- ----.w The Weather Fair and somewhat warmer today; tomorrow unsettled, pos- sibly local showers. CYl rr Ii~r gait ~Iait Editorials A Tribute To A University President ...* Education And Reform ... Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XV No. 12 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 8, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Convention Of Educators Will Be Held Here Tennessee Valley S o c i a l And Personnel Director To Give Lecture' Five Meetings Are Planned This Week Two Social Programs Will Be Presented By Local Organizations With approximately 200 Michigan educators from outside Ann Arbor expected to augment the number of local school men in attendance, the School of Education has announced final plans for its fifth annual Sum- mer Educational Conference, to be held here Tuesday and Wednesday of this week.. Tag Day Tuesday Will Benefit Poor Kids At Fresh Air Camp By DONALD R. BIRD and friendships - things they could One hundred and twenty young- never do in their crowded home tene- sters, having the time of their young ment districts. lives. That, briefly, is the picture of Most of the mornings at camp are the University's Fresh Air Camp on j devoted to interest periods -when Patterson Lake, mairitained by Tag Day contributions for the undernour- ished and underprivileged youth of Detroit, Hamtramck, and Ann Arbor. It's a sight to warm the hearts of all who have helped or will contribute to the cause by buying a tag in the mid-summer drive to be held here next Tuesday, July 10. Little boys and big boys, white and black, tough and soft - all given equal chances to swim, play, eat and sleep under the best conditions and the most careful direction found in Michigan. George Alder, principal of Jones school during the winter, di- rects the camp, with a staff of 29 councilmen and assistants -mostly from the University - to keep the boys interested and happy all the time. And they really enjoy every minute of every day too. From their dip in the lake at 6:30 in the morning to taps at 9:15 in the .evening, they are building up their bodies, their minds, each boy is allowed to make or learn the things young boys always like to make and learn, under expert super- vision. It would surprise the casual visitor as it did me to see these kids -mostly delinquent in some way - making foot-stools, good bows and arrows, models of everything in clay, and carpet patterns on a small loom. In spite of the fact that they have been limited in their educations, these boys have shown to several sociology research students at the camp that they have the same interests and abil- ities as the average child in a -good family. They learn to paint, play simple musicalinstruments, and study animals with the same fervor a young robin displays the first day out of the nest. Then comes the swimming time, when appetites are beginning to sharpen for lunch. Louis Lemak, for- mer Michigan varsity swimmer, is in charge, showing the good and fair swimmers and the "sinkers" how to (Continued on Page 4) Heading the list of speakers is Dr. Floyd Reeves, director of personnel and social development under the Tennessee Valley Authority. Dr. Reeves will speak at the opening ses- sion of the conference, 9:30 a.m. Tues- day, on the topic, 'fThe Social De- velopment Program of the Tennessee Valley' Authority." Five Meetings Planned Five formal meetings are scheduled, three on Tuesday and the other two Wednesday. Organization plans call for a maximum amount of informal discussion, and, the conference pro- gram states, "the sessions have been arranged in such a way as to stimu- late an exchange of views." Officials hope that those in attendance will "welcome the opportunity to partici- pate in the 'give and take' of these discussions, In addition to the regular' meetings planned, members of the School of Education will offer two social pro- grams with attendance open to all. At noon Tuesday Phi Delta Kappa, men's education fraternity, will hold a conferenge luncheon, while the an- nual picnic of the Men's Education club, to be held Wednesday after- noon at Portage Lake, will climax the two-day conference. Although most of the topics will be presented by members of the faculty of the School of Education, there will be addresses by other men from out- side Ann Arbor in addition to Dr. Reeves. Voelker To Speak Dr. Paul F. Voelker, state superin- tendent of public instruction, will speak Wednesday morning on the problems facing the Michigan edu- cational system. Following this talk there will be a discussion on the is- sues raised by Dr. Voelker to be led by Chester Miller of Saginaw, presi- dent of the State Association of Su- perintendents and School Board Members. One other member of the State department of public instruction, Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, director of research and personnel, will appear at the ses- sion. He will speak Tuesday night on the topic, "Some Steps in a Program for Educational Recovery for Michi- gan