WPeath er Fair and Wanner Today; Generally Fair Tomorrow Sir tgan Iait I Editorial The Means Defeat The .End.... VOL. XLIX. NO0. 3. Z-d23 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1938 PRiCE , FIVE COK I I' Prof. L. A. Strauss Succumbs, Victim Of Ieart Failure Death Of Former Head Of English Department Is Shock To Campus Was Member Of Faculty 42 Years Prof. Louis A. Strauss, former chairman of the English department, died suddenly of a heart attack at 10:45 p.m. yesterday at the University Hospital. Professor Strauss, a member of the University faculty for 42 years and chairman of the English department for 16 years, was in apparent god health. He had played golf that afternoon, after recently returning from a fishing trip in fine condition. Dr. Reuben Peterson was a guest at the home of Professor Strauss when the latter was taken ill by the heart attack early yesterday evening and he called the ambulance that took Professor Strauss to the Univer- sity Hospital. 'There :he was given the usual treatment for heart at- tacks but to no avail. Dr. P. S. Barker and Dr. Henry Field, cardiac special- ists at the Hospital, attended Pro- fessor Strauss. *:When informned by the Daily of the death of Professor Strauss last night President Alexander Ruthven sued the following statement: "News of Professor Strauss' death will be a great shock to the campus. Re was not only really respected as a .teacher but dearly beloved by stu- dents and faculty alike." The death of Dr. Strauss came as a "very great blow to the University and the department where he was deeply beloved," Prof. Morris Tilley of the English department, a close friend of Professor Strauss, said in inform-, ing the Daily of Professor Strauss' death last nigtt. Professor Strauss is survived by his two daughters, Mrs. Iir ret Ganau, of Ann Arbor, who is at pres- ent attending the Yale School of Draiatics, Mrs. Valentine Davies, of NeaYork City, a sister, Mrs.Rena Landauer, of Milwaukee, and a broth- er; Mr. Henry Strauss of Chicago. The family is flying to Ann Arbor and as yet no funeral arrangements have been made. Professor Strauss was 66 years old. Hle graduated from the University in 1894, after being appointed assistant in English in 1893. He received his doctor's degree here and later studied at the university of Munich. After being appointed assistant professor in 1904 he was appointed a full profes- sor in 1911 Professor Strauss was par- tUularly known for his famous course on Browning and it was during his regime that the rhetoric and litera- ture departments were incorporated to form one large department in April, 1928. Health Service Addition Awaits Regents' Vote Dr. Forsythe Hopes For Board Decision By Time Of Service Banquet The project for the new building for the University Health Service approved last Saturday in Washing- ton by the PWA now awaits the ap- proval of the Board of Regents, Dr. Warren 1. Forsythe, director of the Health Service, announced. Dr. Forsythe expressed a hope that the Board's deciion might be reached in time so that if the project is ap- proved, the formal announcement of its approval could be made by Presi- dent Ruthven 'at the dinner to be held Oct. 14 in celebration of the Health Service's twenty-fifth year of operation. Invitations have been sent to all former staff members of the Health Service to attend this anniversary celebration. In addition to the dinner, which is to be held in the evening at the League, a full day's program has been planned. A student health con- ference at which student health pro- blems will be discussed informally will be held in the early afternoon, and an address by Dean Diehl, dean of medical science at the University of lfinnesnta will be delivered at 4:15 Dies Suddenly PROF. LOUIS A. STRAUSS Roosevelt Calls In Ar biter s On Rail Fight Judge Stacy, Prof. Millis And Dean Landis Are Named To Make Report WASHISGTON, Sept. 27-(J)-_ President Roosevelt asked two veteran arbiters and a former top-flight ad- ministration executive today to find a solution for the current wage dispute between -major railroads and 19 em- ployee unions. Invoking a seldom-used section of the Railway Labor Act in an attempt to avoid a nation-wide strike, Mr. Roosevelt created this commission to study the controversy and report to him by Oct. 27. Chief Justice Walter P. Stacy of the North Carolina Supreme Court, chairman; Professor Harry A. Millis of the University of Chicago; Dean James M. Landis of the Harvard Law School, former Securities Commission Chairman.. President Roosevelt acted less than 24 hours after the unions announced in Chicago they would call a strike if the railroads put a 15 per cent wage cut into effect Saturday. Invocation of the Railway Labor Act postpones at least until Nov. 26 both the pay reduction and the strike. The law requires the emergency board to "report respecting such dispute" 30 days after its appointment. The status quo is maintained during that period anld for 30 days after the re- port is