I The Weather Increasing cloudiness with rising temperature, with show- ers tonight or by tomorrow. L r e 5k ig tan Iati Editorial~ Devaluation Of The Franc ... VOL. XLVII No. 7 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCT. 4, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Fascist Fliers Shell Madrid; Loyal Soldiers BeginTo Flee Wounded Militiamen And Children Make Escape To Mediterranean Coast Rebels Push Toward Capital From North Government War Ministry Claims Minor Triumph On The Cordoba Front Reports from Madrid said 11,- 000 copper miners were defend- ing the area in Southwestern Spain, North of Seville, where the British-owned Rio Tinto copper mines are located. They were said to be using tanks made from the copper out of those mines in meeting bitter Fascist assaults.- MADRID, Oct. 4.-(Sunday)-3P) -Evacuation of Madrid, nearly en- circled by Fascistdbattle lines, was reported early today to hae begun following a new bombardment by in- surgent planes. Wounded government militiamen and children were understood to have been the first to leave the city. They were said to be going to Va- lencia, on the Mediterranean coast to the east. (In that direction alone could per- sons flee from the capital without en- countering the Fascist forces, which were strung south, west and north of Madrid). Officials reported that the insur- gents had dropped 45 bombs in the latest raid but that there were no casualties and little damage. North of Madrid, surging Fascist attacks broke on the government's defenses. MADRID, Oct. 3.--'P)-Surging Fascist attacks broke on the govern- ment's serried defenses north of Ma- drid tonight. From the northeast and northwest, in the Sierra sector, the insurgents rolled their lines forward on Madrid as the government pushed expansion of its anti-aircraft defenses. Much importance was attached in the capital to, air raids on Madrid as it was feared the insurgents hoped to clear their way into the capital by instilling terror into the inhabitants. A war ministry communique, how- ever, said 250 of the enemy were killed in action near Elvacar Village on the Cordoba front. Government forces operating from Olias Cabanas de la Sagra were re- ported to have renewed their counter- attacks on the Fascist captors of Bar- gas despite a continuous bombard- ment from 12 insurgent bombers which lasted the -entire morning. Bar Sanctions Taking Polities From Judiciary Appointments To Be Made From Recommendations By Bar Committee FLINT, Oct. 3.-(P)-Taking the first step in its campaign to remove the selection of judges from politics, the new Integrated Michigan State Bar placed in the hands of its Board of Commissioners today a proposal that justices of the Supreme Court and judges of all courts of record ex- cept probate courts be appointed by the governor instead of being elect- ed at the polls. The appointments would be made from one or more nominations sub- mitted by the Judiciary Committee of the State Bar, such appointees to remain in office during good be- havior and being removed from of-. fice by the governor for judicial mis- conduct. The proposal was placed in the hands of the Board of Commissioners with full power to act, with the re- commendation that legislation be prepared and submitted at the next session of the State Legislature. The action of the State Bar came today as the concluding feature of its three-day State Convention held here and followed a report by the committee on Judicial selection and tenure. The recommendation of the Bar Our Blue in Grinm Shirts Retreat On Fierce Front Mr. Bachman's rebels from East Lansingo not only massacred Mr. Kipke's Loyalists yesterday in the Battle of Stadium Fortress, but Mr. Bachman poked fun at Mr. Kipke to boot. That is, Mr. Bachman sent his re- serve army to the front just before the battle ended in order to show Mr. Kipke's Loyalists that he did not think very highly of them. "I just wanted to give 'em a fighting chance," he said with a cruel Fas- cist laugh as the second string men girded themselves for the fray. Mr. Kipke, who escaped with the remnants of his Loyalists to Locker Roomo Palace, was reported to have said he appreciated it. But he was, none the less, sore perplexed. As is any commander-in-chief who sees his fighting forces overwhelmed and his cause being lost. In particular he was disappointed because he had taken such great pre- cautions against defeat. For in- stance, he had asked Mrs. Kipke, and others, to keep their fingers crossed for his Loyalists. And Mrs. Kipke, at least, had done that. To what re- sults? As Mrs. Kipke put it mildly (very mildly indeed): "Crossing my fingers didn't seem to do much good." So Mr. Bachman's sportsmanship in light of all this, coming as it did from a Fascist rebel, was rather dis- couraging to the Kipkes. But, as Loyalists are unusually loy- al, Mr. Kipke can be counted on not to lose heart. As Mr. Yost, the form- er Loyalist leader and now a gov- ernment sympathizer, says: "This army has spirit." 