HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 'GAME See Page 6 Y A6F AIi D1ai6ti COLDER AND CLOUDY VOL. LVI, No. 16 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1945 Michigan asses Diow"n urdue, 27-13 Planned Vet Olin ic Here Under Fire Change of Project Site To Detroit Is Asked Proposed plans of the Michigan Office of Veterans Affairs to estab- lish a permanent veterans readjust- ment clinic in Ann Arbor under the direction of the University were under fire this week when behind the scenes agitation arose in Detroit to have the clinic moved there. The clinic, designed for the use of veterans suffering from temporary mental disorders, has received the en- dorsement of the Board of Regents and University Hospital. Detroit Suggested for Clinic A spokesman for the Michigan Welfare League and the Michigan Society for Mental Hygiene indicated that the interest of the State could be better served if the clinic were estab- lished in Detroit. He pointed out that a 50-bed enter- prise would be grossly inadequate in a few years and that a Detroit clinic, working in conjunction with the Wayne University Medical College, would serve a wider range of people. What is needed is a 200 to 500 bed out-patient clinic for the treatment of mental ills, he said. To Cost $400,000 "This would cost approximately $400,000," he pointed out. What final disposition will be made of the plan will come from Lansing where consideration of the appropriation for the clinic is sched- uled within two weeks. * * * Vets May Ask For Tutoring A pro9anf of tutoring for veterans in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts is now being arranged, Dean E. A. Walter announced yester- day. Tutors will be members of the lit- erary college faculty. Subjects cov- ered will be chemistry, mathematics, French, physics, German and Span- ish. Veterans desiring help should re- port to the Office of the Academic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall, before noon on Wednesday. Army Officers Trained Here For New Posts Forty high-ranking Army officers have begun training on campus for future posts as military attaches to Latin American countries. - Seven majors, twenty lieutenant colonels and thirteen colonels are en- rolled in the program, which is of- ficially entitled the "Post Hostilities Training Course." They served in combat theatres during the war and several had already served in Latin America. The course is without precedent, being the Army's first use of aca- demic training in preparing officers for military missions. The 14-week program will include Latin America geography, history, contemporary events, economics and social, political and cultural institutions. At the con- clusion of this phase, the officers will receive instruction in Spanish. The courses are being offered in the east and west conference rooms of the Rackham Building by a spe- cial committee of the faculty headed by Prof. Arthur S. Aiton of the his- tory department. Prof. Sanford H. Mosk, of the University of California economics department is the first of several special lecturers supplement- ing the faculty. Similar courses are being offered in European affairs at Columbia Uni- versity and in Asiatic affairs at Yale University. Fraternittes Out At Chicago U' AND NOW FOR NEXT WEEKEND: evenEvents W Two Day Homecoming Frolic o Herald eacetime Shows With the Purdue game out of the way, the whole campus ,will turn its attention to the gala homecoming activities planned for next weekend. Using the all-important Michigan-Ohio State game as the center of festivities, students have planned a two-day program that should set a pat- tern for all post-war homecomings. Ticket sales for Friday's Varsity Night and Saturday's big dance at the Sports Building featuring Benny Carter and his orchestra will swing Conference TitlIe elcome alumni Hopes Still Alive Elliott Runs for Three Touchdowns, Passes for Fourth To Pace Wolverines By BILL MULLENDORE Daily Sports Editor Michigan's football team piled up a two-touchdown lead in the first half and then played its Purdue opponents on even terms the rest of the way to hang up a 27-13 victory and remain in the running for the Western Conference championship yesterday in Michigan Stadium. The Wolverines apparently were not hampered by a continuous drizzling rain that soaked the field and made ball-handling treacherous as they struck for three of their four scores through the air and put on their greatest dis- play of razzle-dazzle football this season. < His Two-Bits' Worth The local Community Chest drive