made. The railroads announced last spring they would slash wages to save more than $250,000,000 annually. The un- ions protested and the National Rail- way Mediation Board sought in vain to arbitrate the controversy. Mediation board officials said to- day they expected the new commis- sion to start hearings on the dispute by Monday. Judge Stacy has served on four sim- ilar emergency railway labor boards. Millis, too, has had wide experience in labor relations as a member of ar- bitration boards and of the first Na- tional Labor Relations Board in 1934 and 1935. FDR Sends Second Plea To Germany President Says Future Of World Is At Stake In Czechoslovakian Crisis Requests Germany Continue Negotiating WASHINGTON, Sept. 27-()- President Roosevelt tpnight addressed a new peace appeal to Chancellor Hit- ler. ; The President said the "fate of the world today and tomorrow"' now is at stake. His telegram went to Berlin at 10 p. m., eastern standard time, follow- ing conferences with State Depart- ment officials. It was directed only to Hitler, Appealing to the German Chancel- or to continue at all costs present negotiations, the Chief Executive said: "In my considered judgment and in the light of the experience of this century continued negotiations re- main the only way by which the im- mediate problem can be disposed of upon any lasting basis "Should you agree to a solution in this peaceful manner," the message continued, "I am convinced that hun- dreds of millions throughout the world would recognize your action as an outstandiing historic service to all humanity." "Allow me to state my unqualified conviction that history and the souls of every man, woman and child whose lives will be lost in the threatened war will hold us and all of us accountable should we omit any appeal for its pre- ventioni." The message was in answer to Hit- er's reply to Mr. Roosevelt's first peace appeal, in which the Chancel- lor had pointed to what he called the historical mistakes of the Ver- sailles Treaty. Stace To Talk At Press .-Club_ Annual Meet M ~ eeting .Starts Oct. 27; Special Session Slated For Small Publications The 20th annual convention of the University Press Club o Michigan will be held Oct. 27 to 29 in the Union. A main feature of this year's con- vention will be a special session de- voted to the problems of small week- ly and daily newspapers. Arthur W. Stace, editor of the Ann Arbor News, will begin the Thursday afternoon session with a discussion of land utilization in Michigan. Stu- art H. Perry, publisher of the Adrian Telegram will deal with the relation of newspapers to court trials. Sen. Prentiss M. Brown aid Dr. George W. Crane, psychologist from North- western University, will also speak. A discussion of farm markets will then be conducted under the leadership of representatives of the State Board of Agri ulture and the University ec- onomics department. Visiting newspapermen will be guests of the University at the an- nual University Dinner in the Union Thursday evening. Friday morning two representatives of the University will lead a discussion on the relations of the press to the University. Foreign relations will feature thej Friday afteroon session. DiscussionI will be lead by Associated Press and United Press representatives fromI New York. Says Great Britain Mobilizes Forces; Italy Calls Out Troops As Hitler Peace Rests Germans Declare Czechs. Have Repudiated Plan Of French And British Fuelirer Maintains Sudeten Demands BERLIN, Sept. 27.-(/P)-German. Government quarters declared to- night that Czechoslovakia's rejection of Reichsfuehrer Hitler's demands for surrender of Sudetenland next Sat- urday was in actuality a renunciation of the original Anglo-French plan, accepted by Prague last week. These quarters said the rejection, made public today in London, "proves again that the Czechs declare them- selves theoretically ready for any agreement, but in practice are un willing to keep their promises." Calls Demands. Unacceptable r (The Czechoslovaik reply to Hit- ler's final demands was announced by Prague's Minister to London, Jan Masaryk, who said the demands "in their present form are absolutely and unconditionally unacceptable to my government.") German Government circles ex- pressed eagerness to know "how England and France would react to this de facto renunciation of their plan accepted by Prague just a few days ago." Wilson Talks With Hitler They saw in it "not only a repudia- tion of the German standpoint, but also a disavowal of the Anglo-French plan on the part of Prague." These comments were forthcoming after British Prime Minister Cham- berlain, through an emissary, Sir Horace Wilson, still sought to nego- tiate a peaceful solution of the crisis, in a brief talk with Hitler. Hitler, meanwhile- n so far as was indicated by Wilhelmstrasse spokes- (Continued on Page 5) 'Ensian Price Rises Saturday Sales Are 15 Per Cent Ahead Of Last Year With sales 15 per cent ahead of last year, 'Ensian will continue to be offered for $3.50 until Saturday, Charles Kettler, '39, business man- ager,,announced yesterday. 