The Weather' Lower Michigan: Generally fair today and tomorrow; warmer tomorrow. lit4r Ar -Ak dah t Dai1 Editorials Voices From The New Masses . Get The Facts . Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLV No. 16 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1936 PRICE 5 CENTS MeClusky 1ts School- lnstr uct ion Says Character Of Student Should Be Dealt With As Whole Rather Than Part Greater Need For Counselling Seen School System To Suffer If Sales Tax Is Amended, State Head Elliott Warns Dealing with parts of a pupil's makeup rather than treating him as a whole is one of the biggest crimes of the present day school system, Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the education school said yesterday af- ternoon in his lecture at theninth session of the Summer Education Conference. A definite loss to the school sys- tem of. the State would result in the .event that the sales tax is amended and the property tax repealed, Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, State superin- tendent of public instruction, told the audience at the eighth session of the conference yesterday morning in the Union. Dr. Elliott conducted the session which dealt with the topic "Selected Programs and Policies of the State department of public in- struction." The great need for guidance and counselling in the secondary schools was voiced by Professor McClusky The final session of the Sum- mer Education Conference will meet at 10 a.m. today in the Un- ion ballroom to discuss the topic "The Organization, Policies and Program of the Michigan Educa- tion Association." Among the issues to be taken up are "The Effective Functioning of Volun- tary Teachers' Organization" and "The Guild Plan for a Teachers' Organization." Dean James B. Edmonson of the education school will act as chairman of the session and the discussion will be conducted by Dr. A. J. Phillips and other of- ficials of the Michigan Education Association. and other members of the audience who took part in the discussion of the topic "Does the Present Program of the School Fail in its Emphasis on the Development of Pupil Person- ality?" 'Disciplined Imagination' Need For Scholarship, Jones States, Visiting Professor Urges Students Of English To Study Philosophy, Art By JOSEPH S. MATTES The "disciplined imagination," which will maintain the proper per- spective for the humane scholarship and humane, criticisms of our time, must be preserved inEnglish scholar- ship if the integrities of humanism are to be maintained, Prof. H. S. V. Jones of the University of Illinois told a Summer Session lecture audience yesterday. Professor Jones, a member of the University English faculty this sum- mer, described "humanism, of what- ever school, as conservative and in- tegral, qualities which appear not only in the more personal ethical thought of the philosophers, but in their speculations upon the state and the order of the universe." His lec- ture was entitled "Integrity in Hu- manism." Preserve Integrity Not an absolute, mystical and dog- matic spirit, the genius of conserva- tive humanism is one of relativity and compromise, and integrity regarded as a technique rather than a terminal, a variable rather than a constant, the speaker said, "In the ancient world moral integrity and intellectual integrity have much to do with the integrity of art," Professor Jones said. "Unless academic scholarship in English is to be merely a recording secretary, instead of one in constant correspondance with the worlds of philosophy and art, unless moral crit- icism is to be chiefly a recording an- gel, out of sympathetic touch with the relativity of all things human, we should preserve the integration of these integrities in the humane schol- arship and the humane criticism of our time. Take Philosophy, Art "This implies," . the speaker said, "that our urgent need in research and humane scholarship is not further insistence upon scientific method, though that in its place is important; but an education of the imagination in a way to comprehend and integrate values that are at one and the same time ethical, intellectual and ar- tistic." As a method of accomplishing edu- cation of the imagination Professor Jones suggested that graduate stu- dents in English take courses in phil- sophy and art. "Then perhaps their theses, how- ever technical and minute, would be I nore responsible to some scale of values, set more often in some system of ideas, and written prevailingly in a less barbarous style," he said. "The narrow view excludes all thatA s joyous," he concluded. "The larg- r, the more relative, the more im- iginative view should not only in- ure the integrity of our humanism, ut should bring occasionally 'thoseG reflective or far-seeing moments when the mind is like the retentive ar which in a silence following upon nusic, gathers up the mounting trains in a quiet rapture'. Truc Drivero