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November 15, 1935 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1935-11-15

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SE FOR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDA

LY, NOVEMBER 15, 1935

THE MICHIGAN DAILY
- r -

1

-e.
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
Asodatetd (ollegiate * res
_ -134( 'Ieejgt 1935e
[t... . IA95W WN NtSN
MEMBER OF THE~ ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press s exclusively entitled to the use
for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or
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. Special rate of postage granted 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,
Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street,
Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214.
Represntatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michigan Ave.,
Chiago, Ill.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR..............THOMAS H. KLEENE
ASSOCIATE EDITOR .............. JOHN J. FLAHERTY
ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............THOMAS E. GROEHN
SPORTS EDITOR....................WILLIAM R. REED
WOMEN'S EDITOR.............JOSEPHINE T. McLEAN
MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF EDITORS.
..........DOROTHY S. GIES, JOHN C. HEALEY
EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS
NIGHT EDITORS: Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey,
",r a Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, Bernard Weissman,
s Guy M. W.hipple, Jr.
News Editor....... .....................Elsie A. Pierce
Editorial Writers: Robert Cummins and Marshall D. Shul-
man.
SPORTS ASSISTANTS: George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred
Delano, Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman.
WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy A. Briscoe, Florence H.
i -Davies, Olive E. Griffith, Marion T. Holden, Lois M.
King, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel.
REPORTERS: E. Bryce Alpern, Joseph P. Andriola, Lester
Brauser, Arnold S. Daniels, William J. DeLancey, Roy
Haskell, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton D. Heppler, Paul Ja-
cobs, Richard LaMarca, Thomas McGuire, Joseph S.
Mattes, Arthur A. Miller, David G. Quail, Robert D.
IRogers, William E. Shackleton, Richard Sidder, I, S.
Silverman, -Don Smith, William C Spaller, Tuure
Tenander, Joseph Walsh, Robert Weeks.
Helen Louise Arner, Mary Campbell, Helen Douglas,
Beatrice Fisher, Mary E. Garvin, Betty J. Groomes,
g Jeanne Johnson, Rosalie Kanners, Virginia Kenner,
Barbara Lovell, Marjorie Mackintosh, Louise Mars.
Roberta Jean Melin, Barbara Spencer, Betty S'rick-
root, Theresa Swab, Peggy Swantz, and Elizabeth Whit-
ney.
BUSINESS STAFF
Umi Telephone 2-1214
BUSINESS MANAGER ........GEORGE H. ATHERTON
CREDIT MANAGER...........JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD
WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ....MIARGARET COWIE
WOMEN'S ADVERTISING SERVICE MANAGER .
ELIZABETH SIMONDS
DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS: Local advertising, William
Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Con-
tracts, Stanley Joffe; Aceounts, 'Edward Woilgemuth;
irculation and National Advertising, John Park;
lassfied Advertising and Publications, Lyman Bitt-
naan.
BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Charles W. Barkdull, D. G. Bron-
son, Lewis E. Bulkeley, Jr., Richard L. Croushore, Her-
bert D. Falender, Jack R. Gustafson, Ernest A. Jones,
William C. Knecht, William C. McHenry, John F. Mc-
Lean. jr. Lawrence M. Roth, John D. Staple, Lawrence
A. Starsky, Norman B. Steinberg, Donald Wilsher
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 Polier, 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: CLINTON B. CONGER
Frank J. Navin,
An Appreciation..-.
PERHAPS accurately or perhaps in-
accurately the people who have
known or have known of Frank J. Navin will re-
member him primarily as a baseball man.
His death has brought an end to a career which
included many endeavors, yet in none did the peo-
ple of Detroit and Michigan so intimately identify
their hopes and interests with him as in baseball.
His 30 years with the Detroit Tigers will not soon be
forgotten for that reason, as well as for others.
Although too wise to believe that baseball was
not a business, throughout these 30 years he op-
posed, more than anything else, the commercial-
ization and cheapening of the game. He fought
artificial and gaudy innovations. He and his
players did not engage in noisy and much-pub-
licized salary disputes. He was always concerned
with making the Tigers a Detroit and Michigan
team rather than a Navin team.