'Ensian, University annual, is a 500 page book containing pictures of cam- pus activities and those taking part in them; campus biographies of all seniors; a satire section; portraits of faculty members and a complete rec- ord of University life. Price of the book will advance from $3.50 to $4 on Saturday, staying at there until after Christmas vacation when it will go up to $4.50. An innovation, Kettler said, will be made insofar as down payment sales are concerned. In the past the buyer had to pay the price prevalent when he put down the balance due, but this year until April 21 the purchaser will be able to get his 'Ensian for the price charged at the time of his down- payment. After that date the down payment is forfeited. Union Will Have Ticket Exchange Annual Formal Scheduled For October 21 A football ticket exchange similar to that operated last year, will be set up in the Union lobby Saturday morning and on the morning of each home-game, James Halligan, '40, chairman of the committee in charge, announced yesterday. Details of the exchange system have not been worked out, but will be announced later in the week,. Halligan said. Halligan also announced that Octo- ber 21 has been chosen as a tentative date for 'the annual Union Formal, the first important formal affair of the year. A meeting of all sophomores who tried out for the Union staff last. semester will be held at 4:30 p. m. F1rln av c nrdrino tA Prnia uBricklev. Hitler Threatens Czech Seizure Royal Air Force Is Called As King Pronounces State OfEmergency Rome Reported Calling Reserves 3 (By* Associated Press) Britain mobilized her navy last night "as a purely precautionary measure" while reliable informants in Rome reported Italy was preparing to mobilize 2,000,000 soldiers. The drastic British move followed shortly upon a six-minute radio speech by Prime Minister Chamberlain in which he called on the Empire to pre- pare for war as a last resort. Shortly before Chamberlain's radio address the British Isles were ordered into "a state of emergency" by de- cree of King George and the Privy Council, The naval mobilization was an- nounced just before midnight and to- day King George was to issue a pro- clamation calling up reservists. Men serving in .the Royal Fleet Reserves were ordered to report to their depots today without waiting for individual summonses. Usually well-informed sources in Rome said specialists of 10 reservists classes'were being called to the Italian colors as step toWard general mobili- zation of these classes. Premier Mussolini has said that if an ideological war were to develop from the Czechoslovak-Grman crisis, Italy and Germany vbuld fight in a "single bloc." The Italian and British moves dom- inated the troubled horizon while leading diplomats and military chief- tains counted but three days in which to write an historical decision on Reichsfuehrer Hitler's demands on Czechoslovakia. They had three days in which to ac- complish one of these tasks: 1. Persuade Hitler to extend, his Saturday deadline for peaceful sur- render' of Czechoslovakia's Sudeten- land. 2. Persuade Czechoslovakia to yield (Continucd on Page 2) Independlents ' Election, I Shet F or Oct. 12 With Prague Adolf Hitler, speaking to "the entire Reich," declared at Berlin "I, have decided that we shall place" the Sudeten region of Czechoslovakia "under German sovereignty." He added that if President Benes "does not want peace we will have to take matters in our bands." He told his countrymen Germany has "an armed force the like of which the world has never seen." The Reichsfeuher is shown here as he delivered his historic speech. This picture was radioed from Berlin to New York. f , Hi tle~r M ayBack Don If l Can Find Wa Out Lon Says Professor Sees Italy As Unreliable, Following Selfish Interests Only By MORTON CARL JAMPEL The possibility that Chancellor Adolf Hitler bit off more than he can chew in his near-fanatic speech Mon- day in which he nailed himself to the wall with his promise of satisfaction or action by Oct. 1 in the Czechoslo- vakian situation was stressed by Prof. Dwight C. Long of the history de- partmeit in an interview yesterday, as an important indication of wheth- er there will be war or peace in Eu- rope within the next few days. "Hitler has made retreat diffiP cult," Professor Long said, "and he will be forced to make retreat look like victory. A mind that is as fa- natical as his is does not find it hard to adjust itself to an occasion and say he had said something else.' What Hitler does, Professor Long stated, depends on whether he is car- ried away by his convictions and de- sires or is realistic about the situa- tion. Indications are, however, that the "impatient" Fuehrer was putting more bravado than sincerity into his speech, since military authoritiesI point out that if he is planning on war his tactics are peculiar. "I don't place much reliance in view of past experiences