The Weathier Fair today and tomorrow; somewhat cooler in north to- day and warmer tomorrow. 4,trigacn mm-iusa itj I Editorials Electronics Institute .. . Wasting Time ... Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVI No. 9 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Summer Session Enrollment Hits A Peak Of 5,026 Aimerk Hitting Swamps Nat's Pitchers, 8-3 'Dizzy' With Dean Is Charged Loss As Hubbell First Time In Its 44-Year History That 5000 Mark Is Passed 12 Per Cent Gain Over A Year Ago Education Short Responsible For Total Upward Courses Forcing Enrollment in the Summer Session yesterday passed the 5,000 mark as the total registration reached 5,026. This is the first time in the 44-year history of the session that more than 5,000 students have been enrolled. Last year 4,528 were registered to make a new record at the end of the Session, and at this time last year 4,- 488 had enrolled. The gain amounts to about 12 per cent according to Miss Marian Williams, University statistician. Education short courses, which be- gan this week and attracted 224 per- sons, were responsible for pushing the total enrollment past the 5,000 mark. Most of the gain for the Session as a whole can be accredited to the Graduate School in which 2,765 stu- dents are enrolled, 425 more than a year ago. Enrollment in the education school jumped from 325 to 466 or 43.4 per cent because of the numerous short courses. Engineering studentsin- creased in number from 309 to 339, and music students from 191 to 235. Several schools in the University reported decreased attendance. The literary college dropped from 741 to 680, or 8.2 per cent, and medical school enrollment fell from 271 to 217, a loss of 19..9 per cent. Attendance in other schools this summer is: architecture, 45; law, 154; pharmacy, 22; business administra- tion, 37; and forestry and conserva- sion, 76. Modern China Is Main Topic Of SYmposium Prof. Chang, 3 Chinese Sudents, Present Talks PrecedingReception Civil service, used by English- speaking nations starting with Bri- tain's inauguratibn of the system in 1870, was given to the world by des- potic, medieval China in the first century B.C., Prof. Yuen Z. Chang, of the English department told 125 occidentals and orientals gathered for a symposium on modern China, last night, preluding the reception for foreign students in the League. 'Give And Take' Professor Chang indicated civil service as part of a "give and take" 'between Eastern and Western cul- tures. The West has contributed its conception of religion and democracy to modern China, he said. Tracing the emancipation of women in modern China, Miss V. Y. Ting, '39M, president of the Chinese Students Club, said that Chinese. women now possessed suffrage, and were leading in many professions and occupations. Medicine claims 500 women, she said. China, stagnant for 20 centuries, has been awakened by Western civili- zation to new realization of import- ance of commercial development, Utah Tsao, Grad., said. Shanghai has the world's largest radio station, 10,- 000 miles of railroads built with help of the United States, and 14,000 miles of highways. Second Hand Nationalism Far Eastern nationalism, a "second- hand" nationalism borrowed from the West, is assuming new and greater proportions. That was the consensus of authorities present at another forum on "Nationalism in the Far East," sponsored by the Institute of 'ar Eastern Studies yesterday after- noon in the Union. Dr. Y. Z. Chang of the Oriental Languages department, visiting in- structor from China, told the forum Aldermen Rebuke Mayor - Professor In Water Dispute The mayor of Ann Arbor, Prof. Walter C. Sadler, of the engineering college, today stood rebuked by the Common Council, president of which is Prof. Leigh J. Young, of the For- estry School. The rebuke came when the Coun- cil authorized the city water depart- ment to accept a check of $42,000.OQ regardless of the mayor's stipula- tion that it was payment in full of the city's obligation to the water unit. Alderman Max Krutch was acting president in the absence of Young. The check was payment for the annual service charge to the city. The mayor's stipulation was accom- panied by the reply "Who's writing these checks, you or I?" when one alderman questioned his right to make the stipulation. "That is the condition I write it under," he as- serted. "Paid in full" was written on the check to clarify the fact that the 50 per cent increase in water rates, to cover costs of constructing a new water softener, applied only to water works and not to the service charges. Britain Carves Palestine Area In Three Parts Swift Military Intervention Will Follow Any Racial Strife, She Warnsa LONDON, July 7.