lost two-bits when a con- fused male dropped a quarter into the Stockwell ticker box last week. Sitting next to the Community Chest box in the Stockwell lounge, the ticker box is for the tw a-cents worth variety of female gossip and complaints. Pianist To Play In First Choral Union Concert The appearance of Alexander Un- insky, distinguished young pianist, at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in Hill Auditor- ium, will mark the first of three con- certs in the Choral Union series to be presented by Russian-born artists. The fifth concert of the season will be presented by the popular Don Cos- sack chorus, conducted by Serge Jar- off, while Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony will appear here Dec. 10. Born in Kiev thirty-five years ago, Uninsky has rapidly ascended the ladder of fame.rCelebrated in Europe before the war, and more recently throughout South Anprica, he has, won outstanding acclaim in the Unit- ed States and Canada. Uninsky is counted among the handful of great keyboard titans of the day. His ar- into full gear tomorrow. Any stu- dent may obtain tickets from mem- bers of the Marching Band, fra- ternity and sorority representatives or at the Union desk. Line-up for the big weekend it as follows: A giant PEP RALLY will start at 7 p. m. Friday from the Union steps led by the University marching band. The crowd will march in a torch-lit parade to Ferry Field where a giant bon-fire and the campus cheerleaders will join in shouting the team to victory. 2 Star-studded VARSITY NIGHT will follow close upon the heels of the pep rally at 8:15 p. m. in Hill Auditorium. Joe Gentile and Ralph Binge, radio comics, will emcee the show which includes Tom Harmon, Bob Westfall, Hal Newhouser, the University Band under the direction of William D. Revelli, an all-girl trumpeting act, the Gardenaires and student acts. 3 Happy Joe Gentile's three-hour EARLY MORNING FROLIC will start the Saturday festivities with a broadcast from the Union Ballroom. The program is a regular feature of station CKLW in Detroit and Wind- sor. 4HOMECQMING DISPLAYS erect- ed by dormitories, fraternities and sororities will be judged just be- fore game-time. 5 The MICHIGAN-OHIO STATE game will be the highlight of the day's activities with 85,000 people expected in Ann Arbor to see the two teams clash. 6. BENNY CARTER and his orche- stra will wind up the gala week end by playing at an informal dance to be held from 8:30 p.m. to midnight in the Sports Building. Between sets the George Rose Trio from Detroit SCORES TWICE-Bob Nussbaumer, scampering 165-pound right half- back, personally accounted for two of Michigan's four touchdowns as the Wolverines dropped Purdue, 27-13, yesterday. Both times he took long passes from fellow halfback Pete Elliott. 'FREE EXCHANGE OF IDEAS" Charter for UNO Scientific, Cultural Organization Proposed will provide entertainment for ers. danc-I ALEXANDER UNINSKY .To Play Tomorrow tistic execution of Pagannini, Liszt and Chopin place him among the top virtuosi. Tomorrow night's program will fea- ture the Bethoven E-flat major so- nata and Prokofieff's "Sonata No. 7, Op. 83." Three Scarlatti sonatas will open the concert, while the "Waltz in G-fiat," "Nocturne in O-flat ma- jor" and three etudes, all by Chopin, three Debussy selections and Liszt's "Spanish Rhapsody" will complete the program. Four years after Uninsky played his debut recital in Paris in 1928, he won the International Chopin Com- petition in which more than one hundred pianists from all countries competed. May Foresees I Vote in 1946 On Conscription WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 --(P) -- Prospects for a House vote this year on universal military training faded today as Chairman May (Dem-Ky.) expressed doubt that the Military Committee could finish hearings be- fore 1946. Because of a desire to keep the highly controversial subject out of next year's Congressional elections, House leaders had hoped to dispose of the legislation before the Christ- mas vacation. Even after the hearings are fin- ished, May pointed out, some time will be needed by the committee to write the legislation. JGP Committee To Meet Members of the Music committee for Junior Girls Play will meet at 5 p.m. Monday at the League. The room will be posted on the board in the League lobby. Central Com- mittee members will not meet Mon- day. