...,.. , ,. Weather Fair, somewhat warmer today; tomorrow showers and cooler. LI E 41k iga VOL. XLIX. No. 14 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCT. 11, 1938 r 1 Kiwanis Club Hears Author LloydDouglas Former Local Pastor Tells Members Meeting Here Citizens'_Responsibility 3-Day Convention, Concludes Tonight Lloyd C. Douglas Tells Reporter Writing Is Big-ScalePreaching I Citing the old Greeke legend of Gala- tea, the beautiful girl carved from ivory by Pygmalion, who then fell in love with his creation and was re-' warded by her coming to life, Dr. Lloyd C..Douglas,told a near capacity audience of Michigan Kiwanians, townspeople, and students Sunday night in Hill Auditorium that the "highest joy of man is to bring things to life." Dr. Douglas, author of "Magnifi- cent Obsession," "Green Light," and "White Banners," and former pastor of the local First Congregational Church, delivered the keynote address of the Michigan Kiwanis convention now in session here. He was intro- duced by President Ruthven, who wel- comed the delegates as co-workers with the University. Treats Convention Theme Drawing from a huge reserve of anecdotes and relating his own ex- perieices, Dr. Douglas treated the convention theme, "citizenship re- sponsibility." Any consideration of this all-inclusive term, he said, must take into account, not only the im- mediate, visible surroundings, but also the world at ,large. It is this notion of isolation and living in our own little worlds, he warned, that causes much of the strife and trouble that we see today. In briefly reviewing the world scene, Dr. Douglas noted: "The rank and file of people in the world are eager to live lives of~ freedom and peace. A small handful clamor for power. Most people merely want to be left alone. It Is the minority, numerically insig- nificait, suffering from hallucina- tory omnipotence, who want turmoil." People Want Peace People do not want war, the former minister declared, but whether it is better to disarm in the hope of oth- ers following suit, or arm to frighten the rest is a question. A tiger in the jungle, he related, would be foolish to announce in a peaceful gesture that he had lost his claws and teeth. Relating experiences in respect to his own writing, Dr. Douglas noted what a great sense of satisfaction and pleasure ,it gave him to watch his characters develop and progress from the early stages, when they were merely jumbled thoughts in his mind, tothe time he saw them as living, breathing creatures on the screen. The three day convention closes today with the Governors Banquet at 7:00 p. m. in the Union. Nazis Regret' Recent Attack Upon CardinaI Hitler Aid Goes To Vienna; May Send Guilty Persons To Concentration Camps VIENNA, Oct. 10.-(P)-Joseph Buerckel, Chancellor Adolf Hitler's Commissioner for Austria, was under- stood to have returned to Vienna to- day intent upon sending to concen- tration camps persons responsible for Nazi attacks upon 62-year-old Theo- dore Cardinal Innitzer. The attacks are "deeply regretted" In official Germany, it was said. SThe agency Dienst Aus Deutsch- land in an inspired article from Ber- lin said Buerckel had "taken most vigorous action" against demonstra- tions including that Saturday night, wher4 the Cardinal was cut by flying glass in the stoning of his palace in St. Stephen's Square by Nazi mobs. Dienst Aus Deutschland said: "Incidents in Vienna in the course of which demonstrations were made against Cardinal Innitzer are deeply regretted in official German circles. "Reich Commissar Buercke! has taken most vigorous action against the provocative demonstrations." VATICAN CITY, Oct. 10.-4YP- Vatican circles said today that news of the attack Saturday night upon Theodore Cardinal Innitzer, Arch- bishop of Vienna, in his palace has 'Movies Have Not Abusedl Novels,' ays Author Of 'MagnificentObsession' By MORTON LINDER Lloyd Douglas is a tall man. He has a peculiar way of looking at you ,hat makes you feel that he has known you for a long time. When I called on the author of "Magnificent Obsession," "Green Light," and' "White Banners," yesterday after- .noon in Room 317 of the Union, he received me cordially and lookedl stately despite the striped pajamas . in which he was lounging. I declined the proferred cigarette and admitted that I had no definite questions with which to interview him, but I was sure that anything he might have to say would be of in- terest. He told of coming to Ann Ar- bor in 1915 remaining as pastor