on his state- ment that there will be no further territorial problems for him after this," Dr. Long said. Hitler has been silent recently concerning the re- acquisition of the former German colonies, something he has previous- ly promised his people many times, Professor Long said. Concerning the yet doubtful, posi- tion of Italy in the present crisis Pro- fessor Long said that the selfish Fa- scist philosophy would again be the determining factor. If Mussolini feels that there is anything to be gained by coming in with Hitler in event of a war he will do so. Htler has very probably had some- thing to do with the Polish and Hun- garian demands made of Czechoslo- vakia, Dr. Long explained. This he described as but part of Hitler's con- ciliatory advances toward each Eu- ropean powef. Regarding Germany's economic ability to enter a major war: now, Professor Long said that while much can be concluded concerning Ger- many's actual economic condition "It must be remembered that a dicta- torial state has an advantage over a democracy in carrying on any na- tional enterprise such as war." Postpone Meeting . Of Student Senate The Student Senate meeting sched- uled for last night was postponed un- til some time next week because a quorum was not present. The absence of senators was ascribed to the diffi- culty in contacting them because of the lack of addresses. The agenda originally to be dis- cussed last night will be taken up at the meeting. To Pick 10 Zone Leaders ; Three Will Be Selected For Executive Council Independent men will go to the polls Wednesday, Oct. 12, to vote for the ten zone presidents who will repre- sent them on the District Council of Congress, campus organization for in- dependent men, according to Robert Hartwell, '39, president. From this, group of ten, three will be selected by the Judiciary Commit- tee to fill vacant posts on the Execu- tive Council, comprising various com- mittee heads, plans the social, sports, and student welfare programs de- signed to give unaffiliated men the advantages enjoyed by fraternity men. Hartwell urged all independent men to vote in order to make the District Council truly -representative of the campus at large. Nominations will be by petitions which may be filed in Congress's office in Room 306 in the Union. An information booth will also be kept open in the Union lobby until after elections to supply independents with information about Congress's activities and voting procedure. The first function to be initiated by Congress will be the opening Tea Dance to be held at the League 4 p. m. Thursday, Oct. 13. Sponsored jointly by Congress and Assembly, women's independent group, these bi- weekly dances are organized as "mix- ers" to foster student acquaintance. Both men and women are urged to at- tend "stag." Medical Alumni Will Hold First Reunion J. Fred Lawton, '10, co-composer of "Varsity," will lead group singing Woolcott Will Open Oratorical Association Lectures Oct. 25 New Union And Medical Dorms Will Offer Complete Facilities Alexander Woolcott, America's fav- orite raconteur, and Dr. Paul van Zeeland, former premier of Belgium, are the highlights of the lecture pro- gram for this year presented by the University of Michigan Oratorical Association, scheduled to start Oct. 25. Woolcott, who is making his second appearance in Ann Arbor, opens the series with a talk titled "Woolcott Speaking." His books, "While Rome Burns" and the "First and Second Woolcott Readers", and his radio broadcasts, titled "The Town Crier," have . earned wide publicity for him. maa .rnnnt3 taikr_ enhaanlan for gerous Cape, will be Capt. Warwick Tompkins' subject when he speaks were Jan. 12. Motion pictures will illustrate the talk. R. H. Bruce Lockhart, author of the widely read "British Agent," "Re- turn to Malaya," "Retreat from Glory," and "Son of Scotland," talks on "An Englishman Looks at the World" Jan. 26. Lord Strabolgi, famous British statesman and economist, is to speak Feb. 16 on "The Pacific Situation." He will be followed by Capt. C. W. R. Knight who will speak on Feb. 28 on the topic, "The Leopard of the Air." This talr mhich i sahrni the rn A step toward- the alleviation of the long-existant men's housing problem on campus was made this summer with approval by the PWA of a University request for $945,000 to start a $2,100,000 dormitory building program. ° This grant will make possible the construction of two new dormitories. One will be an addition to the present Union group which will house 850 men and the other a medical dormi- tory at Glen and Catherine streets cated at the corner of E. Jefferson and Thompson streets. The dormitories will be made up of a series of "houses" such as the Al- len-Rumsey dormitory. It has not definitely been decided just how many men will live in each of the houses, but each one will have, as Allen and Rumsey, a student govern- ment organization and competition in all fields of scholastic, athletic and social activities. The medical dormitory will be built