PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4,1937 i 0 Murphy To Call house, Senate Into Session Confers With Schroeder, Nowicki; Will Send All Members Telegrams LANSING, Aug. 3.-(P)-Governor Murphy and the House and Senate leaders agreed tonight to call the Legislature into session again Thurs- day, in the hope of partially com- pleting the administration program that collapsed last week. Murphy conferred with Speaker George A. Schroeder, of the House, and Lieutenant Governor Leo J. Now- icki, presiding officer of the Senate. It was decided to send telegrams to all members immediately asking them to reconvene at 2 p.m. Thursday. It will then be up to the Legislature to decide whether to go back to work on the Governor's bills or to order a legal adjournment of the confused special session. "Should Act On Legislation" "Personally I think all pending leg- islation should be acted upon," the Governor said. "If it is determined that the Legislature will not come back except to adjourn legally that course will have to be accepted, but it will mean I will have to order another extra session shortly. "It is the duty of every member to vote on each of these issues. It would save money and would prge the Senate of an illegal act, however, if a constitutional adjournment is or- dered." Attorney General Raymond W. Starr submitted an opinion holding that the extra session which was de- serted by the Senate last Friday still is in existence. He held that the only way it can be ended, and the only way the $200,000 a year snow removal bill for northern Michigan can be made valid is for a quorum of both houses to return and adopt a concur- rent adjournment resolution. 17 Senators Will Return Nowicki declared he is sure 17 sen- ators will return to accept, an ad- journment resolution which previous- ly had been adopted by the House.- Initial House action would safeguard the Senate against the submission of other measures. The Lieutenant- Governor said the Senators probably will want to know that nothing but adjournment is to be considered, be- cause they won't return "on a wild goose chase." Meanwhile the mock session of the Legislature took on a more precise air. For the first time since the Senate walked out last Friday night and left the House in session, the Lieutenant-Governor presided. Only three senators-John C. Wickstrom, Democrat; Norway, and Tom Burke and James A. Murphy, Detroit-were present. Nowicki declared the ses- sion adjourned until Wednesday. In the House 27 members answered the roll call. Bengals Earn Final Victory In Ed League The Tigers finally clinched first place in the Education League yes- terday afternoon by virtue of a 19 to 3 victory over the cellar Indian club. In the other game of the day, the Panthers, who ended up in second position, bowled over the Bees 3 to 1, leaving the losers buried in the basement., Final standings give the Tigers six victories for a 1.000 average and the top position. The Panthers pulled in with three wins and three loses, stay- ing a neck ahead of the Bees and In- dians who both won two while drop- ping four contests. In the University League the league-leading Cards prepared for their Thursday contest with the Chemists by knocking off the Cubs, 11-5.. The basement Chem men up- set the Faculty after eight innings, 15 to 13 in the day's other match. The standings in the league show the Cards have five victories and one defeat while the Cubs and Faculty share the runner-up hole with three wins and three loses apiece. Chemists{ and Yanks are cooling off ih the base- ment with two victories and four de- feats. GOES TO STATE DEPARTMENT WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.-(P)-Sec- retary Hull appointed Frederick Lar- kin of Flint, today to be chief of the office of foreign service building in the State department. He will have' charge of constructing and maintain- ing embassies, legations and con- sulates throughout the world. This Week 25c PHILLIPS MILKI MAGNESIA TABLETS' E The News Of The World As Illustrated In Associated Press Pictur L II Summer Camps Aid In Study Of I Child Growth The use of childrens' summer camps to study the psychology of child development and methods of child education, with both under- graduates and graduate University students serving as counsellors has proven eminently successful, Prof. Willard C. Olson of the School of Education said in a lecture yesterday at the University High School audi- torium. At two camps provided by the W. W. Kellogg foundation in coopera- tion with the University, students are given practice in leadership and of- fered responsibilities which could not possibly be afforded if they were not spending 24 hours a day with the youngsters. The training thus af- avour II, T.O.M. forded is of great value, Professor .. Ranger (left) Olson said. ular course with Counsellors are rotated into all but a few specialized jobs so that their experiences are varied at these two Harold S. Vanderbilt's snub-nosed Ranger won her second consecutive race from Ende Sopwith's challenger, in the latest of the yachting series for possession of America's Cup shown here after it passed the Endeavour, rounded the final marker of the 30-mile triang two and a half miles to spare. Detroit Becomes Archdiocese As Mooney Is Made An Archbishop START TO REFUND FEES LANSING, Aug. 3.