ESTABLISHED 1920 01 4r Su m m rx I A6F 4kp an :4Ia tit j MMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I II VOL. XI, NO. 27. FOUR PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN,THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1931 WEATHER: Cloudy, Warm PRICE FIVE CENTS TURNER DISCUSSES PROGRESS IN RURA EUCATIONAL WORK Schools Are Improved in Both Quality of Instruction and Organization, He Says. CITES CONSOLIDATIONS Claims More Attention Is Given to Education of Teachers for Rural Districts. Rural schools, while still inferior to urban schools, have shown re- markable progress both in organi- zation and in the quality of instruc- tion offered, Prof. H. L. Turner said yesterday in an address at the af- ternoon conference of the School of Education. Professor Turner, a visiting facul- ty member this summer, is professor of rural education at Michigan State Normal college, Ypsilanti. He was formerly head of the depart- ment of education at Arkansas State Teachers college and state supervisor of rural schools in Ar- kansas. Notes Consolidations. Professor Turner pointed out that rural schools are tending slowly to- ward better organization. He cited the increasing number of consoli- dated schools to be found in the country districts. As further proof of improvement, he quoted from the biennial surveys of the United States office of education, which showed that a consistent growth had been recorded in the number. of consolidated schools. "Consoli- dations are being more intelligent-. ly planned," he said. Training Improved. Continuing, Professor Turner de- clared, "More attention is being given the training of rural school. teachers in higher institutions of learning. State departments now. employ more rural workers than ever before. Local supervisors are on the increase despite temporary setbacks here and there." Stating that supervision increased the achievement of pupils, Profes- sor Turner illustrated from statis- tics examples of definite improve- ment of pupils' work. Study in In- diana showed conclusively that an. increase of 14 to 25 per cent in achievement was to be found. Oak- land county, Mich., alone displayed an increase of 76 per cent. GUTHIE SCUSSES AROLGYWORK Director of University Museum of Anthropology Describes Findings in Michigan. "When people think about arch- aeology they usually picture exca-; vations in Greece or Rome, but probably the most active group in archaeology today is at work in North America," said Dr. Carl Guthe yesterday. Dr. Guthe is director of the University Museum of An- thropology, and has just returned from a trip to northern Michigan, where he excavated an Indian mound. The mound, which is 35 feet in diameter and 5 feet high, is near Lake Gogebic, about thirty miles southeast of Ironwood. Two maple trees, which were growing from the mound, gave evidence that this In- dian burial ground was very old, Dr. Guthe said. There was every reason to believe that there had been a burial here Dr. Guthe declared, because it was discovered that someone had ruth- lessly dug to the bottom, ruining the skeleton, and then had filled in the excavation. Mixed with the dirt from the ex- cavation were found handfuls of pottery and human bones. This pottery was cord-marked, decorat- ed by means of the imprint of twisted cords in the clay. The Algonkians, about whom very little is known, were the makers of this pottery, Dr. Guthe said. Heads Toward T okio A << t ress PhLoto Amy Johnson. MOSCOW, July 2.-(A')-Amy Johnson, British aviatrix, who is trying out her speed in a flight from England to Tokio, continued on her way Wednesday after re- freshing herself with a night's sleep. REICH TAKES STEPS TO RETAINCREiITS Names Schmitz Manager of Dye Trust; Melchior to Attend London Conference. BERLIN, July 29.-(RP)-As the first step in keeping in Germany the foreign credits already here, the German government has unof- ficially designated Hermann Schmitz, managing director of the German dye trust, and Caarl Mel- chior, a delegate to the 1929 Young plan conference, as its representa- tives in the bankers' discussions recommended by the seven-power conference at London. While these negotiations are go- ing on, the cabinet continues its extraordinary sessions, and the country at large appears to have adopted the attitude that Germany will see it through on her own re- sources. The visits by Secretary Stimson and Prime Minister MacDonald have heartened the whole nation, and all hands are turning to with a determination to show that the visiting statesmen have not mis- placed their faith in Germany. Marcus Wallenberg, a Swedish banker, and Oliver M. Sprague, American adviser to the Bank of England, are in Berlin now mak- ing a general survey of the situa- tion and giving the government the benefit of their advice through its unofficial representatives. It is reported that the London banks already have indicated their willingness to leave their expiring credits in Germany. The United States, Switzerland, and Sweden al- so are favorable, but the Dutch thus far have remained non-committal. SESSION OFFERS BOAT EXCURSION Hobbs Will Direct Put-in-Bay Trip on Saturday. Down the Detroit river and through Lake Erie on a 120 mile boat trip should prove to be a great temptation to Summer Session stu- dents and their friends, especially if the hot weather continues. The Put-in-Bay excursion, con- ducted by Prof. William H. Hobbs, of the geology department will leave Ann Arbor by bus at 7 o'clock Saturday morning. Persons desiring to take the trip are asked to register at the Summer Session office before Friday night in order that bus accommodations may be made. If more than 100 register, the steamship company will reduce the price of the round- trip ticket from 75 cents to 55 cents, and refunds will be made. Those outside of the geology classes do not have to make the walking trip on the island unless they choose PRESIDENT RENEWS STUDY OF NATION'S EMPLOYMENT NEED Confers With Red Cross Leader, Emergency Committee Head at White House. GREEN EXPECTS SLUMP Labor Head Says Only Solution to Problem Is Shortening of Working Hours. WASHINGTON, July 29.