Alit A :4Iai ti Editorials Twelve Years - A New Life Expectancy .. . Official Publication Of The Summer Session ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS -_ I -_ PRICE FIVE CENTS Hyma Is Chairman The second regular session of the conference will begin at 2 p.m. in the Michigan League. Prof. Albert Hyma of the history department will be the chairman. The first topic is "The Function of Music in Worship" and will be de- livered by William Doty, instructor of organ music in the School of Music. 1 Mrs. Frederick B. Fisher will de- liver the second speech on "The Place of Worship in the Curriculum of Re- ligious Education." A discussion will be led by Rev. Henry Lewis, rector of St. Andrews Episcopal church here. The Sunday morning services in all Ann Arbor churches will be primarily based on the theme of the conference. At 6 p.m. Sunday there will be a social hour for Presbyterian students. Refreshments will be served by the Woman's Association of the Presby- terian Church and the function will be held at the Presbyterian Church House, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Mem- bers of the congregation are cordially invited. Summer Band Performs First .O Programs Summer Session students and townspeople last night had opportun- ity to hear the first of the series of concer.ts offered by the University Summer Band, under the direction of Nicholas D. Falcone. The music was heard on the steps in front of the General Library. Two songs of the University, the "M" Men March, composed by Mr. Falcone himself, and the famed "Yel- low and Blue",featured the program. Seven other numbers were played by the band, these being of a more classical nature. Included among these were Nicolai's Overture to the "Merry Wives 'of Windsor," "Prelude and Berceuse," by Jaernefelt, the march from Wagner's opera "Tann- hauser;" three dances from "Henry VIII," by Edward German, Bizet's "Serenade Espagnole," and the Over- ture to "Zampa" of Arthur William Balfe. Prof. Nelson Talks To Vanguard Club Members CHICAGO, July 11. -() - Over a protest from a minority that it made them "just a party against," young Republican leaders today indorsed the, campaign policies of their elders. The young political leaders had ben asked to write a statement of policy by the party's national man- agers, as part of a meeting of 63 dele- gates from young Republican clubs of 23 states. Immediately a dispute arose over whether the party should criticize the New Deal or offer alter- natives. The policy committee's report con- demning bureaucracies and belittling the Democrats for spending too much money won out, but over a vigorous dissent from delegates from Maine, New York, and New Jersey. "It's a lot of high-sounding words," said Delegate Albert B. Hermann of Milltown, N. J. "It makes us sim- ply a party of 'opposers.' Let's offer something constructive." "Rather than see us offering noth- ing, I see us do nothing," said Dele- gate Archie O. Dawson of New York. New Code For Group Outside NRA Is Started Is To Be Given Choice Of Action Before 30-Day Deadline WASHINGTON, July 11. - (A) - Hugh S. Johnson promulgated a new "basic code" for industries still with- out the NRA fold today and set a 30-day deadline for winding up Blue Eagle code making. In a special order, Johnson gave all uncoded industries the choice of lerging with existing kindred codes or operating under the new basic code with a general NRA code authority to be created by Johnson. Johnson said, "It is not intended by this plan to force all remaining un- codified industries under codes," but gave notice that industries remaining outside NRA which appear to be har- boring labor abuses may have a code imposed. NRA said the mopping-up plan would cover 262 pending codes and any industries which had not yet ap- plied for codes. Code agreements ap- peared near on 135 of these and NRA urged their completion in the next 15 days thereby eliminating them from the basic code group. Several codes, such as for anthra- cite and shipping, were described as "having special and important eco- nomic, labor, or legal conditions" and will be held aside for individual consideration. The service trades, who fair practice provisions have been suspended, are not included in the plan. The uncoded small industries, while numerous, were said by NRA to em- ploy far less than 10 per cent of America's 24,000,000 industrial work- Painters Are Characterized By Donaldson Fine Arts Chairman Says There Is No Such Thing As Pure American Art Influence Of French Is Great On Our Art D i scu s s e s Twenty-Five Artists In Lecture With Illustrations By THOMAS E. GROEHN There is no pure American paint- ing and we can never expect to have a national school of painting unless we stop immigration, stated Prof. Bruce M. Donaldson, chairman of the di- vision of fine arts, who spoke yester- day on "Contemporary American Painting." "American painting is a compli- cated mixture of artists ofsvarious racial stocks, although the school of Paris is perhaps the dominating in- fluence in painting in this country." The saving grace of American painting, according to Professor Don- aldson, isrthat throughout the major- ity of it runs a definite sense of hu- mor. The chief trouble