Schools." Harold Steele of Jack- son, president of the Michigan Edu- cation Association, will lead the dis- cussion -following Dr. Elliott's ad- dress. All sessions of the conference will convene in the Union. Morning meet- ings will open at 9:30, afternoon meetings at 2, with the one evening session, on Tuesday, listed to open at 7:30. Preliminaries Of City Tennis Matches Today Preliminary and first-round play in the 14th annual city tennis tourna- ment will begin today, and will be completed Thursday, George J. Moe, tournament manager, announced yes- terday. More than 80 have entered in the men's singles event which will feature the tournament. Others are the men's doubles, mixed doubles, women's dou- bles- and singles, and the junior singles. All matches in the preliminary and first rounds must be played and the results reported to the tournament Pairings for the preliminary and first rounds are given on page 4 of this issue of The Daily. manager by 5:30 p.m. Thursday or be passed as defaults, Mr. Moe said, be- i R Program For All Churches Is Announced, Hugo Grotius Is Subject Of Prof. Reeves Will Speak In Second Of Series Of International Law Lectures Evening Sings, Discussions For Sunday Sermons, Scheduled Burns Park will be the scene of the initial Sunday Evening Sing, to be held at 7 p.m. under the auspices of the Recreation Commission, Dean A. J. Edmonson, chairman. Dr. Wray Congdon will be in charge of the dis- cussion and the Rev. R. Edward Sayles, pastor of the First Baptist Church, will deliver the address. "Being True to One's Self" is an- nounced by the Rev. Allison Ray Heaps as first in a Summner School series upon Religion and Life, in the pulpit of the First Congregational Church at 10:45 a.m. At the Methodist Episcopal Church this morning the Rev. Frederick B. Fisher, D.D., will speak upon "Dan- gers to be Overcome," second in a series upon "The Challenge of Mod- ern Life." At 6:30 p.m. at Stalker Hall he will lead a discussion upon "Religion in An Age of Power - As* a Church Man Sees It." Cowin To Preach The Rev. Frederick Cowin, D.D., returns to preach in his pulpit this morning at the Christian Church. He invites summer students to com- munion. Mass will be celebrated at the St. Thomas Church at 6, 7:30, 9, and 10:30 a.m. St. Mary's Chapel is closed during the absence of Father Allan J. Babcock in Rome. The Rev. Henry H. Lewis at the St. Andrews Episcopal Church conducts worship at 11 a.m. At the First Baptist Church this morning, Dr. Sayles, minister, will preach upon "Realism in Religion," Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education at the Uni- versity, will lead a discussion upon 'Religion at a University Campus." Angell Will Speak Prof. Robert C. Angell will speak upon "Family Development" at the Unitarian Church, the Rev. Walter Cole presiding over the discussion to follow. At the First Presbyterian Church this morning, Prof. Norman B. Rich- ardson of the Presbyterian Seminary in Chicago will preach. At the Trinity Lutheran, the Rev.. O. H. Yoder, minister, and at the Bethlehem Evangelical Church, Rev. Theodore Schwalf will conduct morn- ing services. The Wesley Foundation will inau- gurate a series of five seminars in Applied Christianity at 9:30 a.m. to- day. Gordon B. Halstead, who is in 'charge of student work at Stalker Hall, will lead the discussions deal- ing with the church and its relation to the present crisis; the church and economic, industrial, race, and inter- national relations; and the church' in the new social order. Announce Engagement Of Helen Mason, Tom Ellerby The engagement of two recent graduates of the University, Helen Mason and Thomas Ellerby, was an- nounced yesterday by Miss Mason's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stevens T. Ma- "Hugo Grotius, His Life and Times" will be the subject of the second in the series of special lectures of the Summer Session on Teaching Inter- national Law when Prof. Jesse S.j Reeves, dean of the annual session and a member of the University po- litical science department, speaks at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Room 1025, Angell Hall. Professor Reeves will describe the varied career of Hugo Grotius, a pio- neer in the field of international law and noted Dutch jurist, beginning in Holland in 1583, continuing in Paris, and finally concluding in jail in the country of his birth. The speaker is recognized as a dis- tinguished political scientist, particu- larly in the field of international law. He is a member of no less than five honorary societies, including the American Society of International Law, the American History Associa- tion, the American Political Science Association, the American Institute of International Law, and the Inter- national Law Association. Professor Reeves has taught history and political science at the Woman's College of Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University, Dartmouth College, the University of Chicago, and the Uni- versity of Michigan. However, in addition to this