rAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN .DAILY FRIDAY, AUG. 14, 1939 Board Takes 'Controversial Issue' Stand Local School Board Tells Its Position On Teaching In Ann Arbor Schools Only Facts Allowed Eby And Group Of School Principles Give Approval To Adoption The Ann Arbor school board yes- terday announced a policy governing the teaching of controversial subjects here as an offshoot of the Kermit Ey case of more than two months ago. The essence of the new ruling is that the individual teacher shall be responsible for giving pupils factual data on all controversial subjects, but shall not use his position to further any social, religious, political or ec- onomic interest. Supt. Otto W. Haisley of Ann Ar- bor High School, who stoutly defend- ed Eby when his trial was before the school board, said in submitting the proposal that it would not only pro- tect the public from propagandizing, but would also define for the teacher how far he can go in teaching con- troversial subjects. Eby Gives Approval The policy, Mr. Haisley said, had been approved by Eby and a group of high school principals. The policy as adopted by the school board reads as follows: "An individual may best be induct- ed into a consideration of controver- sial issues under conditions prevail- ing in a public school calssroom. Here partisanship and propaganda are much less in evidence than otuside the classroom, and scientific techniques of attack on social, political and ec- onomic problems are not only used but the uses of these techniques are likewise taught. "All school pupils should have an opportunity to collect factual mater- ial; to record this factual material; and to generalize upon the basis of factual material. Not To Propagandize "No teacher should use his posi- tion of teaching to propagandize in the interests of any religious, social, economic or political creed, but every Teacher has the responsibility of giv- ing aid in the gathering of factual material so that the pupil may learn on the basis of as complete informa- tion as existing facilities and his abil- ity to understand will permit. "Every teacher has the right to ex- press his own personal views on con-i troversial subjects, but this should not1 be done during the developmental period of the topic under considera- tion. "The techniques of dealing withf controversial issues are among thec most valuable outcomes of these classes and include an ability to col- lect information, to refrain from1 passing judgments before sufficient1 facts have been secured upon which1 to base these judgments, to organizec conclusions, and to make generaliza- tions.c "No teacher should express his per-i sonal views at a time or in a manner that would interfere with the achieve- ment of these outcomes or that would condition the thinking of the pupil upon the controversial issue underf consideration before that pupil has his basic facts." The LENS By ROBERT L. GACH I just had an interesting experience that brings up a question that is often asked: "What kind of camera should I buy?" I received a telephone call to the effect that a picture was wanted in a hurry. It was to be a picture of a room. I asked if there were to be people in it, and they said, "no." I asked if it was to be a small sec-C tion or as much as possible of the room. The customer wanted as mucht as possible. Without any people it could be a time exposure, so I packed no flashbulbs or gun. I took an 8"x10" view camera and made suret that I packed a wide-angle lens. t When I arrived on the job I dis- covered that it was one of those, "shoot at your own risk" jobs, the type of picture to which there might be some violent objections, and cer- tainly not the type of job to shoot with a clumsy box like the one I had brought. I solved the problem by first takingt a very short exposure at large aper- ture. This would not assure either good exposure or focus but it would{ give me something in case I couldn't stay long enough for an exposure ofl two minutes, which was what was re- quired. Then I stooped down and took a second shot at two minutest with one eye on the camera and the other eye on the door.