of the First Congregational Church un- til 1921, and officiating at the fu- nerals of Dir. Angell and Dr. Burton, former presidents of the University. He told of the pastorates he has held in Columbus, Montreal, Akron, Wash- ington, D.C., and Los Angeles, where1 he now makes his home. At last I thought of a question to ask him. "Do you feel that the mo- tion pictures have portrayed your novels as you nieant them to be?" "I am very much satisfied with the job Hollywood has done with my books," he answered, shifting his large frame in the chair, "They have not abused them at all." "Do you feel that you are, in a way, carrying on the same preaching in your books that you started on the pulpit?" "Yes; writing is the same as deliv- LLOYD C. DOUGLAS ering a sermon, except that before I reached only hundreds; now I reach hundreds of, thousands. Then, too,, I feel a little freer in writing-the traditions of the pulpit more or less dictate how you must talk-the hu- man interest is lacking. When I write, I can conceive characters and make them do my bidding." "What is your opinion of the so- called modern school of literature?" "They have a literature of despair. They present nothing constructive. For the. person who thinks the world is gone, they are all right. For those, however, who have troubles, they do not do any good." "Have the students changed since you were here?" "Same old gang," he said, lighting another cigarette. Independent Men To Vote Tomorrow Petitions Are Available; Voters To Cast Ballots in Their Own Districts Congress To Pick Ten Zone Leaders Independents will vote tomorrow in a campus-wide election to choose ten zone presidents who will repre- sent them on the District Council of Congress, independent men's organi- zation. All unaffiliated men are eligible to vote for the president of the zone in which they reside. A map showing numbers and boundaries of zones wim. appear in tomorrow's Daily. Freshmen Not Eligible The polls will be kept open from 7:30 a. m. until 7:30 p. m. Wednes- day, Oct. 12. Election officials will be stationed in the Union lobby, the West Engineering building, and the lobby of Angell Hall to receive bal- lots. Sophomores and upperclassmen in- dependents who wish to run for office have until 9 p. m. tonight to hand in petitions, Robert Hartwell, '39E, Con- gress president announced. Petitions must bear twenty-five signatures, in addition to the candidate's name, ad- dress, telephone, school, class, age, scholastic average, and a brief plat- form. They must be turned in to Room 306 in the Union. Freshmen are not eligible for office. Congress Founded In 1937 From the ten presidents elected to represent the campus, three will be chosen by the judiciary committte to fill vacant posts on the Executive Council, governing body of Congress. Congress was founded in the Spring, 1937, in response to a growing demand for a service organization specific- ally designed to fill the needs of non- affiliated men. Since that time, the group has expanded its activities to include such fields as student welfare, social activities and sports. The first in the series of Congress tea dances, inaugurated last spring, and conducted in conjunction with Assembly, women's independent or- ganization, will be held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday in the League. Chinese Students Publish Directory In Two Languages The Chinese Student Directory, published by the Chinese Student Club, was distributed yesterday. The 31-page booklet was edited by Shao Wei Li. Grad., with the aid of Celia Chao, Hou Jan Sun, and Eugene Tsao, all graduate students. The first pages of the directory are devoted to an introduction written in Chinese, a greeting by President Ruthven, and a short foreword by Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students and Director of In- ternational Center. Alternate pages of names and addresses and advertise- ments follow. Some of the adver- tisements are in Chinese characters, and after each of the 128 names ap- pear the Oriental symbols for the Americanized versions. At the end of the book are two pages to be de- voted to the recording of unlisted names, addresses and telephone num- bers. According to Shao Wei Li, this year's directory was distributed more than a month earlier than that of last year. Lindbergh Is Silent On Charges Thrown At Him By Soviet Airmen Russians Say 'Lone Eagle' Lied To British Chieftain On Airforce Weakness ROTTERDAM, Oct. 10-(VP)-Col. Lindbergh declined comment when he arrived late today in Rotterdam with Mrs. Lindbergh on charges of his "being a lackey of Germans and <': : 3,*.