The Weather Unsettled today, possibly some snow or rain; tomorrow, partly cloudy and warmer. C, - r Sir ian jIatj VOL. XLVIIL No. 24 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCT. 24, 1937 War Fear Revived As Italy And Soviet Hit New Deadlock Rome's Refusal To Make More Concessions Held To Doom Peace Plans Next Move Depends On SessionTuesday LONDON, Oct. 23--(IP--A Fascist warning that Italy had made her last concession, coupled with unyield- ing Russian opposition to the Italian stand, today swept away Europe's op- timism for a settlement of the prob- lem of foreign intervention in the Spanish civil war. The 68th session of the non-inter- vention sub-committee has been called for Tuesday but it promised nothing but continued disputes be- tween representatives of Europe's great powers. Italy Still Unyielding The statement issued at Rome by the official Stefany News Agency and believed to have been written by Mus- solini, himself, said that "to believe Italy can make further concessions (on plans to withdraw foreign troops from Spain) is absurd."- The statement was accepted in London diplomatic quarters as a vir- tual obituary notice for the plan by which Britain had hoped for the withdrawal of volunteers and an at- tendant lessening of the danger of the civil war becoming a general con- flict. The efforts of the non-intervention nations were considered to have been set back to the point where they were before Italy made what Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden called "a welcome contribution" to the prob- lem of getting foreign troops ot of Spain. Russia Submits Refusal Italy's contribution was her ac- ceptance last Wednesday of the nine- point plan presented by Britain. She later qualified this, however, with the condition that all other powrs agree in full, but immediately drew a flat refusal from Russia to accept political responsibility for the plan. The main discussion Tuesday is ex- pected to center on whether the na- tions would agree to accept the fig- ures of the two commissions which the British plan proposed to be sent to Spain to determine, among other things, how many volunteers were fighting for the Insurgents and the government. These figures would be the basis for calculating troop with- drawals from both sides,. Franco Turns East HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Fron- tier, Oct. 23-(/P)-Insurgent Gen- eralissimo Francisco Franco today swung his strengthened army east to 0 the Aragon front, next major theatre of Spain's civil war, for what his aides said would be "the decisive of- fensive of the war." Behind him Franco left a strong force of Navarrese troops to police newly conquered areas of Oviedo Province. Government dispatches announced the Madrid-Valencia regime was prepared to block the Insurgents on all sectors of the long line from the French frontier to Teruel--a front stretching 300 miles south from the border. TheValencia government was re- ported to have started moving to Barcelona which Government sources indicated was aimed to end the threat of anarchist uprisings, in the Cata- lonian capital by the presence of the Government's powerful military guard. Valencia would be left under military rule as the main base of Ma- drid's defense. Red Peril Averted A s Shirley Smith Keeps Clock Pure A Communistic threat hung over our heads yesterday as Shirley W.' Smith, vice-president of the Univer- sity, received a suggestion that thel tower clock be painted a bright red, but he promptly vetoed the proposal. The suggestion was one of several received by University authoritiesl and Albert Kahn, architect for the Burton Memorial tower, who are seeking a method of making the face' of the clock more legible without making the effect inartistic. Far East At A Glance; Yangtze Battle Rages SHANGHAI-Great battle for po'session of Yangtze delta en- tered fourth day with no sign of abatement; heavy losses ad- initted by both Chinese and Jap- anese. PE I P I N G- Japanese army spokesman said Japanese would begin general offensive in Shansi province "very soon" with pur- pose of seizing provincial capital, Taiyuanfu- BRUSSELS - Belgian foreign office disclosed government was considering postponement of nine- power conference on Chinese-Jap- anese conflict from October 30 to November 3; indicated they be- lieved Japan would participate