This Is SOIC's Cable to Prague Ann Arbor, Michigan November 17, 1945 International Students Congress Charles University Prague, Czechoslovakia Students at the University of Michigan wish you success in cementing world student solidarity. The World Student Fed- eration can be an important factor in keeping peace. Michigan hopes to do its part by aiding in the rehabilita- tion of a Unversity in Europe or the Far East, and by estab- lishing contact with students of all nations to foster friendship and understanding. Regards to all delegates. To day Is Id Students Day Zrgu ~1ai1& VOL. LVI, No. 15 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Jack Gore, President of Executive Council, Student Organization for International 1Vlichi0 Tackle Purdue Cooperation 200 Delegates Wil Participate in World Student Conference Prague, Where Six Years Ago 156 Were Massacred, Is Site of Conclave In Ir 190nt i Bg Ten Game By MALCOLM ROEMER The convening of the World Stu- dent Conference today at Charles University, Prague, marks the sixth anniversity of the Nazi's massacre of 156 students in the city, a crime which has since been remembered on International Students Day. About 200 delegates from demo- cratic student organizations are meeting to discuss a constitution for a new International Federation of Students. "Through the united efforts of the freedom-loving young people, victory has been won. A great unity of feeling has been born of Today's issue of The Daily is being sold by members of SOIL. Proceeds of the sale will go toward material aid for a foreign university. that common fight, and it is up to us to make sure that this hard wan but strongly felt unity shall be harnessed now to the common Resignation of Die CGaulle {Stirs +Crisis in France PARIS - UA) - A political crisis stirred France tonight after Gen. De Gaulle's office announced he had de- cided to resign as Interim President because of a deadlock with the pow- erful Communist party over his new cabinet. .Sources close to the French leader, however, said his letter of resignation, as yet not made public, indicated a willingness to continue efforts to form a government. There was an immediate flurry of political confer- ences through the day. The communist Party, which won the most seats in the Constituent As- sembly in the last election, had de- manded "politial posts," including one of the three top ministers-For- eign Affairs, War, or Interior-as its price for participating in a Coalition government. De Gaulle's letter was delivered to- night to Felix Gouin, president of the Constituent Assembly, which elected De Gaulle Tuesday to serve as president during creation of the Fourth Republic. Petitions Must Be Filed Nov.24 Petitions for offices to be filled in the Dec. 5 all-campus election must be submitted to the Men's Judiciary Council before Nov. 24. Officers to be elected are two Union vice-presidents, two members of the Board in Control of Student Publica- tions, senior officers of the engineer- ing college and of the literary college, and ten members of the J-Hop Dance committee. Students will also select a foreign university to receive aid from the fund-raising campaigns of the Stu- dent Organization for International Cooperation and the World Student Service Fund. Petition forms may be obtained at th~e Student Offices of the Union. Petitions should state the candidates' qualifications, aims and views, and must be signed by 25 students. Can- didates must have eligibility cards and must have two semesters of resi- dence left on campus. I CAMPUS EVENTS , task of building a new and better world." This is the call sent to students all over the world by the National Union of Czechoslovak Students, which, with the Czechoslovak government, is sponsoring the conference. Czechoslovak students can truly appreciate the need for unified action to spread democracy and promote peace. On November 17, 1939, the Nazis murdered 156 of them and de- ported 1200 others to concentration See NEW STUDENT, Page 2 Lecturer Tells Of Differences In Economies "The Russian economy differs from capitalist economies qualitatively as well as in the quantity of government regulation," Vladimir Kazakevich said yesterday in a lecture in Rackham Amphitheatre. Government planning of industrial production is one of these qualitative differences, he said. Scarcity of labor is one of the results of this planned economy, since the plan expands faster than the population. When production is planned, prices and consumption must also be plan- ned, Kazakevich