* British," which were thrown at him by Soviet airmen. MOSCOW, Oct. 10-(W)-Eleven Soviet aviation leaders denounced Col. charles A. Lindbergh today in a let- ter which referred to alleged state- ments by the American flier published in London after he visited Moscow in August. The letter, published in Pravda, or- gan of the central committee of the Communist party, and circulated by Tass (Russian official news agency), accused Col. Lindbergh of making "slanderous and insolent anti-Soviet CHARLES A. LINDBERGH utterances" before guests of Lady As--_ tor, Virginia-born member of the and insolent anti-Soviet utterances British House of Comnmons. which were served for Lady Astor's It referred to a report by "'The guests. It appears Lindbergh declared Week' agency" and charged that in London that Germany" possesses "Lindbergh acted in conformity with such powerful aviation, that it is able instructions of British reactionary to defeat the air fleets of England, circles 'to prove the weakness of France, the U.S.S.R and Czechoslo- Soviet aviation' and thus provide vakia. (British Prime Minister) Chamberlain "The second statement outstripped with an argument in favor of capitu- the first. He declared that in the lation in Munich in the Czechoslo- course of his stay in Moscow he was vak problem." offered the post of Chief of Soviet The letter as circulated by Tass Civil Aviation..h.A n said in part: "Lindbergh as Chief of Aviation! ... recently Lindbergh again visit- Such absurd lies can only make us ed the Soviet Union. It should be fliers laugh.. " noted that nobody invited him and he was allowed to come only upon LONDON, Oct. 10--(1P)-The Daily request of the Americans. Taking use Herald, Labor paper, today quoted of the permission to arrive, Lind- American-born Lady Astor as declar- bergh visited the festivities held Avia- ing a "complete lie" the report Col. tion Day and now upon the return to Charles A. Lindbergh pronounced the London made use of the fact of his Soviet air force inefficient during a stay in the U.S.S.R. for slanderous visit at her home. 't _. r rn l wiwr ! Graduate Open House Will Be! Held Tonight Riuthven, Yoakum, DuBey] Will Address Assembly, Reception Will Follow The first annual Graduate Open House, designed to bring the gradu- ate student body into closer unity, will be held tonight in the Rackham Build- ing. The program includes a generalr assembly, an informal reception, and an inspection. President Ruthven, Dean Yoakum,k and Robert E. Du Bey, Grad, execu- tive secretary of the Graduate Stu- dent Council, will address the as- sembly starting at 8:00 p. m. in Lec- ture Hall.1 At 9:00 p. m., President and Mrs. Ruthven and the Graduate Executivet 'Board will receive the graduate Stu- dents in an informal reception. Those t on the Executive Board participating t are: Prof. and Mrs. Peter Field, Prof. and Mrs. Carl Guthe, Prof. and Mrs. Floyd Bartell, Prof. and Mrs. W. C. Hoad, Prof. and Mrs. Arthur E. R. Boak. Others are: Dean and Mrs. Charles W. Edmiunds,' Prof. Dow V. Baxter, Prof. and Mrs. William C. Trow, Prof. and Mrs. E. F. Barker, Prof. and Mrs. Clark Hopkins, and Dr. Frank E. Robbins. The open house and inspection from 9 p. m. to 11 p. m. will be under direction of the Graduate School Staff, including Mrs. Arno Bader, Mrs. G. E. Mills, Mrs. Melvin Ivory,E 'Mrs. Gerhardt Burde, Miss ViroquaI Lemmon, Mrs. Hwoard Barnes, Mrs. Conway' Magee, Miss Gertrude Rick-; ard, Miss Almerene Montgomery, and' Mrs. George Wynn. Dean Alice Lloyd, Mrs. Byrd Bark- er, Miss Ethel McCormick, and Miss Jeanette Perry will also participate in the open house program.t A scientific demonstration, ar- ranged by Wayne Whitaker, Grad., will be presented by T. C. Kramer, Grad. A general inspection of the building will follow after which there will be dancing in Assembly Hall. Progressive Club To Meet Tomior'row The Progressive Club, Michigan chapter of the American Student Union, will hold its first membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union to plan activities for the year. Reports will be given on student working conditions, housing, coop- iera tives. intprrationo aaffairs-nmm- Student Senate Party Control Fight Is Seen Nominating Petitions Are Now Being Circulated; Election Is On Oct. 21 Indicating that there will be an intense party fight in this semester's Student Senate campaigr, Edward