six THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOV. 16, 19^ i SIX TUESDAY, NOV. 16, 193'? National Grange Master Advises Unity In Action Taber Tells Labor, Farm Groups, Business To Act In Proinoting Good-Will HARRISBURG, Pa., Nov. 15.-( P) -Louis J. Taber, Columbus, Off, re- elected master of the National Grange, told the organization today there is great opportunity for labor, business and agriculture to cooperate; in promoting "good-will, enabling not' only our nation to recover, but enable it to be of service in time of world need." The 58-year-old farm leader, who has held Grange office for 37 years, the last 14 as master, had requested delegates to the annual convention to elect his successor. Not until a few minutes before election today and not until Mrs. Taber had acquiesed, did he accede to the wishes of the dele- gates, who gave him an overwhelming vote, to continue as master for two years. Fire Sweeps North Shanghai After Chinese Evacuation Fascists Accuse Our Suppressed Foreign Professor LForces Desire Department To Address Cercle Loyalist F7rHurs - a~n u l BOttle Prof. Georges Lafourcade, profes- sor of English at the University of O Foreign A id DETROIT, Nov. 15.-(AP)-A sports Grenoble, France, will give the first fan bottle thrower suffered discipline lecture of this year's series sponsored Ten Russians, Four CzeChs [rom the law today. by the Cercle Francais at 4:15 p.m. John Sprys, 19, of Detroit, who Friday in the Romance Language To Lead Defense Against threw wine bottles onto the field at Building. New Insurrgent Offensive! the football game Sunday between Professor Lafourcade will talk on Catholic Central High of Detroit and four prominent contemporary French St. Augustine's of Kalamazoo, was authors. One of these, Roger Mar- HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Fron- fined in recorder's court. tin du Gard, is the Nobel Prize winner tier. Nov. 15.-O')-Insurgent officers Sprys told Judge ,Christopher E, for literature for this year and has at Irun asserted today that ten Rus- Stein, who gave him an alternative written a series of books on the sian and four Czechoslovak officers of 15 days in jail, that he couldn't order of "The Forsyte Saga." Another, had arrived in Spain to help direct resist doing so himself when he saw Jules Romains, is well-known in the Spanish Government's defense other persons throwing bottles. America for his novels which have against the imminent Insurgent of-- - - been translated into English. fensive Admission to the lecture, which is First phase of this drive, Insurgent !Read Daily Classified Ads to be in French, may be obtainei sources said, would be launched this -- - from the Romance Language depart- week-within two days if weather; ment or at the door. permits- --with Almeria, port on the southern coast, as the first objective.; Insurgent officers spoke of the drive as Generalissimo Franco's "su- preme" offensive, designed to smash Government resistance before winter EN SIA N sets in. The thrust at Almeria, it was indi- cated, would be followed quickly by a drive on the Aragon front, in north- H eastern Spain, where the Insurgents would try to hammer their way to the sea. The coming offensive was more D freely discussed in Insurgent quar- ters, indicating that preparations were completed. Government leaders, asserting they were prepared to meet "everything Franco can throw against us," pre-j CONVENIENT APPOINTMENTS pared for the coming storm by small operations designed to straighten and TWO PHOTOGRAPHERS strengthen their lines in Aragon. Accepting the mastership, Mr. Ta- ber said: "I did so realizing the re- sponsibilities, the opportunities for service that lie just ahead. We must work for a larger share of the na- tion's income for agriculture. We : must take a long time viewpoint on our farm policy. We are in a crisis R a where stability in thinking and pa- : triotism must be our watchword." "I shall dedicate the comving ad- "::::-: : ministration to the oldest fightof Huge clouds of smoke the Grange, that of equality for ag- treated from Chapei and Ja riculture, protection for the average lines have been moved on or citizen and the family-sized farm, for the cause of world peace. To bring -U about these results I offer the words, Dictionary Is organization and service. A million Grange members by 1940 shall be my AT goal in helping to attain these N ot Dictate points" rolled skyward as fire swe it North Shanghai, after Chinese defenders had re- 4panese soldiers moved in to take possession of the area. Since then the battle rder of Chinese military command to a line 60 miles from Shanghai. Exams Plague These To It Reco Deu The purpose of the dictionary is to tion and co Church Builder record usage rather than dictate it, tendency t Prof. G. E. Densmore of the speech ferent acc deelsaContractdprtment said in an interview yes- the counti Ca c i o taCterday. railrad, t tures and i Professor Densmore believes that ies an k"UB sthe "preferred" pronunciation of in the U words will become standard usage scious'" h Action By Contractor ; within 25 years. The publishers of pb~i _______n _ s dictionaries, he