It was a happy coincidence that his death did
not come until after he had seen an enthusiastic
fandom' applauding his first world championship
club. It is superfluous to remark that both fan-
dom and club, realize that they couldn't have
lost a better baseball man.
Heroic Words
Are Uttered ...
ONE OF THE MOST ACUTI$ obser-
vations on social and political issues
of modern times and the response of the public
to those issues was made recently by Dr. Alfred
Adler, noted Viennese psychologist.
Commenting on the causes of war, he said,
"Among the little things that start big wars are
metaphors. People know more than they under-
stand, and the leaders instinctively know how to
arouse them. Metaphors are used to arouse. Heroic
words are uttered."

the day and such "ardent worshippers" of the
metaphorical as Hugh Johnson and Father Cough-
lin are constantly headlined in the newspapers of
the nations.
Father Coughlin "wins his spurs" as a "meta-
phor-ist" with the phrase "money-changers in the
high temples of finance." Johnson "hatches"
as a champion of the metaphorical with his asso-
ciations of the NRA with everything from eggs
to "boondoggling" and "dead cats."
And now the latest to join the "elite" of the
metaphorical world is Dr. Park R. Kolbe, presi-
dent of the Drexel Institute of Philadelphia, whose
resolution against activities of student pacifists
was recently rejected by a convention at Boston of
the Association of College Deans and Presidents.
Dr. Kolbe "revived" Johnson's "dead cats" and
started them "pussyfooting." "We are pussy-
footing," he charged in response to the defeat of
his resolution, "and apparently are going to keep
on pussyfooting and side-tracking this question by
using questionable methods."
Dr. Kolbe, in the word "pussyfoot," has given us
a perfect illustration of the whole, glamorous,
amusing, internally corrupt "reign" of the meta-
phorical, or what Dr. Adler described as "heroic
words."
For what normal person can be expected to
think of the terrible dangers involved in a measure
which would prevent students from participating
in movements for peace, who can be expected to
realize that such a measure must be in effect a
definite sanction of the slaughters and horrors
of war --when he or she is presented with the
idea of a group of dignified college presidents
"pussyfooting" around an auditorium in Boston.
To borrow from their own "weapons" we claim
that such metaphor-izing, regardless of the worth
of the issues involved, is no more nor less than a.
nation-wide "bender." Everyone has a good time,
but oh the headaches on the morrow.
In The Name
Of Art...
B EAUTY OF FORM, beauty of color,
beauty of line -these qualities
have always been considered an important part of
anything which can truly be called art. Any
work which is so classified appeals to the senses,
and is either sufficiently attractive or, in some
few cases, repulsive, to create a lasting sensuous
impression.
It is difficult, then, to understand why the "im-
pressionistic" paintings now being displayed in
Alumni Memorial Hall by the Ann Arbor Art As-
sociation are considered as even an extreme form
of art. They are ugly, but not sufficiently re-
pulsive to create any impression whatsoever ex-
cept one of disinterest. None of the subjects treated
seem to have been especially well adapted for
studies of planes or masses. It is true that subject
matter has been relegated to a secondary position,
according to the dictates of the school, but the
beauty of form which is supposed to shine through
as a consequence seems to be lacking.
Even the most casual observer is forced to admit
that such works as Leger's "Composition With
Leaf" have bright, rich colors, but the same ob-
server is at a loss to see any value in the manner
in which these colors have been applied. The
study in its entity remains devoid of life and char-
acter, and only the most affected learning will
attempt to read any meaning or purpose into
paintings like Picasso's "Composition."
Taken as a whole, with the exception of a
rather hazily-done pair of maidens by Laurencin,
the paintings have no more beauty or meaning
than a collection of absent-minded scribblings on
a telephone pad.
It is easy to fool people, easy to make them think
that they are being very intelligent by appearing
to understand such nonentities as impressionistic
"art." But surely a moment's thought will serve
to make it clear that it is not really art, that un-
like the classic art so scorned by the modernists,
it does not afford any pleasure to those who see it,
and doing so is, after all, the basic purpose of all
creative work.
The Readers'
Blue Pencil...0