in conference. Chinese Deny Jap Report Of Shanghai Rout Claim They Are Advancing Is Supported By Troops In International Section City Will Put New Sanitary CodeInEffect' Nunrerical Grading Systen Is Basis For Clean-UpI Drive In Restaurants Rumors Of Stalling Spiked By Sadler( Ann Arbor's new sanitary code pro-j viding for numerical grading of the city's restaurants has been approved by the Board of Health and enforce- ment will begin Monday, Mayor Wal- ter C, Sadler announced yesterday. Rigid specifications for the various phases of restaurant sanitation have been set up by Franklin Fiske, city sanitary inspector, and eating places will be marked on a percentage basis. The first inspection which will begin Monday is necessarily ed'uca- tional both to Fiske and to the res- taurant owners, the Mayor pointed out, and the results therefore will{ not be made public. After a fifteen- day preliminary period all health de- partment records dealing with the restaurant situation will be open to the public. "We expect to have cer- tificates giving the health depart- ment's grade posted in all the city's 140 eating places within 30 days," he said. Declaring he wished to spike ru- mors that the administration was deliberately stalling in the present drive, Mayor Sadler asserted he had instructed the city sanitary inspector to speed up his inspections as much as possible. "We expect grades to be low at first but we are convinced that nubliitv It won't be the fault of the 125 "Men of Michigan" if the entire campus and town does not know that they are presenting their second an- nual Varsity Night Tuesday at Hill Auditorium. They are seeing to it personally. Not satisfied with merely donning their uniforms and going about cam- >us selling ducats for the affair, little groups of the band's musicians last night went about town "tooting theirI own horns" and serenading the var- .ous dormitories with music and rau- cous cries of "Don't Forget Varsity$ Night." This year the program is not going to be strictly amateurish, although there will be 12 different acts com-! peting in two fields for prizes total- ing $80. First will come the more adept musicians playing the more aserious works. Then the show will ,give way to the humorous element. Interspersed among the acts, the band will contribute to the general entertainment by playing the new "Michigan Locomotive" amidst other novelties. The audience will also' take part, rendering several of the favorite Michigan songs. Fred Lawton, '11, who along withi Prof. Earl V. Moore of the Schooll of Music composed "Varsity" and "Michigan Locomotive," will act as, master of ceremonies. ' Wave Of Selling' Deals Market. ANew SeUtback , rosh Win Class Games Band erMichigan Trips Iowa, 7-6 IHeralds ShowT*r TuesdayNight~ T I kV~ H t - 10 SHANGHAI, Oct. 24.-(Sunday)- will bring about a rapid tightening pP)--The battle north of Shanghai of health standards." continued for the fourth day today Public opinion aroused by recent with a Japanese announcement that articles in the Daily has demonstrat- ed sufficiently that restaurant pa- the Chinese forces were retreating ~trons are unwilling to undergo fur- along the entire front countered by a ther risks to their health. Chinese assertion they not only were Emphasizing that correction and' holding their own but advancing. not punishment was the end sought, A communique issued by the Jap- ( Mayor Sadler declared he was grat- anese third fleet reported the invad- ified with the number of restaurant ing forces were advancing toward owners who had promised coopera- Soochow Creek. tion. A Japanese spokesman add;ed they- had not yet occupied Tazang, north- west of the International Settlement0 and immediate objective in the drive I on the Chinese settlement of Chapei, but expected to do so quickly. Lova list Spain The report drew a crisp report of ""ho ''nonsense' from a Chinese spokes- man who declared the Chinese were; ByiAt rericansg holding their own and advancing. B A erc n "The worst is now over and we are Cash contributions of $266,467.74 confident of holding out indefinitely and food and supplies worth $233,- in Chapei," the left flank of the Chi- 824.87 were sent to Loyalist Spain by nese line where it is protected by the four American organizations between neutrality of the foreign areas of May 1, 1937 and Sept. 30, 