-(P)-The State Liquor Control Commission today be- gan the task of refunding almost $2,- 000,000 to municipalities as their coeducational camps, which support three three week periods apiece each summer and give vacations to a total of over 1,000 specially selected chil- dren. Daily behavior journals, case studies and classroom discussions are made of each case by the student- counsellors, he declared. - - ----.------,-.-. -*~ DETROIT, Aug. 3.--(P)-DetroitPius XI on May 31, his eightieth share of State Liquor license fees. Arriving in New York aboard the liner Bremen, Mrs. Bruno Richard Hauptmann, widow of the executed Lindberg kidnaper, still protested her husband's innocence and declared she has uncovered "new evi- dence." She was accompanied by her son, Manfried, 4. They are shown with Julius B. Braun, head of a private detective bureau, who met them at quarantine. became the seat of the seventeenth birthday, were formally effectuated Catholic Archdiocese in the United when the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Stephen S. States today and the most Rev. Ed- Woznicki, notary, intoned three Papal ward Mooney was enthroned as Mich- bells during the ceremony in the igan's first Archbishop in ceremonies Church of the Blassed Sacrament. which invoked all the pomp and sol- The first proclaimed the division emn pageantry of the Catholic of the old Diocese of Detroit and the Church. creation of the new Diocese of Lan- sing, composed of 15 counties. The history-making jurisdictional The second proclaimed the new changes will continue tomorrow, Archdiocese of Detroit, composed of when Archbishop Mooney installs the the entire state of Michigan, separat- most Rev. Joseph H. Albers, now aux- ing the Lower Peninsula dioceses iliary Bishop of Cincinnati, as Bishop ofsDetroithLansing and Grand Rap- of the new Lansing diocese. ids from the Archdiocese of Cincin- nati and removing the Upper Penin- Five of the ten Archbishops and 41 sula Diocese of Marquette from the of the 58 bishops who participated Milwaukee Archdiocese. in today's ceremony will be in Lan- The third released Archbishop sing tomorrow for the installation, Mooney from his obligations as which will be the first official act bishop of the Rochester (N.Y.) dio- of Michigan's archbishop. cese and appointed him metropolitan The changes promulgated by Pope of the new province. SPECIAL This Week 40c GEM BLADES 25c Pkg.. MILLER DRUG STORE 727 North University Phone 9797 This Week SPECIA L 25c BLUEJAY CORN PLASTER 19c, MILLER DRUG STORE 727 NORTH UNIVERSITY PHONE 9797 1'. Brilliant 20th century floodlights glorify the old stones of West- minster Abbey, some of which date to 1080. The recent Coronation was its 36th, but its first to see such innovations as radio and newsreels. There's A Lot Of Jekyll-Hyde AmongGolfers It's a Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde business -playing golf. That's the way Mrs. Ray S. Fel- lows of Tulsa, Okla., president of thef Women's Trans-Mississippi Golf as- sociation, looks at it. - Even your best friend may make the worst kind of a golf partner, Mrs. Fellows thinks, while your most ob- jectionable enemy may be the best of opponents. And Mrs. Fellows is not alone in her feeling. It's all a matter of consideration for the other fellow. The same people who lord it overI a waiter in a public dining place bawl out their caddy on the club course. They expect him to wade into! marshes and deep woods to find a ball they couldn't hope to find themselves -and then lambast him publicly be-7 cause he doesn't. All he can do is stand and take it.; The people who make the worst; losers in poker games insist on talking or stalling until they unnerve everyr other player at the table. Women Poor Sports That is especially true of women. For women, in general, are poor sports on the golf links. They waste many hours in actual tournament play deciding which clubI to use-and practicing with those clubs until their partners and oppon- ents are ready to take advantage of the nearest sit-down facilities. They can't seem to understand that "keeping out of line" means just that -staying in a position entirely out of range while their opponent is mak- ing her putt. (That includes not standing in back of the player). Observe The Honor In spite of all the rules and regu- lations about "observing the honor" Roosevelt Hits Rigid Dollar Stabilization WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.- (A) - President Roosevelt argued today that any rigid formula for stabilizing the dollar would be dangerous at present in view of the "rapidly shift- ing international scene." The Chief Executive expressed this view in a letter to Senator Thomas (Dem., Okla.) opposing Thomas' bill to give the federal reserve board power to regulate currency values. The Thomas measure would em- power the board to adjust the dol- lar's value so as to maintain stable rices. The board would be author- ized to stabilize the dollar at a level it deemed desirable. 50-Yard Back Stroke Won By Morgenroth Victory in the 50 yard back stroke Monday afternoon with a 36 second showing left Bill Morgenroth far ahead of the crowd in the all-campus swimming meet with 620 points. Lee Lyons, who pulled in second in the back-stroke event, also holds sec- ond place in the summarized stand- ings with 460 points, while Jack Flow- ers, who was third in Monday's con- test, trails the two leaders with 340 markers. Today's event will be the 100 yard free style race. It is scheduled to take place in the Intramural pool at 4:30 p.m. SPECIAL This Week ENVELOPES REGULAR 10c package \HaveYo LOST Someth ing Fi~nd it C.. ... ........................ \through DAfL P DETSN CLASS IFIE 11 III