THE MICHIGAN DAILY Consulate With Spanish- Club Heads against Japan, when our country is it- try. I He's one of a litter of six fox pups self helping to arm that nation, de- of normal silver fox parents at the Glared Dr. Walter Judd, medical mis- I Thomas C. Tiley Fox Rranch at Com- sionary in China, in a speech made merce Lake. So the rest are going Friday night in the Congressional about the business of having other fox Church under the auspices of the pups this season before their pelts be- American League for Peace and De- come evening capes, while Dofey is mocracy. pampered by A.K.L.'s and their dates We are being hypocritical when we since his pelt is brown and woolly and pass resolutions condemning Japan there's still some doubt as to whether for doing that which she couldn't he'd be father or mother if he were do without our help, he said, for it is used for breeding purposes . (The our arms, our bullets and our trucks "he" is just a convenient expres- which are devastating China today. sion). Outlining a four-fold plan of action Technically, there's not a very for the United States, Dr. Judd advo- complete explanation for Dofey. r-b a rniimm.r hrnrnti f Tann- University museum zoologists, on cas- Saul R. Levin, co'nsulate for several Latin American countries, yester- day told 400 members of La Sociedad Hispanica and townspeople that the countries he represented were misrepresented in the Northern Hemi- sphere. Margaret Carr, '40, vice-president of the club, Mr. Levin, Mar- garet Bryant, '39, treasurer, Carmen McKell, '39, secretary, Prof. Ermel- indo .A. Mercado of the -Romance Language department and Alfred Hoover, '39, president, are shown /in the corridor of the Rackham Building. Nation And State Swept By GOP Farley Says Results Were AnticipatedAs Offset (Continued from Page 1) of the party, construed the tabula- tions as meaning that "thousands of Democrats joined in the protest against the Roosevelt policies which were wrecking their party and their country." But Po'stmaster General Farley chairman of the Democratic National Committee, had his own and con- trasting interpretation of the returns. The election, he said, showed an an- ticipated "falling off from the unpre- cedented pluralities of 1936." He add- ed, however, that the party "won substantial majorities in the Senate and House," and picked up governor- ships in Maryland and California, although gubernatorial losses were more than had been expected. "I think the outcome justifies the statement that the country as a whole is still strongly behind the humanitarian policies of President Roosevelt," he said. The election left Republican charges hanging fire that New Deal candidates had misused the influence of WPA checks for the unemployed, particularly in Pennsylvania, (which PLAY PRODUCTION presents AT LAWV"V By ELMER RICE The moving play that Paul Muni made famous. MENDELSSOHN THEATRE OPENING TONIGHT Thursday, Friday, and Saturday Nov. 10-11-12 - 8:30 P.M. Reserved Seats --75c, 50c, 35c Phone 6300 Progressive Mexico Misunderstood Here, Representative Says Although the Mexican people are on the whole poor, many brighter aspects of that country never reach the Northern countries, Saul R. Levin, legal representative of Mexico and Cuba in the State and honorary Con- sul for the Republic of Honduras,' told La Sociedad Hispanica as he backed his point with movies, last night in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Levin's movies included scenes from Mexico City, Tasco, Oaxaca, Puebla and Cuernavaca, as well as from the poverty-stricken Mexican countryside. His shots of the capital city contrasted the new and the old ideas in what he called a rapidly progressing nation. In many of the scenes he showed how nationalistic Mexico has become in the last quarter-century. Almost every public building, including cathe- drals, museums and palaces, was called "national." Everywhere are seen monuments to the revolution, to liberty, and to various "liberators," he said.. The speaker, pointing to this vast new world of untapped resources,I concluded with an admonition to all Judaism History Traced y Rabbi Dr. Rabinowitz Predicts Disintegration Ahead The Judaism which has survived from the time of Moses Maimonides is slowly disintegrating because of forces outside of it, Dr. Isaac Rabino- witz of Hillel Foundation told stu- dents and townspeople gathered at Lane Hall last evening. The first blow struck at the segregation of Jewish thought and custom was largely' through the coming of the Industrial Revolution while the administrationE of the Code Napoleon continued the disruption of the ghetto, Dr. Rabino- witz explained. There has been a tremendous re- vival of interest in Jewish thought and custom on the part of Jews in Germany because of the rise of fasc- ism and its attendant persecutions declared Dr. Rabinowitz. In Russia, he continued, at the beginning of the revolution, many Jews who belonged to the middle class were disinherited 11 11, I w i college students to look to Latin by the Bolsheviks; but with the adop- America as the place to find future tion of the constitution which pro- great trade and business opportuni- vides for religious freedom, Dr. Rab- ties. inowitz was of the opinion that there Ariistice Day Plans Form'ed Ann Arbor VFW To Hold Memorial Services A program in observance of Armis- tice Day Friday, including a memorial service and banquet has been planned by the Ann Arbor chapters of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Dis- abled American Veterans, and the American Legion for tomorrow. Memorial services will take place at 11 a.m. at the Unitarian Church, the Rev. H. P. Marley of that church and the Rev. Charles W. Brashares of the First Methodist Church directing. This service is open to all veterans and to the public. At noon an Armistice Day luncheon banquet will be held at the Michigan Union, Prof. John H. Muyskens, of the speech department, acting as chairman. Prof. Joseph R. Hayden of the political science department will speak. The luncheon is under the auspices3 of the Last Man Club, the disabled veterans of Washtenaw County. would be a new impetus toward re- ligion on the part of all Russians. In the United States Judaism is in transition stated Dr. Rabinowitz. Be- cause the way of life in America makes many customs and traditions difficult to retain, some sort of syn- thesis must be achieved. 1 Cinema League Revives Chaney Movie Of 1925 "The Unholy Three," with Lon Chaney and Victor McLaglen, will be shown at 8:15 p.m. Sunday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre under the auspices of the Art Cinema League. This film, produced in 1925, is one of a series of post-war American and Swedish films being shown by the League. Tickets for the series can be obtained at the Michigan League. Guest Carillonneur Here Percival Price, guest carilloneur, will play a varied program on the Baird Carillon at 3:00 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 13. The program will include a group of Negro spirituals, operatic selections, folk dances with improvi- sations and selections from the works of Tschaikowsky. [art 1?i I i t lk~ 11 I I Af/l"1MA 111M ""- -I I