1937, ac- Shanghai. cording to reports made to the State British and American troops in the Department by these groups as is re- Inkernational Settlement reported quired by the terms of the Neutrality they saw no signs of the Chinese Act. withdrawing from Chapei. The organizations are the North The Japanese sought to smash the American Committee to Aid Spanish 25-mile front northwest of this city, Democracy headed by Bishop Francis the contending forces fighting J. McConnell of the Methodist Epis- through a maze of creeks and canals. copal Church; the Medical Bureau to r r Backwash Brings Of $10 In Some But Plants Keep Losses Issues, Busy i t NEW YORK, Oct. 23.-(jP)-A brisk backwash of selling in the stock mar- ket today swept away much of the re- covery from the low levels reached in Tuesday's huge wave of liquidation. Shares of steel companies and rail- roads, particularly, were pressed for sale and taken only at sharply lower prices. As the closing gong sounded declines of $1 to $10 were numerous.j This brought to a close the most strenuous and disturbing week which i Wall Street had experienced since the spectacular uprush of prices in the first few months of the New Deal end- ed with a precipitant slump in July, 1933. Price averages were again back in the area in which they fluctuated a from the summer 01 1933 until well along into 1935. Today's setback did not take Wall Street altogether by surprise, as er- ratic fluctuations would be in keep- ing with past experience after such a selling wave as that which came to a climax with the 7,000,000-share turn- over on Tuesday. Yet the week's business reports were scanned anxiously for evidence as to whether the stock market wasi foreshadowing an important inter- ruption to the course of recovery, or giving way to some internal weak-! ness, or possibly a combination ofi both.! Most encouraging aspects of the outlok were reports of brisk retail trade over the country the past week, in most areas substantially above a year ago. Also, while such manufacturing lines as steel and textiles, and build- ing operations, were well under last year at this time, it was noted that the motor makers went forward with large-scale production of 1938 models, Detroit estimates showing 91,905 cars and trucks made the past week, com- pared with only 64, 310 in the same week of 1936. KIPKE IS DINNER SPEAKER Head Coach Harry Kipke will ad- dregs the Exchange Club dinner meeting tomorrow at the Union. He has not yet announced his subject. Outnumbering Sophs 5 To 1, Yearlings Sweep Flag And Cane Rushes Second-Year Men Annex Pillow Fight Scores of freshmen surged down on a forlorn little band of sophomores yesterday and emerged victorious in the flag rush as the annual class games were resumed before many protographers and few spectators at South Ferry Field. Continuing the Black Friday vic- tory of last night, 150 freshmen crashe dthrough the 30 defending sophomores and sent Bob Forsythe of Ann Arbor to the top of the greased pole in less than seven min- utes to nab the flag. Cane Rush First Event In the other two events, the cane rush and the pillow fight, the class of '40 averted an all-around defeat by sweeping the pillow fight four to one. The '41 men captured the cane rush seven to one. The cane rush started the games at 2 p.m. with eight picked freshmen facing eight picked sophomores, each couple gripping a cane. But only one sophomore was able to hang on to his cane long enough to present it as a token of victory to Hugh Rader, '38, president of the Men's Council who directed the games. Victors March Up State In the pillow fight, five men from each class mounted wooden horses armed only with sawdust-filled pil- low cases. After two minutes of pum- meling four sophomores and one freshman remained on their perches. Well-smeared with green paint, the victors marched up State St. shout- ing "We beat '40." They stormed through the Union, loudly proclaim- ing their conquest of the sophomores. Not satisfied with boasting their might to the few radio-listeners in the Union, they mounted the steps to the tower and shouted their de- rision at weary sophomores far below. Student To Give Speech On India In Christ Church Programs Include Musical Discussions, Forums And Many GroupMeetings Miss Sarah Chakko, formerly a teacher at Isabella Thoburn College of Lucknow, India, will