w THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY 'Remarkable' Describes Life Of First Lady (Continued from Page 1) ship "America," officiated at the birth of a grandchild and commuted by air from coast to coast on family busi- ness. All this in addition to a First Lady's regular chores-hostess at the President's formal dinners and re- ceptions, housekeeper in the White3 House and entertainer of visiting: functionaries and their wives. Mrs. Roosevelt is as famous for her simplicity of manner as she is re- spected as a devoted wife and mother. She usually travels unrecognized,; without escort of any kind. She has been seen at almost every important event of recent years-Broadway pre- mieres, World's Fairs, dedications of resettlement projects, CCC camp in- spections and Democratic party con- ventions. It is=said that she, serves as one of the President's "eyes and ears'; as a White House surveyor of public opinion. As a wife, Mrs. Roosevelt's devo- tion during her husband's battle with infantile paralysis is a mem- orable feature of her biography, "This Is My Story." As a mother and grandmother, her column is replete with incidents which show her love for her family Mrs. Roosevelt was born in 1884 in New York City. She was educated by private governesses here and abroad and became engaged to her fifth cousin. once removed at the age of 19. She was married on St. Patrick's Day, 1905, in the presence of her uncle, President Theodore Roosevelt.. At first a typical young society matron, Mrs. Roosevelt did not be- come interested in politics until her husband's unsuccessful campaign for the vice-presidency in 1920. Since then, she says, her interest has never waned. 'Over The Rainbow' To Be Vocal Specialty By Band 'Over The Rainbow," hit tune from the current movie success, the "Wiz- ard Of Oz," willbe presented by the Band in a special vocal arrangement by Donn Chown, at Varsity Night, Oct. 17, at Hill Auditorium. Departing from its usual capadty as an instrumental group, the band will rise to the occasion as a glee club, singing the lyrics in a manner "a la Fred Waring," according to Professor Revelli, director of the band. Feature soloist in the arrangement will be Warren Foster, tenor, who is a regular member of the University Quartette.. James R. Angell, '90, Once Yale Head, Is One Of Michigan's Great Angells (Fourth of a series) One reason why the name of An- gell has become as much a part of this University as Mason Hall is em- bodied in the person of Michigan alumnus James Rowland Angell, '90, A.M.'91, and LL.D. (Hon.)'31. Dr. Angell's remarkable record of achievement spans almost 50 years in the history of American higher education. And, although he has reached .70 years of age, Dr. Angell is still adding to his record. Only last year, he was asked to become educational counselor of the National Broadcasting Company. He accepted the $25,000 a year job, but only on condition that he would have "a free hand to devise and suggest methods by which we may more cap- ably serve radio's listening millions." It is said that radio's recent interest in the intellectual can be credited to Dr Angell; an interest, by the way, which led the Columbia network to obtain another Michigan man, Prof. Lyman Bryson of Columbia Univer- sity, to direct its educational pro- grams. As a Michigan student in the '90's, Dr. Angell played shortstop on the Wolverine nine, won a tennis cham- pionship and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Three years after gradua- tion he became professor of psychol- ogy at the University of Chicago; tthen head of the department and Dean of the University faculties. In 1918, Dr. Angell was named Chi- cago's acting president. He resigned in 1921 to become president of Yale. It was at Yale that President An- gell proved his metal as an adminis- trator. In the beginning, he had one handicap to overcome: he was the first non-alumnus to head the New Haven school. An article in Harvard's Alumni Review in those days expressed a common opinion when it dubbed the Midwesterner "a breeze from somewhere,_outside. New England." But sectional emnity fad- ed when Dr. Angell enlarged, reno- vated and consolidated Yale on a scale never before attempted. En- dowments and students were attract- ed to the "New Yale" in record lots. When he reached the compulsory retirement age in 1937, Time Maga- zine said of him that "an Angell might march boldly in where a Yale alumnus would timidly fear to tread." Dr. Angell's father was Michigan's great president, James Burrill An- gell, after whom Angell Hall . is named His brother was Judge Alexis Angell of Detroit. His son, James Waterhouse Angell, is an ec- onomics professor at Columbia Uni- versity, while a nephew is Prof. Rob- ert C. Angell of Michigan's sociology department. Among the positions Dr. Angell has held in his lifetime are the presi- dencies of the Carnegie Corporation (1920), the American Psychology As- sociation (1919) and the National Research Council. He has been a Sorbonne exchange professor and has been decorated with the Order of the Crown of Italy and. Chevalier of France's Legion of Honor. First Perspectives Issue Postponed Publishing difficulties have caused a postponement of this year's first number of Perspectives, campus lit- erary magazine, which was originally intended to appear with Sunday's Daily. The issue will be made up entirely of material from last spring's win- ning Hopwood entries. Included in the magazine will be stories by Mar- itta Wolf, '40, Mary Owen Rank, '39, and Richard Humphries, '40; poems by John Ciardi, Grad., and John Mal- colm Brinnin, '41; and an essay by Margaret Arno, '39. Material is now being collected for the second issue, which will include only contributed material. President Ruthven Is Fourth To Complete 10-Year Term By HOWARD A. GOLDMAN President Ruthven's 10 years as head of the University, to be cele- brated at the Anniversary Dinner Oct. 26 in Yost Field House, makes him the fourth man in the Universi- ty's history to complete so long a tenure. Rev. Henry Philip Tappan, first president appointed by the Board of