I r today; showers r Lw 4 gaI 4:&iiti; Coi Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25, 1939 PRICE )UPS Slate candidate in today lections wa r Wheele heads of th( iary groups h election >vide that ol or clas ndidate an f the voter here will t owed on thi loting take ing willbi 31 A.H. be Rachmaninoff Gives Recital To Over_5,000 By MAYA GRUHZIT A shadow of a man. , A gaunt genius who again and again comes back to play for demanding audi- ences. Tall, yet with very stooped shoulders, Sergei Rachmaninoff last tnight played to an audience of over 5,000. .e Music that was beauty in only the way that he played it. And then to see him, a truly old man, but great with that indomitable spirit which s has carried, him before many au- diences. His eyes were rimmed and reddened from his many tours, and s worn from many experiences. In his 's entire attitude however he main- s tained the true austerity and reti- r, cence of a great old man who feels he e must recognize his admirers to a s. slight extent. s, Stooping in the midst of a small but a quickly crowded dressing room, he s scratched out a fine and spider-like d signature upon programs and pic- ' tures. Glancing up at a remark that e he must sign papers like any other ie "famous" person, Rachmaninoff s spoke with, quiet x vehemence, "It's e terr-rrible!" And in that voice he ex- - pressed a contempt at himself that, he, a man of genius would be signing autographs like a movie star.' r To few other questions he main- al tained a quiet reserve. Student au- o diences? Yes, fine. Yes, Cleveland : was the next stop. But when he was r, asked why he again played that fa- d vorite', his Prelude in C Sharp Minor, d he was very sure of himself. He had r, played it for himself, and not be- es cause of any audience. Oh, yes, for P himself. Because he liked it. , His hands, encased like the 'pre- h cious things they are, in special ,h glove,s raised, and tiredly motioned the crowd out. "Terrible" he said. 7s And terrible it was. For hands like e his a're above fulfilling the whim of er an excited autograph fan. r, And so he was left, a tired Russian' * composer, who had genius above all, k others. Tired and lonely. Prelude In C Sharp Minor SERGEI RACHMANINOFF Only Thirteen Vie For Senate Seats To Date Broadway Hit Opens Drama Season Nov. 8 Play .Production, oldest campus dramatic organization, will open the fall season Wednesday, Nov. 8, with the presentation of "Family Portrait," a three-act play by Lenore Coffee and William Joyce Cowen. Presentations will be given each day beginning at 8:30 p.m. from Wednesday through Saturday, Nov. 8-11, in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre, Prof. Valentine B. Windt, direc- tor of the group, announced . Just Released "Family Portrait," an outstanding' success on Broadway last spring, has just 'been released, Professor Windt said, and Play Production will prob- ably be one of the first non-profes- sional organizations in the country to produceit. The story deals with Jesus' family, but tries to show it as "anybody's family," free from all the legends generally attributed to it. It is not a serious, 'religious plot,, nor does it attempt to be historical in costume or general feeling. , The authors are said to. treat the plot with humor aid humanity. "Jesus here is shown as His family would know Him, but no attempt is made to placethe. family in any par- ticular locale or age. The action could take place anywhere from Judea to Vermont!" It is this uni- versality of appeal that has made the hit a success, Professor Windt commented. Central theme of the play is Mark's famous observation, "No man's a prophet in his own home!" May Get Tickets Now 'Tickets for the play may be pur- chased at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office beginning Nov. 6. Mail orders 'are now being received. Play Production presents plays once a month throughout the school year. Last year the group presented "Counsellor-at-Law," "Two Gentle- men of Verona," and "Petrified For- est," among others. The correspond- ing summer group, the Michigan Repertory Group, has just completed a seasonof seven plays. Reich M iisterx Warns British. Seized Crew Vessel's Worries Russia Will SendI :' (9 Hull Denies Right Of USSR To Keep 'City Of Flint'; RequestsShip's Return Over Half Of Cargo AllegedContraband WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.