Is Defendant In $90,000 SuitL o0 Attorneys File Damages t Against Detroit Youth C Whose Truck Killed John C. Csach, 21-year-old De- a ,roit truck driver, has been named t as defendant in civil action for a A total of $90,000 planned against him w by local attorneys for a crash last I Friday which took the lives of two Ann Arbor negroes and seriously in- jured two more, although a coron- f er's jury exonerated him from all h negligence is the inquest held Wed- s nesday night. r Named with Csach as co-defend- h ants in the suit were Glenn Allen, ' his employer, Henry E. Hamann and Virgil F. Nichols, owners of the truck p and trailer he was driving, all of De- t troit, and Associated Truck Lines, j Inc.. and Western Michigan Trans- portation Company. P The action asks $25,000 for eachb of the two injured negroes, Fred S.h Adams, 52 years old, and Richard " Woods, 28 years old, and $25,000 for the estates of Edmond Carter, 43h years old, driver of the car in which the four plaintiffs were riding, andh Frank Fields, 50 years old, both oft whom were instantly killed in the crash. The bill of complaint alleges thatd Csach was guilty of "gross and ma-~ licious negligence," and that he was driving his truck, loaded with six ons of cast iron jacks, 50 miles an hour, thus being unable to come to a halt in the clear distance ahead of him. The coroner's jury, however, ac-t cepted Csach's testimony that he had been driving less than 25 miles an d hour at ,the time of the crash, anda that Carter's automobile had first t edged into the center lane as if tor turn left, then, as the truck caught c up, suddenly had turned to the rightr less than 10 feet in front of the truck.n Yankees Beat Detrolt, Taking 10-Game Lead, Tigers Drop In Standings By Losing. 3rd 'Crucial1 Series' Contest, 5-2 NEW YORK, July 16.- A) - The Yankees overcame the Tiger threat for the second straight day today, coming through with a 5 to 2 decision to increase their circuit lead to ten games and club the Detroiters back into third' place in the American League. Johnny Broaca, most improved Yankee hurler since early June, lim- ited the Tigers to eight hits as the Yanks made it two out of three over the world's champions, through time- ly hitting off Tommy Bridges. With Cleveland defeating Philadelphia, the Tigers were shoved back into third place by half a game, as the Indians took over the runner-up berth. Two errors by Goose Goslin aided the Yanks in scoring. In the third, with Lazzeri on base, Goslin missed Jake Powell's line "drive enabling Tony to score. A moment later Pow- ell also came home, when Di Maggio doubled. Two innings later, Di Mag- gio singled and advanced to scoring position for Dickey's single when Goslin again fumbled. The Yanks' first run camne in the sec~ond frame, on a walk to Lou Geh- Woman Stops Plan To Kill KingEdward London Malcontent Tries To Kill Britain's King On Crowded Constitution Hill assailant Maintains He Was 'Protesting' Grand Rapids Minister Is Witness To Attempt On Monarch's Life LONDON, July 16. - () - Edward f England, a king for almost six months, rode unharmed today into ange of a loaded, levelled pistol which as knocked from the hands of a ondon malcontent. The pistol, taken from the hand f its crippled, baldheaded owner by middle-aged heroine in grey, clat- tered harmlessly to the roadway be- ind the King's horse on crowded constitution Hill. The malcontent, George Andrew McMahon, 34, once an editor and inative of Scotland, struggled in he strong arms of London bobbies. Whisked to a Bow Street dock, he wailed: "I didn't want to hurt him. [only did it as a protest!" 'Protest' Unexplained His "protest" was not explained or the man was incoherent. Since ie assailed Sir John Simon, the home ecretary, and said he had tried to 'each him, some suggested he may ave sought to plead against capital unishment. He was charged with "unlawful )ossession of a firearm with intent o endanger life" and remanded to ail for eight days. The King was returning from Hyde Park to Buckingham Palace with a brigade of guards. At Hyde Park he presented new colors to six bat- alions of troops and told them: 'Humanity cries out for peace." He was in officer's uniform. With him was his oldest brother, the Duke of York. At the Park, Queen Mary had watched the brilliant presenta- ion of colors. Just as his horse passed under the Wellington arch, the object of hun- dreds of eyes, a stocky man limped swiftly through the ranks of specta- tors and police at the edge of the oadway. 