The Weather Generally fair today and to- morrow; warmer in extreme east portion today, cooler in extreme west tomorrow. L -dg& Ar at t Editorials The American Ideal For University Freedom ... Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLV No. 35 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUG. 9, 1936 PRICE 5 CENTS Germany's Neutrality Hangs Fire Hitler Awaits Soviet Policy Before Signing 'Hands Off' Pact With France Loyalists Continue Battle On 3 Fronts Algeciras Bombing Seen As Threat To Transport Of Morocco Rebels BERLIN, Aug. 8.-()-Ensconced in a luxurious car of French manu- facture, former King Alfonso of Spain entered Germany tonight as Reich officialdom wrestled with the question of neutrality in relation to Spain's civil war. Germany answered French queries as to Reich adherence to a general hands off with acceptance in prin- ciple and with another question: "Will Russia be neutral?" Official voice was given to Ger- man press allegations that Spain was being "bolshevized" when the Foreign Office made it clear that any action committing Germany to a non-inter- vention agreement awaited a clarifir cation of Soviet policy. As Alfonso was whirled along Ger- man highways, ostensibly for a visit to the Olympic Games in Berlin, the Foreign Office denied any knowledge of his arrival. "We have no information on the subject whatsoever," a spokesman said. Earlier in the day the Foreign Of-' fice had described as "foolish" re- ports that Alfonso was coming to Ber- lin to confer with Chancellor Hitler or possibly with Count Ciano, the Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs. Agreement in principle was the limit in satisfaction the Nazi state would permit French Ambassador Andre Francois-Poncet when he asked whether the Reich would enter an eight-nation agreement to let Spain settle its internal -quarrels with no outside interference. The Foreign Office, however, as- sured the French ambassador Ger- many was fully aware of the danger .of war in connection with Spain's civil conflict and was cooperating with other European powers to pro- duce a neutrality agreement which would prove effective. MADRID, Aug. 8.-(P)-Moroccan rebel troops, hardened in North Af- rican hill campaigns, tramped north- ward toward beleaguered Madrid to- night, with the Fascist Commander- in-Chief, Francisco Franco reported at their head. That word, reaching the capital from rebel headquarters in Burgos, to the north, hastened, rather than delayed, slashing government attacks on three fronts. The Fascists, said Leftist author- ities, were losing all hopes of winning the fight. They pictured general Franco as still in Spanish Morocco attempting to land more troops on the Spanish peninsula. Already he had brought, by ship and plane, an estimated 8,000 soldiers from Africa to Spain. (In some rebel quarters it was feared Loyalist success at Algeciras, southern seaport burned during a government bombardment yesterday, might upset defenses created to pro- tect troop transport, especially since the rebel gunboat Dato was burned defending the city). . While no reports were received of major Loyalist activities in the thea- ter of war in the Bay of Biscay sec- tion held by Rebels, deadly attacks in the province of Huesca, between Zaragoza and the French border were outlined in government dispatches. All of the towns surrounding the capital of Huesca were said to have been occupied. In the southwestern province of Badajoz, the government asserted it suppressed a Fascist revolt led by -an assault guard named Fernando Acosta. Russian Aviators Are Forced Down SEATTLE, Aug. 8.-(A')-Nicholas Sokoloff, representing Amtorg, Rus- Prof.Pollock's Civil Service Bill Is Submitted To Gov. Fitzgerald I I First Draft Of Measure Intended To End Spoils System Is Completed LANSING, Aug. 8-(AP)--The State Civil Service Study Commission laid before Governor Fitzgerald today the first draft of a bill it claims will wipe out the political spoils system in state employment. Governor Fitzgerald has agreed, if re-elected, to submit the bill to the 1937 Legislature. It promises to be the most controversial issue before the coming legislative session. Professor James K. Pollock, of the University of Michigan, chairman of the commission which drew the pro- posed measure, contends its adoption would provide a merit system for state employment, eliminate inefficiency, guarantee advancement to worthy employes without political influence, and result in substantial savings to taxpayers. The commission esti- mated in a preliminary report that the spoils system costs Michigan "pos- sibly $1,000,000" annually. Pollock's critics, and they include nearly every department head he has attacked in a long series of statements, point out the adoption of