'Mental Radios' Is Brashares' Subject Today Rev. R. E. Sayles' Sermon' Introduces New Series On Sermon On Mount "Mental Radios" will be the title of Dr. Charles W. Brashares'sermon today at 10:45 at the First Metho- dist Episcopal Church. "Mental Radios" is based on recent investiga- tions on extra sensory perception. Other activities of interest to stu- dents are a Discussion Group at 10:45 held every Sunday morning at Stalker Hall. This group is led by Dr. George E. Carrothers. Every Sunday evening at Stalker Hall at 6 p.m. there is also a Wesleyan Guild meeting. Tonight Prof. Carleton An- gell will give an illustrated lecture on Sculptoring and Modern Religion. At the First Presbyterian Church, Dr. William P. Lemon, minister, will speak on the subject "Does God Plan Every Life?" at the regular morning worship service to be held at 10:45 a.m. Music will be given by a vested student choir, augmented by a double quartette. Prof. Stewart A. Courtis of the School of Education will speak on the subject "What is it to be Educat- ed?" at the meeting of the West- minister Guild. The supper is at 5:30 and the meeting follows at 6:30. At the First Baptist Church; Rev. R. E. Sayles, minister, at 10:45 a.m. will conduct the worship and the sermon, an introduction to a series of addresses on 'Sermon on the Mount." AtM12 noon, the Roger Williams Guild, Baptist student organization will have a special study period fol- lowing the morning worship. This will be held at the Guild house. The group is led by Rev. Howard R. Chapman, minister and advisor to students. At 6 p.m., Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education for the University will give an address on "The Religious Growth of the Student," after which a social hour will follow. The CongregatiQnal Church will hold its service of worship with a sermon by Mr. Heaps at 10:45. The. subject of the sermon will be "Build- ing Christian Personality." At 6 p.m. there will be a Student Fellowship Supper to be followed by a program (Continued on Page 3) Elementary School Teachers Needed The Bureau of Occupational Infor- mation has received calls for more elementary school teachers with de- grees in the past month than it has been able- to furnish, Dr. T. Luther Purdom, director of the bureau, re- ported yesterday. 64,842 Fans See Yankees WinBy2Tol Giants Score On Homer By Ripple; Gehrig Hits One For Yankees Yanks Lead Series With Two Victories Fitzsimmons Outpit ches His Opponent But Loses When Drops Grounder NEW YORK, Oct. 3.-(P)-The greatest crowd in World Series his- tory, 64,842 fans who filled the ex- pansive Yankee Stadium nearly to capacity, saw the Yankees capitalize the breaks of the third game in New York's baseball civil war today to beat the Giants, 2 to 1, despite the spectacular four-hit hurling of Fred Fitzimmons, 35-year-old Arcadia, Calif., chicken farmer and exponent of the baffling knuckle ball. Fitzimmons, rated one of the best fielding pitchers in baseball, lost a heart-breaking dual to his right- handed rival, Irving (Bump) Had- ley because he failed to hold a sharp- ly hit grounder by Frankie Crosetti in the critical climax of the eighth inning rally that gave the Yankees their second straight triumph and a 2 to 1 lead in the current champion- ship struggle. Luck Against Giants Home runs into the right-field stands by Lou Gehrig, the Yankee captain, and Jimmy Ripple, fresh- man centerfielder of the Giants, carried the most exciting match of the series all square into the eighth inning before the last of a series of tough breaks turned against the Na- tional League champions. Today's attendance and gate re- ceipts surpassed records set during the 1926 series between the Yankees and St. Louis Cardinals in the Yankee stadium. The crowd that nearly filled the reconstructed and somewhat enlarged park included 1,- 242more cash customers than the former record total of 63,000, set in the second game ten years ago. The gate receipts of $235,108 surpassed the mark of $224,130 set in the first game. A Battle Of Freaks Not since the Cardinals squeezed out their seventh and decisive tri- umph over George Earnshaw and the Athletics in 1931 has a series wit- nessed as thrilling a battle of breaks or as tough a setback for the losing pitcher. Fitzimmons not only outpitched Hadley by a decisive margin at nearly every turn but he exhibited superb control of his knuckle ball, which he mixed with a low curve and change of pace to throttle