said. This results in a domination of the law of supply ind demand which controls capital- ist economies. Collectivized agriculture is another characteristic of Soviet Economy, he said. Agriculture in Russia is organ- ized into collective farms, which are run partly under socialist and partly under private ownership, and Soviet farms which are agricultural facto- ries run by the government in which workers are paid according to what they produce.. Russia's biggest problem is to in- crease its per capita production which is still much lower than that of cap- italist countries. Labor productivitiy in the United States is one and one half times more efficient than Rus- sia's, Kazakevich said. Choral Union Will Present Pianist Uniiisk y Featuring Prokofieff's "Sonata No. 7, Op.83," the third Choral Union concert will be presented by Alexan- der Uninsky, distinguished Russian pianist, at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. The program will open with three Scarlatti sonatas to be followed by the Beethoven "Sonata in E-flat ma- jor, Op.31, No. 3." A group of Chopin selections, including the "Nocturne in D-flat major," "Waltz in G-fiat" and three etudes, three Debussy composi- tions and Liszt's "Spanish Rhapsody" will complete the program. Hailed as "one of the most remark- able of present day virtuosi" by the New York Herald Tribune, Uninsky will make his first Ann Arbor appear- ance as a part of his second trans- continental recital tour. Within two seasons in the United States the Rus- sion pianist has skyrocketed to a place among the major concert at- tractions in this country. At thirty-four, Uninsky has an ex- citing history which began in Kiev. He was graduated from the Paris Conservatory at seventeen, won the International Chopin Concurse in 1932, subsequently concertized throughout Europe and South Amer- ica and fought in the French Army in JOE GENTILE (left) an to emcee Var FOR IMPUDENCE EXTRAORDINARY:f Varsity NightTo Sta * _________________ Joe Gentile and Ralph Binge, wacky mimics who have made insult- ing advertising pay in six zero figures for thirteen years on "The Early Morning Frolic," will head the line up for Varsity Night next Friday, Nov. 23. They also will broadcast their reg- ular program from 6 to 9:30 a. m., Saturday over station CKLW from the Union ballroom. Gentile and Binge last appeared here in 1942 at an IFC Vanities show, and Varsity Night will find them em- ceeing again at Hill Auditorium. Any- thing can happen when they take over the stage to interview Tom Har- mon, Bob Westfall, and Hal New- houser. Even the instrumentally arm- ed might of Professor William D. Revelli and the University Concert Band will have difficulty in coping with the two impudent screwballs. Spectators at the broadcast should tell their friends to tune in, because they can expect to be drag- ged to the mike, willing or not, and more than likely be thrown out of the ballroom to the sound of a rip- ping shirt (courtesy of the sound effects man), after being preposter- ously insulted by Gentile and Binge. An ex-bookkeeper and dance hall manager, Joe Gentile and his child- hood pal, Ralph Binge teamed up together in 1932. Binge was formerly a plumber's helper, an amateur boxer, and a door to door salesman. The two comics are favorites of Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven. On one occasion, Dr. Ruthven asked them to help him find a horse that had stray- ed from his stables. Gentile and Sigma Rho Tan To Hold Oen M~'eetinig Sigma Rho Tau, speaking fratern- ity for engineers, will hold an open meeting for all newcomers, returned veterans and former students inter- ester in the organization at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, in the Union. At this meeting, which is open to students in all classes, newcomers will have an opportunity to find out about the society's activities. A speaker will discuss a current topic and refreshments will be served. Binge broadcast ana horse to go home be breaking the president TrgainWr Injures2 Cars Overt By The Associate LYDICK, Ind., Nov.1 persons were injured, today when the New Y vance Commodore Va swiped a westbound fre Lydick. Seven cars of the 1 man train of the New system tipped over a locomotive. Most of th members of the trainc Two dining car emplo 19 persons who were ho listed with "injuries un The seven cars tha were five sleepers, a and a lounge car. Six ca derailed but remained four sleepers ,a diner lounge car. Two cars the rails. TU' Profes Get, Art _A_ Two members of the design