the measure he proposes would result state department at an estimated an- nual cost of $200,000. They pointed to provisions in the bill which would exempt important positions in state government from jurisdiction of the proposed new Civil Service Depart- ment. These state department heads, when asked to comment for publica- tion on the proposed measure, has- tened to declare they "are for civil service in principle." The bill, as it reached Governor Fitzgerald's desk today, provides that a civil servicevsystem for Michigan shall be supervised by a bi-partisan, four-member commission appointed by the Governor for eight-year terms. Not more than two members could be of the same political faith. The commission would choose by examination a Civil Service Director who would classify all employes in salary brackets, maintain a central personnel agency, and who could be removed from office only on charges preferred before the commission. The director would be the administra- tive head of the new department. The following officers and employes (Continued on Page 41 U. S. Sweeps Three Places IDecathlon Morris, Clark And Parker Give America Triple Win In Event For First Time Iso-Iollo Victor In Steeplechase Race Controversy Arises When Michigan's Sam Stoller Is Benched In Relay $53,000 To Carillornneui Regents Report Gifts Of 1niversity; r Appointed {° - 4 Wilmot F. Pratt, Trained In Malines School, Is Choice Of Board Comes Here From St. Thomas Church Song, Program Arranged For VespersToday Last Program Of Summer Will Feature Solos By McGregor, Foster A program of musical selections will be held at the third and last Ves- per Service at 7 p.m. tonight on the steps of the General Library. Congregational singing; solos by Bernard R. McGregor, baritone; and Warren Foster, tenor, and selections by orchestra, glee club and chorus of the Summer Session will be in-= luded in the program. Prof. David Mattern of the School of Music will direct the singing. The invocation and benediction will be given by Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, counselor in religious education of the University. "The Lord is My Light" by Allitsen s the selection which McGregor will sing. He is an instructor in the school of Music at the University of West Virginia. There he studied under Louis Black and Frank Cuth- bert. During McGregor's senior year he1 was awarded first place in the Cap-1 itol District in the contest for student artists sponsored by the federation of music clubs. For the last year he sang at the East Liberty Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh, Pa. Foster, who is a student in the School of Music, is soloist at the First Methodist Church in Ann Arbor. The two selections which he will sing are "Build Thee More Stately Mansions" by Andrews and "Sanctus" from St. Cecelia Mass by Gounod. He will be accompanied in these selections by the Summer Session Chorus. Electric Utilities O'wnership Is DebateSubject Graduate Speech Students Will Argue Question Of Government Control The eight annual Summer Session demonstration debate between teams composed of graduate students of speech will be held at 7:30 p.m. to- morrow in Room 4203 A.H. The de- bate is open to the public and no ad- mission fee will be charged. The question of the debate will be, "Resolved: That all electric utilities should be governmentally owned and operated." This question will also be used by all Michigan high schools both in the Michigan High School Debating League and in high school State leagues throughout the year. Dr. William P. Halstead, instructor in the speech department and manag- er of the Michigan High School De- bating League, will act as chairman of the debate, and Prof. Kenneth G. Hance of the speech department of Albion College at Albion. will act as Olympic Point Scores g Totaled For Yesterdays BERLIN, Aug. 8.-(P)-Point P scores in the unofficial Olympic men's track and field team chain- pionship at the conclusion of to- t day's program:.f. (On 10-5-4-3-2-1 basis).in d United States 188; Finland 75 1/4; Germany 61 3/4; Japan 37 13/22; Great Britain 28 1/11;t Canada 17 1/11; Sweden 16 1/11;t Italy 15 13/22; Holland 11; Newf Zealand 10; Switzerland 9; Poland 5/11; Norway, 5; Philippines 4 Lativa 4; Australia 4; Czecislo- h vakia 3 1/11; Brazil 2; Greece 2; p Argentina 1; Austria 2/11; Hun-E gary 2/11.o s Knox Outlines Party Pro ram ( For recovery Opens G. O. P. Nationalt Campaign With Address In Connersville, In(. CONNERSVILLE, Ind., Aug. 8.-(rP) -Col. Frank Knox, Republican vice-4 presidential candidate, told "what his party has to offer" tonight by out- lining a program he said would "un-4 leash recovery" and return "mil-s lions of unemployed to honest work."r Addressing a statewide rally of In-p diana Republicans, the candidate putc forward the proposals and intentionsa after charging that the governmentI of the United States "is the worst-r managed business in the world today" under the present administration. 