* Loyalists Start Despe rate Offensive To Save C> cai*Iv Olympics At A Glance Swimming and diving: Mrs. Dorothy Poynton Hill, Los Angeles, won platform diving cham- pionship; Velma Dunn, Los Angeles, second; Kaethe Koehler, Germany, third; Cornelia Gilisen, New York, fourth. Dina Senff, Holland, won 100 met- er backstroke championship, with Rita Mastenbroek, Holland, taking second; Alice Bridges, Uxbridge, Mass., third; and Edith Motridge Se- gal, Los Angeles, fourth. Adolf Kiefer, Chicago; Al Vande Weghe, Patterson, N. J., and Taylor Drysdale, Detroit, gained men's 100 meter backstroke final, Kiefer setting New Olympic record of 1:06.8. Jack Medica, Seattle; Ralph Flan- nagan, Miami; Jim Kaye, and Jack Kasley, Detroit, and Johnny Hig- gins, Providence, advanced to 200 meter breaststroke semi-finals; Mrs. Lenore Kight Wingard, Homestead, Pa., and Mary Lou Petty, Seattle, qualified for 400 meter free style semi-finals; Dorothea Dickinson, New York, withdrew due to lame should- er. Rowing: Dan Barrow, Jr., Phila- delphia, qualified for single sculls final; Bill Dugan and John Houser, Philadelphia, qualified for double sculls final; German won places in finals of all seven events; Donald Hume, University of Washington eight's stroke, developed bronchial complication in chest cold but ex- pects to row in eight-oared final to- morrow. Basketball: United States defeated Mexico 25-10; Canada defeated Po- land, 42-15, both gaining final. Fencing: United States eliminated in sabre semi-finals; Hungary, Italy, Germany and Poland finished that order in final standing. Field Hockey: Afghanstan defeat- ed United States 3-0 in consolation game. Water Polo: Consolation games: Holland 5, Austria 4, Sweden 4, Great Britain 2. Soccer: Norway defeated Poland 3-2 for third place; Italy and Austria meet Saturday for first and second place. Women's Gymnastics: German won team title with 506.50 points; United States sixth with 465.65. Equestrian: German won team and individual titles in dressage compe- tition; United States ninth in team rankings, individually, Capt. C. Stan- ton Babcock, 23rd; Capt. Isaac I. Kitts, 25th; Maj. Hiram E. Tuttle, 27th. Boxing: Lou Laurie, Cleveland fly- weight, defeated Sobrowiak, Poland; Jackie Wilson, Cleveland bantam- weight, defeated Larazabal, Philip- pines, both gaining semi-finals; Ted Kara, Cleveland featherweight, lost to Catteral, South Africa; Andrew Scrivani, Chicago lightweight, lost to Agrin, Sweden; Jimmy Clark, Jamestown, N. Y. middleweight, lost to Chmielewski, Poland. hOPKINS TO SPEAK Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session, will speak on "The Need For Conversion" at 10:45 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 16 in the Church of Christ. Continuing AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE! of Miltons Standard Merchandise at Ex- tremely Low Prices ! 3-PIECE SUMMER SUITS $11.90 and $17.90 Extra Pants $3.80 Extra Pants $4.80 LINEN and TROPICAL SU ITS $7.45 and $10.45 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE CLASSIFIED FOR SALE: Model A Ford coupe, ADVERTISING 1931. Recent overhaul. Excellent condition. Rumble seat. $160, phone Place advertisements with classified 6710. 30 Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five FRRN o'clock previous to day of insertion. FOR RENT Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. FOR RENT: Furnished five-room Cash in advanceale per reading line bungalow. Phone 6805. 32 (on basis of five average words to line)j ugowPhn685 for one or two insertions. 10c per read- ing line for three or more insertions. LAUNDRY Minimum three lines per insertion._______________________ Telephone rate - 15c per reading line LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. for two or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Careful work at low price. . 1x 10% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. LAUNDRY WANTED: Student Co- 2 lines daily, college year........ ..7c By Contract, per line - 2 lines daily. ed. Men's shirts 10c. Silks, wools, one month*....... ..............8c our specialty. All bundles done sep- 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ............8c 4 lines E.O.D.. 2 months..............8c arately. No markings. Personal sat- 100 lines used as desired ..........9c isfaction guaranteed. Call for and 300 lines used as desired...........8c 1,000 lines used as desired..........7c deliver. Phone 5594 any time until 2,000 lines usedtas desired...... .c 7 o'clock. Silver Laundry, 607 E. The above rates are per reading line based on eight reading lines per Inch Hoover. 3x Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add ---------- --______ 6c per line to above rates for all capital WANTED letters. Add 6c per line to above for WNE boldrface, upper and lower case. Add 10c per line to above rates for bold face WANTED: Ride to Wisconsin or Lud- capital letters. ington. Share expenses. Aug. 20, 21. The above rates are for 71, point type. C.MEwr.Poe33.1 C. M. Ewers. Phone 3233. 