staff of the Col tecture and Design ha awards in the annual1 Michigan Artists, recen the Detroit Institute of Prof. Jean Paul Sl the Anna Scripps Whit his "Summer 1945," as It was rated the best p plifying traditional4 qualities. "Bird Hunters," vote ure subject gave Prof.i the Ruth McClintock M Other members of th sented in the exhibit James Donald Prender los Lopez. Carlton W. University Museum isr the sculpture section. C B Mich to retail ond W ship in hurdle stacles highly- today i Upw sizeable are exp d RALPH BINGE decide sity Night two Op *s *ship qu TheI Purdue the ru r GeieB ge contest Genitile, Bingent e) Michig~ the ou appeal to the ty minutes later, a listener found the victory cause he was animal, ler's ch 's heart. Twen- Known in Detroit ForI -- Well known in Detroit, the crack of dawn broadcasts draw huge audi- ences to witness the zany programs Ear of derogatory advertising and tran- scribed records. When outragedspon Set sors call to complain, Gentile broad-Se casts their conversation over a port- [urn able microphone. Some have learned the hard way. One clothier fond of recalling that he ed press was once a coal miner, is constantly The A 16-At least 22 chided during his commercial by Gen- has set two seriously, tile and Binge with "Come on ...medica ork-bound ad- you're four buckets behind." which inderbilt side- leasedf ight train near Enough Sponsors essenti Weaklings who eat "The-Bread" are ered fo 5-car all Pull- juggling locomotives within three sec- at an York Central onds; new electric irons are "just the narily long with the thing for ironing out a crumpled. The le injured were fender." Superman appears with a given c heavy Bronx accent. Yet sponsors are the nor yres amngsthef crying for time on their programs. ahenrm oyes among the The duo stopped taking more spon- any me spitalized were sors three years agd, explaining that The tes nknown." . three and one half hours of their titude t tipped over kind of stuff was as much as they work, i dormitory car could take in one day. ars which were Their adventures boomeranged only gical S upright were oce when Gentile was so carried the Ra and a second away by a commercial on coal that he "Thi did not leave purchased five tons. It would not tests fo pnprofess burn and he spent the next two days veloped shovelling it out of his basement. rector That particular commercial is now The accompaniedby the sound of shovels. ciation The sponsor has never known why. they ar wa am to the U. S. Marine's Train whicht painting and have a lege of Archi- Fired Upon in China Colle ve been given men a Exhibition for SHANGHAI, Nov. 16 - UP) - Shots .medica qtly opened in red from a Communist-held village the tes Arts. upon a train bearing a U. S. Marine not the usser received General brought a stern Marine receipt comb prize for threat of punitive air attack today as bthe still life in oil. Chinese communists and government ion. ainting exem- forces maneuvered for possession of or academic Manchuria and the rich northernW provinces. Well, d the best fig- U. S. Headquarters declined to con- Man Emil Weddige firm reports that the Marines had Memorial prize. returned the gunfire, but Maj. Gen. GLA he staff repre- Keller Rockey, commander of the scientis ion are Prof. Third Amphibious corps, said he had day tha gast and Car- directed an emissary to inform the mentsv Angell of the communists that "if firing continues targets, represented in I will order an air strafing mission one oft against the village." Lions nds y BILL MULLENDORE Daily Sports Editor igan's football team, struggling n a fighting chance for its sec- estern Conference champion- three years, will attempt to the first of two formidable ob- in its path in the form of a rated Purdue eleven at 2 p. m. n the Michigan Stadium. ards of 60,000 fans, including a contingent of..Purdue rooters, ected for the game which will the fate of at least one of the posing squads in its champion- est. Wolverines must defeat both and Ohio State to remain in nning at all. Even with, these s safely in the win column, in hopes rest eventually on tcome of the Purdue-Indiana ext week.Only a Boilermaker would put Coach Fritz Cris- arges "in." Purdue, the issue is just as rrlier Date for Medical itude 'Test Association of Medical Colleges a special date, Dec. 15, for the i aptitude test to be given will enable men and women re- from the armed services and al war industries to be consid- r admission to medical schools earlier date than would ordi- have been possible. medical aptitude test, usually