Regents under the present plan, was also the first president to serve at least 10 years. Appointed in 1852, he presided until 1863, when admin- istrative difficulties and lack of agreement with the Regents caused his removal. He died in 1881 in Switzerland at the age of 76. The next two presidents presided for seven and two years respectively. Dr. Tappan's immediate successor, Rev. Erastus Otis Haven, held the office until 1869, when he resigned to become president of Northwestern University. He died 12 years later. Acting President Henry Simmons Frieze, after serving until 1871, was then offered the presidency, but de- clined in favor of Dr. James Burrill Angell, then president of the Univer- sity of Vermont. President Angell's 38 year tenure here is the longest ever enjoyed by a president at Michigan, and thought by many to be the most successful. When he finally retired in 1909, he was 80 years old. He died seven years later in Ann Arbor. Dr. Harry Burns Hutchins was made acting president following Dr. Angell's retirement, but in 1910 he assumed the presidency. He com- pleted 10 years of service, was re- tired in 1919 at the age of 70, and was at that time made the first president-emeritus of the University. He died here in 1930. Dr. Marion Leroy Burton gave up the presidency at the University of Minnesota to take the post left vacant here by President Hutchins. Dr. Burton held the office until his death in 1925. President Burton's place was taken by Dr. Clarence Cook Little, who accepted after resigning the presi- dency of the University of Maine. Differences with the faculty and re- gents caused his resignation, how- ever, in 1929. Dr. Little, a famous cancer expert, resides now in Bar Harbor, Me. It was after this resignation that Dr. Alexander Grant Ruthven was chosen president of the University. He assumed office in October, 1929. THE TESTED FOR EVERY PNI am r ors r am""" SERkOEI EISEN51TEINS I ALEXA*N)DP LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE FRI., SAT. -OCT. 13, 14 Evening Performance Only.--8:15 All Seats Reserved - Tickets 35c Disguised Bremen Is Unharmed In Russian Harbor, Sailor Says Prof. Jamison Returns ... SEND your laundry home by convenient RAILWAY EXPRESS Prof. Charles L. Jamison, of the School of Business Administration, returned to Ann Arbor recently from New York, where he addressed the annual conference of the Society for the Advancement of Management, Thursday, Oct. 5.. I DAILY F0071A BULLETI FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1939 VOL. L. No. 17 Notices To The Members of the University Senate: There will be a meeting of the University Senate on Wednesday, Oct. 25, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. To The Members of the University Senate: At the meeting of the Uni- versity Council on Oct. 9, Prof. John E. Tracy was elected to membership on the Board of Directors of the (Continued on Page 4) ~PNUOS_ AMSTERDAM, Oct. 12. -(A')- A hasty disguise and the swirling mists of the North Atlantic helped the Ger- man merchant flagship Bremen make a perilous voyage through strange waters and reach safe harbor in the Russia Arctic port of Murmansk, a member of her crew related today. The crewman was E. Post, tall, blond seagoing cook and the only Netherlander aboard. In a copyrighted interview with th Amsterdam Newspaper Het Volk, Post told of the repainting of the ship at sea after her delayed departure from New York Aug. 30, of the anxiety aboard and finally of the Bremen's reaching Murmansk with the Ham- mer and Sickle flying. (The Bremen was held in New York two days while United States customs men searched her for possible arma- ments, and finally sailed 36 hours before Germany invaded Poland.) Without passengers or cargo, but with 900 seamen, Capt. Adolf Ahrens was reported by Post to have dodged the British blockade with gasoline drums on the deck of his $20,000,000 ship, ready to burn and sink her if need be. Without slackening speed, the ship received a complete coat of dull gray paint the first morning out. She refused to answer wireless calls, and at night she ran without lights. When the painting job was done,. he said, "in the mist at 200 meters, (656 feet), you could not have seen the Bremen." "Among the members of the crew there came a terrible tension," Post recalled, "as nobody knew where we were going. "Later, in the day of Sept. 3, we were all called together in a large saloon. The captain, standing in the center, said: 'Men, war in Europe has started'." After he told of plans to sink the ship should capture seem sure, "everybody gave the Nazi salute, ex- cept myself, the only Hollander on board. For, to be frank, the prospect of disappearing below the surface for good didn't attract me very much." "We got very little sleep," the cook continued. "We did not undress, as at any moment we might come across a trawler or some other vessel which might seize us. Numb witih cold, sailors were on the lookout in the crow's nest or on the foreship. "At last we learned we were some- where between Iceland and Spitz- bergen. On the morning of Sept. 6, three days after the outbreak of war, we sighted the coast of Mur- mansk. "As we came near the shore, we saw a man-o'-war, which afterward appeared to be a Russian cruiser. Outside Murmansk we got a Russian pilot officer. "I suppose the Bremen had never entered port under such conditions. At the foremast there was only the flag of the company (North German Lloyd) and the Russian Hammer and Sickle, and behind that the Swastika flag." Kreisler Feels Sorry For Youth Of Today COLUMBUS, Oct. 11.-(1P)-Fritz Kreisler is sorry for young people of today. "There is no romanticism for them," the violinist, here for a con- cert, declared. "From the start they are face to face with stern necessities, leaving no time for the foolish little romantic things we did when I was young. "People need more retrospection today. They need to be themselves." Thrifty idea, this: It saves you bother, and cash too, for you can express it home "collect", you know. So phone our agent today. 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