with the Ger- man painters, he continued, is that they "are so infernally serious." Lists Contemporaries Taking a list of 25 representative contemporary American painters with techniques ranging from radical to conservative, Professor Donaldson showed one, and in some instances two of their works, on slides and dis- cussed the distinguishing character- istics of each. Included on the list discussed were: Peggy Bacon: "a clever draftsman and caricaturist, with a grand sense of humor." Thomas Benton: "He has the abil- ity to combine romance with dignity and one of his chief peculiarities is the elongating of figures to represent figures of poverty. He is undoubtedly one of the greatest if not the greatest of American mural painters." Alexander Brook: "Extraordinary quality of design, a fine sense of color and arrangement of figures." Edward Bruce Cited Edward Bruce: "An amateur artist who does most of his work for pleas- ure. His pictures have a very sound quality about them and he believes in reducing a painting to its simplest form. He was also one of the chief promoters of the Federal Public Works of Art, which during the depression, saved many a good artist from starva- tion." Charles Burchfield: "He is one of the many contemporary artists who are opening the eyes of the public to the fact that a great many sub- jects hitherto believed unpaintable are excellent subjects. He paints such things as viaducts, factories, and bridges." John Carroll: "Consummate crafts- manship and excellent technique. He has a genius for analyzing the sub- ject matter of his themes. Many do not like his portraits because of his peculiar manner of drawing eyes. His better pictures are of a pictorial na- ture." Also Mentions Chapin James Chapin: "Best known for his latest picture 'The Boxer and his Manager,' which is now hanging in the Rockefeller Center. Has great ability in bringing out essential ex- pressions of his subjects." John Stewart Curry: "Best known work is the 'Kansas Baptism.' He is1 ne of the many painters who has shifted subject matter of paintings from the east to the far west. He has an excellent insight into ordinary events." Stuart Davis: "Specializes in sur- face designs. His buildings are of an unstable character and although some of his works are charming they all tend to be almost effeminately fra- gile." Preston Dickinson: "Interested in the painting of factories and other iri- (Continued on Page 4) Report Ivy Lee Advising Reich, On Armament NEW YORK, July 11. - (P)~ Evidence that Ivy Lee, the public- relations counsel, is receiving $25,000 a year from the German Dye Trust for service which include advice on Genrman re-armRamnnt wn nPC m P Station Contact With Caamp Engineers at Camp Davis, the Uni- versity engineering camp, at Jackson Hole, Wyo., cannot get out of touch with the University, even though more than 1,000 miles separates W7DKZ, the camp's radio station, and W8AXZ, the University station in the R.O.T.C. Building. Richard Brown, 405 S. Forest Ave., inadvertently joined the circulation staff of The Daily last night when he took a message over the University station requesting two copies of The Daily for campers. Brown related how he talks direct vxith Camp Da- vis every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday night, both over the Univer- sity station and his own, W8GSZ. Brown explained that he talks in code with members of the camp and receives the news which brings the two University units together of the nation-wide distance. In the future, he will co-operate with The Daily in receiving and re- laying news for publication here and of interest at Camp Davis. Stunt Ni ht At League Draws Large Crowds Well-Known Entertainers Of Campus Featured On Evening's Program Despite the play opening at Lydia Mendelssohn theatre last night which drew large crowds from other events, the second Stunt Night of the Sum- mer Session, started last week as an innovation intended to provide mid- week entertainment for summer stu- dents, found many dancers and look- ers-on in the grill room of the League. A program which consisted for the most part of numbers presented by1 entertainers well-known on the cam- pus provided the central feature of the evening upon which the entire in- formal plan was based. Richard Edmonson served as mas- ter of ceremonies to introduce a trio, tap dancer, and novelty pianist. The short series of novelty acts opened with a piano number by Tom Stacey, who amused the audience by playing with his back to the instrument. His number was followed with two se- lections, "O' Pappy" and "Mississippi Mud" sung by a trio composed of Jane Seeley, Maxine Maynard, and Mary} Morrison, all well-known to those who have attended other similar' functions given at the League during the regular session. The program was concluded with a tap dance by Harriet Townsend. The third Stunt Night of the Sum- mer Session will take place next Wednesday night, itcwas announced by Edmonson, at which time another series of unusual entertainment fea- tures will be presented. A small min- imum charge is made for those at- ending the Wednesday night infor. mial gatherings, which are expected to become the leading mid-week social event for the