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 - The State Department released tonight a proposed charter for a United Na- tions Educational scientific and cul- tural organization devoted to stimu- lating a free exchange of ideas among peoples. The charter was worked out in London in a conference of 43 na- tions with one other as an, observer- but Russia was neither a member nor represented. An earlier draft was made public here several months ago. The announced purpose of the or- ganization and the charter is to bring about, among other things, an exchange of scientific information such as that which President Tru- man, Prime Minister Attlee and Prime Minister MacKenzie King pro- posed in their atomic energy policy statement earlier this week. The purpose of the organization therefore is declared to be "to con- tribute to peace and security by pro- moting collaboration among the na- tions through education, science and culture in order to further universal Portugal To Go TI o Polls Tod-fay Election's 'Free' - But Voters Have No Choi&e LISBON -(/P)- Portugal will vote today in a nation-wide election of- ficially described as free-but there, will not be a single candidate on the ballot who opposes the dictatorship of Premier Dr. Antonio de Oliveira Slaazar. Although the election is obviously a bid by Portugal to return to the good graces of the United Nations, voters will have no alternative but to endorse the 19-year-old dictator- ship if they ballot. So far, the only opposition to the premier has been expressed by thie politically weak intellectual class which has attempted to persuade voters to stay away from the polls tomorrow, in silent protest against Salazar. Bulgarians 'To Vote F or SinrFl e Slathe respect for justice, for the rule of law and for the human rights and fundamental freedoms which are af- firmed for the peoples of the world without distinction of race, sex, lan- guage or religion by the charter of the United Nations." Meeting Fails To Disentangle Snarl in Java See also HUNTLEY, Pg. 2 BATAVIA, Java, Nov. 17-(j)-The first conference of Dutch, Indonesian and British leaders ended late to- night without a formula for peace in Java, and the official Dutch News Agency Aneta declared Indonesian extremists had, called for a war to the death against the British. Aneta quoted the nationalist-con- trolled Jogj akarta radio as declaring: "This is the last night of peace. To- morrow we shall start and either kill the British or drive them from Java."J Thousands of armed Indonesians were reported massed in Jogjakarta, central Java stronghold of youthful extremists. Nationalists Quit Chinese City. CHUNKING, Nov. 17 -(IP)-Chi- nese Nationalists, fearing a Com- munist coup, were reported quitting Manchuria's capital of Changchun today even as their own troops fought into the province for the first time. Purdue, knocked out of contention for the Big Ten title by the loss, made a fight of it all the way, but failed to capitalize on all its scoring opportu- nities. Statisticsally, the two elevens were just about even with the Boiler- makers having the edge in first downs and rushing yardage. Passes Decisive Michigan's superior aerial game turned out to be the main difference between the two rivals. Although Coach Fritz Crisler's men attempted only eight passes, five were complete, and three produced touchdowns. Pur- due's Bob DeMoss clicked on nine of 15 heaves, but could not connect when the chips were down. A crowd of 51,000, slightly smaller than anticipated owing to the weath- er, saw Michigan capitalize on every scoring chance. Four times the Wol- verines drove inside the Purdue 30- yard line, and each time a touchdown was the result. The Boilermakers had five pay-dirt opportunities, but con- verted only two. A 50-yard pass play, Pete Elliott to Bob Nussbaumer producer the first Michigan score when the game was just four and one-half minutes old. A 63-yard landward march ended in another score midway in the second period, and the Wolverines seemed off to the races. Purdue Scores Purdue cut the margin to six points a few minutes later by taking ad- vantage of a recovered fumble deep in Michigan territory, but the Wol- verines got that one back a minute before the half ended on another Elliott-Nussbaumer aerial, this one good for 54 yards. Coach Cecil Isbell's charges, obvi- ously fired up for the game, attempt- ed a comeback in the second half and pulled within one touchdown early in the fourth period on a 58-yard march, but the Wolverines sewed up the game by counting for the last See WOLVERINES, Page 6 CoeMessage Signalled Attack Tokyo Radio Started Pearl Harbor Blow WASHINGTON, Nov. 17-(JP)-A coded message "Climb Mt. Niitaka" radioed from Tokyo Dec. 5 (Hawaiian