The Weather Mostly cloudy, probably snow flurries in north and extreme east Sunday; Monday fair. CLlrr Sir igan i Editorials Armistice Day, 1934 . Life Is A Gamble... ___________ VOL. XLV. No. 43 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Rally Against War Will Be HeldTonight United Front Committee Sponsoring Meeting In Science Auditorium Dr. A. E. Wickwell To Address Group Student Panel Will Lead Discussion By Audience After Main Speech Climaxing a week of upset and reformulated plans, a meeting intend- ed to demonstrate and crystallize student sentiment against war will be held at 8 p.m. tonight in the Nat- ural Science Auditorium. The main speaker of the evening, according to latest plans, will be Dr. A. E. Wickwell, of Detroit, who will discuss "War and Fascism." Follow- ing the address, the audience will par- ticipate in a general discussion of the subject, led by a student panel con- sisting of Kenneth Leisenring, Grad., George L. Abernethy, Grad., and Harold Lief, '38. The chairman of the meeting will be Michael Evanoff, '35L. The meeting is sponsored by the United Front Committee Against War, which includes representatives of The National Student League, The Mich- igan Vanguard Club, and The Mich- igan League Against War and Fas- cism. Originally the committee planned to hold a service in collaboration with the various church groups. The service was to be followed by a torch- light parade and the planting of hun- dreds of crosses on the campus to symbolize the Michigan students killed in the World War. When, according to the committee, the church factions withdrew the ar- rangements, the plans were altered, eliminating the church service from the program. Finally it was decidedthat the planting of crosses and the torchlight procession were not feasible, and the present plan for the anti-war rally tonight was decided upon. Members of the committee include Evanoff, Lief, Ascher W. Opler, '37, Samuel Magduff, '37A, William L. Fisch, 737, and Leo S. Luskin, '35. 'Fletcher Hurls Defiant Retort At Democrats WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. - (P) - A challenging insistence that the Re- publican party "is not dead and is not going to die" was flung at Demo- crats today in answer to Postmaster- General Farley's attempt to read that result in the G.O.P.'s defeat in Tues- day's election. Taking notice of reports that a new party might be formed on the wreck- age of the G.O.P., Henry P. Fletcher served a warning on Democrats that "we will continue to fight." Furthermore, the Republican chair- man predicted the New Deal "will topple" because of its "paternalistic and socialistic policies and that the "G.O.P. will carry on." Apparently somewhat encoutaged after conferences with other party leaders in New York about future plans, Fletcher held, in his first for- mral statement since the election, that there was "no other organization" to' take the field to make "the fight for sound economic and political principles." This was interpreted by political observers here as meaning the Re- publican high command had deter- mined to keep its lines together des- pite reports it might be reorganized into a new party under a different label. Fletcher claimed that despite the Democratic sweep and Farley's state- ment that the G.O.P. was "dead" the Republicans polled 47 per cent of Tuesday's total vote and that Demo- crats lost 7,000,000 compared with a Republican 3,000 drop under 1932. Police-Firemen Ball Tickets Put On Sale Tickets for the seventh annual Fire- men-Policemen Ball to be held Nov. 27 in the Masonic Temple were of- Relationship of Education And Religion Is Explained By Heaps EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last of a series of articles explaining the relig- ious opportunities available for students at the University. The series is being run in . conjunction with a concerted effort of religious organizations on the t~nm fn rai thf ct d t dl of the belief that this spiritual element hasr something akin to it in the uni- verse. Religion gives ground, there- fore, for a reasonable faith without which thprp N nno s irit of courageous cam pus to a vi se the sa u ent oa y o pSi. g Ll t.J. U 4 ,i 11U .)1 J Ul '.3. 