most of the Yankee sluggers. Up to the fatal eighth the only hits off the right- hander were Gehrig's second inning homer into the new right-center bleachers and Dimaggio's double to left-center. Union Tryouts Called For Meeting Tomorrow Tryouts for the Union will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Room 304, the Union, it was announced yesterday by Union officials. Eligibility rules demand that a try- out must have received . no grade lower than C for the past semester, and that he must have a C average in his college record. Paris Troops Mustered As Riots Impend Communists And Fascists Will Hold Simultaneous Street Demonstrations De La Rocque Men 'To March On Reds Leftists Appeal To Their Partisans To Ignore All Provocations By Enemy PARIS, Oct. 3.-(P)-The govern- ment tonight ordered 8,500 mobile guardsmen and heavy regular police detachments to mass in the Parc Des Princes where Communists and Rightists announced simultaneous demonstrations would be held Sun- day. Police ripped down placards posted today by the Rightists followers of Col. Francois De La Rocque calling upon citizens to attend his demon- stration to show "The Red Fascists we are on guard." The "Social Party" of Col. De La Rocque who was former head of the disbanded Rightists "Croix de Feu," has been ordered the subject of crim- inal investigation by the government of Socialist Premier Leon Blum. The Communists, in the face of the mobile guard orders, appealed to their partisans to "ignore all provo- cations." The guardsmen's patrols were re- laxed somewhat tonight after the one-day strike of Paris hotel, restau- rant and cafe employees was settled. The men agreed to return to work Sunday after a collective contract committee had been decided upon to establish a salary scale and to settle other differences. The strikers demanded percentages of checks rather than tips. Rightists, meanwhile, declared they would march on the Communist meeting scheduled for Sunday. The Communist meeting would be broken up, said the Rightist follow- ers of Col. De La Rocque. There were no serious clashes be- tween Leftists and Rightists today as guardsmen patrolled Paris boulevards and watched hotels where striking employes sought to prevent non- strikers from working. The police were ordered to prevent all "occupations" of restaurants, cafes and hotels, and to throw the strikers out if necessary, in accord- ance with Premier Blum's promise to the Chamber of Deputies Sept. 29 that "occupation strikes will not last." NYA Issues A Call To Lax Applicants Students who have filed applica- tions for NYA aid, have been reg- istered in the University, and who have neglected to fill out an em- ployment record card, should report to Room 103 Romance Language Building at once, it was announced yesterday by Harold S. Anderson, Mr. Anderson explained that his office would not be able to get in touch with students who have failed to fill out employment record cards as no Ann Arbor addresses are avail- able yet. The quota has been filled but students are being added to work projects as rapidly as possible, he said. State Hurls Two At Michigan And Drives Teams To Brilliant 21 -7 Victory One Reason Why Michigan's Attack FailedI Well-Oiled Running Attack Proves Too Strong For Kipke's Untested Squad 60,000 Watch Game In Baseball Weather Sweet's Smash Through Tackle Ties Up Score In The Second Quarter By GEORGE J. ANDROS (Daily Sports Editor) Two Michigan State elevens, each exhibiting a well-executed running attack, swept over a Michigan team composed mostly of sophomores yes- terday in the Stadium to make it three straight over the Wolverines. The final score was 21 to 7. -Michigan Daily Photo Bob Cooper ran smack into his own interference on this attempted thrust off tackle midway of the first quarter of yesterday's Spartan- Wolverine game. Art Brandstatter is holding up the play long enough for Howard .Zindel, outstanding State tackle, to grab Cooper from behind. Mel Kramer can be seen on the ground after attempting to cut down the secondary. Coughlin SaysI Both Nominees 'Sham-Battling' Priest Declares No Banksj Failed But Many Private Corporations Did DETROIT, Oct. 3.