S MOOTH FOL-DE-ROL is beginning
to flow out of the pens of editorial
writers with the beginning of the open season on
buncombe and the national election in the offing.
Leading many other newsorgans in editorial
meaninglessness as in circulation is the Chicago
Tribune, personal press-sheet of Col. Frank M.
Knox, arch-Republican.
Whistles the Chicago Tribune, in an editorial
on the consequences of a recent political survey
of the nation by one of their staff writers, the
People of the United States are "in no mood to
be regimeited politically under the influence of
ancient party loyalties and time-worn slogans ...
The individual is thinking as an American free
man, conscious of his responsibility for the defense
of his heritage and for the adoption of measures
and policies conducive to the restoration of the
nation's strength and progress."
What clap-trap! If it were not for the insidious
effect such pseudo-reasoning will have on our dear
unthinking Americans, their ingenuous confusion
would be funny!
Continuing in the same strain (the strain is on
the reader) the Tribune says that this power of
independent reasoning "is a condition which every
believer in our democratic society must welcome
and on which the collective action of the Re-
publican party must be firmly and faithfully built
if it is not to insure its defeat and disintegration.
The Republican convention must be composed of
men who represent this spirit and will give it full
play."
How delightfully subtle! How very wrong, in-
deed.
If we are to preserve any effective individual

The Conning Tower
1835 -FRESHMAN -1935
Great-grandpa came to college
In eighteen thirty-five,
He used a horse for haulage
And tied it in the drive;
There was no rush committeek
Dispensing freshman caps,
With "Welcome to Our City"
Expressions on their maps;
Alone he sought admission,t
The President looked stern:
"Had he enough ambition?"
"Was he on fire to learn?"
He'd had so few essentials-
Some Tully and some Weems,
But most of his credentials
Were merely future dreams;
A letter from his preacher
Brought forth a friendly look:
"This lad will make a teacher" ...
He signed the college book,
And paid his first tuition
From hard-earned summer cash,
So came the quick fruition
A wish that once seemed rash;
At last matriculated,
Down steps he fairly ran,
Picked up his trunk, elated,
He was a college man!
Great-grandson thumbs to college
In nineteen thirty-five,
But not for lack of knowledge -
He's competent to drive;
His advent is preceded
By letters by the score,
When one request is heeded,
There come a dozen more
For detailed information-
Fill out this questionnaire
About your father's station,
The color of hi hair?
His parents flee on binges,
All creaky in the joints,
On this admission hinges-
Has he just fifteen points?
Then come the "Welcome" letters,
The Freshman Bible, too,
From sophomoric betters-
A most aggressive crew;
A week in mid-September
Is spent in varied tests:
How much can he remember?
Should dinner coats match vests?
His I.Q., please? His mucles?
His list of aptitudes?
Admixed with sundry tussles
With fellow-salesmen-studes;
His paper-work completed,
What's left is little joy,
Though pretty much defeated,
He is a college boy!
H.A.L.
The author of the preceding poem, a professor
of philosophy at Union College, told college stu-
dents recently that they ought to read at least
one newspaper critically and thoroughly daily.
"You will have to read something besides the sports
pages and the movie magazines," he sad. He
picked out a good day to advertise the Herald-
Tribune, in whose name we thank him.
Former President Hoover made an appeal to
"the thinking citizens of the United States." It is
a limited appeal, though there is hardly a citizen
who doesn't say to himself that he is included
in that select group. There are dreaming citizens,
and hoping citizens, and despairing citizens; but
the citizenry, the voting citizenry, cannot be ac-
cused of thought. You can lead a citizen to
water, but you can't make him think.
There ought to be a constitutional amendment
making it compulsory for a citizen to think. There
should be annual inspections of every citizen's
thinking engine. It would make voting simple;
and thousands of unthinking citizens would get
jobs as inspectors. An inspector would come to
your house, say, and greet you with, "Well, what
to you think, big boy?" If you couldn't tell him
you'd lose the divine privilege of voting until the