'Woman In Gray' The King straightened in his saddle. He looked intently to the left. His horse quivered visibly, its ears twitched. A little, unidentified woman, dressed in gray and accompanied by a fair-haired girl, struck quickly at the man's outstretched arm and the revolver, loaded in four of its five chambers, flew in a wide arc to the paving, between th King and his men. "The King seemed completely un- moved, but the excitement of the crowd nearby was intense," said an eye-witness, C. Harold Einecke, Grand Rapids, Mich., who is here on a holiday. Einecke is minister of music at Park Congregational Church in the Michigan city. "Soldiers and police rushed for- ward. A number of women in the crowd screamed. Several fainted." The King, seemingly the coolest person in the whole nation, rode on to the palace, saluted Queen Mary, who was then standing on a balcony, and vanished in the inner cour.t- yard. Liquor Control Hits Practices Of Breweries LANSING, July 16.--P)-The Stat( Liquor Control Commission lashed a1 the brewery industry today and or. dered an investigation of its prac. tices. Chairman John S. McDonald aske the attorney-general to assist. H said he wanted to expose brewerie he suspects of having attempted t subsidize beer dealers by giving then bar supplies and equipment. McDonald said the investigatioi would reach into the plants of brew eries outside the state that do busi ness in Michigan, and added specia attention would be paid to the qual ity of beer sold here. He said he had complaints som State's Budget Is Out Of Red, Governor Says Michigan Enjoys ,Of $4,023,000 Balance In First Criticizes Grade System Professor McClusky's, answer to this question was that the schools are failing to develop "beautifully in- tegrated personalities." The marking system was given by him as one of the chief reasons why the schools are "falling down." He stated that the marking systems in use today do not take proper cogni- zance of individual differences of the students. Instead, he said, it makes for "the awarding of extrinsic re- wards which are totally irrelevant to the purpose of the system." A second cause for the failure of the schools to fully develop the personali- ties of the students lies in the method by which teachers are placed in the educational system, Professor Mc- Clusky said. "We do not pick out carefully enough those people who should become teachers," he added. The training process of future teach- ers was also criticized as being de- ficient. Praises Part-Time Idea Teachers in the class rooms do not give enough attention to the individ ual differences and this is partially true because the teachers do not re- ceive the proper training for mak- ing such distinctions, the speaker said. The medium or the average of the class is considered, Professor Mc- Clusky said, but this method does not do the individuals in the class full justice. The part-time counselling method, in which the teacher divides his or (Continued on Page 4) L. L. Watkins Discusses ProblemsOf Currency What do the two major political parties plan to do about the mone- tary issue? Does the public as a whole favor a return to the gold Fifty Summer( Students Leaver For Falls Trip' Party Will Return Sunday After Studying Geologyt Of NiagaraFalls e More than 50 students of the Sum-L mer Session will leave for the three-1 day Niagara Falls Excursion at 4:30 p.m. today on the Michigan Central railway, it was reported last night by Prof. Irving D. Scott of the geology department, who is conducting the trip. The geological formations of the Falls, from the historical point-of- view, will be studied by the excursion- ists in their investigations of Niagara Gorge, the Whirlpool, the Canadian1 and American Falls, Goat Island and Whirlpool Rapids. The Falls were described by Pro- fessor Scott as the finest geological age markers in this region in his re- cent illustrated lecture, which an-j nually precedes the Niagara Fallst Excursion.1 The American Falls are receding at the rate of four feet a year, he also pointed out in his lecture. Professor Scott said the party would return to Ann Arbor at 11 p.m. Sunday. Faculty Man Beaten Foi National Office SAN FRANCISCO, July 16.-(P)- Dr. C. Willard Camalier, of Wash- ington, D. C., was named president- elect of the American Dental Associa- tion today. Dr. Camalier won the office over Dr. Marcus L. Ward of Ann Arbor, who received 87. votes in the house of delegates as against Camalier's 104. Dr. Camalier will serve during 1937i and 1938, succeeding Dr. Leroy M. S. Miner, of Boston, who takes of- Annual Fiscal Account Fitzgerald Praises Michigan Finances Governor Plans Change For Agencies Of State Administration Soon TRAVERSE CITY, July 16.