The Weather Cloudy to partly cloudy today and tomorrow; warmer today; cooler tomorrow. L .it igau fIaiII Editorials The Position Of The Daily In The National Election . VOL. XLVII No. 28 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCT 29, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Naval Patrols Along Spanish ShoresUrged London Offers Proposal To Make 'Hands-Off' Agreement Effective Rebels Strengthen I Grip About Madrid} American Newspapermen Captured By Fascists Are Reported Freed (By The Associated Press)I MADRID, Oct. 28.-(A)-The So- cialist Government claimed tonight "the most marked triumph" since the Spanish Civil War began, with the bombing of the insurgent airports at Seville, Granada, and Caceres. To Speak Here Tonight CORNELIA OTIS SKINNER Miss Skinner Oyens Lecture Naval patrols along the coasts of Spain and Portugal were proposed in Series Ti t London Wednesday night to make the international "hands-off Spain" agreement effective as Spanish Fas- cists tightened their grip of steel Daughter Of Otis Skinner around Madrid. Will Present Numbers The proposal was made before the W k 27-nation non-intervention commit- From Own tee by its chairman, Lord Plymouth. I The committee, which will meet again Cornelia Otis Skinner, famous stage next Wednesday after a subcommit- star, will open the 1936-37 lecture tee meeting Monday, agreed to dis-) series of the Oratorical Association cuss the patrol suggestion. at 8:15 p.m. tonight when she pre- Charge Russian Aid sents a program of original modern Fresh Italian charges against Rus- monologues at Hill Auditorium. sia, detailing 20 alleged instances of Miss Skinner, who is the daughter Russian aid to Spanish Socialists, of Otis Skinner, dean of the Amer- were laid before the committee by ican theatre, has been called a one- Dino Grandi, Italian ambassador to woman dramatic company who gath- London. ers her own material, writes her own In Spain, 35,000 additional civil- sketches, assembles her own costumes ians were mobilized in Madrid to and does her own acting. strengthen the lines against the Fas- Her program will include numbers cists and food was rationed for the selected from the following list, all refugee-swelled population of 1,500,- of which she has written herself: 000. Nurse's Day Out, Sunday Driving, An Fascist armies were within 10 miles American Girl on the French Tele- of the capital at two points on the phone; Monte Carlo, Paris After the south and a fleet of 200 "baby" Armistice, The Vanishing Redman, armored cars and tanks was being Being Presented, A Lady Explorer, saved for the "final" assault. The Calais-Paris. Express, Sailing In London, political fireworks were I Time and possibly others. expected to be touched off on the Miss Skinner began her stage Spanish situation by the British gov- careen after completing her educa- ernment's opposition when Parlia- tion at the Baldwin School at Bryn ment meets today to wind-up the Mawr, at Bryn Mawr College and in present session. Paris. She made her first stage ap- Labor leaders met Tuesday and pearance with her father in "Blood drafted a demand for restoration of and Sand." Madrid's right to buy arms from Not long after her stage debut she foreign powers. M discovered a happier medium for Independent Policy her talent by departing from the le- Belgium's Chamber of Deputies gitimate stage and reappearing in heard Foreign Minister Paul Henry a lone program of original mono- Spaak describe,the country's new for- logues written by herself. From that eign policy as "complete independ- time onward she has sought for the ence without returning to our pre- right material with which to embody war foundation of complete neutral- her conception of a technique which ity." would carry her modern monologues S.I.E. Makes. Clean Sweep Of Elections State Street Barely Beats Washtenaw In Literary College Soph Voting Independents Give Leaders Stiff Fight Fred Osberg Is Elected Sophomore Engineering Leader By 15 Votes A quickly organized independent party made a clean sweep of the. sophomore engineering class offices in the election yesterday, while in the literary college the State Street Party beat out the Washtenaw Coali- tion Party by a small majority, with strong third party voting by inde- pendents. In every office the Sophomore In- dependent Engineers gained an ad- vantage ranging from one to 22 votes. Fred Osberg, S.I.E. candidate forJ president drew 15 more votes than his rival, Charles Kettler, to win, 64-49. For vice-president, Bob Hart- well won over Don Siegel with a seven vote margin, 62-55, whilePeter Ipsen, also S.I.E., took a 15 vote lead over Leonard Orr and won the election for secretary by 64-49. Hird Battles Tim Hird, Independent Tech hope, put up the hardest battle of the day1 when he lost by one vote to Don Per- cival by 69-68. The other