31 READ THE WANT ADS HAVE CASH for fairly late 5-pas- senger car. Phone 4714, Tues. p.m. -Associated Press Photo. These pictures, rushed from Spain to New York, show loyal government troops in action in one of their desperate offensives to prevent Fascist rebels from taking Madrid. Top, a heavy artillery piece of the loyal army in action on the-Guararrama mountain front not far from the capital; center, loyal soldiers with rifles poised while comrades lift a wounded Fascist pilot from a rebel plane which was shot down near the village of Soma Sierra; below, government troops charging up a hill in the Guadarrama mountains to wipe out a rebel machine gun nest. Huron River Valley Project Progress Described Here In its Various Phases Dr. J. T. Sunderland Dies After Bad Fall lContinued from Page i) anese, and also had several revised editions. Shortly before his death Dr.+ Sunderland had been writing a series+ of articles for the "Modern Review" of Calcutta, and his latest books were two volumes on "Eminent Americans and Englishmen Whom India Should Know." He was at one time editor of the Unitarian Monthly, and later of Young India, a monthly issued in New York. ' Funeral arrangements are awaiting the arrival from California of Profes- sor Sunderland, his son, who is teach- ing in summer school there. Dr. Sunderland is survived by his son, a daughter, Mrs. Gertrude Saf-' ford, of Detroit, a sister, Mrs. Mary Moore, of Denver, who is 98, seven grandchildren, four great-grandchil- dren, and 14 nephews and nieces. Allen Blanks Tigers For Ninth In Row (Continued from Page 1) get another safety. Salty Parker, rookie shortstop making his first ap- pearance for Detroit, came up for the first time openingthe eighth, after he relieved Rogell in the fifth. He struck out. Myatt drove a single to right for the second Detroit hit, and Jo-Jo White, pinchhitting for Joe Sullivan, also singled. The blows were of no avail as Walker popped to Knickerbocker and Allen fanned Burns. Gehringer opened the ninth with another single, but was forced at sec- ond by Goslin, and Simmons ended the game by hitting into a double play, Hughes to Knickerbocker to Trosky. AMERICAN New York ........ Cleveland ......... Chicago .......... Detroit .......... Boston ........... Washington ...... St. Louis ......... Philadelphia ...... LEAGUE W. L. ...72 36 ....63 49 ...59 52 ...58 52 ... 57 54 ...54 55 ...40 70 Pet. .667 .563 .532 -.527 .514 .495 .364 .37 72 .340 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 8, Detroit 0. St. Louis 7, Chicago 3. Washington-Boston to be played later date. New York-Philadelphia to be played later date. TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Chicago. Cleveland at St. Louis. New York at Philadelphia. Washington at Boston. Major Leagues NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis........ Chicago......... New York ...... . Pittsburgh ........ Cincinnati....... Boston ........... Brooklyn ......... Philadelphia...... W. L. ... 66 43 ... 64 43 .. .63 46 ... 56 53 ...52 56 . . .51 57 ... 42 66 ...39 69 Pct. .606 .598 .578 .514 .481 .472 .389 .361 (Continued from Pace 1) teen or twenty lagoons on the Huron that are well suited to such gardens. 3.. Engineering Improvements. On the rivers controlled by the U. S. War Department, the channel is maintained if necessary by dredging or the building of dams. The engi- neers of the department determine the height of bridges and require locks for the passing boats. The Huron has all of these engineering problems along with a number of others. The law says the power com- panies must maintain fish ladders over dams for the passage of fish, but it says nothing about boat conveyors for the passage of boats. Still people are probably as important as fish. 4. Reforestation. The steep bluffs of the river will raise no other profit- able crop but trees. There are many areas between the railroad and, the river that are almost inaccessible and are now unused. In general, they are well suited for reforestation. Where gullies are beginning to form on hill- sides, trees are the best cure and there are many places where a shield of willows would shut off the rail- road and add a graceful reflection to water vistas. Public Parks 5. Better Fish. The first and most important problem is to get the sew- age out of the river, then would come the protection of the spawning sea- son, the furnishing of spawning beds in certain quarters and the syste- matic planting of the better varieties of fish. 6. Wild Life Protection. Much of the attraction of any river comes from its water and shore life. It might be possible to make the chain of ponds on the Huron into a chain of sanctuaries. From a thousand to two thousand ducks stay over on the Geddes pond for a month or so each spring, but apparently few people see them. Nesting and food shelters in the spring and winter shelters of cedar or spruce with food plantings or feedings are suggested. 