summer. MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS The Tigers and New York both continued on their pennant fight yes- terday with each team batting out, victories in the American League. An account and box score of the Detroit contest will be found on page 3. University Radio In Direct River Rouoe Plant Visited By 4th Tour 32 Students Make Trip To Ford Factory To Study Processes Watch Assembly Of Line Of Cars Inspect Power Plant And Machine Shops; Tour Is To Be Repeated Thirty-two students accompanied Prof. Carl J. Coe, director of excur- sions, to the Ford Motor Co. plant at River Rouge yesterday on the fourth of the Summer Session excursions for 1934. The party left Ann Arbor by mo- torbus shortly before 1 p.m. yesterday, reaching the River Rouge plant in less than an hou" . There the party first went to the power house, which supplies electricity for the entire sys- tem. The engine rooms of the power house were first visited, where steam- driven turbines turn the generators for the plant. The furnace rooms of the power plant were also visited, where over 2,000 tons of powdered coal is blown into the furnace daily. From the power house they went to the machine shops, where all the motor machining is done, from the boring of the block itself to the more delicate adjustments of smaller parts. An interesting feature was the meth- od of guaging all the fine adjustments. The room where the gauges are kept is constantly heated to a temperature of 68 degrees. A portion of the motor assembly line was next seen. Here a new method of inserting valves was shown the party. The process is rather in- teresting in that it was not made pos- sible until several years ago, when dry1 ice was discovered. Formerly the en- gine block was always heated, after which the valve was inserted and the block was allowed to cool down on the valve. Now the valve is contracted by the use of dry ice, and after it is put in the motor block it expands, achiev- ing the same results without heating the entire engine block. The last portion of the plant to be, visited was the main assembly line, where the completed car is assembled in 45 minutes, starting with the bare, frame. As the conveyor-belt moves, along the line of workers, the axles,, fenders, running boards, wheels, en-, gine, steering wheel, and finally the body are added until at the end of the line the car is driven away under its own power. Attempt Made To Settle Dock Strike Trouble Labor Dispute Board Will Hold Workers' Election For Union Agents SAN FRANCISCO, July 11. -('P) - Struggling to avert a general walk- out of upwards of 100,000 marine workers which became increasingly likely in the face of more shooting and other violence on Pacific coast waterfronts, President Roosevelt's La- bor Dispute Board announced today it would hold an election among the striking marine workers to choose union representatives in future nego- tiations. Buckshot from police guns wound- ed four strikers at Portland, causing a situation described by authorities as "desperate." National guard bullets whizzed again last night on the San Fran- cisco embarcadero as the militiamen dispatched a gang of prowlers. A citizens' emergency committee re- quested the use of state police to drive "alien agitators" from the city on the ground that they were responsible for strikes and violence there. Growing demands for a general strike in San Francisco, Oakland, and Portland were heard as President Roosevelt's board forced a last-min- ute truce. The board still awaited answer from both shipping men and strikers as to whether they would submit the various issues to Federal arbitration. Unions began taking strike votes. Conference Speaker Law Lecture Will Be Given Next Monday Prof. C. C. Hyde To Speak On U. S. Interpretation Of Law Of Air The third in the series of five lec- tures on the program of the Summer Session on Teaching International Law will be given Monday, July 16 by Prof. Charles Cheney Hyde of the conference teaching staff on "The Law of the Air as Interpreted in the United States," Professor Hyde, who is the Ham- ilton Fish Professor of International Law at Columbia University, has been on the law parley teaching staff for the past three summers. In addition to presenting his lecture, he is leading two group conferences this summer on "Realistic Approach to International Law" and "Tests for Ascertaining Proficiency of Students." He is also teaching a course on "Treaties: Their Making, Interpreta- tion, and Termination." The fourth and fifth lectures of the series will be given on succeeding Monday nights by George A. Finch, managing editor of the American Journal of International Law, and Dr. James Brown Scott, director of the division of international law of the Carnegie Endowment for Interna- tional Peace, who is chairman of the parley. 