-(P)-The Brit- ish government announced its ap- proval tonight of a royal commission report carving ancient Palestine into three new states and warned that swift military intervention would follow any renewal of racial strife in the Holy Land. The cabinet's adoption of the dras- tic plan for splitting Palestine into' separate sovereign, Jewish and Arab states was disclosed in a white paper which accompanied the 400-page re- port of the commission.1 Governs Holy Cities Under a new permanent mandate, Britain would govern the Holy cities of Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Na- zareth and a corridor to the sea. Bitter objections to the plan were expected in Palestine and as she re- leased the long-awaited report of the year-old commission Britain kept troops and a warship in readiness there to stamp out possible disorders. The program for Palestine, which the commission described as a "sur- gical operation," will be submitted shortly to the League of Nations which has the final word as Britain is the administrator of a league man-' date over the country. Special League Meeting A special meeting of the League's permanent mandates commission, to be held July 30 in Geneva. will con- sider the plan and report to the League council for final action. Britain has ruled over the strife- torn Holy Land since 193 under mandate following Turkey's loss of it in the World War. The government in the white pa- per warned hostile elements that "pending establishment of such a scheme, his majesty's government have no intention of surrendering their responsibility for peace, order and good government throughout Palestine. They are in general agree- ment with the commission's recom- mendations in the matter of public security." ft added that military intervention would follow any "serious disorders" in the Holy Land. Today Is Deadline For Sports Entries Today is the deadline for entries in all intramural sports, it was an- nounced yesterday by Randolph W. Webster. An entry blank will be Is Chased In Fourth Lou Gehrig Leads Mates To Victory GRIFFITH STADIUM, Washing- ton, July 7-()-The American League's All-Stars, unloading a bar- rage of basehits at the expense of their foremost pitching foes, rode the crest of a combined heat and hitting wave to decisive triumph today' over the National League in the fifth an- nual charity "Dream Game." Sweltering in 90-degree heat with the rest of a capacity crowd, num- bering 31,391 cash customers, Presi- dent Franklin D. Roosevelt looked on while the Americans shelled six rival pitchers for an 8 to 3 victory, with an attack featuring the long-range fir- ing of Lou Gehrig and his mates of the world champion Yankees. Gehrig, the iron man of baseball, touched off the fireworks with a third inning homer off the Great Dean, with Joe Di Maggio, the sensational Yankee outfielder, on first ease.' This blow gave the Americans a lead they never relinquished, and, as it turned out, caused Dizzy Dean to be charged with his first all-star de- feat as the climax of an. episode that marked his belated, if not actually reluctant appearance on the scene. Three Run Blast A three-run blast in the fourth frame knocked none other than the renowned Carl Hubbellfrom the box and the Americans, aided by Yankee Red Rolfe's two-run triple, gained some measure of revenge for the screwball master's domination of junior league batsmen in the mem-i orial 1934 All-Star game. The climax of the cannonading, came in the sixth at the expense of the Brooklyn fireballer, Van Mungo, as Gehrig drove in two more runs wity- a' double agairist thefence in left-center. Gehrig was tagged out, trying to stretch this towering shot into a three-bagger. It gave him the dis- tinction of batting home exactly half his side's runs. All-told Gehrig and his Yankee mates pounded across seven of the eight American League runs and otherwise dominated the game with the same pulverizing brand of power that carried them to the baseball heights against the Giants last October. One Hit, No Runs To make it all the more evident that New York is the class of the junior circuit, Vernon (Lefty) Gomez was credited with victory as a result of holding the Nationals to a soli- tary single and no runs in the first three innings. It was Gomez's third triumph in four All-Star appearances and marked the fourth victory for1 the Americans in five mid-summer classics. The Nationals matched their rivals; in total hit production, with 13 safe- ties during the course of a free- swinging affair that lasted two hours and a half, but the outfit piloted by Manager Bill Terry of the Giants couldn't produce in the pinches. Joe Medwick, Cardinal clouter and only .400 hitter in either major league, lived up to his reputation by banging out four straight hits, but the best the Nationals could do was collect one run in each of the three innings worked by Tommy Bridges, slender right hander of the Detroit Tigers. Mel (Chief) Harder, Cleveland right-hander and co-holder with Gomez of the "Indian Sign" over National League opposition, dupli- cated the southpaw's fine work by blanking Terry's men in the last three frames, despite yielding five (Continued from Page 3) Big Ed Dudley Leads Golfers In Open Meet CARNOUSTIE, Scotland, July 7.