PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAILY parties were formed cannot live forever. For many years it has been apparent that there was little important differences in Republican and Democratic beliefs. The passing years of our crisis are continually emphasizing this fact Therefore, we believe that voters of America are increasingly concerned now with individuals and not parties. Old loyalties are being aban- doned. A candidate in the future will not be elected with Republican votes nor with Demo- cratic votes. The task of the politician of today, if he is to achieve anything, is to cast off the cloak of old allegiances in favor of one a bit less tattered and torn. The time may not have been ripe 10 years ago -it certainly is now. a The Conning Tower Publisned every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER 5soe#ted @ioegiatt rt -.1934 ] j H14)ezl 1935 AD"VASCOSIN MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to itor not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Specialrate of postage ranted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc.; 420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.--400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ...............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............. THOMAS E. GROEHN ASSOCIATE EDITOR...............JOHN J.FLAHERTY SPORTS EDITOR ....................WILLIAM R. REED WOMEN'S EDITOR ..............JOSEPHINE T. McLEAN MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF EDITORSH. ..DOROTHY S. GIES, JOHN C. HEALEY EDITORIAt ASSIS''ANTS News Editor ..............................Elsie A. Pierce Editorial Writers: Robert- Cummins and Marshall D. Shul- man. Night Editrs: Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Rich- ard G. Hershey, Raph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, and Bernard Weissman. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred Delano, Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy A. Briscoe, Florence H. Davies, 'Olive E. Gr~ffith, Marion T. Holden, Lois M. King, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. REPORTERS: E. Bryce Alpern, Leonard Bleyer, Jr., Wil- 1iam A. Boles, Lester Brauser, Albert Carlisle, Rich- 4rd Cohen, Arnold S. Daniels, William John DeLancey, Robert Eckhouse, John J. Frederick, Carl Gerstacker, Warren Gladders, Robert Goldstine, John Hinckley, S. Leonard Kasle Richard LaMaca, Herbert W. Little, Earle J. Luby; Joseph S. Mattes, Ernest L. McKenzie, Arthur A. Miller, Stewart Orton, George S. Quick, Robert D. Rogers, William Scholz, William E. Shackle- ton, Richard Sidder, I S. Silverman, William C. Spaer, Tuure Tenander, and Robert Weeks. Helen Louise Arner, Mary Campbell, Helen Douglas, Beatrice Fisher, Mary E. Garvin, Betty J. Groomes, Jeanne Johnson, Rosalie Kanners, VirginiaKenner, Barbara Lovell, Marjorie Mackintosh, Louise Mars, Roberta Jean Melin, Barbara Spencer, Betty Strick- root, Theresa Swab, Peggy Swantz and Elizabeth Whit- ney. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ..........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER.............JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER . . .MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S ADVERTISING SERVICE MANAGER, ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS: Local advertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Con- tracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohgemuth; Circulation and National Advertising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publications, Lyman Bitt- man. BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Charles W. Barkdull, D. G. Bron- son, Lewis E. Bulkeley, Richard L. Croushore, Herbert D. FAlender, Jack R. Gustafson, Ernest A. Jones, William C. Knecht, William C. McHenry, John F. McLean, Jr., Law- rence M. Roth, John D. Staple, Lawrence A. Starsky, Norman B. Steinberg, Donald Wisher. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Adelaine Callery, Elizabeth Davy, Catherine Fecheimer, Vera Gray, Martha Hanky, Mary McCord, Helen Neberle, Dorothy Novy, Adele Poller, Helen Purdy, Virginia Snell. WOMEN'S ADVERTISING SERVICE STAFF: Ellen Brown, Sheila Burgher, Nancy Cassidy, Ruth Clark, Phyllis Eiseman, Jean Keinath, Dorothy Ray, Alice Stebbins, Peg Lou White. NIGHT EDITOR: BERNARD WEISSMAN To The Homecorners . MANY OF MICHIGAN'S Alumni are back in Ann Arbor to participate in Homecoming. They are back to greet their class- mates and fraternity brothers, their friends on the faculty and in town --they are back to try and recapture a little of the 'glamphere' of their undergraduate days. We do not know what 'glamphere' is either, but it is necessary to invent a word that means: spirit, glamour, atmosphere, cheering at football games, receiving a grade of E and the multitude of things that make up one's undergraduate ex- periences. We wish the returning alumni every success in their pursuit of the elusive 'glamphere.' Today's football game --the main event, so to speak--is an appropriate one. Many of the old grads will recall the exciting series played with Pennsylvania in a day gone by. The renewal of this satisfying series pleases everyone. Nineteen thirty-five's Wolverine team is good, they improve every week, and, although