The Weatier Showers, cooler today. To- morrow fairer, continued cool. Yg lit tan suitl i Editorials Freshmen Should Wear 'Pots'.. The Real Campaign Issue ... VOL. XLVI. No. 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Cubs Wi* n Billy Herman's Run An Added Blow To Bengal Hopes 3-0 Behind L.Warneke Star Pitcher Makes Seven Assists, One Strikeout, As Rowe Fans Eight Tigers Play Tight Ball After First Augie Galan Gets First Hit Of Series To Start Cubs' Early Drive By FRED BUESSER NAVIN FIELD, DETROIT, Oct. 2. - (Special)- Arkansas came into its own yesterday when two of its stal- wart Ozark sons staged a great pitch- ing exhibition before an overflow crowd at Navin Field in the first game of the World Series between the De- troit Tigers and the Chicago Cubs. Lon Warneke and Schoolboy Rowe were both in fine form as they lim- ited the championship teams of both leagues to a total of eleven hits. The Cubs emerged victorious by a score of 3-0, and whether the two runs that the Cubs got in the first inning were earned or not, Warneke and the Cubs deserved to win. The Cubs played a brand of hustling, heads-up baseball behind the superb hurling and spectacular fielding of their ace moundsman, Warneke, who himself had seven assists and one put- out. Tigers Are Shaky The Tigers, in comparison, looked slow and nervois, as if they were too keyed up. While Rowe was credited with eight strikeouts as compared with one for'Warneke, who also is- sued four passes, the big Chicago right-hander allowed the Tigers only four hits and with men on bases was absolutely invincible. W a r n e k e's sinker had the Tigers hitting on top of the ball all afternoon as they drooled pitch after pitch into the dirst for easy' iffeld76uts. The huge crowd which filled all of the newly-erected bleachers in left and center fields was in good humor throughout the afternoon and al- though there were a good many more spectators than seats, there was little of the bitterness apparent which characterized the series with the Cards in Detroit last year. Kenesaw Mountain Landis, high commissioner of baseball, announced during the first inning that any spectator inter- fering with a batted ball would be ejected from the park, and the police had no difficulty keeping the specta- tors off the field. Cubs Start Early The Cubs wasted little time in giv- ing Warneke a lead. Augie Galan,' first man to face Rowe, got the initial hit of the series when he lined a drive between Rogell and second base.. Bill got a hand on the ball with a great try, but only succeeded in de- flecting it. He then tried desperately to get Galan who had kept on coming. Galan beat the throw easily, and scored from second a moment later when Rowe fumbled a bunt of Billy Herman's anduthendthrew to the in- side of the bag. Both Herman and the ball arrived at the same time. Greenberg allowed it. to get away from him and Galan raced home with the first run of the game. Fred Lindstiiom sacrificed Herman to second, and the Cubs had their second run a moment later when Gabby Hartnett singled sharply to right. That ended the Cub scoring for the inning, for Demaree popped to Rogell and Cavarretta forced Hart- nett, Rogell to Gehringer. Go Down in Order Warneke, with a two-run lead to work on, set the Tigers down in order in the first, getting White with a third called strike, and inducing Cochrane and Gehringer to fly out. For the eight remaining innings Rowe and Warneke waged a real pitching duel. The Schoolboy allowed five hits and Warneke four, but the extra hit which the Cubs got was a home run into the left field bleachers by Frank Demaree in the ninth in- ning. Demaree caught hold of one of Rowe's fast ones with a beautifully timed swing and it was tagged "four base clout" all the way. The Tigers missed several excel- lent scoring opportunities when, with men on base, Warneke bore down and made the Bengal batters look very bad. In the second, after Greenberg and -Associated Press Photo. The cut shows Herman, Cubs second baseman, scoring the second run of the first World Scries game for Chicago at Detroit. The star second sacker was safe when Rowe threw wildly to first on his roller. He ad- vanced on Lindstrom's sacrifice and scored oi Hartne tt's single. Freshmen Pots Are Favored By Engineers William Dixon Speaks At Weekly Assembly For Incoming Men Enthusiastic support of freshman engineers and this year's Rendezvous campers yesterday met the efforts of William Dixon, '36, president of the Men's Council, to swing freshman opinion into line behind a movement to return the wearing of freshman pots on the campus. Dixon addressed both the assembly of the freshman class in the College of Engineering at 11 a.m., and a meet- ing of the yearlings who attended the 1935 Rendezvous camp at 8 p.m., held to effect permanent organization for the year. Response Favorable At both meetings he reported that the response to his suggestions was highly favorable, leading to hopes that with the support of both soph- omores and freshmen, the old tradi- tions may successfully return to the campus. Dixon, acting for the Men's Coun- cil, has already obtained the support of Interfraternity Council, various