--/P)--The United States prepared tonight to seek release of the captive American freighter City of Flint and at the same time worried officials strove to find out what became of the vessel's crew after she was seized by a Ger- man raider which sent her to Mur- mansk, Russian port. President Roosevelt said he had no word as to the whereabouts of the 42 sailors, because of difficult com- munications with the far north city of Murmansk, it was not clear whe- ther they were aboard the City of Flint when the vessel arrived there flying the German flag and unider command of a German 'prize crew. Secretary of State Hull appeared worried over the lack of informa- tion. War Developments From Other Points (From Associated Press Dispatches) PARIS-French advance guards on the Western Front clung to a foot- hold on German soil tonight. Along a strategic range of ridges just with- in the territory of the Reich where the French took their stand after general withdrawal from first-line positions on Oct. 16, patrols of in- fantrymen armed with machine guns, rifles and grenades waited in cam- ouflaged positions to meet any ad- vance of German troops. HELSINKI- - Soviet Russia has modified her demands on Finland in new proposals being brought here by Finland's special envoy to Moscow, Dr. Juho Kusti Paasikivi, authorita- tive sources asserted tonight. Soviets Of I To D Offie Envoy Seeks (Unless othi dispatches are By WI MOSCOW, t the American a Soviet port German prize fronted Russ knotty and tic national law 1 4- s fu antra ge t are i Y i g these , junior Senate Nears es from Final Decision ,aLen- vo can- - Sixteen Posts To Be Filled In November 3 Election; More Candidates Urged Only thirteen petitions have been turned in to date for the Student Senate election Nov. 3, with sixteen positions to be filled, Norman Schorr, '40, and Stuart Knox, '40, o-direc- tors of the election announced last night. Inasmuch as the Senate is a gen- eral campus group, designed to re- flect opinion on all questions of sig- nificance to students, the directors urged every campus group to enter a candidate. The election will be held on the proportional representation system which gives even minorities a good chance to receive representation' the directors explained. Martin Dworkis, '40. acting-presi- dent of the Senate, said yesterday that the Senate will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. today at the, Union, and that students, especially those intending to run for the Senate, are invited to attend. A general dis- cussion on American neutrality and on the - election will be- the features of the meeting. Candidates are urged to turn in their platforms as soen as possible, either to the directors or to Bill Elmer '41, at The Daily. The deadline for these, if they are to be printed in the special Battle Page of The Daily, is 1 p.m. Monday. They must: not be longer than 150 words unless candi- dates group together on one slate in which case, the platform may be. longer. The Senate office, 302, Union, will be open from 4 to 6 p.m. loday through Friday for the filing of peti- cions, the directors said. . Harvard Student First Collegian To Enter War CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(ACP)-Be- lieved to be the first U.S. college stu- dent to fight in the present European war, John C. Baker, a Harvard grad- uate, will soon be stationed in the French Maginot line.{ Reports reaching friends here said that Baker has joined the American division of the French Foreign Le- gion. ence A. Vladimir for foreig tion wouJ available ir 7 un NveutratyI Cr',. ,.,., belle. Pc for Some Changes Approved And Others Eliminated In SpeedyDiscussion mittee WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.-(P)- Is 'ex, Lates fo sopho , Jame mes Ke tur thi J-Hop will be hel on Page 2) -ds y Done with three-weeks of oratory, the d Senate put on a tremendous burst of n speed today, disposed of a long series - )f amendments to the neutrality bill - and drew near to as final decision on - the essential issue of repealing or - retaining the arms embargo. - It approved changes which would' s permit American ships to go almost ty anywhere except to the danger zones (of the North Atlantic, would make e the bill more nearly a cash-and- carry measure, and permit ordinary r trade with Canada across the border - or through sheltered water and sea- es ways. With equal dispatch it turned down St an amendment forbidding American 1- vessels to go within 300 miles of the e European continent or the British is Isles, and rejected a proposal that no military aircraft should be sold 4 to belligerents until American na- tional needs had been satisfied. The day pegan with the Senate finally entering into an agreement to limit further debate and thereby hasten final disposition of the neu- trality legislation. Under the ar- rangement each Senator was given 45 minutes to discuss the'bill itself and 45 minutes on each amendment.: g Senator Taft (Rep., O.) offered the amendment to forbid American ships to go within 300 miles of Eu- rope or the British Isles. He pleaded al, that such a provision was pecessary ed to keep American vessels from being he sunk enroute to neutral ports. ty Senator Barkley (Dem., Ky.) re- he plied that the 300-mile limitation 9 would keep American vessels from go- c' ing to Norway, Sweden, Belgium, re Holland, Denmark, Spain and Medi- he terranean ports. He emphasized that no one had suggested there was ig danger to American ships in the Mediterranean. - he us Prof. Allen Sherzer 1g. 13 To Talk At Smoker to im Hitler Will Fight To End, Says VonRibbentrop By ALVIl J. STEINKOPF DANZIG, Oct. 24.