Independ- ent Tech nominees, John Parker and1 Bill Worthing were outnumbered by 13 and 22 votes respectively as Ed Lebeis was elected to fill the three1 year Engineering Council job by a 64-51 ballot, and Harold Spoden took the decision by a 68-46 count for the two year Honor Council post.' The election of a straight inde- pendent ticket is the first in a num- ber of years and came as a surprise' to both parties concerned. The S.I.E. party was hastily organized late Tuesday afternoon, and handed in its' list of candidates just in time for the 4:30 p.m. deadline. The results in the Literary College were unexpected only in the number of votes cast for the independent third party, as the State Street and Wash- tenaw Coalition parties ran a very close race. Hook Wins For the office of president, Wally Hook won over Frank Husemen by 143-135, with the independent can- didate, Dan Smick drawing 97 votes. Betty Lyons won the vice-presidency with 144 votes while Harriet Pom- eroy, Washtenaw, drew 138, and El- izabeth White, independent, drew 82. In the race for the secretaryship, the 141 votes cast for Rebecca Bursley outnumbered Jenny Petersen with 134, and Elizabeth Spooner with 100. John Jordan, who polled only 132 votes and John Thompson, who polled 99 votes, were defeated by Stuart Low, whose 145 votes repre- sented the highest number cast for any of the officers-elect. Though the voting machines, sup- plied through the courtesy of the; Automatic Voting Co., were not ready at the opening of the polls, they were soon placed in operation, and the bal- loting carried through smoothly to the end. Announcement of the date of the senior elections to be held in two weeks was made last night by Mil- ter Shrwood, '37, president of the Men's Council . Triangles Initiate Seven Members The initiation of seven new men was announced last night by Tri- angles, honorary engineering society for juniors. A banquet was given last night in the Union as the concluding portion of the initiation. The men added are Fred Boynton, Edward Kirar, Mather W. McLean, George Marzonie, Fletcher Platt, Ed- ward Replogle and John Staple. At the dinner Neil Levenson acted as toastmaster, Hubert C. Fones, president . of the society, welcomed the new initiates and Prof. H. C. Anderson, head of the mechanical en- on behalf of the faculty. Speeches And Forum Are On Hillel Program The first in a series of classes to be held under the sponsorship of the Hillel Foundation will take place to- With these prosaic words Paul Rushing Problen I Engle described the source of the S ill Ule d inspirationsfor the poetry which has Is Still Unsettled caused him in recent years to be com- pared to Carl Sandburg and Walt Whitman, speaking before a large Interfraternity C o u n c i1 audience in the Lydia Mendelssohn Holds lInformnal Meetillg Theatre last night. Describing writing as a kind of "in- A B e' om tense living," as if the writer were packing several years of his life into Sentiment in favor of supporting a a short time, Engle said that ideas dance proposed by the Committee on which went into poetry usually came Men's Dormitories to earn money for in a rythmic form, and were written then buildigoffreshan mdorym- in the same cadence in which they the building of a freshman dormi- occurred, rather than being care- tory was exhibited by a majority of fully arranged in verse form after the 45 fraternity presidents who at- being thought out. "Writing poetry tended an unofficial gathering of the is natural, and should be done as na- Interfraternity Council last night at turally as breathing," he remarked. Dean Joseph A. Bursley's home. Speaking of contemporary poetry, Their unofficial vote on whether Engle expressed the belief that poets Unofficial Poll Shows Council Favors Dance Proposed Dance Is Given Tentative Approval By House Presidents Paul Engle Finds Inspirations. In Riding Horses And Shaving 40 Machinery May Be Used As Symbol Of Modern Life, Poet Says "Most of my ideas for poems came while I was riding a horse, and most of the rest while I was shaving." of today are too self-conscious. Mod- ern poets should find a source of in- spiration in machinery he said, al- though machinery should be treated as a symbol of our way of living. Engle discussed the use of slang in poetry briefly, saying that slang lends an essential feeling of spontanity to verse. Interspersed through the lecture were readings from the speaker's own Nworks, which he used as examples of development of an inspiration or theme. In this connection he re- counted an experience from his Eur- opean travels, when the report of the abortive Nazi putsch in Vienna of two years ago came over the radio. Hurrying to the Austrian capital from a border village of Bavaria where he was at the time, Engle found the inspiration for an entire volume on the prevalent spirit in