they go into today's battle rated by many to lose, we think the Quakers are going to quake. If we don't win, it's still a great day. Alumni, the town is yours. Treat it gently, but have a good time. Exit The Old Line Partiesa. HAVEN'T ANY DOUBT," says Senator William E. Borah, "that this country is largely Republican. Mr. Roosevelt could not have been elected without Republican votes. He cannot be re-elected without Repub- lican votes." Mr. Borah is a veteran politician. generally Ati As Others See ItI Back To Small Towns (From the Daily Iowan)f ACCORDING to a recent news dispatch, Mar-F quette, an Iowa town of 814 population, hass no clergyman, doctor, dentist, lawyer, furnitureI store, jewelry shop, shoe store, blacksmith shop,I harness shop, printing office, implement store,2 newspaper, theater, photographer, bookstore,I grain elevator, clothing store, coal dealer, cream-i ery, or produce house.I Can it be that there is a city ordinance againstc business in this little village? The story gives no reason for the lack of business enterprises in the town. Unless the town is jinxed, or the trade ter- ritory around it so limited, we can see no reason why this is not the ideal location for several smart college graduates. Surely the apparent lack of competition ought to attract some of the products of our professional schools. After all the mere fact that 814 people are gathered togetheri in one spot should create enough trade and indus- try for at least one or two of these sorely needed enterprises. While Marquette has attracted much attention because of its number of apparently unexploited fields of endeavor, there are numerous other1 middle western towns that lack physicians, law- years, newspapers, and business houses of various types. If this country is to survive as a capitalistic nation where free enterprise flourishes and prem- iums are paid for brains and originality, the grad- uates of our universities must look again to small towns. If we are to carry on traditions of Yankee ingenuity, originality, and independence which have so colored the character of America for the last 200 years, we must forget bigness and all that goes with it, forget that the measure of man's success is not in the size of his salary, but rather in the good he can do for his community. For those of us who still have a desire to be our own bosses as much as possible in a highly civilized system, we say look to the smaller town. If this country is to continue to prosper and grow as it did in the past, those of us who have the training and ability should spread it out and realize the responsibilities we have to the country as a whole. The Personal Touch' (From the McGill Daily) T HAS BEEN STRESSED FREQUENTLY in the past by educationists and would-be educationists that the duty of a teacher is to give more than knowledge to his pupils -he must give part of himself, his personality, as well. This applies to no teacher more than to the university professor, for his students are both intelligent enough and eager enough to absorb whatever colour he may throw upon his lectures beyond the mere state- ment of facts. The professor, in the course of his study and teaching, has personally encountered the various shadings of meaning and general trends of detail that the student lacking in experience and prac- tical knowledge in his study, appreciates. It is therefore up to the professor to give what he can to his students, making their courses more than merely printed and articulated material. No professor, it must be admitted, fails to do this to some extent, but some, indeed, have made the unconscious mistake of overdoing it. That is, they colour their lectures with so much of their own personal opinion that all element of "discus- sion" disappears. It is the wary and skilled university professor, therefore, who strikes the happy medium, giving his students the benefit of his own superior ex- perience and stimulating activity in their own minds. Alcohol And Gasoline (From the Chicago Tribune) LETTERS TO THE EDITOR of the Tribune evi- dence the widespread belief that the number of automobile deaths in Cook county has increased alarmingly since the repeal of prohibition. The [facts do not bear out this thesis. Since repeal the number of deaths in automobile accidents has declined. From Jan. 1 to Oct. 28, 1935, the number of deaths in automobile accidents in Cook County was 792. The corresponding figure in 1934 was 1,002. The corresponding figure for 1932, the last year of prohibition, was 932. If repeal is to be blamed for the slight increase of deaths last year it must be credited with the much more substantial decrease in deaths this year. There is no slightest doubt that drunken drivers are a menace. The question to be considered is' not whether there should be drunken drivers, but whether repeal has put more of them on the roads than were there during prohibition. There are no reliable statistics bearing directly on this point, but the decline in the acciuent rate leaves HILL WOMAN She'll find it very easy to be dead, Who amply trots about her thousand chores In flower garden, house and barn and shed, 1 Setting things right, both in and out of doors. Quite simply she will meet all death's demands,s For now, to fertilize our stony lifet She gives her spirit daily, with both hands. I The tonic zest of this old farmer-wife Helps to enrich each creature that she knows. Thus, when she dies to the recurring plow X She cheerfully will yield her flesh; the rose 1 Will be her problem then, as well as now, How amiably she'll give her bones to corn! Living and dead, for this, her kind is born. E ORIANA ATKINSON.