-()- Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald reported an improvement of more than $10,- 000,000 in state finances during the past 12 months, in his first annual fiscal accounting tonight. "The general fund," the governor said, "has gone out of the red, into the black. With a present balance of $4,023,000 its condition has im- proved by approximately $10,400,000 over last year. The government of Michigan, after floundering for years in a backwash of deficits, is finan- cially sound-as sound as that of any state in the union. The era of gov- ernment by red ink in Michigan is gone as long as this administration remains in power. Any other than a strict pay-as-you-go policy is a betrayal of the people. CondemnsdDetroit Policy "We have had a glaring example of what may happen when carefree, open handed public spending takes the place of business-like administra- tion. It took place in a great city in our own state a few years ago. That city spent and spent, on the plea it was helping the poor. It spent until its credit was exhausted, in spite of the protests of alarmed taxpayers who objected, not to helping the poor, but to seeing their money squandered. "This being a campaign year, we may expect a flood of proposals prom- ising bigger and better government, and at the same time, lower taxes. Advocates of a reduced sales tax have already made known their views. An- other group would eliminate all prop- erty taxes. Other similar ideas will be proposed. I suggest that each of these proposals be accompanied by a statement showing which state serv- ice or which state institution the proposed cut should apply to. 'Blind Subterfuge' "A reduction in taxes, made with- out a well-considered plan for an equal reduction in the costs of gov- ernment, is a blind subterfuge. It's like telling your wife you are going to cut the family budget $40 a month, and doing it by not paying the rent. "The safe, intelligent way of lower- ing taxes is to adopt a comprehensive program for the revamping of our worn-out administrative system, elim- inating or consolidating agencies whose duties over-lap or duplicate each other. I submitted such a pro- gram to the last legislature, without success. I still believe init, and given the opportunity, I propose to submit it again in substantially the same form." Polish Airforce Head Killed In Airplane Crash WARSAW, July 16. -(A)-Poland' airforce chief, General Gustav Or icz-Dreszer, lost his life with two oth er officers in an airplane crash today just as the ship carrying his wif home from America appeared on th Baltic horizon. The other victims were the aviatio Colonel Loth and Captain Lagiejsk who were flying with the general to ward Gdynia. There, Orlicz-Dresze had planned to meet his wife, arriv t , ing from the United States on th - liner Pilsudski. - 1Holiday-makers at Orlow, a sub d urb of Gdynia, saw the plane cras into the sea several hundred yard s from the shore. Boats sped to th o machine and towed it to a small pier n but the three occupants were dea Shortly afterwards the Pilsudsk n entered the harbor and the general - wife was taken to view the body. - Orlicz-Dreszer was 46 years old. H 1 wife, the former Mrs. Elvira Row o Washington, has two daughters i the United States by another mar e riage. The general himself had visit Henry Ford Gives4 Park To Dearborn, SpeaksTo Nation DEARBORN, July 16.-(jP)-Henry Ford made one of his rare radio au- ditionstonight, in presenting a park to his home city. Speaking over a national network from the park on the lower Rouge S River where thousands of towns- people had gathered, he said: "This field isnreally the village green of our town. Mrs. Ford and I take great pleasure in presenting it P to the city of Dearborn so that it may always be devoted to the public use." The field, which contains a hillside ampitheatre, has ben used as a park C for several years, the city making a nominal payment of $1 a year. Introducing Ford, W. J. Cameron, of the Ford Motor Company, ex- plained that the park is only two miles from the Ford birthplace, and c thatFord, as a boy, played there fre- i quently. Occasionally, Cameron said, t Ford had to swim the Rouge River f to reach it. e The presentation was the climax r of a two-day civic holiday. r f Summer Termt fE Dance Will Be h At Union Today w Cowan To Furnish Music;a Education Clubs Sponsor a Tonight's Dancef Sponsored by the Men's and Wom- en's Education Clubs, this week's us-o ual Friday night dance will be held at1 the Union instead of at the League. i Al Cowan's orchestra will furnish the music for the dancing. The Uni-p versity's Summer Session band willb play several speciality numbers andN Jean Seeley, '36, will sing.t A series of dances were held atA both the Union and the League lastt summer, but that plan was discon- tinued this year.' This is the firstc time in a Summer Session that a reg-c ular Friday night League dance wills be held at the Union. Partners Not RequiredN The dance will be conducted one the same plan as the previous Leaguei dances. The usual price of 25 cents daa person will be charged. It is not necessary that one come with a part-I ner.V Evelyn Stephen, general chairmant for the dance, is being assisted byp Mrs. Alvalyn Woodward, Mrs. A. R. Morris, Eleanor Welsh, Guy Hill, H.r M. Wood and E. M. Boyne.