teach- ing, he is a member of the bar, hav- ing been admitted in 1897. He prac- ticed actively for ten years preceding 1907. Since 1925, Professor Reeves has been a member of the Permanent Court of Central American Justice. He was also a lecturer in the Academy of International Law at The Hague in 1924, and has been since 1925, the American member of the Pan-Ameri- can Commission of Jurists, for the codification of international law. Professor Reeves has published es- says and reviews in numerous pub- lications and has written several au- thoritative works, notably 'American Diplomacy Under Tyler and Polk" and "La Communaute Internationale." Program For Fall Lectures Is Announced Oratorical Association To Offer Eight Speakers In Place Of Usual Six Ruth Bryan Owen Will Open Series Thomas, Stowe, Howland, Hindus, Sullivan, Chase, Holmes On Program The schedule of eight lectures to be offered by the University Oratorical Association during the regular se- mesters of 1934-35, released yestr- day, includes some of the most fam- ous personalities in the country. Ruth Bryan Owen, present ambas- sador to Denmark, will open the ser- ies on October 25, speaking on "The United States in World Affairs." The second lecture will be presented November 7 by Stuart Chase, eminent economist and author of "Your Mon- ey's Worth." He will speak on "The Economy of Plenty." Lyman Beecher Stowe, grandson of Harriet Beecher Stowe, will be the third lecturer of the series. He will discuss the material in his latest book, "Saints, Sinners, and Beechers," on November 22. "Whaling in the Seven Seas," will be the subject of Charles Scott How- land, authority on the history of ship- ping, who will speak December 6. From Whaling Family Mr. Howland is a member of a long established whaling family and re- cently, with several friends, he rigged out a ship and caught whales in the old-fashioned manner. A Paramount News cameraman accompanied the party and a major portion of Mr. Howland's lecture will be illustrated with these motion pictures. Lowell Thomas will speak Decemnber 13 on "Adventures on the Air and Around the World." Mr. Thomas is one of the most popular radio com- mentators and lecturers in the coun- try and has always addressed packed audiences while lecturing in Ann Ar- bor. January 20, Maurice Hindus, prom- inent writer and an authority on in- ternational affairs, will lecture on "Stalin, Hitler, and Roosevelt; Who Will Win?"1 Hindus has been characterized by Mr. Thomas as the most eloquent and brilliant lecturer on the American platform today. Holmes To Speak Burton Holmes will speak February 18 on "Around the World with Bur- ton Holmes." Mr. Holmes is the popular commentator of the trav- elogue series shown in motion pic- ture theatres and his lecture will be supplemented throughout with origi- nal pictures. The lecture series will be concluded by Mark Sullivan, newspaper syndi- cate writer, on February 28. His subject will be "Behind the Scenes in Washington." Mr. Sullivan was the principal speaker at the Rotary International convention which was held in De- troit last week. A new policy has been formulated by the officers of the Association. In- stead of the usual six lectures, eight will be presented. However, officers said yesterday that there would be no increase in the price of the season ticket admissions. Date Set For Bear, All-Star Football Tilt Gridiron Fans To Select 1 College Aggregation By Newspaper Ballot Coach Also To Be SelectedBy Vote Teams Will Meet August 31 At Soldiers Field; 'M' Men May Play By WILLIAM R. REED What may well be the greatest football game ever played is planned for Augustn31 at Soldiers' Field, Chi- cago, when the Chicago Bears will meet a picked team of 1933 college all-stars. The all-star team is to be chosen by ballot of football fans, through the Chicago Tribune and associated news- papers, and will be composed of those college stars who ended their college gridiron careers last fall. Each fan is invited to name the eleven best players from last year's college graduates, and the 27 receiv- ing the highest number of votes will comprise the squad which will report for training August 15. Sponsors of the game have limited the choices to those who ended their college play in 1933 because it is felt that those men will be in relatively fine physical condition. Subsequent to the choice of the all- star squad, which will be made July 25, a nation-wide contest to pick a college coach to handle the squad will be held. Members of the Chicago Bears team, national professional cham- pions in 1933, have expressed them- selves enthusiastically as in favor of the game. "We are supposed to be world's champions," they are re- ported as saying, "here's a chance to prove it against a team which will be a real All-American team." Althtugh teams of "All-Americans" have often been assembled, and all- star teams play annual games, spon- sors claim that the proposed game would be the first real exhibition by a group of college All-Americans. Four Michigan