Weather Partly cloudy and warmer to- day. Tomorrow showers, cooler. Poo. LiL l, 4 r f~lt ian at t Mr. Dies Goes To Town Birthday Greetings To The, Health Service . VOL. XLIX. No 19 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCT. 16, 1938 PRICE, FWE 64 Candidates Seek Posts In Student Senate ElectionFriday Independent Candidates Top List; Three Parties Endorse 17 Nominees Hare PR System Will BeEmployed With the same number of petitions; submitted this year as last for half the number of vacancies, petitioning for coming Student Senate elections, Friday, Oct. 21, closed at 12 p.m. yes- terday bringing the official lists of candidates to 64. 1,700 students vot- ed in the Student Senate elections last year. Among this nutber there are sev- en candidates from the United Lib- eral Coalition, six running on the Conservative Party ticket and four on the -Progressive Coalition. The! remaining 37 candidates are run- ning independently. The election to. this all-campus representative body will be conduct- ed according to the Hare s stem of I proportional representation with the 1 single transferable vote.- The official list of candidates, as1 announced by Edward Magdol, '39, is as follows: Martin B. Dworkis, '40, Indepen- dent Liberal; John P. O'Hara, '39; Cecile Franking, '39, Ann Arbor In'- dependent; Anand M. Kelkar, '39,1 International Council; Charles T. Piecewicz, '39E, Independent Progres-1 sive; Erwin E. Benzier, '41, and Ar- thur H. Bikof, Non-Partisan; Donald Cunihan, '41; Cly Brockman, '39E, Harry Stutz, '39, Jack Laro, '41, Ber- nard Dober, '41, Robert Emerine, '39, robert Kahn, '39, Richard Jeffreys, Grad., Robert Perlman, '39, United Liberal Coalition, Jack Sessions, '40, Socialist; Elliott Maraniss, '40, Inde-1 pendent; Irving K. Fox, '40, Liberal; Larry Gubow, '40; Daniel Bernstein, I '40, Progressive Independent; Fred- erick Pear d4O; Jares E Tobin, I '1, 4bn-Partisan; Barbara Brad- (Continued on Page 2) Baruch Favors Tax To Meet Defense Costs Eminent Financier Refutes Nazi Charge That He Is Influencing Roosevelt (By Associated Press) Bernard M. Baruch, in an inter- view in New York yesterday in which he amplified his views on building America's defense forces, advocated a special tax to meet the cost of in- creased armaments. "We should not pile the burden of paying for these armaments on to the shoulders of coming generations," Baruch contended. "We should pay the bill ourselves. Congress, I be- lieve, should enact whatever form of levy it thinks best to pay for the new expenditures." Referring to the statements in the German press that he was mixed up in a "Jewish plot" to influence Pres- ident Roosevelt, Baruch said "As for what the Nazis say about me, I can only point to the record. At the Ver- sailles peace conference I fought con- sistently for better terhs for defeated Germany." Cinema Series BeginsT Oday Swedish Film Featuring Garbo On Program Two Swedish films, "The Outlaw and His Wife" and "The Story of Gosta Berling," the first in the series of pictures to be presented by the Art Cinema League, will be shown at 3:15 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Lit School Students May Drop Courses Up To Nov. 5, 19' Contrar y to the notice in the Daily 'esterday, the deadline for dropping .ourses in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts is Nov. 5 for sophomores, juniors and seniors, and Nov. 19 for freshmen. It was erron- eously reported that yesterday was the deadline for dropping courses. Yesterday was, instead, the last day for election of courses. The rule which governs the drop- ping of courses readsnas follows: "Save under extraordinary circum- stances, courses dropped by fresh- men after the end of the eighth week and by all other students after1 the end of the sixth week will be re-t corded with the grade E." A freshmanI is a student who has earned less than 24 hours of credit. Public Health Authorities. Will MeetMonday' Conference Will Consider Feasibility Of Health Education [n Schools The Joint Committee of Public Health Education, made'up of morec than 20 professional groups, that hast been operating through the Univer-4 sity Extension Service, will present'itsl school health education program be- fore a conference of state health and education authorities tomorrow inI Lansing.t The Joint Comittee, which is com- prised of such groups as the Depart- ment of Public Instruction, the State Department of Health, the Michigan Teachers Association and many oth- ers, has been working for the past two years on adlt and public school health education, Dr. James D. Bruce, vice-president of the University and a member of the committee revealed last night..i The committee will present a pro- - gram at the meeting tomorrow that is designed to give health educationj a correlated and integral part in the public school system. Child health education was described by Dr. Bruce as having been "hit or miss," until now.S The conference will consider the feasibility of the program and just what it shall consist of.