'Some Japanese Cities' Is Title Of Hall Lecture Prof. Robert B. Hall of the geography department will deliver an illustrated lecture at 5 p.m. to- day in Natural Science Auditorium on "Some Japanese Cities." Professor Hall will discuss the origin of some Japanese cities and hold their forms and patterns of the ancient cities have carried through to the modern cities of Japan. Types of towns which will be explained are the market towns, the shrine towns, the temple towns of the feudal age and how they have developed. During the past five years Pro- fessor Hall has been in Japan 'three times, once for a year's study and the other times for a shorter dura- tion. He has published many pamph- lets and monographs about the subject and included among the societies to which he belongs are the American Association of Geog- raphers, the American Oriental So- ciety, the China Institute, the Asi- atic Society of Japan, and the So- ciety for Japanese Studies. Dolufuss Given Fullest Powers Against Nazis VIENNA, July 11. - (P)- As a pre- liminary to a ruthless campaign against Austria's bomb-firing Nazis, Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss today concentrated the full military and police powers of the country in his own hands. The van u m tea oncenr neh- 'Tax Rich,' Voelker's Suggestion State Education Executive Advises Conference In Leading Speech Teachers Must Be Leaders, He States Says Many Children Are Wasting Time Un der Present System By PAUL J. ELLIOTT Advocating higher taxation for the rich to meet Michigan's education problems, Dr. Paul F. Voelker, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, defended the right of every child to get an education in his address yes- terday before the fifth annual Su- mer Educational Conference,meeting for the closing sessions of its two- day meeting. "The wealth of Michigan belongs to the people of Michigan," Dr. Voel- ker said. "We must get the money where it is to be found." He criti- cized the policy of heavy taxation upon small farms and small homes beyond the ability of the people to pay, saying that "someone is making money and the burden should fall upon those who are able to pay." It was Dr. 'Voelker's thesis that such added taxation had become a necessity through the added respon- sibility of present day education. "If America is going to advance the so- cial frontier, education must be there to show the way," he said. "It must prepare the youth of our age for a life in a more complex age than ours." Stresses Changing Role Dr. Voelkerhstressed the changing role "which the educator must play, that of the leader and not the fol- lower." Throughout all history, h said, educators have been in the rear of progress; but now, he 'Indicaed, the time is ripe for a new style of leadership. "Thecivilization which is on the way will bow down to the°' rule of reason.'" "Education must furnish the vision, the method, the plan, and the pro- gram for the new age if it is not to be possessed by a new swarm of life- destroying parasites, Dr. Voelker said, concluding his prophecy that education would advance both in power and prestige. Dr .Voelkerhthen turned to the problem of what he styled "wasted energy, the attempt to make intel- lectual giants out of children that do not have an intellectual heredity." Frankly admitting that "education cannot do much for these under the present system which stresses an in- tellectual development over that of the character," he advised a change in emphasis, "an attempt to produce good citizens instead of intellectual giants." Many Wasting Time As proof of his contention that the vast majority of children are partially wasting their time under the present educational system, Dr. Voelker cited statistics to show that "only about 15 out of 10,000 who enter school are ever truly successful in accordance with the aims of educators in the past. The other 9,985 are partial fail- ures," he said. "If the, development of character were emphasized," Dr. Voelker con- tinued, "it would be possible to pro- duce at least 9,985 good characters and good citizens out of 10,000 whom we are trying to affect in our educa- tional environment. In a new social order the character of our citizens will be of far greater importance than their intellectual capacity. "We shall need to develop such traits as social initiative, social loy- alty, the spirit of co-operation," Dr. Voelker said. "To us, a concern for justice and the rights of the common man shall be more important than the training of our youth to a high degree of discrimination in science, mathematics, or philosophy. With the imminent changes in our civiliz tion, education will need to keep pace at least in preparing our youth for ac- tive participation in the new order which is on the way. Stimulates Individual "So far, education has concerned itself largely with stimulating the in- dividual in his personal development," Dr. Voelker stated. He advanced the theory that the schools of tomorrow must teach co-operation, as opposed to the prevailing method of appealing AMERICAN LEAGUE New York. Detroit. Boston..... Cleveland. Washington St. Louis ... Philadelphia Chicago ..'' W L 47 27 48 29 42 35 .39 36 .........39 39 .31 39 .30 45 '25 51 Pct. .635 .623 .545, .520 .500 .443 .400 .329 Yesterday's Results Detroit 13, Washington 7. New York 9, Cleveland 4. Games Today New York at Detroit. Boston at St. Louis. Washington at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York..... Chicago....... St. Louis...... Pittsburgh..... Boston........ Brooklyn ...... . W L 49 28 48 30 43 32 38 34 39 39 32 45 Pct. .636 .615 .573 .528 .500 .416 T I. _.. _l _1 _I__. I