1 Ugt UU6 j their activities, adventure for anything. It redeems By REV. ALLISON RAY HEAPS life from cynicism which poisons the (Minister, First Congregational Church) , springs of thought. Through prayer "Education is the continuous re- it organizes the inner life and gives fashioning of life in accordance with to life itself a rational purpose and ever new and nobler patterns." This meaning. is probably as good as any basic defi- If this be true, religion not only nition. Of religion we may say that "merits attention," but is an indis- it is the continuous refashioning of pensable necessity. I am not on the de- life in accordance with ever new and ;fensive for the church. It bears wit- nobler spiritual patterns. There may. ness all to often of a "tactful scintilla- be here a distinction without a dif- f tion of pious emotion" from the pul- ference, which but shows the affinity pit. The fact remains, however, that ij ,j > , FOOTBALL SCORES Syracuse 10, Mith. State 6. Ohio State 33, Chicago 0. Colgate 20, Tulane 6. Army 27, Harvard 6. Purdue 13, Iowa 6. Minnesota 30, Ind.iana 0. Illinois 14, Northwestern 3. Pittsburgh 25, Nebraska 3. Georgia 14, Yale' 7. Holy Cross 12, Mknhattan 6. Rice 7, Arkansas'0. Columbia 39, Brown 0. Stanford 24, Washington 0. California 7, South. California 2. Auburn 18, Georgia Tech 6. Fordham 27, West Virginia 20. Temple 34, Car#egie Tech 6. Pennsylvania 3, Penn State 0. Princeton 54, Lehigh 0. Kansas State 29, Missouri 0. Wisconsin Wins, 10-0, As Wolverines Fail In Scoring Opportunities I' Stars In Badger Line Lynn J o r d a n, Badgers' Sophomore Half, Runs 100 Yards For Tally Inevitable Showers Lower Attendance between education and religion. The point I would make is that re- ligion and education both represent growth. No period of life is comparable to college days from the standpoint of development. It is a period of change, transition, discovery, adjust- ment, awakeping, summed up in the one word, growth. Is that growth going to mean a more complete personality, the acqui- sition of a set of dependable values, an enrichment of in;sight, an achievement of emotional stability and social con- sciousness, the setting up of worthy goals of aspiration, the generation of moral energy cirected toward the establishment of a nobler common- wealth of man? Education needs religion for such a growth, because religion insists upon the presence and glory of a spiritual element in human life and nourishes I it is the one and only institution among men that continuously and un- equivocally stands for the spiritual interpretation of life, while worship, to use the words of Henry Nelson Weiman, is "the only way of reor- ganizing that totality of habits0which make up the complete personality."' Let the student work out his own religious salvation guided by ever new and nobler spiritual patterns. Let him utilize ever available aid in that direction. Dr. George A. Gordon for many years minister of the historic Old South Church of Boston, himself a profound scholar and a preacher that Harvard students delighted to hear, has left us this little transcript of col- lege experience (and how familiar the mood to every serious minded college young man and woman): "One day in Appleton Chapel, weary (Continued on Page 6) Dinner Monday Council Permit For Iawesmen Required Opens Annual ai u d an All fraternities were warned yester- Fg day by Alvin H. Schleifer, '35, secre- Ftary of the Interfraternity Council, to C prohibit any salesman from showing} City Divided Into Many his wares at their houses unless these salesmen have a permit from the Business Classifications ;Council. Leaders Named The reason for the warning is that many salesmen without Interfrater- .nits Cnnil nermitr hav bp- "in Armistice Day Sermlons Will Be Presented! Ann Arbor Churches Will Do Honor To War Dead In Services Today Services woven around various phases of Armistice Day will be pre- sented in many Ann Arbor churches today. At the Presbyterian Church the Rev. William P. Lemon will present his' sermon in the form of an imag- inary dialogue between the Unknown Soldier and a man' of the present day. Mr. Lemon will advance questions which he thinks the Unknown Sol- dier might ask, and will answer them in the light of present-day knowl- edge. The service will begin at 10:45 a.m. The Rev. R. Edward Sayles of the First Baptist Churclwill discuss "The Ministry of Reconciliation," also at 10:45 a.m. The Roger Williams Guild,, student organization of the Baptist Church, will meet at 6 p.m., with Prof. E. William Doty oo the School of Music speaking on "The Philosophy of Jesus." For his Armistice Day sermon the Rev. Charles W. Brashares of the First Methodist Episcopal Church has chosen the topic "Peace." Student meetings of that chtrch include a 4 p.m. session of the