-(A)-Germany is determined to, fight Britain to the bitter end and is supremely confident of victory, Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop told the world to- night. In a 90-minute address von Ri- bentrop warned Britain that by con- tinuing the war she was "playing' dangerously with the fate of her em- pire." "The present British government may go down in history as the grave- digger of the empire," he told a group of veteran Nazi fighters which formed his iymmediate audience in this one- time free city, now incorporated in the Reich. The Nazi foreign minister let fall not a single hint of a possible com- promise to end the war before the conflict at arms goes to its bitter con- clusion.- Denies Right . Secretary Hull denmed the right of1 Russia to keep the City of Flint,t and it was reliably learned that thet State Department would request the f release of the vessel if Russia did- not voluntarily permit her to depart. President Roosevelt said he hoped to get the vessel back. Officials here apparently were tak- ing their stand on a United States Supreme Court decision which may3 be summed up thus:t "If 50 per cent or more of an American ship's cargo consists of, contraband and if a belligerent seizes her, the ship may be taken into a< port of the belligerent country, but not into a neutral port except under' exceptional circumstances such as stress of weather, breakdown of ma- chinery, or lack of provisions. 'Conditional' Contraband Hull acknowledged today that more than half the cargo of the City of Flint was conditional contraband, and some of it was absolute contra- band. (Conditional contraband is ma- terial, such as food and clothing, which is immune from seizure if des- tined for civil populations of bellig- erent country but subject to seizure if destined for the armed forces. Absolute contraband, such as steel, is subject to seizur'e if it is being shipped to any one in a warring na- tion.) The White House took the position that if its proposed anendments to the neutrality act had been on the statute books, the seizure would not have taken place. DETROIT, Oct. 24. -P)- Mrs. Catherine Anderson of Detroit today admitted she was concerned over the fate of her brother, Robert McColl, 46, only Michigan member of the crew of the seized City of Flint. MOSCOW-Renewed negotiations between Soviet Russia and a. Finnish delegation were suspended today less than 48 hours after the Finns' arriv- al, leading foreign observers to be- lieve the talks were not going too happily. The Finns prepared to re- turn tonight to Helsinki presumably for fresh instructions from their gov- ernment, indicating that compromise proposals they brought here were unacceptable or that Soviet authori- ties may have made new demands. LONDON-The British govern- ment promised the House of Com- mons a "constant endeavor to secure the largest possible measure of pub- licity" in the United States today while newspaper placards reported the "U.S.A. angry" over German seizure of the steamship City of Flint. Single Tickets Available For First Lecture City of Flint was t German flag. Delay of a day or since there are no i at Murmansk, Russ port which is not is ter. The German ] is understood to b about 200 miles no: Circle. Crew In The Gerian iriz terned by Russian o Ing Murmansk, an Germany embassy fectly correct," a] officials said they h the incident. Foreign sources b lieved the Russians as anyone when it in flying a Germa they probably were the situation. Alumni Gather For Ruthven Dinner Here Frida Decoration Plans Told Mrs. Roosevelt Will Begin Series Tomorrow Night; Box Office Opens Today Single admission tickets for the 'first Oratorical Lecture tomorrow by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will go on sale today in the Hill. Auditorium box office. The box office will be open from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m. today. Remaining single tickets will also be sold tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 