1 The speech was the opening ad-t dress of the Republican national cam-c paign, Col. Knox told his audience.t To "drive out the sweat-shop andr the exploiting employer" is one of the party's resolutions, Col. KnoxI said, if it is successful in the fall election. Another is to battle monop- olies, while encouraging and foster-f ing "honest business." For a third he1 listed cutting taxes and shifting their weight from "the plain man." Col. Knox struck into this subject after charging that "recovery began1 in 1932," and adding "we should have been entirely out of the woods by this time." "What has the Republican party to offer?" he asked. "We propose first of all to end the waste of the people'ssmoney. We pro- pose to make taxes less and to make them fairer, "Instead of NRA, we propose to have freedom of enterprise. The sweat-shop and the exploit- ing employer we intend to drive out. The man who adulterates goods or sells dishonest stocks we expect to put in jail. "But honest business is to be free." "With this program in operation the forces of recovery will be un- leashed . . . Millions of unemployed will be restored to honest work and earned wages." Speaking to an audience of mixed industrial and farm interests, Col. Knox attacked both the NRA and the AAA as failures. As for the AAA BERLIN, Aug. 8.-(P)-Three far- vestern youths swept the boards for 9merica in the Olympic decathlon competition today, led by Colorado's nagnificent Glenn Morris, who amashed his own world record, scal- ng Olympic heights as a climax to his first year in all-around competition. The Fort Collins automobile sales- nan, who got the idea admiring arring Jim Bausch capture another ecord-cracking Olympic tussle at Los gngeles in 1932, outstripped two Cali- fornians, Bob Clark and Jack Parker, ,hile running up the amazing aggre- ate of 7,900 points. The 24-year-old former Colorado State College football and track star's erformance was capped by a sen- ational stretch sprint concluding the ,500 meter run which carried him to he tape in 4:33.2, and gave him suf- icient points to beat his own world mark by exactly 20 points. Sets New Record Morris' exploits in the strenuous wo-day, ten-event test, enabled him o wipe out the Olympic record his ormer idol, Bausch, set by 502 points under the new scoring system. Bausch operated under the old system, but his figures translated, total 7,398 points. Earlier in the day, Volmari Iso- Hollo of Finland set the stage for rec- ord-smashing performances. The wift and durable Finn became the irst champion to repeat as he paced he field in the 3,000-meter steeple- chase final to a 9:03.8 victory. The next four finishers all lowered his former Olympic record of 9:14.6. Kaarlo Tuominen, another Finn, trailed his countryman by three sec- onds as Alfred Dompert of Germany, producing a great stretch drive, took third, followed by Martti Matilainen f Finland and Harold Manning of Wichita, Kans.. The semi-final day of the blue rib- bon competition also saw Jesse Owens return to competition to lead off the 400-meter relay team to a word-rec- rd-equalling 40 second preliminary triumph, and the American women's 400 and men's 1,600 metern relayers survive the trials and qualify for to- morrow's final. Dusk settled down not only on the weary decathloners but also on an- other rip-roaring Olympic day in which assorted developments included Finland's domination of the obstacle race and the latest "Jarrett case" de- velopment whereby Avery Brundage, president of the American Olympic Committee and also the A.A.U., ruled out the former backstroke queen, El- under Iso-Hollo's 1932 mark. Tuo- minen's time was 9:06.8; Dompert, 9:07.2; Matilainen, 9:09, and the Kansan, 9:11.2. Jewish Boys Omitted Also there were repercussions over the omission of two Jewish boys, Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller, from America's 400 meter sprint relay team. Controversial echoes rocked the press box all day while experts strug- gled with an endless stream of de- cathlon tabulations. Mrs. Jarrett challenged Brundage's authority to order her disbarred with- out a hearing, while Glickmar charged the track coaches with "poli- tics" in shunting him and Stoller tc the sidelines without a chance to ap- pear in the games. Head Coach Lawson Robertson vol- untarily took the ap for deciding to put the best available quartet int( the spring relay in order to insur triumph. The head coach viewed th world record-equalling performanc I (Coninued on Page 3, The appointment of Wilmot F. Pratt of New York City to the post of