Magdol, '39, director of elections, an- nounced last night the beginning of petitioning for nominations. Arrangements for the election, to! be held Oct. 21, will be made at a Senate meeting at 7:30 p. m. today in the League. The Student Senate office in Lane Hall will be open from 4 to 6 p. m. all this week to receive petitions and to interview applicants for positions as election clerks. The latter will be necessary, Magdol said, to attend the polls and count ballots. Agenda for Itonight's meeting will include: The election of three con- tinuing Senators to form the nucleus of the Spring Parley Commission; the motion of Sen. Martin Dworkis, '40, relative to Student Senate participa- tion in the United Peace Committee; and the issde of the formal prelim- inary report. Reports of Senate com- mittees will be given by Sen. Harold Ossepow, '39, forum committee; Sen- ator Albert Peter Mayio, '30. race dis- crimination committee; and Sen. Philip Westbrook, '40, sex education. The election will employ the Hare system of proportional representation now in operation in many American cities. Magdol explained. More than 2,000 are expected to go to the polls. New Justices Are Outvoted On MooneyPlea Suprene Court Grants Ford Request To Review River Rouge Issue WASHINGTON, Oct. 10. - (') - President Roosevelt's two appointees to the Supreme Court have tried in vain to persuade the tribunal that it should review a lower court decision against Thomas J. Mooney, the labor leader who has been fighting for 20 years against his conviction of com- plicity in a famous bombing. This was disclosed today when the Court, with Justices Black and Reed dissenting, refused Money's request that it review the decision announced last Oct. 31 by the California Su- preme Court. Mooney, told of the Court action, pinned his remaining hopes for free- dom on the California election in November. Culbert L. Olson, the Democratic candidate for governor, has expressed the intention of par- doning him if elected. The Mooney case was among ap- proximately 300 which accumulated during the Court's four-month sum- mer recess and were considered for review. The National Labor Board was granted reviews of two adverse lower court decisions. An employer's re- quest for review of another decision, favoring the Board, was denied. The Board failed, however, in its effort to prevent review of a Federal Circuit Court order permitting it to with- draw litigation against the Ford Mo- tor Co. for amendment of procedure. The court also: Refused to consider challenges of the Ohio liquor law and the Massa- chusetts birth control law. I Former TVA Head Reiterates Accusation's In Interview Here By ROBERT I. FITZHENRY to public control was seen by the Dr. Arthur E. Morgan, former flood control expert as the only expe- Iead of the Tennessee Valley Author- dient productive of the much-needed ity, charged the present Valley direc- comparisons in efficiency. The gov- tory with use of "capricious force" ernment, he said, . must develop a I and resort to misleading propaganda competitive system that will elimin- in the administration of the vast ate the unfit as efficiently as private river project, in an interview with industry has eliminated them. the Daily yesterday. Dr. Morgan had no objections to Dr. Morgan envisioned the har- government purchase of private pow- nessing of the Tennessee as the most er lines in the vicinity of the Ten- comprehensive engineering project of C nessee project, but the former An- its kind in the world, combining un- tioch college president took outspoken der one administrative unit flood exception to the present government control, power production and navi- design which he charged was aimed gation. He cautioned that unless at destroying private enterprise, and "fair aRnd open" accounting of all buying out at its own figure. operations is made available to the The deposed TVA head was in- nfihlir fthaP'a Iwill hp n ua,',isiek struim,.ntalit ,will reh ee i-.a~d Strachey, Liberal Writer, Denied Entry In U.S. NEW YORK, Oct. 10--(P--Eve- lyn John St. Loe Strachey, British writer on Communism and one- time object of a deportation pro- ceeding in this country, was barred from entry in the United States tonight by immigration officials. They ordered him held aboard the Normandie overnight and in- structed the French Line to deliver him tomorrow morning to Ellis Island for appearance before a special board of inquiry. The hearing will determine whe- ther he shall be allowed a tempor-