- Police Commissioner has ordered his subordinatel officers to put an immediate stop to the gang war-I fare. And a mighty good idea, too. Why do otherE public officers not emulate the Police Commis- sioner? Why doesn't the Commissioner of Motor< Vehicles order his officers, cooperating with the Police Department, to reduce motor accidents to zero? And why lags the Department of Health? Why not command every physician and surgeon in what Mr. Walker and the unofficial welcomers will call this great city to make any disease, or disorder impossible?; HARP; wish to dispose of one of my Lyon & Healy beautiful toned concert harps; $800. Y 81 Herald Tribune. Is one of the Marx Brothers broke? We are, and have been as long as we can re- member, a Mark Twain reader, though one who never went all the way with him, except with "Tom Sawyer" and "Huckleberry Finn." But it seems to us that Mark Twain might spin in his grave if he could know of the solemn, ponderous stuff that is being pulled every day of this his centenary year. Committees for this and that. practically hold a gun at your head, and say, "Damn you, me an appreciator of humor at 8:05 p.m., December 6." There seems to be dozens of committees, and dozens of dinners and celebra- tions. We are not alone in saying that it will take us a year or two to get back to liking Twain again. OCTOBER 31 Sir: Tonight, my Old Farmer's Almanac tells me is All Hallows Eve, and there will be apple- bobbin' and charades and all that. Marshmallows will be toasted over open fires and chestnuts roasted in the hot ashes. Corn will pop in a mil- lion houses, and the strains of ghost-played music will echo from the haunted house through all Can- opus Hollow. And yet despite all this, no frankfurter manu- facturer will be on the air exploiting the Hal- lowe'enie. * *Trademark registered. AL GRAHAM. The Hartford Courant's free cooking school opened Tuesday. There were lectures; there are lectures, for the school has a four-day session. The lectures are preceded by organ recitals, and everybody in Connecticut, to judge by the tele- phone queries that have come to us, wants to know what the program will be. Well, all that we can do is guess: "Oh, dear what can the batter be?" "Pease pudding hot." "Little Tommy Tucker." "The Chocolate Soldier." And of course, almost anything by Suppe, not to say Will Marion Cook. GEORGETOWN CART The sun peers down, the hills glance over, the road runs back and the lilac kneels, because the orchard shades a cart with yellow shafts and yellow wheels. A wagon that has yellow wheels must stay at home with little will, must ache to roll its yellow wheels from Georgetown up to Hotchkissville; from Hotchkissville to Farmington must long to show its yellow pride, to spin its suns through flying dust homeward down through Riverside, to flash its spokes through Redding Ridge into the apple orchard's shade. For such careering and such a blaze, surely were yellow cart wheels made. -J.T. To yesterday's World-Telegram Mr. L. Powers writes, and mentions "Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta, 'Olivette,' " quoting the "Bob Up Serene- ly" song. The song -the composer was Ed- mund Audran and the librettists Henri Chivot and Alfred Durn - occurs in "Olivette," all right. The English adapter was Henry Broughton Farnie, and, if we may risk memory there also was sung in that operetta "The Torpedo and the Whale" By the way, Audran composed also "The Mas- cot." AROMATOPHILIA I love to sniff the perfumed rose, And sniff the salt sea breeze; O rare delight when to my nose, Wafts tang of good ripe cheese. Oh, boy, to whiff a broiling steak, Or bacon in the pan; Sweet new-mown grass beneath the rake, Smells sweet to any man. But would that I were Cyrano, A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.-The pros- pect seen by the two Georgia senators of an audience of 200,000 to hear President Roosevelt speak in p Atlanta the day after Thanksgiving, l nvites attention. On what is it based? c That is a good-sized chunk of the t population of the state. It is per-B haps two-thirds of the population of Atlanta. It comes within shooting distance of the total vote cast ina Georgia in any recent presidentialt election. How can the Georgia sena-A tors be sure?f It is explained that the 200,000 fig- ure is not just a vague estimate based largely upon hope; but a definitea organized program aimed at Gover-d nor Talmadge, anti-Roosevelter-in- chief among southern DemocratsA since Huey Long's assassination. It is said to be documented by seat reservations at the twin mass meet- ings planned and already fortified byt requisitions for railway equipment to0 mobilize the crowd. The state's ownn facilities in that respect are describeds as exhausted. Borrowing from near-c by rail centers or even from distantt car and engine pools, is in progress. * * * *V LL of which illustrates again thet importance attached in the southF to party regularity - Democratic regularity, for by and large the solidI south does not admit there is moree than one party there. Jumping thet party reservation is always a dan- gerous expedient. Hopes and plans of third party advocates elsewhere int the country have bumped into that e old southern political custom to their own undoing.