time), 1941, gave a Japanese task' force the signal to launch its sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, Congres- sional investigators were told today. They also were informed that the Japanese were prepared to call off the attack if diplomatic negotiations in Washington had succeeded. Rear Adm. T. B. Inglis related to the Senate-House Committee the story of Japanese planning as gleaned from captured documents, question- ing of prisoners and, after the occu- pation, the Tokyo archives and ques- tioning of the Imperial Naval Com- mand. To Decide Fate Of Scholarshi Bomber Fund May Be Liquidated To Aid Vets The Bomber Scholarship Student Committee will meet "in a week or 10 days" to decide whether the Bomber Scholarship Fund should be liquidated now to aid returning vet- erans, Dean of Students Joseph A. Bursley, faculty advisor to the com- mittee, announced yesterday. The fund, if liquidated, would be turned over to the University Com- mittee on Scholarships. Approximate- ly $25,000 in war savings bonds has been donated by campus groups since the fund was established in February, 1942. Few Applications Questioned whether any inquiries concerning aid from the Bomber Scholarship Fund had been made by veterans, Dean Burley said that "a few" had been made during the sum- mer term but that an insufficient number of committee members were on campus to take action making the fund available. The University "tided these veterans over with loans," he said. Dean Bursley said he did not know how much aid would be sought from the fund, since it was established prior to the G. I. Bill of Rights. The Bomber Scholarship Fund was conceived by Art Rude, of the Class of 1942. The committee was formed on Feb. 28, 1942, and began accepting contributions on March 10. The cpm- mittee's program was "social mobili- zation" of the campus with the goal of "the price of a bomber now, scholarships for returning veterans later." Main source of contributions was campus social functions. Three Requirements Requirements for veterans seeking aid from the fund are: (1) at least six months in the armed forces (time spent in a college training program not counted), (2) at least two seme- sters of credit hours in an under- graduate school or college of the Uni- versity but not enough to be given a degree of any kind from the Univer- sity, and (3) fulfillment of the Uni- versity's general requirements-need, character, ability-for scholarships. The Bomber Scholarship Student Committee comprises the presidents of the Union, the League, IFC, Pan- Hellenic Association, Congress, As- sembly, Inter-cooperative Council, SRA and a representative of The Daily. SOIC Council Collects'$200 International Students Day Newspaper Sold At least $200 was collected yester- day when SOIC members became newsboys-for-the-day to sell the In- ternational Students Day issue of The Daily. "We wish to thank all those who joined us in observing the day by buying copies of the Daily," Jack Gore, SOIC's eecutive council chairman said on behalf of members of the organization. Managed by Manny Rose and Ar- thur Beaumont the special sale was undertaken to raise funds for the re- habilitation of the foreign university. The institution will be chosen at the campus election Dec. 5 and a slate of universities under consideration will be published sometime next week. MORE VACANCIES:- Student Veterans, Families Commute from Willow Run METHODIST SINGERS: Hardin Van Deursen To Direct Annual choir Festival Today More than 100 university student veterans and their families are now taking advantage of the housing fa- cilities at Willow Run Village, with additional space still available, ac- cording to figures released yesterday by Village officials. bedroom for couples with only one child. There is a waiting list of ten couples for such apartments, but they are being placed rapidly, Village officials reported. A regular scheduled bus service provides the student veterans with The Fifth Annual Choir Festival, featuring choirs from twenty-five churches of the Ann Arbor district of the Methodist Church under the direction of Prof. Hardin Van Deur- sen, School of Music, will be present- ed at 7:30 p. m. today at the First Methodist. Church. Dr. J. Brett Kenna, pastor of the host church, will deliver the invoca- tion, while Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, University religious counselor, will pronounce the benediction. Choral works to be presented in- clude Handel's "Messiah," "Hark, Hark, My Soul," by Shelley, Cesar 'Pank. "a n T ra f n r3_a" " ( li: