I was shocked that anyone could laugh," he said. However, short-wave radios were not taken over for about eleven Blakemnan Is Given New (;hurc~h Post I , i months and at first registration a sign read. "Kind and Polite." In October arm-bands were issued. Instead of shaming the Americans and British by this as the Japs hoped, those who wore them were proud of, them . Even the march to the internment camp was a disappointment to the Japs," he said. "We had a regular triumphal procession. Again the idea of trying to shame us before the corn- munity fell flat. The gendarmes look- ed very glum." Inside the internment camp the commandant spoke to: the prisoners. Prof. Sullivan summed up the points of this speech-"This is your new home. You'll be here for a long time. You must love and cherish it. If you try to escape you will be shot." Prof. Sullivan said that Pootung University, which the internees start-- ed in the camp, "turned out to be a great success," that the meals were "just like trying to take so much Fastest growing program in the Boy Scout movement is the Cub or- Dr. Edward W. Bla-keman, coun- g anization, composed of 9, 10 and 11 I selor in reli.ious education, has been year old boys, whose enrollment appointed to an educational advisor- has reached an all time high in Ann ship of the World Council of Church- . Arbor. es, it was announced yesterday. Nearly 300 Ann Arbor boys have This organization, with 82 member enlisted in the work of Cubbing, and churches in 28 countries, has built parents are having a part in the pro- a network of inter-church communi- gram too. Cubs are organized into cation among nations as well as Dens, small neighborhood groups of states. five and six boys which meet one af- The Council's task involves mutual ternoon each week with their Den interpretation of church to church, mothers and Den chief at different the finding of common denominators homes. for Christian units, 'and the facingr Mack School P.T.A. Pack leads the .of common responsibilities. These in- list with 71 Cubs enrolled under Cub- elude rescue of Christian refugees master Durwood Prochnow, and Eb- and "endange'red" religious leaders,j erbach School P.T.A. has 65 Cubs un- the service to prisoners of war der Cubmaster Hudson Morton. New through the agency of the Ecumeni- boys are being enrolled each month cal Chaplaincy Commission, and the and new Packs are being organized preservation of a common ChristianI as needed. heritage. a stirring story would be arriving in! New York. Instead, I'm in German hands and for the first time in an all-American officers' camp. "There shall be written a story stranger than fiction but it cannot I be- in this letter. I can only tell you that I was sohungry for freedom and tried with 'all my heart to find my way to a typewriter again. "After the Italian armistice, the Chieti camp swiftly was occupied' by the Germans. On the first move from there, I dashed for liberty. A1 burst of machine gun fire cut shoirt my crawling through the barbed wire. Jumps from Train "I was placed aboard a train bound for Germany. High in the Alps, I leaped from the heavily-guarded. speeding train. I hit the rail bed with a terrific impact. I spun around and fell directly under the wheels, rolling into the center of the track- bed. I prayed. The entire string of box-cars passed over me. Badly cut and bruised, I trudged through swamps. orchards and mule paths in the snow-covered Alps. Days of cold and hunger. I got within 30 miles of Switzerland, then was re-, captured because I was betrayed by a pretended Italian friend, on Oct. 8" World News ... (Continued from Page 1) I Bly The Associated Press . quested b~y the itussian war ief, A mild form of respiratory ailment, whose headquarters are in the West similar to the grippe and influenza, Hospital on Catherine Street oppo- has reached epidemic proportions in site the Red Cross Production Center. some sections of the United States, People with contributions of oldj health officers said last night, but clothes are asked to contact Mrs. they stressed that deaths were few. G. Y. Rainich at 602 Oswega Street They said the ailment was of a far or phone her at 3427. She also needs less serious type than in England and volunteers to help salvage the Wales, where 709 deaths were report- clothes, to sew on them after they ed in a single week recently, and not thaem for shipping, to be compared with the influenza The Russian War Relief will sup- epidemic that swept 'this country in h s v trsan~ epdmi9ht1wp8ti.out ply wool to all volunteer knitters, and 1918. the Knitting Committee has received An average of one person in 10 was from volunteers about a hundred ill in the hardest-pit sections, with a knitted articles each month. All in- proportionate level of absenteeism in terested knitters may reach Mrs. J.R. war plants and offices. Absenteeism Slocum, Chairman of the Knitting in schools was as high as 30 percent Committee, at: 1117 South Forests in some cases. Street or phone her at 3909. The ailment, usually affecting a To date the Russian War Relief person for about five days, was re- has sent. 1,255 knitted articles of all ported on the wane in