Europe, which he wrote in the Tyrol a short time later. After the lecture, Engle was present at a tea in the Hopwood room, where he discussed his recent European tour briefly, stating the opinion that while a great mass literature may develop from experiments now being carried on in Russia, chances for a similar movement in Italy or Germany are extremely remote. "Culture is a word of contempt in the fascist countries," he said. Between puffs on a short briar pipe, Engle described recent attempts at mass literature by Gorky and others, the results of which will not be ap- parent for some time. He expressed himself as opposed to "propaganda poets," as "defeat- ing their own ends," saying that poetry should be an expression of the writer's self rather than of his convictions. Political beliefs which are so strong as to become a part of the individual's character, however, are not, properly speaking, prop- aganda, he pointed out. F.D.R. Pledges Peace, Freedom,; Sound Housing Premier Benito Mussolini in RoneI hailed the fourteenth anniversary of his Fascists' march on Rome with a1 challenging speech. t "The Italian people," he declared, "today are ready and determined toz defend as never before-with all theirt force right up to the last drop oft blood--victory and empire."I In Paris, sharp rise in the French_ defense budgets was foreshadowed by an announcement from the min- istry of finance that 8,500,000,000 francs ($375,000,000) of the govern- ment's total extraordinary estimates will be set aside for armaments. WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.- W)P) - Ambassador Claude J. Bowers re- ported today to the state department from St. Jean de Luz, France, that two American newspaper correspond- ents, David Minifie and Henry T.1 Gorrell, captured recently by Rebell troops, had ;crossed the border to the French town from Irun. Their cap-f tors took them to Irun from Sala-. maca.. Minifie represents the New York! Herald Tribune and Gorrell the Unit- ed Press. Students urged T Order Penn' Tlekets Early Students expecting to attend the Pennsylvania and Ohio State games should order their football tickets at! once according to Frederick S. Ran- dall, Ann Arbor travel agent, who will conduct excursions to both Phila- delphia and Columbus. The special train to the Pennsyl- vania game will leave here Thursday night and will return Saturday night although the tickets will be good for 10 days. The train to Columbus will nearer to the theatre. Miss Skinner has explained her work as "simply another technique of the same art, permitting me to go only as far as I, myself, can take me. My success or failure is always dependent on me, not on the play, the director, the interpretation of the re- mainder of the company." Landon Seeks Electoral Vote OfNew York; Recognizes Right Of Labor To Bargain Collectively Withiout Interference NEW YORK, Oct. 28.-(UP)-Gov- ernor Alf M. Landon arrived in New York today for two days of cam- paigning xn the metropolitan area for the state's 47 electoral votes. A few minutes before his arrivall he spoke in Newark, N. J., empha- sizing labor's right "to organize and bargain collectively through repre- sentatives of their own choosing without interference by employers." In his first personal appeal for New Jersey's 16 electoral votes be- fore entering New York, the Repub- lican nominee told a throng over- flowing 4,500 seats in the Mosque Theatre in Newark: "I would like the workers of Amer- ica, whether they are organized or unorganized, to understand clearly that their problems are familiar to me; that I myself have worked with my own hands; that I have earned wages, and that I am in deep sym- pathy with the point of view of the working men and the working women, and eager to cooperate with them ... "When I am President I will see to it that federal laws for the pro- .n . -c- l_. -f ,,! Landon Lead Is Wiped Out As Roosevelt Gains In Poll Heavy Voting In Literary College Gives President 19 Vote Margin Who's Who Ballots Give Kansan Edge Thiri Party Candidates Get 25 Votes Out Of 246 Cast By Faculty By WILLIAM C. SPALLER First returns from the literary col- lege swept President Roosevelt into a'19 vote lead over Governor Lan- don in The Daily's presidential poll of faculty members with the count standing 120 votes to 101, when vot- ing ended yesterday. Only 25 of the 246 votes cast thus far went to third party candidates. Norman Thomas, Socialist candidate, was third with 18 votes, followed by Earl Browder, Communist candidate, who polled 6 votes. William Lemke, candidate of the Union party, received one vote, from they would give the dance their sup- port was as individuals rather than representatives of their fraternities.n The annual meeting of the Coun- cil at Dean Bursley's home was in- tended to be an informal meeting presenting an opportunity