Wprld Friendship Circle, and a meeting at .6 p.m. of the Wesleyan Guild. "Peace With Honor," a book writ- ten by A. A. Milne, will furnish the basis for the Rev. Harold P. Marley's discussion at the 5 p.m. afternoon service of the. Unitarian Church. A1 student discussion at 7:30 p.m. will be led by Prof. Preston James of the geography department. Professor James will speak on the topic, "A Skeptic Looks at War and Peace." Members of St. Paul's Lutheran Church will hear their pastor, the Rev. C. A. Brauer, speak on "Tfie Power of Faith," at the morning serv- ice to be held at 10:45 a.m. He will also conduct the Student Walther League Bible Class from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. C MARIO PACE TTI, GUARD f I f f t 'h E Plans have been completed for a send-off dinner to be held at 6:15 p.m. tomorow at the Masonic Temple, which will open the annual Commun- ity Fund Drive, Charles Hutzel, head of the campaign, announced yester- day. Division leaders, who will carry on the campaign, were also named yes- terday. In order to eliminate house- to-house soliciting, the city has been divided into business classification divisions this year. F. E. Benz is chairman of tht automotive ,naus- try division, Earl H. Cress of the fin- ancial division, Prof. William Hoad of the construction division, J. Karl Malcolm of the clothing division, Harold J. Lepard of the furnishings division, George Sandenburgh of the officials division, Otto W. Haisley of the organizations division, and Ed- ward W. Breay of the public service division. There is also a special University division, which is headed by Prof. Robert Rodkey of the business ad- ministration school. This commit- tee, appointed by President Alexander G. Rathven, honorary chairman of the drive, is compsed of Prof. John E. Tracy of the Law School, Prof. Wells I. Bennett of the architectural col- lege, Dr. Russell Bunting of the dental school, Prof. Raleigh Schorling of the education school, Prof. Russell Dodge of the engineering college, Dr. Harley Haynes, director of Uni- versity Hospital, Prof. Louis Eich of the speech department, and Charles Edmund of the Medical School. Gorman Again Elected Head Of Press Club, Michael E. Gorman, managing ed- itor of the Flint Journal, was re-elect- ed president of the University Press Club of Michigan at the organiza- tion's closing meeting in the Union yesterday morning. Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour- nalism department, was also re-elect- ed as secretary-treasurer of the or- ganization. Frank J. Russell of Iron Mountain, Phil T. Rich of Midland,I William H. Berkey of Cassopolis, and Floyd Miller, Royal Oak, were elected as vice-presidents;.A' The convention passed a resolution eulogizing the late E. J. Ottaway of} Port Huron, who for many years was active in the affairs of the club. Paul F. Voelker, superintendent of public instruction in Michigan, and Eugene Elliot of the department of education were speakers at a sympo- sium on public education held earlier in the morning. *JyV p. UIJA sA Ul'n llt JUUve Veen n- festing houses with 'gyp' proposi- tions," and with goods of an inferior and questionable character. No salesman is supposed to show his wares in a fraternity house until he has first received this license from the council offices. Contest For Opera Poster Ends Nov.16 Posters to be submitted in the Un- ion Opera poster contest which started Nov. 7 and which will close' Nov. 16, must be turned ir, before 3:30 p.m., the day on which the competition is to close, to Room 345 in the Architectural Building. The jury which will choose the prize winners is composed of Prof. H. A. Fowler, chairman, Prof. W. J. Gores, Frederick Aldrich and R. T. Billenger, instructors, and Russell McCracken, '32, director of the Union Opera. Each student may suDmit from one to three posters, following the in- structions which were previously pub- lished in The Daily and which may be secured upon inquiry at the Union. Prizes, including cash and tickets to the opera, have been offered. SENIORS, TAKE NOTICE The dlealine for seniors to have! their pictures taken for the 1935 'En- sian has been set for Dec. 3, accord-f ing to an announcement made by Robert J. Henoch, '35, business mana- ger. All seniors are urged to attend to this, because the staff of the 'Ensian is attempting to get the book out at1 an earlier date than in previous, Serge Jaroff To Don Cossacks Auditorium Male Chorus Of 36 To Sing Here Nov. 19 Conduct At Hill Stuart Chase Recovering, Will Give Delayed Talk Wednesday Stuart Chase is recovering from kind of work that is the most fun."