carillonneur for the Baird Carillon now under construction was an- nounced here yesterday by Prof. Earl V. Moore of the School of Music after confirmation by the Board of Regents during their summer meeting Friday. Mr. Pratt, who is 24 years old and a native of New Jersey, has been until recently carrillonneur at St. Thomas Church in New York City, where he was also soloist in the choir under Dr. T. T. Noble. For the past year he has been studying in the carillon school at Ma- lines, Belgium, under M. Jef Denyn, who was city carillonneur at. Malines until his retirement in 1933, and, ac- cording to Professor Moore, "the most distinguished performer of that in- strument in the world." The Malines school was founded 12 years ago for the training of per- formers on the difficult instrument, and is the only school of its kind in the world. Many$ of Denyn's pupils hold positions in Belgium and Hol- land, carillon centers of the world, and the best artists in the United States are also his pupils. Professor Moore himself heard Mr. Pratt play on his last trip to Europe, and states that the young man has played many concerts throughout the Netherlands during his study period, from which several reengagements have resulted. Mr. Pratt is unmarried. "He's the type of man I'm sure the students themselves will like, because he's young enough to understand their viewpoint," Professor Moore added. According to Professor Moore, Mr. Pratt will be the only American grad- uate of the Malines school in the United States. One other holds a po- sition in Belgium, 'and a Canadian, Percy Price, is carillonneur at Ottawa. Profesor Moore said he had just received a cable from Denyn giving his pupil a very high recommenda- tion, and informing him that he had passed his examinations "with great distinction." The examination con- sists of paper work in music and a performance on the big carillon at Malines, one of the finest in the world, before a jury of carillonneurs from the Netherlands. The new carillonneur is expected to arrive -here Sept. 15, shortly after the bells themselves arrive from Eng- land. Carillonneur Here Sept. Years Ol Will 15; Arrive Is 24 BULLETIN Fire of unknown origin last night destroyed seven buildings on the farm of John Zeeb, on the Zeeb road two miles from the Plymouth road, and four miles east of Ann Arbor. The blaze, which is believed to have started shortly after 9 pam., had already engulfed all build- ings on the farm but one shed and the house itself, separated from the remainder of the build- ings by a gravel driveway, when the South Lyons fire. department arrived at 10:30 p.m., a few min- utes after the fire had been dis- covered. Zeeb, who did not return until 11:30, said that he had lost a large quantity of baled winter hay in one of the barns which was burned, but that his herd of cattle had been rescued from the burning buildings and led into an adjoining field. The barns were still blazing at 1 a.m., as the fire department stood by to make sure the fire did not creep into a field of dry stubble nearby. Teachers Plan Fourth Annual English Parley, Five Of Be Ormond E. Hunt Presents $35,000 In Property For Needy Engineer Grants Given For Further Research Medical Library Of Late Dr. G. Carl Huber Is Among Donations Talks By Members Summer Faculty To Given Tomorrow Wenger Given State Post For Poet Congress' Prof. C. N. Wenger of the Engligh department of the Engineering Col- lege has been appointed by Gov. Frank Fitzgerald as a delegate from the state to the Congress of American Poets which is being held in New York. The Congress, which is under the chairmanship of Edwin Markham, is the first national conference of American poets. Among the objec- tives are to review the nature and fundamental problems of the poetic art, to discuss the new problems of the poet arising from the conditions of contemporary life, to investigate the varied means by which poetry may most fully serve its function and to consider means for a closer cooper- ation between poetry and education, science, radio, motion pictures, the other fine arts and the employment of leisure. Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the School of Music. is a member of Five lectures by members of the Jniversity summer faculty will be giv- en at the fourth annual summer E meeting of the Michigan Council of t English Teachers, to be held tomor- row, Prof. Clarence D. Thorpe of the 1 English department, president of the 1 Council, announced yesterday. 