- The last session of the State Legis-i lature passed a bill making the teach- ing of sex hygiene in public schools compulsory and there is considerable pressure at present for a program to teach the dangers of alcohol. The conference, Dr. Bruce said, plans to sidetrack these single issues and sub- stitute an extensive health educa- tion program as an integral part in the public school curriculum. Meader W.ill Address Forum Freshmen Will Discuss Personality Relations "Relationships to Other Personali- ties" will be discussed by Prof. Clar- ence L. Meader, formerly of the gen- eral linguistics department, at a freshman roundtable to be held at 4 p.m. today at Lane Hall. This is the third in a series of roundtables being sponsored by the Student Religious Association to of- fer students the opportunity to talk Ainformally with members of the fac- ulty. Following Professor Meader's talk, the group will be divided into small discussion sections to be led by upperclassmen. Professor Meader, who retired last year after 45 years of service in the University, is at present working on a handbook of bio-linguistics with Prof. John H. Muyskens which will expound a new theory of speech cor-, rection. He studied in Italy, Greece and at the University. After receiving his doctorate from Michigan, he taught Latin and philology here, later switch- ing to general linguistics. It was through his efforts that Roman Law, Hitler Adapts Czech Policy To Germany Paris Believes Adolf Hitler Stopped Magyar Plan For 4-Power Meeting Hungary Speeds Mobilization Plans MUNICH, Oct. 15.--(P)-Germany looked forward tonight to quick adap- tation of Czechoslovakia to her hege- mony and to settlement of Hungary's claims for Czechoslovak territory on the same basis as Germany acquired the Sudetenland. At the same time the German press suddenly ceased all attacks on Czechoslovakia and opened up in- stead with a flood of criticism of Ber- nard M. Baruch, former Chairman of the United States War Industries Board. Budapest BUDAPEST, Oct. 15.--(1P)-Hun- gary speeded up defense measures to- day by ordering mobilization of ag- ricultural workers to insure an ade- quate food supply in any emergency arising from her dispute with Czech- oslovakia. The decree supplements the calling to the colors of five army classes of about 200,000 men, which boosted the number of Hungarians under arms to an estimated half million. These steps were taken for peace, not war, officials said. Hungary has no aggressive intentions, it was add- ed, and has taken measures to strengthen the army to secure peace along the frontier in territories Hun- gary expects to get from Czechoslo- vakia. Paris PARIS, Oct. 15.-(P)-Hungary's plan to force another Four-power conference in the hope of gaining a larger piece of Czechoslovakia was abandoned, French sources said to- night, after Hungary discovered Reichsfuehrei Adolf 'Iitler was op- posed to the idea. Britain and France also were op- posed, but Hungary had hoped Chan- cellor Hitler would back* her up, as he Studenis Greet Football Team At 2:33Today In a tremendous welcome which harks back to the greatdays of "Hurry-Up" Yost's point-a-minute elevens, more than 3,500 proud Michi- gan students are expected to crowd the Michigan Central station at 2:33 today to greet the Michigan team which gave every ounce of its energy before it fell, exhausted, before Min- nesota's national: champions yester- day. With the marching band play- ing the "Maize and Blue" and 150 eager freshmen and sophomores wait- ing to pull a team which remained victorious in defeat through Ann Ar- bor streets to the Union, the Michigan1 football squad will be given a recep- tion never equalled in the palmy days of Big Ten Championships. All members of the marching band (Gold and Concert) should report in uniform at 2 p.m. today at Morris Hall. A rehearsal will followv the football rally. -William D. Revelli Members of the Varsity cheer-lead- ing squad will lead yells for the team which sport-caster Harry Wismer yes- terday said "deserves the most en- thusiastic greeting of any Michigan squad in history." Fred Luebke, '38, president of the Men's Council which is sponsoring the celebration, declared yesterday that he had wired manager Phil Woodworth, '38, that the team could expect 'half the campus' to be pres- ent when the team's train arrived. It will be the successful revival of a long-time tradition when students pull the returning warriors through town. In other'years when Ann Arbor was the home of "The Champions of the West" it was the ordinary pro- cedure.