- There may be doubt among Demo- cratic leaders as to just when and how to open up full blast in reply tot "new deal" critics elsewhere in the country. Field Marshal Farley hasp intimated it was his idea of good strategy to let Republican spokesment fire away at will for some time yet before oiling up Democratic machin-t ery for organized counter attacks. The politically adroit Louis Howe, presidential secretary, feels the same, way. * * * * ALL that has nothing to do with Georgia. It is busy with a party discipline matter. It is out to prove to the country, according to spon- sors of the Roosevelt reception idea, that Governor Talmadge does not speak for the state at large in his anti-Roosevelt attitude. It will be interesting to see how it comes out, particularly what Mr. Roosevelt has to say. Watching his tactics both at Albany and in Wash- ington leads to the conclusion that the President does not favor verbally blasting his opponents by name, par- ticularly those within his own party. It seems to be his method not to erect needless barriers to a return of any of the "new deal" fold. Here is a case where the President is being invited to come down and help along a move by Democrats of his adopted state to put the bee on their governor in sensational fashion. Just how will he go about it? THE SCREEN AT THE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN "UNFINISHED SYMPHONY" The beautifully appealing story of the once-obscure ccmpser Franz Schubert is told in this Gaumont- British production centering about the young musician's difficulties en- countered in construction of his un- finished symphony in B minor. If technical imperfections common to most foreign-produced films and the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater's equip- ment are discounted, it may be said in all sincerity that the story is flaw- lessly told in a manner most pleas- ing to any cinema-goer who has risen above the Warner Brothers plane. "Unfinished Symphony" describes with excellent attention to detail the tangled life of the moody, unassum- ing Schubert. When first presented Schubert is performing his unfin- ished work, dedicated to Emmie (a youthful acquaintance) at a Court Musicale. At the very moment when he is inspired with an ending, the theme of which has been eluding him, the wild laughter of Countess Ester- hazy interrupts him and literally drives him from the salon. With Emmie unable to comfort him satisfactorilySchubert leaves to ac- cept a post as music-master, only to find that his pupil is Countess Ester- hazy. They fall in love when he is infatuated by her beauty and she by his music. Countess Esterhazy is subsequently driven by her father into a loveless marriage, and when Schubert returns to her to play his newly-completed symphony as a wed- ding present, he is once again inter- rupted, this time by Caroline's weep- ing. After destroying the ending of the symphony, he pauses on his homeward journey at a wayward shrine where he is inspired to com- SATURDAY, NOV. 2, 1935 VOL. XLVI No. 28 Notices LaVerne Noyes Scholarships: Ap- plicants for these scholarships may earn the result of the awards by calling at the office of the Assistant o the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall. President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to members of the faculties, their friends, and other residents of Ann Arbor on Sunday, November 3, from 4 to 6 o'clock. President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to the students on Wednes- day, November 16, from 4 to 6 o'clock. There will be no tea on Wednesday, November 6. Apparatus Exchange: The Regents at their meeting in March, 1927, au- thorized an arrangement for the sale of scientific apparatus by one depart- ment to another, the proceeds of the sale to be credited to the budget ac- count of the department from which the apparatus is transferred. Departments having apparatus which is not in active use are advised to send descriptions thereof to the University Chemistry Store, of which Prof. R. J. Carney is director. The Chemistry Store headquarters are in Room 223, Chemistry Building. An effort will be made to sell the appara- tus to other departments which are likely to be able to use it. In some instances the apparatus may be sent to the University Chemistry Store on consignment, and, if it is not sold within a reasonable time, it will be returned to the department from which it was received. The object of this arrangement is to promote economy by reducing the amount of unused apparatus. It is hoped that departments having such apparatus will realize the advantage to themselves and to the University in availing themselves of this oppor- tunity. Shirley W. Smith. Faculty, College of Literature, Science,yand ThegArts: Instructors are requested to send their "Fresh- man Report Cards" to Room 4, Uni- versity Hall, not later than today. Faculty, Engineering