next inspection.
The League for Less Noise is consistent, and
our support now is unqualified. Its office is
equipped with a Noiseless Typewriter.
Doubtless the telephone bell is a necessary noise,
but we wish that the League for L. N. would write a)
play. In each scene there would be a telephone
which never, during the course of the play, would
be used.
The New York Society Library, 109 University
Place, lists in "New York in Fiction" George Ade's
"Artie." This is as utterly Chicago as it can be,
and we beseech the Library to delete it from the
alleged stigma of having been written about New
York. And while the Library is revising that list
it should instruct its proofreader to remember that
the author of "The Four Million" was not O'Henry.
It is suggested by a Prudential policy holder that
if the Italians seize Gibraltar a certain insurance
company might have to acquire Plymouth Rock.
There is one trouble about the 1939-40 World's
Fair. It is likely to attract at least one of the na-
tional conventions to this city.
-F.P.A.
Often heard around The Daily is the suggestion
by faculty men that staff members some day re-
turn to the University to get the education they
are missing this time. Now comes the news that
Mrs. Gracie Penrod Jansen, first editor of the
West Texas State Teachers College newspaper

A Washington
BYSTANDER
By KIRKE SIMPSON
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.-Pub-
licity is the life-blood of politics;
but too much of it at the wrong time
is dangerous to those it would bene-
fit. That is particularly true about
aspirants for presidential nomina-
tion. Unless they are prepared to
launch formal campaigns, to go af-
ter delegates in many states simul-
taneously, a favorite son status and
just enough publicity to keep them in
the public eye, is the traditional strat-
egy.
Governor Landon of Kansas and
his suporters for 1936 Republican
nomination may be thinking along
these lines right now. The Kansas
budget-balancer has enjoyed an ex-
traordinary degree of national pub-
licity in the last few weeks. To the
uninitiated it might appear that
Washington political writers were all
suddenly and simultaneously imbued
with the Landon-in-'36 idea and went
out to Kansas to see about it.
THAT was not the case. Nothing
particularly new had happened
to draw so much political attention
to the Kansas executive. What did
happen was that a number of Wash-
ington writers seized on President
Roosevelt's western trip and subse-
quent three weeks at sea to make
political surveys. Few of them missed
out on a Kansas port of call on the
way back.
Governor Landon met the visita-
tion without falling into the tempta-
tion of parading his paltform views
extensively. He must have under--
stood the situation and clung to his
concentration on state activities. It
was quite a test for a man who prob-
ably had not previously gone through
any such experience.
* * * *
YET, any student of the Republican
convention of 1920 might have
forecast what Landon's attitude
would be. That was the last time
the party, out of power, set out to
find a candidate without reference to
the occupant of the White House.
There were 15 candidates on the first
ballot for a presidential nominee. It
imediately developed that the group
of "favorite sons" held a veto power
over the leaders, General Wood, Low-
den of Illinois and Hiram Johnson
of California.
It took 10 ballots and the immi-
nence of a weekend recess that might
have seen a great change in the per-
sonnel of many delegations, to break
that deadlock in favor of Harding,
Ohio's favorite son. Present indica-
tions are that an even wider distribu-
tion of strength among a larger group
of favorite sons may mark first bal-
loting in the next Republican conven-
tion.
Landon strategy appears to be
aimed at a favorite son role next year.
At least, all the sudden interest in
him as a potential presidential nomi-
nee shown by the political writers has
failed thus far to stir him out of that
probable approach. There is plenty
of time for a nomination drive later
if the Landon idea takes hold.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1935
VOL. XLVI No. 39
Notices
University Directories and Campus
Telephone Directories: Copies of the
University Directory have been
mailed to the homes of faculty and
staff members and copies of the
Campus Telephone Directory have
been delivered to campus offices in so
far as possible. It should be under-
stood that the material contained in
these publications is identical. Any
office or person missed in the dis-
tribution may obtain their copies at
the Business Office, Room 3, Uni-
versity Hall.
Freshmen in the College of Litera-
ture, Science and the Arts who have
not received their five-week progress
reports may obtain them in Room 102,
Mason Hall, from 8 to 12 and 1:30 to
4:30 according to the following sched-
ule:

Fantasie, Op. 49
Mrs. Rhead

s
t:
t
d
t
s
Y
C
t
Y
C
C

Surnames beginning
Monday, November 18.
Surnames beginning
Tuesday, November 19.
Surnames beginning
Wednesday, November