- The line of march will be south on Division St. to Huron St., east to State St. and south to the Union. 5,000 xpected At Varsity Night 'On To Yale' Show To Be Held Tuesday Night If ticket sales to date are an indi- cation, Varsity Night this Tuesday will draw more than 5,00 students and townspeople to Hill Auditorium, Gilbert Phares, '39, who is in charge of the show, said last night. "Enthusiastic support of the 'Send Your Band To Yale' movement has greatly accelerated ticket sales to Varsity Night," Phares said. "But the main thing is the swell program we've got lined up." Varsity Night, which starts at 8 p.m., will feature a "Kampus Kwiz" under a real-life professor, John Brumm of the journalismn depart- ment. A drawing of ticket stubs will determine the six contestants to take part and the winner will get $25. A second prize of $15 and four consola- tion prizes of $5 will also be offered. Leonard B. Smith, youthful soloist with the Detroit Symphony orches- tra and reputedly one of the most handsome musicians in America, will also appear on the program. The Jackson Zouaves, an audience quizz of "mystery music" played by Bill Sawyer's orchestra, and musical interludes by the Varsity Band will complete the program. The Varsity Night program will be over in time for women to keep hours, Phares said. Minnesota Defeats Varsit' By Extra Point; Krome Scores On- 89-Yard Driv ___________ 4 Outcome Dazes Minnesota Fans As Wolverines Show Superiority had indicated he Immediately after ference at which in Czechoslovakia would during and the Munich Con- Germany's claims were settled. Adult Students Urged To Vote Prof. Pollock Calls Notice To Absentee Ballots Approximately 3500 students on the Michigan campus are qualified to vote in the coming election on Nov. 8, according to Prof. J. K. Pollock of the political science department. Out-of- state students may vote by the absen- tee ballot if they have already been- registered and if their states permit absentee voting. As the election is but three weeks away, it is imperative that students who are qualified send at once for their ballots, Prof. Pollock said. In order to familiarize students with their state laws on the subject, Prof. Pollock has placed information from all states at the disposal of the Michi- gan Union. Little Brown Jug Stays In Minneapolis; Stadiumj EmptiesIn Dead Silence By ELLIOTT MARANISS and ' CARL PETERSON MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 15-, (Special to 'the Daily)-Fritz Crisler met Bernie Bierman in the center ofj Memorial Stadium here yesterday following the final gun and shook his hand. Undoubtedly he congratulated the Minnesota coach. Then he pushed his hat over his eyes, pulled his head deep into his overcoat, and walked quietly, alone, off the field. Yet even as the new Michigan coach walked slowly toward the fieldhouse, the pub- lic address system announced to the amazed thousands, who stood dazedly in their places in the stands for al- most ten minutes after the game ended, the statistics that undoubtedly proved Michigan' to be the stronger" team on the field here today.- It was impossible to distinguish1 between expressions of Michigan and Minnesota fans after the game. When the referee fired the final gun there" was a brief startled cry of relief in all1 parts of the stadium, but almost im- mediately afterward there was silence.I Disbelief was the dominant facial ex-, pression. Some men uttered mumbledi statements about the closeness of the game, but for the most part it was a quiet, subdued, throng that left this1 stadium. Fans Stage 'Pepfest Pre-game tensior1 was geat last night and this morning. More than 15,000 rabid Minnesota fans staged a "pepfest"near the Uni- versity campus, which was capped with the building of a great bonfire in one of the main thoroughfares of the University section of this twin city area of nearly 1,000,000 persons. Soon after 7 p.m. a procession of sightseers joined the university con- tingent at the campus on the south- east side of Minneapolis. They milled about, ceering around the bonfire which threw flames 40 feet high, lighting the sky. More than 35 Minne- Heneman Says Italy Will Have PuppetHouse By BEN MARIN When the new Chamber