honor societies, the Michigan Union; and several freshman groups, along with a favorable concensus of opin- ion at a meeting of representative sophomores held at the Union Tues- day night. The next step of the Council, he said, would be to present the plan to a mass meeting of the Class of 1939, scheduled to be held at 4 p.m. tomor- row in the ballroom of the Michigan Union. Dixon and John McCarthy, secretary of the Council, will preside, and several prominent - speakers, as yet unannounced, will be on the pro- gram. Canvassing Houses Should the freshmen attending the mass meeting pass favorably on the movement, Dixon said the Council would take immediate steps to bring the freshman emblems back to the campus. George J. Moe, local merchant who has handled the supplies of pots al- most entirely for the past few years, stated that he had more than 300 left on hand at present from previous years, and, since they are produced by a Toledo firm, would be able to order more on notice of a day or so if the demand should arise as a result of the movement. Reports of members of the Inter- fraternity Council, who are canvass- ing campus houses to determine their opinions and enlist their support if possible, will not be heard until the next meeting of the council, scheduled for Friday afternoon. Crusade For Peace ProposedBy Hull WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. - (P) - A "flaming crusade" by the churches NYA Students Must Report By Oct. 15 Unless all students approved for National Youth Administration jobs report immediately to the NYA office in the Romance Language building and fill out work cards, there is a possibility that they will be replaced with others, Harold S. Anderson, cost accountant of the buildings and grounds department, warned yester- day. The deadline for students approved to report is Oct: 15, he said. Accord- ing to Mr. Anderson, unless those students who have all ready been approved report, their jobs will be given to others on the already large and ever growing waiting list. State Marshal Will Supervise Fire Inspection LANSING, Oct. 2.- (P)-Col. V. Lane, assistant state fire marshal, announced a campaign today to rid the state of "fire trap" fraternities and sorority houses which he said are endangering the lives of scores of col- lege and university students in Mich- igan. Lane said his inspectors will make a rigid inspection of student college dormitories at the University of Michigan and Michigan State College next week. He said they will visit 160 buildings in Ann Arbor alone and investigate reports that they do not meet the requirements of the new fire safety law. "From our previous experience with these places and from preliminary re- ports," he said, "I am sure that many students are living in tinder boxes and sleeping in three floor dormitories from which there is only one way of escape." Lane told of a report reaching him today from Ann Arbor which told of 18 students quartered on the third floor of a frame building, a wooden stairway from one corner of the room, their only means of escape. U. S. Stand In Crisis Stated By Roosevelt President Says Nation Is Determined To Avoid Dangers To Peace SAN DIEGO, Calif., Oct. 2. - (IP) - President Roosevelt today served no- tice on the war-threatened world that the United States is sternly deter- mined "to avoid those perils that will endanger our peace." Without directly mentioning the Italo-Ethiopian situation, he said that this country "shall and must remain * * * unentangled and free." "The gospel of the good neighbor" was pieached with fervor an hour be- fore he was scheduled to view maneu- vers of 130 warships in sight offshore as he spoke. "This country seeks no conquest," he said. "We have no imperial de- signs." Addressing himself to the domestic situation, Mr. Roosevelt also warned against thoseswho would raise false issues." He spoke of present condi- tions as offsetting false preachments. Although the depression is not finally solved, he said, "the outlook is clearer. As the burden lifts, the Federal Gov- ernment can and will greatly divest itself of the emergency responsibilities but it cannot ignore the imperfections of the old order. A review of existing circumstances led to this Presidential conclusion: "We stand once more upon an eco- nomic plateau. We have, therefore, a right to look forward to the brighter future while, at the same time, we remember the mistakes of the past." 300 MEN POISONED OKAYAMA, Japan, Oct. 2. - (P) - The poisoning of more than 300 of- ficers and men and a majority of the 39th Infantry -regiment, two of whom died, caused the abandonment today of divisional maneuvers. The poisoning was attributed to the eat- ing of octopus, considered a delicacy in Japan. The victims filled the Tenth Division's hospitals. aile's Men Marehing On Italian Foes Nearly Quarter-Million Troops Set To Stop Threatened Invasion Fascists Urged To Unite By Mussolini War Enthusiasm Rises Throughout Italy; No Sanctions Are Seen ADDIS ABABA, Oct. 2. - (P- Nearly 250,000 Ethiopian fighters were reported on the march tonight, some toward the Italian colonial frontier, in anticipation of a general mobilization