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 the President
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. w

Chopin

A through G,
H through 0,

P
20.

through Z,I

THE SCREEN 1
AT THE MICHIGAN
"SPECIAL AGENT"
A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer picture star-
ring Bette Davis, with George Brent,
Ricardo Cortez, Jack LaRue, and Henry
0' Nell.
(minus)
The Davis-Brent team scores again
in this, another in the series of G-
man pictures which would certainly
be very tiresome by now if it weren't
that they haven't as yet reached the
stereotyped stage.
One of the things that is impres-
sive is the excellent casting. Brent
is very convincing as the undercover
man for the department of justice
who pretends to be a reporter. In
this way he gains the confidence of
Carston, (Cortez) who is the king of
racketeers and public enemy number
one.
Bette Davis gets along well as the
able-to-take-care-of-herself gal who
has become Cartson's privatesecre-
tary, though completely innocent of
any crime herself. And Jack La-
Rue, as one of Carston's lieutenants,
does a great piece of acting when the
heat is turned on him by the district
attorney and the police commission-
er. The former is Henry O'Neil,
convincing as ever.
The story opens with all the G-men
being told to get Carston alive. The
job is the particular assignment of
Brandon (Brent) and he follows the
trail through a number of unusually
bloody killings, all of which are en-
gineered by Carston.
In between times we are shown
some of the rackets which Carston
heads, and also listen in on a few
sessions at which he is totalling his
prodigious income, on which he al-
ways forgets to pay taxes. This lat-
ter item irritates the treasury de-
partment no end, but in the end they
do the same to Carston and ship him
off to Alcatraz for a 30-year vaca-
tion in the Pacific.

Physical Education for Women:
Registration for the indoor season
will take place at Barbour Gymna-
sium on Friday, November 15 from
8-12 and 1-5; and Saturday, Novem-
ber 16 from 8-12.
Twelfth Night: There will be a spe-
cial matinee performance this af-
ternoon at 3:30 at the Mendelssohn
Theatre at reduced prices. Perfor-
mances also tonight and tomorrow
night.
University Bureau of Appointments
and Occupational Information re-
minds all 1936 seniors, and graduate
students who have not previously reg-
istered, that Friday is the last day
to obtain registration blanks from
both teaching and general place-
ment divisions.
Academic Notices
History 47: Midsemester, Thursday
Nov. 21, 10 a.m., Sections 1 and 2,
1035, A. H.; sections 3, 4, and 5,
C Haven Hall.
English 89: Contrary to the an-
nouncement made in class, English
89 will not meet today. Bring blue-
books at the usual time Monday.
J. R. Reinhard.
Lectures
Chemistry Lecture: Dr. L. P. Ky-
rides, Director of Research at the
Monsanto Chemical Company, will
lecture on the topic: "Some Recent
Trends in the Organic Chemical In-
dustry," Friday, November 15. 4:15
p.m., Room 303 of the Chemistry
Building. The lecture is under the
auspices of the American Chemical
Society and is open to the public.
Admiral Byrd Lecture: The Story
of the Second Antarctic Expedition
will be presented in Hill Auditorium
on Monday, at 8:15 p.m. Tickets are
on sale at Wahr's State Street Book
Store. Good seats are still available.
Patrons are urged to secure tickets
immediately and thereby avoid the
usual last-minute rush.
Hygiene Lectures for Women: The
examination in the series of hygiene
lectures for women will be given on
Monday, November 18 at 4:30 p.m.
The group will be divided and will re-
port as follows:
Students whose names begin with
A through L, report to Natural
Science Auditorium.
Students whose names begin with
M through Q, report to the East Am-
phitheatre of the West Medical Build-
ing.
Students whose names begin with
R through XYZ, report to the West
Amphitheatre of the West Medical
Building.
A list of students who have been
absent from one or more lectures is
posted in Barbour Gymnasium. Since
no cuts are allowed, all absences must
be made up.
Lecture: The Adventure of Death,
by Bishop Charles Hampton, Friday,
8:00 p.m., Michigan League Chapel,
under the auspices of the Ann Arbor
Theosophical Society. The public is
cordially invited.
Concerts
Faculty Concert Program. Arthur
Hackett, tenor; Mabel Ross Rhead,
pianist; and the School of Music Trio
consisting of Wassily Besekirsky,
violin; Hanns Bick, violoncello; and
Joseph Brinkman, piano, will give
the following program Sunday af-
ternoon, November 17, at 4:15 o'clock
in Hill Auditorium, to which the gen-
eral public with the exception of small
children, is invited without admission
charge.
Trio, Op. 1, No. 3 ........Beethoven
Allegro con brio
Andante con variazioni
Menuetto