-()- President Hoover today began a new study of the unemployment situation designed 'to coordinate the diversified activities of the many agencies dealing with the problem. Coming from a long conference at the White House, to which he was summoned, Chairman Payne of the Red Cross said he believed his visit marked the start of a cooper- ative movement among relief or- ganizations. Almost at the same time the American Federation of Labor is- sued a statement by President Green, predicting "a worse unem- ployment situation next winter than last." He said that a survey of 184 cities by the National Association of Community Chests showed that "relief needs will probably be twice as great." Information Not "Bright." Payne said that information on unemployment reaching him was not alarming but not to be de- scribed as bright. The burden of caring for the un- employed, he added, rests primarily on the states, counties, and muni- cipalities. Green painted a sombre picture. of unemployment based on the federation's figures for July. He es- timated that in July 5,200,000 per- sons were without work, and that if the usual seasonal unemployment comes after the fall pick-up 7,000,- 000 will be out of jobs next winter. Asks Shorter Hours.' The federation president said the crucial need is for shorter hours. "This is the only permanent so- lution to the unemployment prob- lem," he said. "Other measures are mere palliatives. When we consider that with modern machines, work which took the average man 52 hours in 1929 he can now no in 34 hours, and that the average work hours have only been reduced from 52 to 50 hours per week, we under- stand how spare time has become unemployment instead of leisure. { President Hoover yesterday con- ferred with Fred C. Croxton, the acting chairman of his emergency committee for unemployment. Crox- ton would make no statement after the conference. HEAT DEATH TOILL FOR WEEK HITS 80 No Immediate Respite in Sight for Lower Michigan Area; Insect War Opens. (By Associated Press) Heat reigned again Wednesday over the west, central, and eastern states, and in its train were death, suffering, and destruction from pests and fire. No immediate respite was in pros- pect in most areas, although some sections-the northern plains, the extreme Missouri valley, the north- ern portion of the upper Great Lakes, and California-felt cooling winds and rains. Eighty deaths were attributed to the burning temperature during the week, most of them in California's Imperial Valley, where the mercury soared to 120 degrees before drop- ping Wednesday; 17 were in Salt River valley of Arizona, and two more in Iowa. Grasshopper hordes still swarmed in the Dakotas, Nebraska, and Iowa, and farmers battling the scourge in Northern Minnesota met still another foe in the invasion of ar- World Flyers Land Safely in Wales Hugh Herndon (left) and Clyde Pangborn, American aviators, land- ed at 7 o'clock last night near Cardigan, Wales, completing a hop across the Atlantic ocean from Roosevelt field, L. I. The flyers cruised over Ireland in a heavy fog for some time, unable to sight a landing field. They had originally planned to go direct to Moscow on the first leg of a round-the-world flight. Summer Repertory Players Present 'Alison's House,' Pulitzer Prize Play A REVIEW The Pulitzer Prize Play strikes this reviewer as rather the culmination of all the sentimental nonsense which has been accumulating in all sorts of public letters and poems about Emily Dickinson's love affair. Ac- tually, of course, Emily Dickinson's love-isolation was only the condi- tion, not the subject-matter, of her poetic strength; and that "thwarted emotion"-for which everyone has been and is in this play asked to weep sympathetically-so gloriously expanded that it made Emily Dick- inson a microcosm for the great dying New England culture-an achieve- ment in which she far transcended the importance of her decision or her indecision about her lover. But Miss Glaspell's play carries us on through two acts with the expectations of some great revelation aroused by the demented Agatha's intense and worried secrecy; and then in the last act the play (with its very interesting characters, its very interest- ing suggestion of themes) is fused on a very sentimental level ("the new poems tell all about what hap-R pened;" Alison didn't "go"; Father didnt "o";Els di "g"; nn is "going"; and Alison has written all about it for all of us; should we or shouldn't we let the world know what Alison hasnwritten about it B' Team Will Be Retained, But for all of us). And this should be BohTasWlBePcd something of a comedown whether Both Teams Will Be Picked you happen to know that Emily From Single Squad. Dickinson was much more than a "confessional" poet (writing about Michigan will play both a major all the details of just what happen- and a "B" football schedule this ed) or not (but particularly if you year, but for the first time since do). 