Freshmen: Reports to the Mentor System on all engineering freshmen will be collected from the faculty during the week of Nov. 4. Report forms are being dis- tributed to the faculty this week. Mentors will confer with freshmen on their standing during the week of Nov. 11. Faculty members will please take up routine questions with Miss Edmands, Dean Sadler's office; refer other questions to A. D. Moore, Head Mentor, 268 W. Engr., Telephone 576. Study Tours for Foreign Students: The second in the series of study tours for foreign students wishing to acquaint themselves with the facili- ties of the University and the points of interest on the campus will be held Monday, November 4. Students will assemble promptly at 4 o'clock in Room 201, University Hall, from which place they will be conducted through the Law Quadrangle. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. Angell Hall observatory will be open to the public for observation of the moon from 7:30 to 10:00 this eve- ning. Children must be accompan- ied by adults. Women Students Attending the Il- linois - Michigan Football Game: Women students wishing to attend the Illinois-Michigan football game are required to register in the Office of the Dean of Women. A letter of permission from par- ents must be received in this office not later than Thursday, November 7. If a student wishes to go other- wise than by train, special permission for such mode of travel must be in- cluded in the parent's letter. Graduate women are invited to reg- ister in the office. Byrl Fox Bacher, Assistant Dean of Women. Presidents of Student Organizations should report the names, titles and classes of all officers to the Dean of Students, Room 2, University Hall not later than November 15. Forms should be obtained in Room 2 for the purpose. The following are the names of student organizations as listed in the Office of the Dean of Students. Any organization which does not fur- nish the required information by No- vember 15 will be considered no long- er in existence. Any active organiza-' tion not listed should apply for of- ficial recognition at once. J. A. Bursley, Dean of Students. Acolytes Adelphi Aeronautical Engineers Alpha Alpha Gamma Alpha Epsilon Mu Alpha Gamma Sigma Alpha Kappa Delta Alpha Lambda Delta DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to thGPresident until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. Beta Kappa Rho Black Quill B'nai B'rith Hillel Independents Cercle Francais Chi Gamma Phi Chinese Student Club Christian Science Organization Cosmopolitan Club Delta Epsilon Pi Delta Sigma Rho Deutscher Verein Deutscher Zirkel Druids Forestry Club Freshman Girls' Glee Club Galens Gamma Alpha Genesee Club Graduate Outing Club Hillel Foundation Hillel Players Interfraternity Council Iota Alpha Iota Sigma Pi Junior Mathematical Society Kappa Beta Pi Kappa Phi Kappa Phi Sigma Kappa Tau Alpha Landscape Design Society Les Voyageurs Lutheran Student Club Michigamua Michigan League Mimes Michigan Public Health Club Michigan Union Michigan Wolverine Mortar Board Mu Phi Epsilon National Student League Nippon Club Omicron Kappa Upsilon Oratorical Association Panhellenic Association Phi Beta Kappa Phi Delta Kappa Phi Epsilon Kappa Phi Eta Sigma Phi Kappa Phi Phi Lambda Upsilon Phi Sigma Phi Tau Alpha Pi Lambda Theta Pi Tau Pi Sigma Polonia Literary Circle Quarterdeck Rendezvous Club Rho Chi Scabbard and Blade Scalp and Blade Scouting Fraternity Senior Society Sigma Alpha Iota Sigma Delta Chi Sigma Eta Chi Sigma Gamma Epsilon Sigma Rho Tau Sigma Xi Sociedad Hispanica Sociedad Latino-Americana Sphinx Stanley Chorus Student Christian Association Students' Theosophical Club Tau Beta Pi Theta Sigma Phi Toastmasters Transportation Club Triangles Undergraduate Council University of Michigan Band University of Michigan Forestry Club University of Michigan Glider Club University of Michigan Outdoor Club Vanguard Club Varsity Glee Club Vulcans Wesley Foundation Women's Athletic Association Women's Physical Education Club Women's Research Club Wyvern Zeta Phi Eta Lecture University Lecture: Oswald Garri- son Villard, Contributing Editor of the New York Nation, will lecture on the subject "The Present European Crisis," Tuesday, November 5, at 8:00 p.m., in the Natural Science Audi- torium. The public is cordially in- vited. Coming Events The Graduate Outing Club will meet at Lane Hall on Sunday, No- vember 3, at 3:00 for a hike through Barton Hills. Supper will be served at a cost of 25c. All graduate stu- dents are cordially invited to attend. Landscape Club Meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m. Don Wolbrink will talk about Isle Royale. Convocation. On Sunday, Novem- ber 3, The Reverend Fred Cowin and Professor Preston W. Slosson will speak on the subject of "Religion and Politics Look at War," at 8:00 p.m. in the Congregational Church. This meeting is sponsored by the Inter- Guild Federation and will follow the regular guild meetings. The student body and the general public are in- vited. Michigan Dames Child Study Group hold its first meeting on Monday evening, November 4, at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Karl Karsian, 1133 Forest Avenue. Mrs. F. W. Peterson, the faculty advisor to the group, will