speak on "India Looks at the West," at 6:30 p.m. today at the Church of Christ Guild House. Miss Chakko left India last year to attend the graduate school of the University of Chicago and is now taking graduate courses at the University. A program of music and songs will be given at 6 p.m. at the Roger Wil- liams Guild House, Robert Marsh, '40, presiding. During the hour Ruth Enss, Grad.SM, will sing and also give a brief talk on the place of music in worship. Guild To Meet At 5:30 The Westiinster Guild's Supper and Fellowship will be held at 5:30 p.m. At the meeting which follows at 6:30 p.m. there will be a student symposium on the subject "The Faith of Four Hundred Million." Prof. Carl Rufus will lead a dis- cussion on "Science and Religion" at 9:45 a.m. at Stalker Hall. Prof. Howard Y. McClusky will speak on "The Christian Way of Life," before the Wesleyan Guild meeting at 6 p.m. A fellowship hour and supper will follow the meeting. "The 24 Hour Day" is the subject of Dr. W. P. Lemon's morning sermon for the First Presbyterian Church at 10:45 a.m. Prof. E. W. Doty of the music school, will lead the student choir Parr To Speak At 10:45 A.M. "Capturing Liieus Great Mom- ents," was the subject chosen by Dr. Leonard A. Parr, of the First Con- gregational Church for his sermon at 10:45 a.m. The Rev. Harold Marley of the Unitarian Church will speak at 11 a.m. on "A Little Journey Within the Self." At 7:30 p.m. the Liberal Stu- dents' Union will hold a meeting at iiu 5pai'in Democracy withJDr. Walter B. Cannon of Harvard Med- ical School as chairman; the Friends flaarer Reitpralps X1 --- -- of the Abraham Lincoln Battalion vocac.y Of Gop and the Emergency Ambulance Com- l" 0mittee which has Ernest Hemingway, Mi-Wa '* enoted novelist, as chairman. 'Mjd-WayMe' -- ' CCt 5 Of the $500,292.61 collected in cash and supplies, $62,350.59 or approxi- GREENWICH, Conn., Oct. 23.-(A') mately 10.3 per cent was spent in ---Former President Herbert Hoover publicity and administrative ex- stressed again tonight his advocacy penses. of a mid-season Republican conven- tion as a means of formulating a! It Is An Ideal Roomer definite policy on which to base the That's 'Clean And Hof party's fight against the Roosevelt administration. The bulletin board of the Wolver- The immediate objective of such a jeo srdh 1 _, > li _ 1 I I 650 Wolverine Members To FMeet-Next Tuesday For Incorporation Vote Six-hundred and fifty members of the Wolverine eating co-op are urged in an official notice to take final ac- tion next Tuesday on incorporation of the organization als a preliminary step to signing a land contract for their new building at 209 S. State. The meeting will be at 7 p.m. Oct. 26 in Natural Science Auditorium. The members will be asked to ap- prove a motion dissolving the old Michigan Wolverine Cooperative Boarding House and transferring its assets and liabilities to a new Michi- gan Wolverine Students Cooperative,I Inc. Since the Wolverine's option on the present premises expires Nov. 1, all members are urged to attend the meeting in order to facilitate signing of the contract by the corporation. A motion affecting the five-dollar membership fee will be brought up, with these provisions; "Credit will be given each member for two dollars annual dues, and the corporation will issue its note to each member for three dollars; payable June 10, 1938, with interest at four per cent." The plan provides that if "profits" warrant it, a proportionate reduction in the price of board will be made for the last few weeks of next semes- ter, instead of dividends and refund- ing of membership fees in cash. In view of the "increased financial (Continued on PaRre :.: Matinees Give 650 Access To Cinema Series Sunday afternoon showings of the four remaining programs in the Mu- seum of Modern Art series will be held at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, according to Mitchell Raskin, Grad., manager of the Art Cinema League. Membership cards will go ol sale at the Union, the League and Wahr's. The sale of 650 additional member- ships for the 3:15 p.m. matinees was necessitated by the demand of many who were unable to secure member- ship for the evening performances. Two hundred persons were turned away from the first showing last Sun- day. Matinee memberships will not be good for admission to evening show- ings. The