continued, base their panuat George Walterhouse, contractor, preferred pronunciations on the re- pronunciati cancle his contract with the Pres-' suits of questionnaires sent to the byterian Church on Washtenaw leaders in various fields of activity. I Changes Avenue yesterday as a result of pick- The preferred pronunciation of aI come perm eting by the Local Building Trades 'word is not necessarily the correct concluded, Committee protesting the employ- one, but rather the one in most counteract ment of non-union men for cement- common usage. nunciation. ing and landscaping work. "Modern methods of transporta-- Union men employed to redecorate the inside of the church refused to F t FoeAgas cross the picket line yesterday morn- !Ffh or styT l ing thus halting all work on theBToday O church. Walterhouse voluntarily To e GivenTOC cancelled his contract, and work on the inside of the church will go on The 5th talk in the Forestry and as usual today. .Land Utilization series will be given The Building Trades Committee is by Earl C. O'Roke, Associate Profes-'Instead continuing to picket the Standard Oil Company station at Fifth and Huron sor of Forest Zoology, at 3 p.m. to- "True Ai as they and Walterhouse have come day over station WJR, Professor rd Usage, Assembly Board To Hold Gridders, Even On Trip ) Monthly Meeting Today DETROIT, Nov. 15.-A)-Imagine s'ore Says The regular monthly meeting of! a college football team having to the Assembly Board will be held at oaminations while away ommunication, also have a 5 p.m. today in the League, according That was the situation which con- o rule out gradually dif- to Helen Jesperson, '38, president of fronted the Hiram College elevenj ents in different parts of Assembly, organization for non-af- from Hiram, Ohio, Saturday. ry. The automobile, the filiated women. I It arrived here last Saturday and, he telephone, talking pic- Miss Jesperson said that the room after a short workout for the game radio have combined dur- for the meeting will be posted on the with Detroit Tech, retired to a down- years to make the people bulletin board on the first floor of town hotel for a three-hour academic nited States 'word-con- the League. session. e declared. The American akrng a new interest in and a vogue f or correct ion has resulted. in pronunciation, to be- ,. anent, Professor Densmore should come slowly to frequent fads in pro- td Evenings if desired. A whole building devoted to Photography STUDIO: 319 East Huron Opposite Daily News Dial 5541 Established 1890 II Oglu Talks Islamic Art; Spain With Origin Of Arabian Hone rabic art was not developed to no agreement, about the employ- ment of union labor on the job. ANNOUNCE SCHOLARSHIPS Winners of three University pro- fessional scholarships amounting to fees were announced yesterday by Dr. Frank Robbins, assistant to the president. They are George M. Vir- ga, '38M, Emil M. Isberg, '38M, and Anne H. Kowab, '38M. O'Roke's topic will be "Money from Animals in our Forests." William Rice, '38, will be the student an- nouncer for the broadcast. The other four talks that have been given by men in the Forestry School are available to the public in mimiographed form, and can be ob- tained by writing to Waldo Abbot,, Director of Broadcasting service, Ann Arbor. Ia EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS I in the home of the Arabs but in I Spain," Professor Aga-Ogiu pointed out yesterday in an illustrated lec- ture on "Islamic Art in Spain" de- livered in Alumni Memorial Hall.' Professor Aga-Oglu, who himself is a Turk, is a member of the Univer- sity 's Institute of Fine Arts. He began the lecture, which was sponsored by the Research Seminar; in Islamic Art in Spain, by outlining the historic development of Islamic art in Spain. He explained how the Arabs conquered Spain~ and estab- lished an artistic culture different; from that of the Near-Eastern coun- tries of Islam. Slides were shown depicting the Alhambra and Alcazar in the whole and also showing sec- tions so that the delicate and minute decorations would be clearly per- ceived. "The Alhambra is an ornament in itself. It is not an architectural wonder but a decorative one," he ex- plained further. The Alcazar is a true example of this art, yet in com- parison with the Alhambra it shows the beginning of decay. The western' elements of the beginning of the Renaissance are introduced into it. WWJ P.M. 6:00--Tyson's Sports. 6:15-Dinner Music., 6 :30-Bradcast. 7:00-Amos 'n' Andy. 7 :15-Souvenirs. 7:45-Concert Violinist. 8:00-Phillip Morris. 8:30-Lady Esther Serenade. 9:00-Vox Pop. 9:30-Hollywood Marti Gras. 10:30--Jimmy Fidler. 11:00--Newscast. 11:15~-Webster Hall Music. 11:30-Dance Music. 12:00--Northwood Inn. WJR P.M. 6:00-Stevenson Sports. 6:15-Comedy Stars. 6-30-Glen Gray Orch. 6 :45-Whispering Jack Smith. 7:00-Poetic Melodies. 7:15--To Be Announced. 7:30- -Helen Mencken. 8:00-Edward G, Robinson. 8:30 -Al Jolson-Martha Raye. 9:00--Al Pearce. 9:30-Jack Oakie College. 10:30-News Comes to Life. 11:00-Headline News. 11:15 -Reminiscing. 11:45-Meditation. 12:00-Emery Deutsch Orch. 12:30-Ted Flo Rito Orch. 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