men are mentioned, as outstanding possibilities for the squad, Whitey Wistert, Chuck Ber- nard, Ted Petoskey, and Herman Ev- erhardus. Wolverine Relay Team Is Third In A.A.U. Meet CHICAGO, July 7. - (P) -Jack Medica, most brilliant of Uncle Sam's distance swimmers, failed for the first time in many attempts to set a world record, but he outclassed his field in the 440-yard grind to win his second national A.A.U. championship in the World's Fair Lagoon today. The Los Angeles team won the 880- yard relay, with the Detroit A.C. sec- ond and the University of Michigan third. The' Wolverines led for one leg, giving way to the Detroit team. which hung on until Callaghan, Los Angeles' anchor man, caught Bob Goldstein and went on to win by about 10 feet in 9:41.2. The Michigan relay team is com- posed of Jim Cristy, Taylor Drysdale, Tex Robertson, and Bob Lawrence. MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE Sixty-Seven Go On Trip To Cranb rook, Kings wood Schools Sixty-seven students, making the trip in two buses and four private cars, accompanied Prof. Carl J. Coe on the third of the Summer Ses- sion excursions to the Cranbrook Schools in Bloomfield Hills. They left shortly after 8 yesterday morning, and returned to Ann Arbor in two groups, one at about 3:15 and the other at 5:15. After reaching the boys' school at Cranbrook at about 9:30, the group spent half an hour wandering about the school while waiting for an ap- pointment at the Academy of Arts, which was set for 10:00. There they viewed George G. Booth's art collection, which he has deeded to the Cranbrook Foundation. Among the exhibits was a model of a proposed memorial to Alexander Hamilton, designed by Eliel Saarinen, architect of the Cranbrook Schools. At this time Mr. Vernon B. Kellett, acting assistant to the headmaster at Cranbrook this summer, who con- ducted the party while it was at Cranbrook, explained to the group the organization of the six units which form the Cranbrook Foundation. The only co-ordinating force, Mr. Kellett explained, is the Foundation itself, which administers the endowment set up for the group, and handles its investments. The first of the units to be estab- lished was the Brookside School, which Mr. Booth originally meant to be a choir-school for the proposed Christ Church. These two units were, built first, and from them grew the entire system of schools and other, institutions. Cranbrook, the boys' school, wasa the next to be built, and it was com- pleted and started operation in the< fall of 1926. At this time the Academy# of Arts and the Institute of Sciences were also formed, but Kingswood, the (Continued on Page 3) Administration, Is Attacked.At G.OP. eeting Vandenberg And Fletcher Among Prominent Party' Speakers , By ROBERT S. RUWITOH (Daily Staff Correspondent)j JACKSON, July 7. --Further ut- terances of apprehension against Democratic bureaucracy and "exces- sive" governmental spending were) made today by nationally prominent speakers at the 80th birthday cele-t bration of the Republican party here.- Great crowds of party adherents heard Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg of Grand Rapids, Chairman Henry P. Fletcher of the Republican Na- tional Committee, Sen. Arthur Capper of Kansas, and several state digni- taries lash out against the problems and policies of the party now in power. Budgetary iniquities of the Admin- istration were severely scored by Sen- ator Vandenberg, who characterized the governmental spending as "the{ prodigal mistake of trying to buyg prosperity and the worse mistake of buying it without paying for it." t Warns Against Inflation He warned against what he termed "our deadly drifts toward the mael-( stroms of uncontrolled inflation,"( which he said was capable of sweepingI "all industry, commerce, and agricul- ture under the dominion of the statel and substitute it for the citizen as ouri economic reliance." i Like the speakers yesterday who preceded him on the platform, Ser- ator Vandenberg was firm in the be-E lief of a rigid Constitution and flayed the Democrats for their abuse of it. Inevitable complications will spring up, he stated, in a system, "wholly; new to America, under which the1 spirit of the Constitution is mocked and mangled; under which even the President's own Congressional ma- jority is significantly reduced to the impotence of a convenient rubber stamp." Flays Bureaucracy Shortly before Senator Vandenberg1 spoke, members of the party heard' Chairman Fletcher rail against bu- reaucracy in the Administration, as- serting that Congress had no right whatsoever to completely turn over to the President its powers of law mak- ing, as evidenced in the past two years., In addition, Chairman Fletcher at-; tacked monetary policies of the Ad- ministration, NRA regulatory activi- Government Is For Renewed Of Insurgents Watching Activities (Copyright, 1934, by the Associated Press) BERLIN, July 7. - (A) - Adolf Hit- ler called for peace and quiet and or- dered a political truce today after a a most