8:15 p.m., the time when Mrs. Roosevelt's lecture begins. The First Lady's topic will be "The Relationship of the Individual to the Community." She will arrive in Ann Arbor Thursday morning or after- noon and will stay at President Ruth- ven's home until evening. She is not expected to remain overnight. Single tickets for later lectures in this year's Oratorical Series, the next of which will be by Jan. Masaryk on Nov. 14, are to go on sale two days in advance of each talk. German Raid Britain's Bal The possibility speedy German r Britain's blockade and are now roam an effective camps shipping was seer rious reports fromr The reports ind )both of the raid( United States frei taken it off its cc Isles with a gener, it by a German Russian Arctic : In addition t1i either or both o have been operat a few miles west seen in informed the report of the British vessels less this historic Briti In connection w~ Gibraltar it was b Shortag rong By Going in Prosecutor yesterday welfare fu clerk, Emn STON H. COX he third week of trig Bert J. Rapp prove the records in tI of the' former count M. Gibb, between ti .ry 1936 to April 193 tage of $5,547.52. A pp he still has mo erify the evidence 1 that, the State audit( he books last sprir ipon to testify. mp, accountant in tI finally finished h t day of testif yin the 28 checks from] one city were paid1 turned over to hi Guest At Michigan Dinner In 1911 To Be Present; Vernon Hillery Arrives Michigan alumni from all parts of the country are gathering to attend the Ruthven Anniversary Dinner Fri- day in Yost Fiell House. Myrtle White-Godwin, '10, for ex- ample, one of the women who attend- ed the first National Michigan Din- ner, Feb. 4, 1911 in New York City, will arrive tomorrow from her home in Long Beach, Calif. Mrs. Gowin, on that occasion, sat in the gallery with Mrs. Hutchins (wife of Dr. Harry Burns Hutchins, then president of the University) and the rest of the ladies who attended. She was one of the first women to talk to William W. Cook about what later resulted in the construction of Martha Cook Dormitory. In 1910 she traveled to New York City with a letter to Mr. Cook from President spends at least one week out of each year in Ann Arbor. Last spring in Ft. Worth he led one of the largest Dress rehearsal for the pageant to be given Friday night at the Ruthven Anniversary Dinner will' be held at 7 p.m. today in Yost Field House. All participants are to appear with full equipment and full costumes. celebrations in the country the day of the world-wide Michigan Birth- day Broadcast. Raul Benedicto, '02L, secretary of the University of Michigan Club of Porto Rico, in Ann Arbor expecting to attend the Ruthven celebration, left for home suddenly late last week. Submarine warfare, he said, is mak- ing the 1000-mile sea voyage from New York City to San Juan more dangerous every day. Donald J. Sterling, Portland, Ore., Open Book Of Knowledge Will Keynote Setting; Fall Leaves Deck Tables Preliminary arrangements a n d- plans for decorating Yost Field House for the Ruthven Anniversary Dinner Friday have been completed, Oscar L. Eberbach, chairman of the decora- tions committee, announced yester- day., The entire decorative scheme, he explained, is inspired by and will emanate from a huge golden "Book of Knowledge," hung from the speak- ers table directly below President Ruthven. An immense number "10," in honor of Dr. Ruthven's 10 years as head of the University, will be worked' out in flowers on the open pages. From this central motif, and. spreading all over the speakers' table, will be placed specially, treated oak leaves of appropriate fall colors. On each table, in fact, oak leaf decora- tions will center about a yellow candle in a blue base. About 165 candles will Wolverine Has Labor Trouble Meeting To Be Held Today On 'Hours' Increase Ten students, and one, faculty member representing workers, the Board of Directors, and membership- at-large of the Wolverine Coopera- tive Restaurant will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in an' effort to settle the wage controversy, caused by the two- hour increase in working hours this year.', Feeling that conditions in Europe would bring about a rise in prices of certain food commodities, John Scheibe, '42M, president of the or- ganization, explained that the Board of Directors deemed it advisable to save nowr by increasing working hours. Ex-Governor's Grandson that the and that waters w under the the torpe Yoder T( Relhie Will G Of '] will be J. M clerk's fourth An intimate dis religious beliefs a be the basis of th lecture by the R Trinity Lutheran today in the Rack perience as a students," ac 4 N N - GL .1