some areas and kinds to Russia, but still needs many on the increase in others. Physicians more. said current cold weather in many sections would tend to stop the Ct. spread. (Mg fftF l.ees Campus Flu Cases Hospital Ward CalledFil ~l C l.d Fairly Mn Arbor police are joining a i nprcluc o, i-pea I 'ris v 91-M-1 NOW PLAYING! medicine" and that "the hopec patriation kept us going." USO Will Wrap Gifts For Servicemen Free Servicemen are invited to any -hristmas gifts they want, ped to the USO in Harris Hal 1 to 5:45 p.m. today, tom( Thursday. Friday and Sunda from 9 to 12 a.m. Saturday. Experienced gift wrappers u on hand to tie fancy bows ar that the presents are wrapp tractively. The service is free. TODAY Wednesday of re- bring wrap- 1 from lorrow- y and will be nd see ed at- 6 1 a 3 , ; is Matinees . 40c Nights... 55c Servicemen 25c J s W7&#ja%1!N t tA vs W~a - specified targets and were accom- panied all of the way by Thunder- bolts and Lightenings for their long- est escort job of the war. 41Jarshalls Raided PEARL HARBOR, Dec. 13.-(Ik- Army Liberators kept up a month- long series of raids on the mid- Pacific Marshalls by bombing a Japanese cargo ship and shore in- stallation at Emidji (Imeiji) in the Jaluit atoll Saturday, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz announced today in a press release. Reds Repulse Nazis LONDON, Dec. 13.--(/1-The Red Army hurled back the Germans to- day for the third successive day in the great tank-and-infantry battle of the Kiev bulge and recaptured strong German defense points in aI two-way extension of the big Krem- enchug bridgehead in the right band of the middle Dnieper, Moscow an- nounced tonight. Pact Binds Reds, Czechs LONDON. Dec. 13.--P-The 20- year mutual assistance pact between Russia and Czechoslovakia pledges both countries .to fight a war to the finish against Germany and her sat- ellites, and "not to enter any- nego- tiations with the Hitlerite govern- ment or any other government in Germany which has not repudiated all aggressive aims," the Moscow ra- dio announced tonight. Dean Cooley WIll Be Honored TonightI Retrial of Padgeit Postponed -to Jan. 4* Louella Smith. Washtenaw County Clerk, announced yesterday that the retrial of William Padgett, originally scheduled for today, will be held Jan. 4, in the County Circuit Court. Judge Guy A. Miller, of the Wayne County Circuit Court will preside. Padgett, who has spent the last se- ven years in Jackson prison for the slaying of Clifford Stang, Ann Arbor policeman, has been granted a re- trial after repeated appeals to the State Supreme Court. Music Sorority Gets Eight 1New Members The Alpha chapter of Sigma Al- piha Iota, professional music sorority' pledged eight women to membership at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. in ceremonies held at the home of Mrs. S. T. Dana. patroness.' Pledges, all from the School of Mu- sic, are Jacqueline Bear, Riverside. Calif., Blossom Reynolds, '46, De- troit; Sylvia Deutscher, '46, New York City: Frances Griffen. '44, Ann Ar- bor; Arlene Peugeot. '46,.Stryker; Do- ris Reed, '46 Ithaca. New York; Joyce Denherder. '45, Zeeland; Anna LDIR ECT ORY CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of $.25 for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Request LOST and FOUND LOST-Irish Setter, female, 6 months old, wearing collar. Reward. Tele- phone 24839. LOST-Woman's red wallet, some- where in or between Parrott and Hill Auditorium. Finder call 23119. Reward. CtfD CAI >r Contrary to the beliefs of many state-wide hunt for 32 year-old con- bed-ridden students, the flu epidemic vict Thomas Henson who escaped Sunday morning from his ward at this year on campus is not as serious University Hospital, where he was as is commonly supposed, Dr. War- being treated for a jaw infection. ren E. Forsythe, Dean of Health Henson was not under guard when Service, said yesterday. he escaped from the -hospital's fifth "However, there are more cases of floor west ward. He was brought flu this year than there have been here for treatment from Southern in the last four years," he continued. Michigan prison near Jackson, where "The best remedy for students who he was serving 10 to 20 years for have a cold or a temperature is to armed robbery. go to bed and to drink plenty of The escaped convict was paroled fluids. If the cold continues. they last June 22 after being sentenced should see a physician." on the robbery charge in December, According to Dr. Otto K. Engelke, 1937. He was returned to prison Oct. County Health Commissioner, the 31, for violating the terms of his outbreak of influenza is still going parole and was brought to University strong in Washtenaw County. Hospital Nov. 29. MADCAP ENTERTAINERS!~ Stars~.ng RED SKELTON The lKing of Hilarity ELEANO0R POWELL The Darling of the Dome ' RICHARD AINLEY Young and Kqndsomi PATRICIA PANE Gorgeou.; and Dongerous Headiins of Lavghs ! Jeff1UJIN$TON IALL EpgrloryIV.Rpidpi n Nonpp Voice toSang $prd - Sireni of Ihp K'qy Sont andJ HIS BAND BOB EIBEI{LE Thos favori'a Voclio of RPdio and 0-d *I 9 s: > 2 r r' > Y ?7 ' yo- T' i ti. . > [;fi s tix ' _ _, . h 'q . .. *' 3 \s ti: , '. SWEROMPAUJ1 .! Aw An