turbulent week of the Nazi reign. The Chancellor set an example of outward calmness for the German people by leaving Berlin and going to his retreat in the Bavarian Alps, at least for the week-end and possibly for a longer vacation. Sub-leaders, who helped Hitler break up the revolt with firing squads a week ago today, also were reported resting. Vice-chancellor Franz von Papen, whose position has not yet been made secure, was smiling when visited in his home today. "My plans are not yet complete," said the aristocratic friend of Presi- dent Paul von Hindenburg. "Every- thing is still unsettled." The political truce leaves him vice- chancellor, free to come and go as he pleases, although his home still is guarded, presumably to protect him from hot-blooded Nazis. The government still is on the alert, the propaganda ministry indicated, for any sign of renewed effort of dis- satisfIed elements. jo yerthrow the, Hitler reign. Activities of secret police will con- tinue through the "truce," which if carried out as planned, mean that no major change can be made during July. The cabinet, which rules Germany as a legislative as well as an execu- tive body, will have no meetings dur- ing the month, it was stated at the Chancellor's office. To the Storm Troopers, among whose leaders the revolt developed, Nazi party leaders issued a carefully worded statement assuring them that the troop and the party belong to each other and cannot be separated. Handman And Guthe To Give Week's :Lectures Professor Carl E. Guthe, director, Museum of Anthropology, will lecture on "North American Archeology" a 5 p.m. tomorrow in Natural Science Auditorium on the eighth lecture of the Summer Session series. Professor Guthe will discuss what we know about the history of Indian civilization in North America. He will describe some of the various tribes, most interesting among which are the Pueblos, who live chiefly in New Mexico and Arizona. He will also take up briefly the history of the mound builders. Professor Guthe received his dog- tor's degree at Harvard. At the pres- ent time he is chairman of the Com- mittee on State Archelogical Sur- veys of the National Research Couri- cil. He was also at one time assistant director of the Andover Pecos expedi- tion, and has made excavations in New Mexico, Guatemala, and the Philippine Islands. At 5 p.m. Tuesday Prof. Max S. Handman of the economics depart- ment will lecture on "Can and Should America be Self-Sufficient?" Professor Handman is a well- known authority on economic prob- lems. He has served on many gov- ernment commissions, chief of which was the Wickersham Commission.' He served as a special investigator for the Library of Congress in 1918, was a member of the Commission on Public Information, and he was also on the staff of the United States Inquiry Commission on Terms of Peace in 1918. Numbered among the societies to Ordered BHitler Chancellor Sets Example Of Calmness With Visit To Bavarian Alps Von Papen's Plans Unsettled, He Says Peace Is 'Both Your Houses' Is Lauded As Effective Propaganda Play W L New York ............45 27 Detroit ..............46 29 Boston ..............40 35 Cleveland...........37 35 Washington .........39 37 St. Louis ...........31 38 Philadelphia .........30 43 Chicago .............25 49 Yesterday's Results Detroit 4, St. Louis 0. New York 7, Washington 4. Boston 11, Philadelphia 10. Pet. .625 .613 .533 .514 .513 .449 .411 .338 "The most effective propaganda play which has come along in several seasons. . . It has an entirely timely aspect. . . I wish it were playing in Washington right now," wrote Hey- wood Broun, in the New York World- Telegram after seeing a Theatre Guild performance of Maxwell Anderson's "Both Your Houses," to be presented this week by the Michigan Repertory Players. Maxwell Anderson was born at At- lantic, Pennsylvania, in 1888. His boy- hood was spent in the middle west. After attending the Universities of North Dakota and Leland Stanford, he taught school in North Dakota and California, and then for a time went of the 1924-25 season. This was quickly followed by two other plays, "First Flight,' 'and "The Buccaneer," also in collaboration with Mr. Stall- ings; then "Outside Looking In," based on a novel by Jim Tully, "Sat- urday's Children," "Gods of the Lightning," (with Mr. Dickerson), "Gypsy," "Elizabeth the Queen," one of the most successful productions presented by the campus dramatic group this past winter, and "Night Over Taos," produced in New York by the Group Theatre. Mr. Anderson is also author of another play, "Sea- Wife," as yet unproduced, and a vol- ume of poetry, "You Who Have Dreams." Chicago, Cleveland, wet grounds Games Today St. Louis at Detroit. Washington at New York. Chicago at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Boston. NATIONAL LEAGUE W New York ...........47 Chicago .............45 St. Louis ............42 Pittsburgh ...........37 Boston ..............39 Brooklyn ............31 L 28 29 30 32 36 44 Pet. .627 .608 .583 .536 .520 .413 C