- (A)-Ed Dudley, the big, placid Geor- gian who splits his professional duties between Augusta and Philadelphia, hobbled over wind-swept Carnoustie's "bonny braes" in 70 strokes today to take a two-shot lead in the first round of the British Open golf cham- pionship. Jekyll Praised As Women's Best Garder Prof. Whittemore Delivers Lecture On Four English Amateur Horticulturists Devoted 90 Years To Lifetime Study The late Gertrude Jekyll, of Mun- stead Wood, was the outstanding woman gardener of all time, and per- haps contributed more to the science of gardening than any other person, according to Prof. Harlow E. Whitte- more of the landscape design depart- ment in his Summer Session lecture yesterday. The talk was illustrated by colored slides. Speaking on the subject, "Four English Amateur Gardeners," Prof. Whittemore discussed the work of Miss Jekyll, John Morant, William Robinson and Sir Frank Crisp, all of whom have been instrumental in the development of gardening in Eng- land to the high point it has reached. "Although none of the four ever had any formal training," Professor Whittemore said, "their work shows us the wonderful possibilities incip- ient in the field of gardening." In Unstable Location Gertrude Jekyll, who occupied a lifetime of over 90 years almost sole- ly in gardening study, worked in a singularly unsuitable location, ac- cording to Professor Whittemore, the chalk downs south of London. In spite of this handicap, she spent dec- ades in useful experimentation in her garden at. Munstead Wood. One of the most interesting of her innova- tions, he said, was the color progres- sion scheme, by which flower beds are arranged in a manner similar to notes in P musical scale or melody, for example, in colors ranging from dark blue through pale yellow, white, pink, crimson, scarlet and on to a soft purple. "It might be thought that the crimson and scarlet next to each other would clash," Professor Whittemore noted, "but as a matter of fact the eflect i similar to that achieved in a musical composition, and very striking." Introduced Seasonal Flower Another of Miss Jekyll's introduc- tions to gardening was the seasonal garden, each flower plot being suc- ceeded by a fresh one for each change of season. Miss Jekyll was a pro- lific writer, and also exercised her influence on gardening style through her friends, whom she frequently as- >isted. To illustrate the depth of her study, and her attitude towards her work, Professor Whittemore quoted a remark she once made, "I have been gardening for 50 years and am only just now learning how to do it." The bird and animal statuary with which so many modern gardens are decorated were conceived by Sir Frank Crisp of Frier Park, Professor Whit- temore said, and are only one mani- festation of the remarkable genius of this man who still maintains his gar- den at Frier Park. "The rich par- terre of Frier Park contains many ex- amples of rich and piquant statuary," he said, "as well as miniature moun- tain lakes," while the rock garden,- which he called the finest in the world, is adorned with a model of the Matterhorn with imitation ice and snow and miniature chamois. It is built of great granite boulders from Yorkshire. Plant Trial Ground William Robinson, every corner of whose beautiful garden at Gravetye Manor is a trial ground for plants, according to Professor Whittemore, made himself an authority on every kind of plant grown in the English climate, and is one of the foremost writersonkthe subject of gardens. The best known of his books went 'through more than 25seditions, the proceeds of which he devoted chiefly. to further experimentation. "There are even plants growing on the roof of the garden house, in the cracks between the roofing tiles," Professor Whittemore said. John Morant of Brockhurst Park in New Forest, although not a writer, nonetheless was one of the leading gardening authorities of his day, and contributed greatly to the advance- ment of the art of landscape gar- dening, according to Professor Whit- temore. China's U. S. Court Is Blume's Topic "The American Court in China" will be the subject of tomorrow's lec- ture in the Summer Session series, to be given by Prof. William W. Laboratory Costly Blaze Hits Automotive Shop The photographs above show the smoke as it poured through the roof of the, Automotive Engineering Laboratories adjoining the West Engineering Annex last night and firemen fighting to control the blaze during the most costly fire on campus since the University steam tun- nels caught fire more than a year ago. Firemen extinguished the blaze shortly after their arrival on the scene, but not until heat, smoke, and water had damaged not only the building but costly instruments and machines used in the experiments being carried on inside the building. "Look Out For The Bicycle!" Those Are Orders To Police By Fire From Gas Pump Is Damaged Automotive Engineering Building And Equipment Are Fully Covered By Insurance Sirens And Whistle Bring Large Crowd Amount Of Loss By Blaze, Water Undetermined By Prof. W. E._Lay Fire apparently started by a spark at a gasoline pump caused damages as yet unestimated in the University's Automotive Engineering Laboratories in the West Engineering Annex last night. According to John Stevens of Ann Arbor, a former student now em- ployed in the laboratories to make commercial tests, he had just started the pump shortly after 8 p.m. when a blaze shot up to the roof at the south end of the building. In a few min- utes almost the entire