-E Members of the Men's and Wom-E en's Education Clubs will act as hosts1 and hostesses and will aid the stu-1 dents in becoming acquainted withI each other.t Hosts, Hostesses Announced The hostesses are: Noma Reid, El- eanor Reid, Asmah Orcutt, Loisj Woodard, Genevieve Wilkowski Mar- garet- Roeser, Irene Raver, Adelle Kleineche, Karin Ostman, Claudine Steffek, Marietta Elder, Alice John- son, Adeline Hollis and Elizabeth Le-7 roy. Freida Grand, Mrs. Helen Field, Florence Jubb, Irene Schreiber, Mar- ian Cameron, Rowena Harrison, Er- ma Scott, Mary Elizabeth Ward, Mar- tha Kosanke, Johanna Illisner, Syl- s via Marttinen, Faye Nixon and Mar- - ian Grimm. The hosts are: Paul. Hartley, Carl , Kern, Louis Schmitt, Forrest Averill, e Ray Brainard, Max Brail, Bob Car- e son, Keith Cheney, Merlin Claucherty, Milton Cowan, Martelle Cushman, C. n A. Maywood, Russell Fuog, Bernard i, Gaffney, J. B. Geisel, Otto Grein. - Harold Husband, Edward Jennings, r M. A. Kopka, Gerald Bush, Sidngi - Quigley, C. H. Salter, Lawrence e Vredevoogd, Donald Wing, Walter Hill, Franklin Black, William Krause, - Howard Dalman. h 4 s Kenyon Murder Headed e For Unsolved Records Corn Belt CroRuin Tops_1934 5ee Damages Exceeding 1934 Disasters; Deaths Pass 1,400_Mark No Shortage Likely In SupplyOf Food General Alleviation Is Not Expected For 48 Hours; Relief Measures Start CHICAGO, July 16. - )P} --The por belt finished two weeks of the iottest driest weather it has known oday with no relief in prospect and ears growing that a crop disaster xceeding that of 1934 was in the naking. Except for a few favored areas the millions of acres of Middle West farmlands which produce the na- ion's greatest cash crop baked on 'or the 14th day in temperatures which continued to top previous highs. Deaths ascribed to the long stay of the torrid wave decreased some- what in number but mounted upward f 4,200 to maintain a 300 daily aver- age. A special agriculture department urvey in Washington assured that despite the destruction of crops the forthcoming 12 months would see no actual scarcity in food supplies. The same report, however, estimated the domestic supplies would be about one per cent under the like June, 1934-June 1935-period, also includ- ing a great drought period. Irreparable Damage Grain trade advices asserted irre- parable damage had been incured by the corn crop over a belt from Kansas and Oklahoma eastward through Indiana. In Illinois ten coun- ties in the southern part of the state, A WPA director reported, had "prac- tical crop failures." Prices for corn jumped the four cent limit at the opening of the Chi- cago board of trade and finished at that figure, a new seasonal top, De- spite heavy profit-taking July de- livery finished at 89 cents a bushel. Wheat spurted three cents on reports of continued heat and deterioration in Canada. No general alleviation could be ex- pected for at least two more days, Forecaster J. R. Lloyd of the Chicago weather office said. He predicted somewhat cooler weather for the Da- kotas and parts of Minnesota and Nebraska, however. Today in Pierre, S. D., the highest noon temperature of the season-109 degrees-was endured. Other highs about that hour included: Aberdeen, 108; Mitchell, 105; Bismark, N. D., 100; Kearney, Neb., 102; Beatrice, Neb., 103; Lincoln, Neb., 105; Falls City, Neb., 105; and Norfolk, Neb.; 107. Warmer Weather Looms Warmer weather was again in store for parts of Illinois, Western Mich- igan, and most of the Ohio and Mis- sissippi Valleys and the other plain states. In Chicago where more tem- perature conditions have prevailed the past two days, a return of 90- 100 degree heat was predicted. The first half of this month has been the second driest on record in the Chicago vicinity, exceeded only by that of 1898. Relief measures for the adrought harried regions proceeded along a front extending from Washington, D. C., to the parched plains of the west. Forty three more counties in Kentucky, North Carolina, and Geor- gia were added to the emergency drought areas by the AAA. This made the national drought aid sector 452 counties in extent. At Bismarck, N. D., resettlement Administrator Rexford G. Tugwell, declared his agency would take full responsibility for providing imme- diate help to needy farmers. The state relief director in Minne- sota estimated $1,000,000 would be re- quired to provide work in the next three months for 5,000 drought im- poverished farmers in 13 counties. Cissel Will Return Here After 3-Year's Absence Prof. James H. Cissel of the struc- tural engineering department yes- terday informed University officials that he would return to Ann Arbor to take up active teaching after a three- year leave of absence Sept. 15, at s. EAST LANSING, July 16.-(A')- ki Police officials indicated today the s mutilation murder of Robert Kenyon, 10, near Tawas City, appeared to be is destined for a place on their list of of unsolved crimes. n Iosco County Sheriff John F. Mor- r- an and State Police Sergeant P. L. t- Hutson, in charge of the investiga-