of Depu- Ities assumes its post in Italy at the expiration of the present session, said Prof. Harlow O. Henean of the po- I litical science department yesterday, it will be a safe prediction that will be purely functional in form. The representatives to the new Chamber will be from the corpora- tions of workers, executives and busi- ness men, he said, and it is certain that the Fascist Party will be repre- sented as a special entity. From the advent of Mussolini Vo the leadership of the Italian government, the continued existence of the Cham- ber of Deputies, as a democratic in- stitution was doomed. Il Duce from the first threatened the dissolution of the Chamber. The oft-reiterated determination to abolish the organ, made by the Fascist head, Professor Heneman claims, brings us psycho- logically up to the present decision of the Fascist National Grand Coun- cil to eliminate the Deputies. The whole transaction is being conducted in a purely routine fashion. As yet, Professor Heneman de- clared no law has been passed term- inating the existence of the Chamber. However, it is quite probable, he pre- dicted, that none will be passed and the present body will just be per- mitted to expire and the new ham- ber will appear under a new name, one more in keeping with the tenets of Fascism. The abolition of the Chamber of Deputies has been in the offing at several times during Mussolini's as- cendency, Professor Heneman ex- apolis police were called out to take care of the traffic tie-up resulting from the blocked streets. The little brown jug tradition start- ed back in 1903 when the great 'host of Yost' teams swept through all competitors like a prairie fire. There were great Michigan teams in those days, and when the Minnesota boys held the Yost bunch to a 6-6 dead- lock, the score was hailed as a moral victory by Minnesota supporters. Tells Of Brown Jug As Frank G. McMormick, Minnesota athletic director, tells the story, on the Monday following the game in 1903, Oscar Munson, then the janitor of the old armory which served as the athletic headquarters here, was cleaning out the Michigan dressing room when he came upon an earthen- ware jug left by the departed Wolver- ines. Forthwith Oscar tucked the jug un- der his arm and marched to the office of Dr. Louis J. Cooke. There, after a brief powwow, they painted the fol- lowing inscription on the jug: "Michi- gan jug-captured by Oscar, October 31, 1903." The two teams did not meet. again until 1909, and the morning before that game Dr. Cooke told Cap- tain Johnny McGovern, "Johnny you tell that Michigan Captain that they can have their jug back if they beat us tomorrow." The jug went back to Ann Arbor along with a victorious team and it has been journeying between Minne- apolis and Ann Arbor ever since. Next year, perhaps . Chnurches Here To Start Two Speech Series, Vacations Unique Summer IJ And Youth Adventures Are Subjects Of Talks Wolverines Nosed Out - As Gophers Register l1 4th Period Comebac Forest Evashevski Stars On Defend y BUD BENJAMIN MIINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 15-(Speci to the Daily)-Six points to the goc with glory but 12 minutes and 57 sei onds away, lady luck sudden frowned on the valiant efforts of great Michigan team today ar turned an earned victory into one point defeat. Before the amazed eyes of mo: than 55,000 partisans, a heroic Wo verine eleven outplayed a supe Minnesota team at its own game o power but lost a 7 to 6 verdict on tv breaks that would have broken tl heart of any football team. For three quarters the two tean fought without a score, but alwa; It was Michigan who held the pla Undaunted by their highly touted an veteran opponent, this green Mich gan team outmaneuvered, outfoug and outsmarted the national chan pions, but fate deemed that the efforts must be nullified, and, so was. Michigan Deserved To Win No Michigan team in history evi acquitted itself more billiantl tha did this one. None ever tried hart er. None ever deserved a victo more. They ran up 13 irst dow to Minnesota's six. They gained 1I yards by rushing and 97 through t3 air for a net of 254 yards from scin mage. The victorious Gophers' tot was 122 yards less. But fortune smili at figures, and tonight she mut i laughing at a Michigan team* t1M never got a break. By winning, the Gophers becan the first team in history ever, to da feat Michigan five times in a ro But if one salent fact must be draw it is the setting of a new sun fo Michigan and the end of foots humiliation. By their performan today alone, Michigan proved itse as one of the top five teams in t nation. Touchdown