-(I)-The Rev. Charles E. Coughlin asserted tonightl that both Gov. Alf M. Landon andY President Roosevelt were "sham-i battling their way through this po-l litical campaign with sophistries andc misstatements, confident that an un-t analytical public will applaud theirt golden words and keep the Americanc people in financial bondage." In a radio address, the head of thec National Union for Social Justice re- ferred to President Roosevelt's state-r ment Thursday night that within a year there had been no "single bankc failure" in the United States. The priest said: . "Oh, yes, we are celebrating a re-c quiem anniversary for our local corn-s er banks in our cities. It is true thatX no national bank has failed withint the year. Is it likewise true that noc grocery sto,er no small industry failedv during that space of time? Theyt were all private corporations. "Instead of curing the banking dis- ease of this country, instead of driv-r ing the money changers from the{ temple; instead of restoring to Con-r gress the right to do all the issuing ofr money, permitting the bankers to doi the retail lending of money, the NewI Deal has fallen in love with the Oldt Deal. Worse than that, it has put the cart before the horse. The banksc issue money and the government does the retail lending of money.' Manion Takes McNutt's Place At Forum Here Prof. Clarence Manion, dean of the law school of Notre Dame University and a prominent New Deal Democrat, will supplant Gov. Paul V. McNutt of Indiana as the first Union Forum. speaker of this year at 8 p.m. tomor- row, it was announced last night by William G. Struve, recording-secre- tary of the Union. He will speak in the Union ballroom. Notified late yesterday afternoon that McNutt would be unable to ap- pear in Ann Arbor, Union officials ob- tained the Notre Dame faculty mem- ber, who is reputedly a good debater and as ardent a New Deal advocate as Governor McNutt. The careers of Governor McNutt and Professor Manion correspond strikingly. Professor Manion is at present president of the Indiana Bar Association, an office which Governor McNutt once held, and Governor Mc- Nutt was dean of the Indiana Uni- Dean To Begin1 Check On Autot Ban Violatorst Attention Called To Partr Of Regulation Relatingi To StorageOf Cars t A statement was issued by the Dean of Students Office whicht warned all students driving cars tor have them registered or put awayt inasmuch as a careful check is nowc being made of all cars being used or stored by University students.- Particular attention was called tof the section of the automobile reg- ulations relating to stored cars. These) cars must be registered at the Dean's office without further delay and fail- ure to comply with this requirementD will be considered in the nature of ac violation. Students whose applications forc driving privileges have been acceptedI and filed for one week were requestedx to call for their permit tags without delay. The Office of the Dean of> students offers the following inter-j pretation of the Automobile Regula- tion. Violations will not be excusedc on the basis of misunderstanding: 1. No student in attendance at the Uni- versity from and after the beginning of the first semester of the University yeart 1927-28 shall operate any motor vehicle. In exceptional and extraordinary cases at then discretion of the Dean of Students this rule may be relaxed. The automobile reg- ulation became effective at 8:00 a.m. Mon- day, September 28, and all regularly en- rolled students are requested to avoid anyC driving or use of their cars until permits have been obtained at the office of the Dean of Students, Room 2, University Hall. 2. The automobile regulation governs the use of a car as well as the operation of one; consequently, it is not permissiblej for a student to use his car, or a family- owned car, for social, personal, or any other purposes, when the car is driven1 by a non-student who is not a member of his immediate family.1 3. A student receiving permission to use an automobile must adhere strictly to the terms of his permit. Before any' driving is done, student permit tags must be attached to the State license plates, in such a manner as to insure easy vis- ibility. Any act of driving without per-j mission from this office, or with permit4 tags unattached, will be considered a vio- lation of the ruling and will be disciplined accordingly. 4. All permits must be renewed when the 1937 State license plates are required1 or as soon as the new tags are purchased. At such time, new sets of permit tags bearing the current license number will be issued at no additional cost to the holders. All, permit tags obtained this fall will be void as soon as it is unlawful to drive with 1936 license plates. .5. Where any appreciable saving in transportation costs is realized, students (Continued on Page 2) Amateur Contest Offers Novelties The amateur contest to be held at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13 in Hill Auditorium by the Michigan Band will present many novel features to Ann Arbor audiences, Director Wil- liam D. Revelli announced yesterday. The purpose of the contest is to raise funds to send the band to the Pennsylvania game Nov. 7. In addition to the amateurs on the program, the entire band will be