{ the severe attack of laryngitis con- Somersworth, N. H., was the birth- place of Mr. Chase. He studied mathe- i matics and engineering for two years be able'lo appear at 8:30 p.m. Wed- at Massachusetts Institute of Tech-j nesday in Hill Auditorium to lecture nology, and specialized in economics' on "The Economy of Abundance." and statistics during his two yearst In his lecture Wednesday, Mr. Chase at Harvard, where he received his! will draw from all of the books he bachelor's degree in science in 1910.' has written in an attempt to make He practiced public accounting inc a broad and vivid picture of existing Boston until 1917, and received the conditions and problems. Included degree of Certified Public Accountant: among the books which he has writ- from the State of Massachusetts inj ten are: "The Tragedy of Waste," 1916 and was sent to Chicago to take( "Men and Machines," "The Nemesis charge of the investigation of Armour of American Business," and "A New & Company which was part of thel Deal." general meat investigation. He was Heis reputed to be one of the transferred to the Food Administra- greatest American platform speakers tion in 1918 and placed in local charge and, according to officials of the Ora- ' of the Control of Packers' Profits torical Association, he presents a dis- under the wartime regulation of the tinctively human approach to the Food Administration. problem of present needs of the peo- After the war, he rejoined the Fed-j ple and how those needs are to be eral Trade Commission, wrote a book New Literary Magazine To1 Appear So on Succeeding to last year's "Inland Review," a new literary magazine en- titled "Contemporary" will appear on campus about two weeks before Christmas Vacation. The announced purposes of the new publication are to encourage writing by Michigan students, to provide an opportunity for publishing the best and most interesting material' pro- duced here, to stimulate the expres- sion of divergent points of view, and to continue and emphasize the tradi- tion of student literary activity as represented by previous literary per- iodicals and as now embodied in the Hopwood Awards. Contributions will be accepted chiefly from students, but also from alumni and faculty members. Manu- scripts may be turned in at the Eng- lish office in Angell Hall. They will all be returned, with criticism if the writer so desires. The editorial staff of "Contempor- ary" consist of Leo Kirshbaum, Eng- lish instructor in the college of engi- neering, Morris Greenhut, Grad., Willard Blaser, '35, Donald Elder, '35, Otto Bird, 35, Kathleen Murphy, Grad., Robert Warshow, '37, and Ar- thur Carr, '35. Mr. Harvey Websterj of the English department is acting! as informal adviser. The business staff includes Nath- an Katzman, '37, Joseph Andriola,, '37, and Irving Tenenblatt, '37. 1 The program of the Don Cossack Russian Male Chorus, which will pre- sent the third of the season's Choral Union series concerts, Nov. 19 in Hill Auditorium, has been designed to give this group of 36 artists an opportunity to sing all of the types of songs for which theyhhave become famous. Under their youthful conductor, Serge Jaroff, the chorus will be heard in folk songs, sacred music, and Cos- sack war songs. In addition, they will present several of the traditional Russian dances with musical accom- paniment. Several of the numbers which they have selected for their Ann Arbor appearance are the compositions of Rimsky-Korsakoff. Other great Rus- sian composers whose music will be interpreted include Modeste Mous- sorgsky and Peter Tchaikovsky. The chorus will also be heard in a group of soldier's songs which has been especially selected and arranged by Mr. Jaroff as well as his arrangements years, Henoch stated. ! of several Cossack songs. Virgil C. McNitt Denies Press Is Controlled By Big Business By F. WARNER NEAL stores and their business dwindled That the American press is "free almost to nothing." Tham treAmeigcasiness isnfrny1 "The newspaper publisher feels no from control of big business in any more obligation to a buyer of adver- way whatsoever," was the opinion tising than does a merchant to a buy- vigorously asserted by Virgil C. Mc- er of goods," he declared, "and in Nitt in an interview yesterday. Mr. I practically every newspaper in the land, the editorial department neither McNitt is prominently known as a f knows or cares what the advertising