tomorrow Native drums echoing through val- leys and mountains will call 10,000,- 000 men, women and boys into service in the face of a threatened war with Italy. Emperor Haile Selassie decided up- on the mobilization, which he will proclaim from the balcony of the Im- perial Palace, after he had dispatched a protest to Geneva charging that Italy has already invaded his king- dom with 50,000 troops. (Rome denied that Italian troops had crossed the border.) Ethiopians Marching One hundred thousand Ethiopians were reported marching from Gondar toward the Eritrean frontier, where Italy is expected to strike. This army was followed by 60,000 warriors from four provinces led by Ras Mulugeta, minister of war. Another 80,000 troops from Jima and Wallaga province were said to be on their way to Addis Ababa to protect the capital.] (The Addis Ababa correspondent of the Paris Soir reported that fight- ing between Italian and Ethiopian troops had already started in the Mussa Ali - eastern section of Ethi- opia and that there have been cas- ualties..~~ (The newspaper, although previous1 Ethiopian reports said that none of the country's troops were in that vicinity, asserted that three columns of advancing Italian troops, totaling 25,000 men, had fought with irregu- lar Danakil tribesmen. The Italians' have not yet met Ethiopian regulars,1 the report said). Predict War In the traditional Ethiopian fa- shion, drums will call the warriors to arms. The beats will be taken up by] other drum-beaters in a momentous warning which will resound through-i out the land. Mobilization orders are1 already in the hands of provincialf governors. Some officials here expressed belief1 that war may get into full swing even before the arrival of Italian consul agents from the interior. They have been called in for safety.1 DUCE MAKES SPEECH ROME, Oct. 2. -(P) - Benito Mussolini, undeterred by hints of League of Nations action, announced to the world today that 44,000,000 Italians will march on toward their goal in Africa. Addressing mass assemblies of his citizens throughout Italy, and all the other nations of the world through a radio broadcast he declared: "There is an attempt to commit against them (The Italian people) the blackest of injustices, that of with- holding from them a little soil under the sun." He declared Italy "had been pa- tient 40 years" with Ethiopia and "that is enough." Then he lashed out at the League of Nations where, he said: "Instead of recognizing the just rights of Italy, they dare talk sanctions." He declared that he did not be- lieve the French and British people (Continued on Page 8) Hitler Denies Any Union With Italians PARIS, Oct. 2.-(P) -Premier Pierre Laval, cautious in committing France to a definite attitude in the Italo-Ethiopian conflict in fear of what Germany would do, today re- ceived Adolf Hitler's assurance, trans- mitted through Great Britain, that the Third Reich has no intention of joining Italy, French officials said. Official circles learned of Hitler's Friday Pep Rally Will Usher In'35 Football. Season New Band Director -Fernand DeGuelidre Photo. PROF. WILLIAM D. REVELLI Revelli Accepts Professorship In Band Music, Former Is Also Assistai Hobart Director o Appointed To nt Professorship William D. Revelli, formerly of Hobart, Ind., this fall received the appointment as Assistant Professor of wind instruments in the School of Music and director of the Univer- sity Bands to succeed Prof. Nicholas Falcone. For the past ten years Prof. Revelli has been director of the Hobart High School Band, which was three times state champion and five times na- tional champion of all high schools in Class B. He has also directed band; at Northwestern and Wisconsin uni- versities. For the past two years he has conducted the music clinic and directed the all-state band at Wis- consin. Professor Revelli began his study of music in St. Louis. There for five years, he studied under D. D. Sarli From St. Louis he went to the Chi- cago Music College, where he studied under Leon Sametini and Louis Vic- tor Sarr. He next received his bach- elor's degree from the Columbia School of Music and then attendees the Vandercook School of Music. For three years Professor Revell. traveled with the Redpath Chatauqua and for the next seven years he played withavarious theater orches- tras. He has served as adjudicator for nearly all state band contests dur- ing the past four years. Last year he judged 22 of these contests. Many national musical organiza- tions have honored Professor Revel. with membership. He is first vice- president of the National School Band Association; a member of the board of directors of the National Musical Educators Conference; member of the American Bandmasters Association, founded by the late John Phillip Sousa; and an honorary member of Phi Mu Alpha, national honorary music fraternity. AAA Proposes New Method O f Potato Control WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. - (AP) - AAA leanings toward a voluntary po- tato control program as a substitute for a compulsory tax control plan grew more pronounced today as one official privately indicated a possible source of funds for financing a