for discus- sion and getting acquainted, Bursley said. Rushing was the first topic to be discussed but no definite pro- posals were framed to improve the present system. The discussion inevitably turned to dormitories and Dean Bursley ex- pressed the attitude he has had for the past 15 years on dormitories for men. "There is no question about the need for men's dormitories and that they will come sooner or later,"c he declared, "and if the students1 can accelerate the movement sol much the better for the future stu- dent body." In the ensuing discussion the gen- eral sentiment expressed by most of the men present was in favor of" building a freshman dormitory and in getting the impetus for that proj- ect from the student body. New Shiipping Strike Creeps On Waterfront, Mediation Fails; Vessels Held In Port As Great Stores Of Goods Pile UpI SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28.-W)- A shipping paralysis crept slowly over West Coast waterfronts tonight with the approach of midnight-zero hour for a long-threatened maritime strike. Employers met with representa- tives of two unions in a "final" but fruitless effort to get together on pending peace proposals, and police in some cities took preliminary steps to preserve order in the event of a walkout which might involve 37,000 workers. Union leaders privately expressed a belief that only the intervention of President Roosevelt could avert the strike, destined to start at midnight. (3 a.m. E.S.T.) unless a last-minute peace is effected. Plans Meeting Assistant Secretary of Labor E. F. McGrady declined to abandon hope, however, and was reported planning to ask the unions to meet separately with the shipowners in a final peace effort. The postoffice department trans- ferred 200 pounches of Honolulu- bound mail from the Matson liner Maui to the Japanese liner Chi- chibu Maru to prevent delay in case of a walkout. Along the San Francisco waterfront ships were .diverted or cleared ahead of schedule. Only 16 vessels were in dock here, 11 of them having arrived last night. Nine were scheduled to leave and eight to arrive. The normal aver- age is 50 movements daily. The schedule for tomorrow called for the arrival of only five and the depart- ure of eleven. Six of the eleven moved up their departure schedules today. Ships Tied Up Employers reported six ships al- ready tied up by "quickie" strikes of unlicensed ship's personnel with a variety of small demands. A strike of longshoremen against all vessels of the Luckenbach Steam- ship Lines was called, but theco- Radical Groups Discuss Plans Of Government H.J. McFarlan, Weinstone And Heiss Represent Parties At Forum Just how much the American sys- tem of government should be changed and by what means, was in spirited discussion last night when represen- tatives of the three minor political parties in the 1936 election campaign spoke at the Union in a forum spon- sored by the Student Alliance. Prof. Harold J. McFarlan of the college of engineering took the So- cialist position, with William Wein- stone, state secretary of the Com- munist Party speaking for that group and Byron Heiss, instructor at Mich- igan State Normal College speaking for the Farmer-Labor faction, to a half-filled ballroom. Support No One Heiss said his party supported no E. candidate for piresident, but he be- ' NEW YORK, Oct. 28.-())-Frank- lieved "the majority of the members lin D. Roosevelt stood today in the will follow Mr. Roosevelt, as labor shadow of the Statue of Liberty and, would have a better chance to or- as President instead of as candidate, ganize." rededicated the nation "to carry for- Mr. Weinstone spoke secondly. The ward American freedom and Ameri- Communist leader is a graduate of, the College of the City of New York, 1 can peace." class of 1918. He stressed the im- portance of being prepared by thor-; ough organization before entering conflict with capitalism. He scored1 the other two parties represented on, this point. "We are in the death stage of capitalism," Mr. Weinstone insisted. "We have come to a monopolistic. stage in industry, in railroads,_ in banking, even in farming. Capital-, ism is approaching itstdecay. In the monopolistic stage the battle be-{ tween workers and capital is sharp- ened." Accuses Socialists He accused the Socialists of min- imizing the dangers of Fascism in the United States. "The devil of fascism appears as the protagonist of liberty-and calls itself the American Liberty League. Capitalists see 10 million people un- employed, and are building up means. to withstand a struggle they know is inevitable. Fascists are repre- sented by William Randolph Hearst who is unquestionably one of them. The most chauvinistic group of cap- italists is connected with Hearst and the Liberty League and support Lan- don. His election would open the door for fascism." Professor