present and will entertain with sev- eral specially arranged nvelties. A crowd of 60,000, the largest to attend a game between the two teams, saw Coach Harry Kipke's squad dis- appointingly open the 1936 season in a brilliant afternoon sun that was more suited to baseball than to grid- iron play. Statescored first during the third series of downs in the opening quar- ter after Julius Sleder had recovered the second of two successive Mich- igan fumbles. The game was less than three minutes old at the time. Michigan Scores Michigan came back to score and dominate the play in the second pe- riod, but the Sartans countered once in each of the third and fourth quar- ters and had Coach Kipke's young team on the run throughout most of the last half. The first score of the game came before many of the spectators had reached their seats. Art Brandstat ter, fast and bruising State fullback, carried Johnny Smithers' opening kickoff from his own three to the 15. John Brennan stopped Al Agett for no gain at the center of the line, after which the Spartans' left half- back punted out of bounds on Mich- igan's 44-yard line. Bob Cooper fumbled on the first Michigan play but recovered on his own 37. Here tackle Sleder recovered Cedric Sweet's fumble on the 34 and State was away. Steve Sebo skirted left-end to the 26 and on the next play Frank Gaines circled the same side of the line on an end-around play to score without a hand being laid upon him. Michigan's eleven seemed to re- cover from its jitters of the opening period soon after the second quar- ter began, and finally marched to a score. Pass Ruled Incomplete With the ball in the possession of the Wolverines on the State 25-yard stripe, Smithers faded back to the 40 and threw a pass to Cooper in the corner of the field that was ruled complete on the six-yard line when Sebo interviewed with the receiver. Sweet smashed over right-guard for a yard gain, and went to the Spartan one-yard marker on a trick play that saw the ball snapped short to the big fullback while Capt. Matt Patanelli was out of his end position and in the backfield apparently talk- ing to quarterback Lou Levine, who was on the receiving end of a short punt formation. Sweet then ploughed over left-tackle to score. Chris Everhardus went in for Coo- per and tied the score on a perfect conversion placekick. The first half ended two minutes later, Coach Charlie Bachman inserted an entirely new State team at the start of the last half following the first team's inconsistent defensive play in the second quarter. Kovacich And Pingle After Fred Ziegel had returned Cooper's punt to the State 32, Full- back George Kovacich went through the Wolverine line for a first down on the 42. Two plays later Johnny Pingle broke through the line for a first down in Michigan territory, going all the way to the 33-yard line. Fol- lowing a line play and a five-yard offside penalty against the Wolver- ines, Kovacich slashed through left tackle for another first down on Michigan's 12. P i n g I e crashed through left tackle on the next play for State's second touchdown, Kova- cich converting to make the score 14 to 7. Early in the last quarter the first Sartan lineun went into th -om Cyclotron Is A New Factor In Cancer Fight, Says Cork How atomic theory built up by the; physicist in the laboratory may be utilized in medicine's fight against cancer and biology's study of life processes was outlined last night by Prof. James M. Cork of the physics department in a talk before the De- troit chapter of the American Society of Metals. More than 160 members of the so- ciety convened at a dinner in the Union, heard Professor Cork first briefly describe the cyclotron, ma- chine in which atomic bombardment yields therapeutically valuable radio- active substance, and then present a few applications of these substances. That such mechanisms are of vast importance Professor Cork indicated by mentioning the rapidity with' which development work on the cy- active salts into inaccessible but im- portant life-streams such as tree sap was added by Professor Cork as an- other application of the cyclotron. Due to the ease with which an elec- troscope will detect extremely min- ute quantities of radio-active ma- terials, the biologist may readily fol- low the sap as it performs its various functions. Common occidental illusions and. misrepresentations about Japan were treated by Prof. Robert B. Hall of the geography department in a second talk before the society. Apparent dishonesty in the Jap- anese is often really a highly culti- vated attitude of always being agree- able at the price of strict truth, Pro- fessor Hall found. Serious crime, however, he declared, was almost non-existent in Japan, except for