1928, when the "B" team plan was Mr. Stevens has done, I believe, put into practice, the teams will excellent things in trying to in- be picked from a single squad. tegrate this play. He has contrast- Coach Harry Kipke yesterday an- ed the characters effectively and nounced the abandonment of the used a slow pace that is not dull. double squad plan, saying that he The best performance of the eve- believed the choice of teams from ning was certainly given by Fern a single group will prove more ef- Barrer as Miss Agatha. Getting fective, both to the school and to all of a monomaniac's nervousness the men. and intensity into a quiet dull , The change is partly the result monotone was something of an of an experiment tried in basket- achievement for Miss Barrer; and ball last season when George Veen- it kept the first two acts, which ker kept the squad intact and pick- threatened not to move, moving. ed teams from it for all games on Mr. Dammon's father didn't have both schedules. The major team enough character, enough pointed tied for second honors in the Big sternness to be quite important as Ten, while the minor team won the protagonist of the last act. Paul nine of its 10 games. On the other Showers' Eben was similarly not hand, the double squad plan has pointed enough. It is suggested worked with only fair success, the that Eben has an heritage from Ali- "B" football team last year having son; but that it has been stifled by won two, tied one, and lost four circumstances of his life. If Mr. games. Showers had more sharply suggest- Only about 60 men will be in- ed Eben's uncertainty and lack of vited back for practice this fall, direction as a character, the image Kipke said yesterday. of the dead Alison, whose life had had a gentle certainty and straight- More Than 60 Inspect lineness, would have been vivified. Ford Airport, Village Miss Lewis' Elsa had some bad, self-conscious, over-emotional mo- More than 60 Summer Session ments-particularly her first en- students took the excursion to trance-but was in the last act Greenfield village, Dearborn inn, quiet and effective and precise. The and the Ford airport yesterday. Hodges, Ted, and Louise were all Thirty-six of the students were very nicely done. taennin the ti-nr Fnr l l P V f r 1 ' ' MOSCOW FLYERS DOWN IN WALES; FOG BLOCKS HOP Herndon and Pangborn Land Near Cardigan; Crossing Good. NO NEWS HEARD OF OTHER TEAM Polando and Boardman Unreported; Started on Tuesday. CARDIGAN, Wales, July 29.- (P)-Prevented by fog from mak- ing Moscow the first stop of their projected round the world flight, Hugh Herndon, Jr., and Clyde Pangborn, Ameican aviators, brought their plane safely down .at 7 o'clock tonight on a sloping farm field at Moile Grove, five miles from here, after a success- ful trans-Atlantic crossing from New York. The ocean crossing was made .difficult by persistent fog all the way, and the fog forced the avia- tors down when they still had a supply of fuel sufficient for eight hours more of flying. No Reports Heard Meanwhile no word was heard from the other American trans-At- lantic plane, piloted by Russell Boardman and John Polando, which took off from New York at almost the same time as that of Herndon and Pangborn. There was nothing even upon which speculation as to the whereabouts of Boardman and Polando might be based. It was assumed that they met the same foggy conditions which prevented Herndon and Pangborn from getting a glimpse of the ocean between Newfoundland and Ireland, but there was nothing in the way of reports, either in England or in Europe, to indicate what fortune might have befallen them. Will Resume Flight. Herndon and Pangborn resolved to have a few hours' sleep before continuing their flight, and they went to a hotel here immediately after safely stowing away their plane for the night. They said they sighted the coast of Ireland about 3 o'clock this af- ternoon and continued flying east- ward, but fog prevented adequate observation and it was only after they had cruised over the Irish sea for some time that they were able to find a landing place on the Welsh coast. Both were tired after their long flight, but they asked to be called at dawn to resume their journey. When they landed in the farmer's field, the flyers' first question was: "Well, just exactly where are we?" The question was directed to farm hands who came running to the plane. Graf Zeppelin Starts Return Flight; Sighted at Archangel BERLIN, July 29.-(JP)-The giant dirigible Graf Zeppelin was report- ed tonight to be on its way back from the Arctic to Leningrad, whence it started for the far North four days ago, and due to arrive there early tomorrow. The Graf was reported at 8 o'clock tonight (2 p.m. Eastern Standard Time) over Archangel. It was believed here tonight that the reason for shortening the Arc- tic trip, which was originally in- tended to carry the big dirigible nearly to the North pole, was the presence of heavy fogs over the Arctic regions. This dispelled fears aroused by 40 hours' silence of the Graf's radio. The silence was being attributed tonight to the fact that the ship had entered the Arctic's "zone of silence" and that this was respon- sible for interference with wireless transmission. The Russian radio expert Krenkel told his friends before the Graf left Berlin that according to his Arctic experience, north and south W.J.G. Kraus, Guests to Visit Biology Station Today Dean Edward H. Kraus and a number of guests will visit the Uni- versity Biological station at Douglas lake today. Those who will go are Prof. Mar- tin Smallwood, of the Syracuse uni- versity zoology department, and Mrs. Smallwood, Dean John R. Ef- plane at the airport. BASEBALL SCORES American Leauge New York 10, Chicago 4. Detroit 4, 8, Boston 5, 6. game 10 innings) Cleveland 6, Washington 0. Athletics 4, St. Louis 2. National League New York 5, Pittsburgh 4. Phillies 4, Chicago 0. (first