McFarlan, answering the Communist's thrusts, said: "I do not minimize the dangers of fascism. I saw it in Tampa and Terra Haute, and in Ann Arbor here, when the only newspaper says in an editorial that an intelligent person will choose fascism over commu- nism." Alpha Niu, Athena Hold Mock Debate Alpha Nu and Athena, literary college debating societies will hold a mock debate at a meeting on Nov. 11 in the Alpha Nu rooms, it was an- nounced at a meeting of Athena last night. The subject of the debate is "re- Soon afterward, speaking to thous-1 ands who live in the crowded lowerb east side of Manhattan, he picked upn the political banner which he had dropped for the moment and promised a "sound housing policy" if the NewI Deal is returned to office From a tremendous morning ova-s tion on a motor tour of three Newz York boroughs, the President rodet by ferry to Tiny Bedloe's Island inc New York harbor to speak duringi ceremonies commemorating the fif- tieth anniversary of the towering god-t dess of liberty. They were Franco-American cere-f monies because half a century agoN the people of France gave the world-I renowned statue, to America as ai symbol of international friendshipi and good will.c President Lebrun of France tookf part by short wave radio while his ambassador to Washington, Andre de Laboulaye, represented France in per- son. The statue was the vision orig- inally of the ambassador's grandfath- er. Today, Mr. Roosevelt said, the sym- bolism of liberty enlightening the world should be broadened. "To the message of liberty which America sends to all the world," he said, "must be added her message of peace.. "We do only a small part of our duty to America when we glory in the' great past. Patriotism that stops with that is a too-easy patriotism-a pa- triotism out of step with the patriots. "For each generation the more pa- triotic part is to carry forward Amer- ican freedom and American peace by making them living facts in a living present. "To that we can, we do, rededicate ourselves." Riksen Is Fined $28 For First Violation B. Ray Riksen, 602 Monroe St., charged with the violation of the city peddler's ordinance, paid a fine Greeted By Thousands Anniversary Of Gift Statue OfLiberty On Of Results in The Daily's faculty poll after voting yesterday: Roosevelt..................120 Landon . .....................101 Thomas ....................18 Browder....................6 Lenmke......................1 Total..................246 a faculty member listed in Who's Who, as a "protest vote." The voter wrote on the ballot "I am a dis- satisfied Republican." Governor Landon held a.slight edge in the voting by professors listed in "Who's Who," leading the President 13 ballots to 11. Thomas received one vote in this group, Lemke one, and Browder none. Governor Landon held a two to one lead in the slight voting Tuesday mostly from science departments in the literary college, but it was wiped out when returns came in yesterday from the liberal arts departments of the college where the President was expected to pull his heaviest vote. The Republican candidate con- tinued to maintain his lead in the engineering college and the science departments of the literary college. A part of the vote from the engineer- ing college has not yet been returned, but Governor Landon is expected to maintain his advantage there. Voting Divided Voting was fairly well divided in returns from the School of Business Administration, School of Education and College of Law. The dental school went heavily Republican, while no returns are available yet from the College of Medicine or the School of Music. The vote by departments in the colleges will not be released. Voting will continue today and also tomorrow, if necessary, to get in all the ballots that are voted. All faculty members who have not yet voted are asked to do so today. Bal- lots may be obtained from the sec- retary of each department or by call- ing The Daily. If ballots are not collected, The Daily should be noti- fied. Pots To Stay; Fr'aterni'ties [nd S upport Pot-wearing by freshman in fra- ternities will be supported by the In- terfraternity Council thus making the Fall Games and Black Friday on Dec. 5 a certainty, according to Miller Sherwood, '37, president of the Men's Council. Fraternity Pledges will have a ban- quet sponsored by the Interfraternity Council next Thursday at which the scholarship cup of the Council will be presented and a speech given by Col. Henry W. Miller, Gorge Cosper, '37, president of the Interfraternity Council said. The banquet will be held in the Union ballroom and it is hoped that all fraternity pledges will be present, Cosper said. A banquet following the fraterni- ties initiations after the first of the year is also being planned accord- ing to Cosper, at which time it is olanned to present a cun to the