Drive It was the third quarter, and the were but five minutes to, play whi Michigan unloosed its giant artille Deep in their own territory on the yard line, they smashed and plow4 through the massive Gopher line march 89 yards for a touchdown a, six points, Paul Kromer circling ei for the final two yards and a scoa which seemed insured a treasur victory. John Maruicci, the rugged Goph end and hockey player, blocked Di Smick's attempted conversion, ai still it didn't seem to matter. Mictl gan's siperb line was there to st the Gophers-they had been doing good job of it all aftenobn-a there were only 12 odd minutes to But in 12 odd minutes the cor plexion of everything change Minnesota received the kicko couldn't gain, and punted to Mih gan's 18. Lady Luck Harmful Still the Wolverines marched a: another score seemed imminent they smashed down the field. Br liant Tom Harmon, a fighter tod from start to finish, and the equa courageous Norm Purucker were mc ing the ball when suddenly disasi struck. Harmon, moving down the midi nicely on a 12 yard jaunt, was b tered by a frantic Gopher second on his own 49. and fumbled. Al Harold Van Every, Bernie Bierma (Continued on Page 7) Labor Pec Attempts Fal Among the offerings in the Ann Arbor churches today will be the in- troductory speeches of two series, one on summer vacations and another on youth adventures. "Two Men In Mexico" will be the subject of Rev. Marley's talk at 1]i o'clock at the Unitarian church. The two men, Juarez and Cardinas, will be compared to Lincoln and Roose- velt respectively. First in the series of talks on sum- I mer vacations at the Unitarian church will be that by Lucille Poor, former student, on her trip through Mexico. The next speakers in order of their appearance will be' Frieda Oberle on Russia, Morris Lichenstein on Czecho- slovakia, Barbara Tinker, who was re- cently arrested in China as a spy and Lois Jotter who lecture' on the Colo- rado river trip taken with several other members of the University staff. Martin Dworkis, '40, and ,Charles Buck, '40, student representatives of the World Youth Congress at Vassar and the League for Industrial Demo- cracy convention in New York, re- spectively, will be guest speakers in the first of the series of Youth Ad- ventures talks to be presented by the Liberal Students' Union. Following Dr. Brashare's sermon at 10:40 a.m. the student choir under the direction of Achille Taliaferro will, sing "God Be in My Head" by Davies and a crusader's hymn. Mr. Taliafero, who is originally from Texas studied in Europe for three summers under the able tutorage of Pierre Monteux, a famous French conductor. After having received his bachelor's degree in 1933 andhis masters in 1938 he is now serving in the capacity of (Continued on Page 2) Tug. Strike Cripplesw New York Harbor Majority Of Students Favor Open Football Subsidization i' J t ,x , (Daily Photos by Joseph Freedman) Gilbert Phares, THE QUESTION: Do you believe in '39BAd.: "Men who -. the open subsidization of intercol- work at the tough legiate football? tabor of football for THE PLACE: Nickels Arcade. two hours every THE ANSWERS: tight should get Arthur C. Hills, some sort of remu- '42: "I should think neration, especially it would be all right ' wiien their efforts if done equally by help build million all. But as condi- T dollar stadia. They tions exist n o w, ' should get jobs, cash some colleges can T or %nything else as long as they get not afford to pay paid. Students who aid the Univer- while others do. sity in collegiate advertising such as This makes inter- i7 yintercollegiate football should get collegiate athletic paid.' affairs often times uneven." William Mallick, Barbara Bradfield, '42: "If there is to Grad.: "I believe in be any subsidization open subsidization of intercollegiate i I "The Outlaw and His Wife" pro- duced by Svenska-Biograf in 1917, was directed by Victor Sjostrom, whose international reputation was established by this film. It was cir- culated in this country as "You and I" in 1921. The story deals with an Russian and hermeneutics were in- cluded in the curriculum. Michigan Educators Get National Posts BOULDER, Colo., Oct. 15-(A')-S. NEW YORK, Oct. 15 -(')-- The country's busiest port was badly crippled today by a tugboat strike which delayed the docking of several transatlantic liners and forced others Roosevelt Railroad Boar Will Conclude Hearings WASHINGTON, Oct. 15-(IP)-T1, Roosevelt administration's first con crete proposal for ending labor three-year-old civil war failed toda to produce any immediate signs o acceptance by either the America