next program, Nov. 14, will pre- sent "Comedies" in the history of the American cinema. Kinnick Scores For Michigan, it was the halfway mark in a season that started dis- mally and Wolverine partisans hoped that it marked the long-awaited turning point in their football for- tunes. The only real spark of enthusiasm the Hawkeyes provided the crowd came in the third quarter when Kin- nick, triple-threat sophomore, took a Michigan punt and sprinted through the entire Wolverine team on a 74-yard touchdown dash. Iowa, however, was denied a tie when Bill Smith, Michigan tackle, smashed through the Iowa line to block Jack Eicherly's conversion at- tempt from placement. Hawkeyes Await Victory The Hawkeyes never had another chance. The big Wolverine line con- stantly smashed through to ground Iowa's running and passing atta, and Iowa fans filed out of the sta- dium still waiting for the Hawkeyes' first home conference victory since 1933. Michigan started its touchdown drive late in the first quarter. Fred Trosko ,the little dynamo in the Wolverine backfield, returned a punt 10 yards to the Michigan 45 and then swept nine yards around end as the quarter ended. Tex Stanton, fullback, anl Trosko hammered to the Iowa 28. Then (Continued on Page 6 Farm Program Costs SeenMet By New Taxes Roosevelt Stresses Budget Economy, Permanence In Letter To Leaders WASHINGTON, Oct. 23.-R)- President Roosevelt wrote congres- sional leaders today that any new costs caused by the new farm program should be covered "100 per cent by additional receipts from new taxes." That fact, plus studies being made by agriculture department experts for House and Senate committees, pointed strongly to early efforts to- ward reviving some of the processing taxe's which went out with the old AAA. Stresses Continuous Program Mr. Roosevelt stressed that he wanted a farm program that would be continuous and permanent and added: "It is especially important that any new legislation should not unbalance the expected balancing of the budget In other words, no additional federal expenditures from the general fund of the treasury should be made over and above existing planned expendi- tures. The only exception to this would be the incurring of additional obligations on the part of the treas- ury, backed 100 per cent by additional receipts from new taxes.' Outlines Plan Briefly, the farm plan outlined by Mr. Roosevelt would: Safeguard farm incomes and soil fertility. Provide for storage of food supplies in_ an ever normal granary. Give surplus control but preserve Sn r. - m-irb .- _i convention, Hoover said at a privatej meeting of Connecticut Republican leaders, would be to increase the Re- publican representation in Congress. "The crisis at the present time is too great to sit by without affirma- tive action on the part of the Amer- ican people," the former chief ex- ecutive was reported to say by lead- ers attending the session. "The national crusade to save the American people from the New Deal," the leaders said Hoover told them, "must be fought on national ratherj than local issues." U. To Participate In Ohio Celebration George Starr Lasher, '11, profes- sor of English at Ohio University, will read a statement from the Univer- sity prepared for the 150th anniver- IL It, vu- r' a "E- -t '**'-' *J'S t J t - .e , - day: "Wanted: Roommate: Clean-Warm-Convenient-To-The- Campus. 609 Hill." After all, that's too much to expect, from any roommate. i Michigan To Tax Local Sales Made By Out -Of -State Firms Michigan is trying to plug loopholes in the sales tax by the new "use" tax effective Oct. 29. It is an ingenious taxing device, Prof. Robert S. Ford, of the economics department, ex- plained yesterday, as it is probably a legal method for reaching those sales which can not be touched now by the retail sales tax. The tax represents an effort to place Michigan retailers on a parity with out-of-state competitors, he said, anli a im a rirnfl o. lc nrn by the merchants themselves and en- forcement depends on agreement by) local retail merchants to abide by them. All retailers who make sales, ex- empt from the sales tax, to Michigan consumers, are required to register with the State Board of Tax Admin- istration under the new "use tox" act. Out-of-state retailers who maintain agencies in Michigan and sell to Michigan customers must eollect the