nce a year, in the spring, is mal entrance requirement for edical school in the country. t, designed to measure the ap- of the student for medical s to be administered here by iversity's Bureau of Psycholo- ervices at 3 p. in., Dec. 14 in ckham Amphitheatre. s is one of the best aptitude r the selection of students for ional work that has been de- , "Dr. Wilma Donahue, di- of the bureau, said. tests are returned to the Asso- of Medical Colleges, here *e scored and the results sent various medical schools to the prospective student may pplied. ge graduates or seniors, both nd women preparing to enter I school are eligible to take t here in December whether or y are University students. The of a two dollar fee, payable cashier's office, entitles the to admission to the examina- There's One Brave Left in the World SGOW, Nov. 16-(1P)-Scottish t Sir James French said to- at if the United States experi- with atomic bombs on Naval he would be willing to board the ships and record his reac- clear-cut. Victories over both Michi- gan and Indiana would insure at least a tie, while a loss to either means the end of all championship aspira- tions for Coach Cecil Isbell's sur- prisingly strong squad. Not rated very highly at the out- set of the season, Purdue turned out to be one of the surprises of the Mid-West as the campaign pro- gressed, reaching a peak in a 35-13 lacing of previously undefeated Ohio See WOLVERINE, Page 3 Biand Prepares New Formation Thanksgiving will be the theme of maneuvers performed by the Uni- versity Marching Band on the grid- iron this afternoon, as announced by Prof. William D. Revelli, director of the band. During the half, the band will honor Purdue with its block P, after which it wilf form the outline of a Thanksgiving turkey. Appearing on the scene, a hunter will shoot the turkey, which will move down the field at a fast gait. To complete the slaughter, an oversized axe will be used to chop off the turkey's head, which will also move on down the field. The turkey will finally appear in its proper place, resting on a plat- ter. Continuing the Thanksgiving theme, the band's next formation will represent a church, inside of which will be the University Choir singing "Prayer of Thanksgiving." Concluding its maneuvers, the band will honor the university with its traditional block M. JAG School Will Graduate 1Q9 officers One hundred-nine officers will re- ceive certificates in the eighteenth graduation of advanced officers and officer candidates from the Judge Advocate General's school Tuesday morning in Hutchins Hall. Major General Myron C. Cramer, the Judge Advocate General of the Army, who is retiring from duty Nov. 30, will present the certificates and address the graduating classes. Thir- ty-six men, who comprise the 14th Officer Candidate Class, will be com- missioned second lieutenants and 73 officers in the 25th Officer Candidate Class will participate in the cere- monies. Special Parade A special parade Monday afternoon in the Law Quadrangle, will be re- viewed by General Cramer, Colonel Reginald Miller, school commandant, and guests. At this time candidates from the 14th Officer Class will be commissioned. Colonel Miller will ad- minister the oath of office, following the reading of the letter of appoint- ment by Lieutenant Colonel John H. W. Derrick, executive officer. Company commander for the 25th Officer Class is Captain John Rap- paelli and Walter Brown is comman- der for the graduating candidate company. Honor Gen. Kramer A banquet honoring Major Cramer, Dr. Alexander RTuthven,, president of the University, E. Blythe Stason, Dean of Law School, and other Title Hopes Boilermaker's Trio of Backfield Stars Must be Stopped For Michigan To Win efeat For Either -~ w jw .xr,,u v.c.. . r.a.wb v, UV O. WHERE ANGELS FEAR TO TREAD; Managing Editor Goldstein rIs Logan in Gargoyle Office EDITOR.'5 NOTE: Perry Logan? was as=- signed to cover the reincarnation of the Gargoyle. Knocked down by the general manager for not showing him the proper reverence, Logan has been locked in the Garg office, where he will serve as janitor basket for adolescent whimperings? Now take your story and be off." Goldstein relaxed. He lit a for- bidden cigar. Suddenly a broad smile wreathed his face. He was head reverently). We have no time for your idle chitchat here. Can't you see we're busy?" I looked around. Bob Chatfield, business manager, was haranguing "Please, Mr. Goldstein," I begged, "I must talk to you. I want to write a story ..- "A story? Well, hand it in before