1 Prof. Hans Kurath of the linguis- tics department of Brown University, Lirector of the Linguistic Atlas of New England, will give the opening1 lecture at 4:30 p.m. in Room 231 A.H.1 Iis subject will be "Folk Speech and1 Cultivated Speech." The second program will be held in the University Elementary School Library, beginning at 7:30 p.m. Prof. Roger P. McCutcheon, visiting pro- fessor of English, a member of the staff of Tulane University will open the program with an adidress on "Teaching Literature for Meaning and Appreciation." Prof. McCutch- eon is the co-editor of a book on "Introduction to the Study of Poetry," with Prof. R. R. Kirk of Tulane which' is used in English courses here. The second talk will be given by Miss Ruth Schoonover, teacher at Negaunee High School, on "Testing for Taste and Appreciation." Harold Allen of the English department of the University will speak on "Train- ing for the Teaching of Language," and Mentor Williams, also of the English department will close the program with a lecture on "Coopera- tion in Teaching Composition." The lectures are open to the public, and anyone interested is invited to attend. Tigers Divide Doubleheader With St. Louis DETROIT, Aug. 8t-(P)-The Tig- ers and the Browns divided a double- header here today, Detroit winning the first game 9 to 7 and St. Louis the second one 10 to 5 before a crowd of 39,000. Gerald Walker, Tiger outfielder, drove in eight runs, hitting two home runs, three doubles and a single and drawing a base on balls during the two games. He won the first game almost single handed, driving in seven of Detroit's nine runs. In the nightcap the Browns fell on Schoolboy Rowe and drove him from The acceptance of gifts totaling iore than $53,000, together with the .aluable personal library of the late . Carl Huber, by the Board of Re- ents was announced at University iffices yesterday following the Re- tents' summer meeting at President tuthven's summer home near Frank- ort. The greater part of that sum was he gift of Ormond E. Hunt, vice- wresident of General Motors, who save his home and four city lots on iighland Road here to the University, vith the income from the sale or ren- al to be used in setting up a trust und for needy and deserving stu- [ents in the College of Engineering. The property is valued at $35,000, nd according to Julius E. Schmidt, Jniversity investment officer, hasal-i ,eady been put up for sale. The fund will be known as the Har- 'iet Eveleen Hunt Trust Fund, as nemorial to Mr. Hunt's mother, who lied in April of this year. $10,000 Also Given Next largest gift announced by the Regents, in a list which totalled $18,- 79, was a second grant of $10,000 by he Earhart Foundation for the sup- port of the Bureau of Industrial Re- ations, established last year with Prof. John W. Riegel of the Business Administration School as director. A gift of $5,000 from the Milbank Foundations of New York for the establishment of the Milbank Hyper- ension Research Laboratory under Dr. Max Minor Peet, noted University Hospital brain surgeon, was also re- ported. Gifts of $750 each were made by the Alumnae Counciland the Mich- gan Gas Association, the first toward the establishment of a $15,000 en- dowment fund for the Alice Crocker Lloyd Fellowship, anc the other for a renewal of an annual fellowship in gas engineering. From the family of the late G. Carl Huber, dean of the graduate School, head of the anatomy department, and director of the anatomical and his- tological laboratories, who died Dec. 26, 1934, the Regents accepted the gift of Dr. Huber's personal library of medicine, containing fourteen bound sets of periodicals;several hun- dred books, and several thousand re- prints, all on anatomy. Receives Three $500 Gifts A gift of $629 from the University of Michigan Club of Detroit as an addition to that organization's en- dowment fund was also announced by the Regents, together with three gifts of $500 each. They were from Parke, Davis, Inc., Detroit for a fellowship in the College of Pharmacy; from Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, for use by Dr. Walter J. Nungester of the bac- teriology department in research on pneumonia, and from the Milbank Foundations for research in psy- chiatry by Dr. Theophile Raphael, Health Service psychiatrist. The Class of 1913 Engineers gave $40 as the nucleus for a loan fund, and Kapp, Smith, Hinchman, Grylls, Detroit architects, offered a $10 prize for a sketch problem in ar- chitectural design. Aside from confirming the appoint- ment of Wilmot F. Pratt as caril- lonneur, announced yesterday by Prof. Earl V. Moore, the Regents made only one other announcement on academic matters, which was the approval of sabbatical leave for Prof. Samuel Lawrence Bigelow of the chemistry department for the school year 1936-1937. ionscheck Suicide Is Laid To Worry SEATTLE, Aug. 8.-(A)-The five- story death dive of Rep. Marion A. Zioncheck, Washington's sensation- stirring congressman, was attributed by friends tonight to worry over a nsehiatrist's advice that he take a