vol- untary program - customs receipts. The AAA amendments recently passed provide that 30 per cent of the gross customs receipts shall be set aside for the farm administration. Comptroller-Gen. John R. McCarl recently held that part of the fund might be used to pay a subsidy on the 1935 cotton crop. Officials have estimated that 30 per cent of the customs receipts at Large Bonfire Will Light Sleepy Hollow, Scene Of Big Outdoor Event Plans Are Made For Elaborate Program Men's Council, Union Are Joint, Sponsors Of First Rally In Two Years The first pep meeting in two years, featuring a large bonfire and a care- fully prepared program; will be held at 8 p.m. Friday night in Sleepy Hol- low, scene of the traditional fresh- man cap night of years past. Under the auspices of the Men's Council and the Union, the pep rally is being staged to help kindle in- terest in the University football sea- son, and especially the Michigan State Game on Saturday. Permission to hold the gathering in Sleepy Hollow was granted yes- terday by University Hospital of- ficials. It is planned to hold the meeting out in the open by the great bonfire, weather permitting. Program Incomplete The details of the program are still incomplete, but several organizations will combine efforts to help make the program a success. The 'Varsity Football Band, composed of 110 pieces, will be present for the rally, and the band will be making its first Ann Arbor appearance under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli, newly appointed director from Ho- bart, Ind. The Glee Club,.under the direction of Prof. David Mattern, has consented to appear on the program of the pep meeting, and it will sing a group of Michigan songs as well as help, to lead the group in mass sing. Heretofore, it has been the custom for all pep meetings to be held in Hill Auditorium, but officials in charge of the event believe that an increased attendance will result from holding the meeting outside. It is the first time that such a rally has been held on the Michigan campus. Speakers Sponsored It was stated that if the student bodys responds favorably, the meet- ings in all probability will be held in the future, prior to every game for the rest of the season. Speakers for the rally have not as yet been announced, but it was re- ealed that plans were underway to secure a prominent alumnus and some niversity official who is well known )n campus as headliners for the event, The cheerleaders, headed by Robert Burns, '36, will be making their first appearance of the year, and they will help the new students become ac- iuainted with the yells and songs of .he University. Because of the fact that the plans were still indefinite, the exact dura- tion of the program was not forecast by officials in charge, but they added that as has been the custom in the past years, the program would not be too lengthy so as todelay plans the students had for the evening. Harvard Geologist Will Not Take Oath BOSTON, Oct. 2.- ()-Massa- chusetts' new "teachers oath" law was defied tonight by Dr. Kirtley F. Ma- ther, celebrated Harvard geologist, who declared he would refuse to take an oath of allegiance to the state and national constitutions. Dr. Mather, also director of the Harvard summer school, said he was confident that the compulsory oath, such as the last legislature prescribed for the state's 40,000 public and pri- vate school and college teachers, "vio- lated his constitutional right as a citizen and a teacher." "I do not know what the, conse- quences are," said Dr. Mather, of his announced refusal, but coincidentally it was admitted by the state commis- sioner of education, Dr. Payson Smith, that the law contains no penalties. Enforcement, Dr. Smith observed, was a matter for school principals and local school committees. The law was passed at the instance of veterans and patriotic organiza- tions. although virtually all of the Industrial Relations Bureau Launches Important Program Born as a result of the "increased importance to the community of sat- isfactory relations between employer and employee," the University's new Bureau of Industrial Relations, a unit in the School of Business Adminis- tration, is launching a broad program in its field that is expected to be of major importance to both education and business. A trust fund set up by an anony- mous friend of the University, and ad- ministered by the Board of Regents, enabled the Bureau to begin its work last July, with Prof. John W. Riegel as its director. Projects already definitely planned bhe+, Rn~rnniinra n. c'riac of nP n- Relations will be the second one of its type established in an American university. Princeton established the first one in 1922, with its activities centered in a research bureau, a spe- cial library, and in instruction to students. With Dr. J. Douglas Brown, economist, at its head, it has fur- nished valuable aid to the national government, and has just held its fifth annual conference, which was attended by leading industrial execu- tives of the country. Professor Riegel, whose chief inter- est has long been in industrial rela- tions, comes to the University from the Dennison Manufacturing Com-