Sonata in A for Violin and Piano
..Franck
Allegretto ben moderato
Allegro
Recitativo-fantasia
Allegretto poco mosso.
Mr. Besekirsky and Mr. Brink-
man.
Exhibitions
Exhibition - Architectural Build-
ing; Studies and cartoons for the re-
cently completed mural paintings in
the central rotunda of the Los An-
geles Public Library and the Lincoln
Memorial Shrine at Redlands; the
work of Dean Cornwell. Hung in the
third floor exhibition room; open
daily 9:00 to 5:00 except Sunday. The
public is cordially invited.
Exhibtion of Home Designs Archi-
tectural Building: Thirty prize de-
signs by American architects for
homes, selected from the nation-wide
competition recently conducted by
the General Electric Company, are
hung in the ground floor exhibition
cases of the Architectural Building.
Open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m. The public is cordially invited.
Events Of Today
Phi Delta Kappa meeting in Room
4007 UHS at 4:30.
School of Music Seniors. The Sen-
iors of the School of Music will meet
for the purpose of electing officers
and transacting such other business
as may.be of interest at 4:00 o'clock
in the School of Music Auditorium.
All senior music students are urged
to attend.
This meeting is called in coopera-
tion with the Student Council.
Lutheran Student Club: The Luth-
eran Student Club will have a party
in Lane Hall this evening. The en-
tertainment, planned by Miss Emma-
Schmid, social chairman, and her
committee, will begin at 9 o'clock.
All Lutheran students are cordially
invited. Admission 35 cents.
Coming Events
Graduate Outing Club will meet at
Lane Hall Sunday, November 17,
12:30, for a hike to be followed by a
steak dinner at the George Washing-
ton Cabin. Games will be played in
the afternoon. All Graduate stu-
dents are cordially invited to attend.
There will be a minimum charge of
35 cents for dinner.
Elective Tap Dancing: A beginner's
class in tap will be organized on
Monday, November 18, 8 p.m., in
Barbour Gymnasium. This class is
open to both men and women.
Lutheran Student Club: Sunday
evening, November 17, Prof. Howard
McClusky of the School of Educa-
tion will speak to the Club. The so-
cial half-hour at 5:30 will be followed
by supper at 6 in the parish hall on
Washington St.
All Lutheran Students and their
friends are invited.

Dames Athletic Group
meeting has been postponed
fourth Friday, November 22.
for a further announcement.

regular
to the
Watch

Billiard Exhibition: Ora C. Morn-
ingstar, former world's champion at
18.2 Balkline Billiards will give two
exhibitions at the Union next Mon-
day, November 18, 3:00 to 5:00 in
the afternoon and 8:00 to 10:00 in
the evening.
Hygiene 204: Class will meet Fri-
day, 3-5 p.m.
Hygiene 208: Class will meet Sat-
urday 9-11 a.m.
I-E

Ten Years Ago
From The Daily Files
of November 15, 1925

Although unsuccessful in effecting
her usual strong forward pass attack,
Michigan battled her way to a 10-0
victory over the strong invading elev-
en of Ohio State yesterday afternoon
at Ferry Field.
Riding, sponsored by the Women's
league and the physical education
department, received a stimulus this
week when Guy L. Mullison, propriet-
or of the riding stables on Ann Street
and the fair grounds added seven
horses to his sheds.
The final count of a two day refer-
endum by Yale undergraduates on the
question of whether the existing com-
pulsory attendance at university
chapel should be retained or abolished
showed 1,631 votes against compul-
sory attendance and 241 in favor of
it, a ratio of about seven to one.
More than 100 guests were enter-
tained at the lawyers' club over the
week-end.

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