7. Recreation. The effective range of such features as parks, swimming beaches and camp and picnic sites is not less than ten miles in this day of the automobile. Within ten miles of the Huron, counting lower Detroit are more than a million people. If a half mile strip along the river were camera shall I buy?" It is impossible to say that any one camera will serve all your wants, but certainly there is a type that will do most of set aside for forests, sanctuaries, golf courses, swimming beaches, camp and picnic grounds, it would represent two and a half per cent of the area, considerably less than many cities set as their standard. This would put these recreational facilities within ten miles or less of all the people of the valley. It is not an excessive amount. Within fifty years not less than a half of this strip should be obtainable. This would make a park one hundred miles long by the side of the river. If this were threaded by a river parkway with a nearly continuous trail at the water's edge, it would provide for nearly every form of recreation. Better Walks, Drives 8. Administration. In water uses we are in the horse and buggy stage. Recreation is the dominant use of our inland waters, but the law has scarce- ly discovered it as yet. Our entire water code needs to be revised, and definite authority given to some state departments rather than to the coun- ties, which are concerned only with, sections of a river. It is also felt that there should be some governmental unit or valley authority to conserve and promote for all the people of the Huron valley the values above indi- cated. Such a guide from its valley pic- tures should make our walksiand drives and river cruises more inter- esting to us all. The indications are that it would be introduced into the social studies groups in the high schools for thorough perusal, and that it could be placed in the libraries of five hundred or more rural schools of the valley. If these ideals of a riverJ improved and made accessible to all' thus becomes a part of the conscious- ness of the rising generation, there is little doubt that many of these ideals will become realities. Only about half of the funds necessary to print and distribute this guide of fifty pages are thus far available. Land Owners' Cooperate In many ways the conditions for carrying out the plans outlined are peculiarly favorable here. There are three large property owners who largely dominate the valley. They have all promised their cooperation. They are the Detroit Edison Com- pany, the Michigan Central Railroad and Henry Ford. The Michigan Cen- tral has offered a lease on a 92-acre tract lying above the Superior dam for a park. The Detroit Edison has offered about two miles of the river from the Scio Bridge to Dexter for the same purpose and an area lying be- tween the Barton Pond and the rail- road. Through the cooperation of the Garden Club of Ann Arbor, the first of the water gardens, consisting of eight varieties of water lilies have recently been planted in a lagoon a short distance above the Sand Bar swimming pool. There are two groups of influential citizens who are promoting these de- velopments on the Huron, one a com- mission of seven of which Joseph Hooper is chairman appointed jointly by the Common Council of Ann Arbor and the County Road Commission, the other a similar commission with John Gault as chairman appointed by the Common Council of Ypsilanti. ALL-COMEDY DOUBLE BILL! The laughs begin when the stork drops in- "TEABY BABY" YESTERDAY'S GAMES New York 6, Philadelphia 4. Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 4. Boston-Brooklyn to be played later date. Only games scheduled. SWIM PICNIC NEWPORT BATHING BEACH PORTAGE LAKE STRICTLY SUPERVISED r -- _ _ _ _ _ [zHlUAN PROGRSSrohe A G[S>] a1 - - - L ast D ay "36 HOURS TO KILL" and - "COUNTRY BEYOND" Starting Saturday THE BIG PICTURE ! ,TI= MOST sSTARTLINGLY ORIG AL COMPOSMTI ON OF TMS4GENXRATION J Said * a as *News*inits Play Rview SPORT Choice COATS $8.45 SLACKS FRUIT OF THE LOOM FABRICS SANFORIZED SHRUNK $1.45 and $1.95 SUITING TROUSERS $3.80 and $4.80 These are trousers from Milton's regular $16.50 and $22.50 Suits. S 0 " " a DRESS SHIRTS ... $1.29 NECKWEAR 29c and 43c BRACES . . 39c and 69c BELTS . . . . 39c and 69c SHORTS . .29c and 39c PAJAMAS. . . . . $1.29 POLO SHIRTS'. . . . 83c MEN'S SOX . . . . 29c HATS. . $1.49 and $2.39 READING NEWS REPORTS IN CHINA THE CHINESE are reputed to have had the first daily newspaper, the Tching-Pao, (News of the Capital), which continued for many centuries after its beginning in 713 A. D. They also had publicly displayed news bulletins. TODAY millions of readers of more than 1200 daily newspaper are in- formed of world events by the globe girdling wires of The Associated Press. You can keep in touch with both foreign and domestic affairs by reading I I I 11