roof was in flames. Considerable Repairs Needed Neither Prof. Walter E. Lay, direc- tor of the Laboratories, nor Herman Grave, University inventory clerk, was able to give either the value of the building and its contents or an estimate of the damage caused by the blaze and the streams of water which followed it, but it was appar- ent that considerable repairs would be needed for the building, and work- men examining the machinery after the fire had been extinguished found that a number of guages and instru- ments had been severely damaged by the heat. Wiring was burnt out on a number of the tests, and engines being used in the work were similarly injured. The fire department's sirens and the University power plant's steam whistle brought a large number of spectators to the scene, an examina- tion of the contents was impeded by crowds of small boys darting about in the interior of the building. Annex Had Former Fire The West Engineering Annex was the scene during spring vacation this year of a fire started by painters' equipment left in the faculty offices on the second floor which were being redecorated, but the damage was slight. In last night's fire the flames did not spread beyond the south end of the Laboratories themselves, but smoke and water filled the adjoining rooms where a number of trucks and automobiles and a large quantity of gasoline were stored. According to Mr. Greve, the build- ing and the equipment in it belonging to the University are fully covered by insurance, but Professor Lay said some time would be needed to deter- mine the expense of reconditioning motors and guages and remaking tests being carried on under contract for outside concerns in the Labora- tories. Another item of cost will be the time needed to set up experiments being carried on by the University again. Sino - apanese troops Clash In Bitter Fray SHANGHAI, July 8.--(Thurs- day)--(!P)-The Domel (Japan- ese) News Agency reported from Peiping today that a spokesman for Japanese military headquar- ters there declared the Chinese forces battling maneuvering Jap- anese troops would be "wiped out" unless they threw down their arms immediately. TOKYO, July 8.-(Thursday)-(P) --The oriental war scene shifted swiftly today from the Soviet Man- choukuo frontier to Fengtai, near Peiping where Chinese and Japanese troops were said to have clashed while the latter carried out secret midnight maneuvers. Numerous casualties on both sides were recounted in Japanese dis- patches, reaching here, and it was, said that artillery, trench mortars and machine guns were used in the City Council Enacts A New Ordinance To Regulate Two-Wheeling Addicts By CLAYTON HEPLER "Look out for the bicycle" is a cry often heard when the life of the party is at his peak, but sometime within the next two weeks those will be orders for the 32 members of the Ann Arbor police department. That's the decision of the common council which passed an ordinance Monday, by a vote of 9 to 1, requiring the registration of every bike in town and codifies a set of rules regulating this mode of traffic. The only objec- tor was Ald. Wirt Masten, who be- lieved that a rule should be inserted requiring all cyclists passing pedes- trians to dismount and walk past. Penalties for violations of the new ordinance provide for a fine of not Mead To Head Education Club FOr Men Here Steve Mead, principal of Central School of Grand Haven, was elected president of the Men's Education Club at an organization meeting held last night in the Union. Bryon G. Smith, head of the de- partment of health and physical ed- ucation of the State Teachers' Col- lege, Statesboro, Ga., was chosen vice-president; Louis Kulcinski, former state superintendent of phys- ical education in Illinois was named more than $50, or imprisonment of not more than 30 days. Just what will be done in the case of minors, who are in the majority among bi- cycle owners, who disregard the law, was not stated. A metal tag, comparable to the automobile license but looking much more like a dog license, will be fur- nished to all those paying the annual fee of 25 cents. The ordinance will become effective 10 days after legal law publication, which will probably be made sometime this week. I: ighlights of the new law which also demands that the two-wheelers abide by the regular city traffic regu- lations, make illegal carrying of more than one person. Tandems, of course, are excepted from this ruling, but it is still debatable whether or not such vehicles will have to pay an added fee. The pedestrian gets the break, the new ruling holds, and bicycles must proceed in single file when passing vehicles or when ridden on the side- walk. He of the hoof has the right of way, while he of the wheels must either get off the sidewalk or take up only one side when the two meet. Lights at night are a new requisite for bikes, thus removing a favorite sport amongst drivers who have here- tofore considered unlighted cycles fair game. To Know Monday If Amelia Is Dead HONOLULU, July 7.-(P)-Admiral O. G. Murfin, directing the search for Amelia Earhart, said today it should be known by mid-afternoon Monday whether the round-the-world