journalist and was in attendance department is doing." here at the press convention. The journalist said he could recall Citing a portion of Prof. James K. but one case in which a newspapers Pollock's address Friday afternoon policy was directly affected by its which stated that "the German press advertisers. "This was in 1924 in is the mouth-piece for the German Cleveland," he explained; "when the government as the American press is 'Press' took a vigorous stand for La- for big business," Mr. McNitt stated Follette for president. The advertis- that "while Professor Pollock prob- ers objected when LaFollette was vic- ably did not mean it literally, that torious and threatened to withdraw view is erroneous." He said that it their patronage. The policy was was an opinion "commonly held in dropped and the editor fired. This, university circles." however, is but an exception to the "In more than 30 years of expe- rule," he maintained. rience in the newspaper business, Mr. McNitt, who is associated with he declared, "I have yet to find a the McNaught syndicate in New York cvnln *1 rnn~.rnnrf of' the n.q~ vtirn City n~cl nnq A ,-ttxn- rhQVc'n.in in Chris Everhardus' Play In Bakfield Is Only Ray Of Hope In Local Camp By ARTHUR W. CARSTENS Lynn Jordan, sophomore half who has been playing bit parts in Wis- consin's football drama all season, stepped into a starring role here, yes- terday when he returned the opening kick-off exactly 100 yards through the whole Michigan team for a touch- down. It was the longest run ever made in the new Stadium and was sufficient to give the Badgers a vic- tory over Michigan, although they al- so tallied a field goal in the last quar- ter to make the final score 10 to 0. Had Many Chances Though Michigan had numerous opportunities to tie the score when they were outplaying the Badgers in the first half, the Wolverines couldn't gain when near the oppon- ent's goal line. Michigan's golden opportunity to tie the score came on Ward's kick-off after Jordan's sensa- tional sprint when John Fish fumbled and the ball was recovered by Borg- mann on Wisconsin's 21-yard line. The Wolverines went to Wisconsin's three-yard line in five plays but here lost the ball on downs. The inevitableSaturday rain start- ed a half hour before game time, and, combined with generally overcast weather all day, kept the attendance down to a meager 20,000 fans. "One Ray Of Hope" One ray of hope in the Michigan camp as the Wolverines sunk deeper into the morass of the Conference cel- lar was the work of Chris Everhardus while carrying the ball. The soph- omore brother of Michigan's great running back last year gained five to ten yards consistently through the line and around the ends during the first half, after replacing Whitey Aug at left halfback. Everhardus was the spearhead of two Michigan thrusts into Wisconsin's territory in the second quarter. The first drive was stopped on the Wis- consin 29 and the second was halted by the gun ending the half, Michigan Loses Power Though Michigan's aggressive play in the first half kept the ball in Wis- consin territory the Badgers came back in the last 30 minutes to hold the Wolverines even, and, themselves, engineer several thrusts deep into Michigan territory. Near the end of the third quarter a Wisconsin line- man fell on Sweet's fumble on Mich- igan's four-yard line but Michigan immediately got the ball back when Jankowski fumbled and Savage re- covered. With Regeczi punting poorly, as he was all afternoon, the Badgers were soon back in the shadow of Mich- igan's goal. One thrust ended with Pacetti's attempted place kick with the ball on the 28-yard line. It was wide, but a few plays later Regeczi, in punt formation, got a bad pass from center and after trying to run, kicked the ball into a group of charg- ing Badgers, one of whom recovered on Michigan's eight-yard line. The Wolverine line held, however, and Pacetti was again forced to at- tempt a field goal. Standing on the 19-yard line he sent the ball soaring squarely between the uprights. Every Trick Used Quarterback Ferris Jennings pulled every Michigan trick out of the bag during the game, and most of them worked, but not when the Wisconsin goal was in sight. "Old 83," the flea- flicker pass, the statue of liberty, and the fake kick all were used, as was a nine man line formation with Sweet carrying the ball. The latter play failed miserably. Regeczi's punts averaged only 31 yards from the line of scrimmage and most of his passes were far over the