THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1937 THEMIHIANDAIYHUSDY,.UL_1,v93 MAWAN-0 Amelia Shortly Before Her Last Hop NI-City Tennis Meet Is Begun In 6 Divisions Summer Session Students, LeRoy Wier, Sorenson, Favorites In Singles The 17th annual All-City tennisj tournament got under way yesterday in all six divisions on the Palmer Field courts, although the contestants are allowed to play off their matches on any courts in the city. Two Summer Session students, "Hap" Sorenson, defending cham- pion,, and LeRoy Weir, 1935 cham- pion and Great Lakes and Ohio champion, were placed in the opposite halves of the draw. Both men drew byes along with Jack Anderson, J. P. Edmonds, Doug Gregory, Clint Sandusky, H. A. Eaton and A. W. Sempliner. All eight are seeded. Seeded combinations in the men'sE doubles were Dorsey-Angell, Eaton- Gardner, Gregory - Sorenson a n d Weit-Mack. Catherine Saunders, Uni- versity student, and Mrs. May .Lewis, 1936 runner-up, were seeded in the women's singles. Senator Robinson Died As He Lived - -- In The Thick Of Political Battle (Continued from Page I1 a page boy in customary white shirt and black knickerbockers was a strangely contrasting flash of motion as he scampered up to aisle to receive and carry to the desk the formal res- olution of Senate regret that Mrs. Caraway offered. Then, one after another, those who have worked for years with and against Senator Robinson rose and b r i e f l y, sometimes emotionally, praised the dead Senate leader, as a statesman, as an opponent, as a leader and as a friend. "No man ever bore the responsi- bilities of leadership with greater courage, fortitude, patience, fore- sight and wisdom," said Senator Barkley of Kentucky. "May God rest his militant soul." "The Republican members of this body join me in expressing profound regret and sorrow in the passing of Senator Robinson," said Senator Mc- Nary, the Republican leader. A "great citizen, a great senator Amelia Earhart Putnam, globe-girdling aviatrix, and her navigator, Fred Noonan, were warmly received when they stopped at Batavia, Java, Dutch East Indies. Miss Earhart is shown here during a luncheon with Dr. Walter Foote, United States consul general. Naval and coast guard searchers have almost abandoned hope of finding the fliers alive, after disappearance on a flight to Howland Island. Ta] ble Tennis Play Summer Handball Will Begin Today Tournament Starts and a great American," said Senator Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan. Following the great Southern tra- dition of many a statesman before him, Robinson made a law career the mounting block to a career in public office. He served successively as a member of the House, governor of his state and senator. Within a pe- riod of seven weeks, in early 1913, he served as all three. By 1920, he had become a figure so prominent in his party that he presided at its national convention of that year. In 1928, he became his party's nominee for the vice-presi- dency, with Alfred E. Smith. Mean- while in 1922 he became Democratic leader of the Senate, upon the retire- ment from that office of Senator Un- derwood of Alabama. But it remained for the depression to bring the Arkansan really to the fore, in battles with the Hoover ad- ministration over relief, and coopera- tion with it in certain recovery meas- ures. Then, when he became ma- jority leader with the advent of Pres- ident Roosevelt, he found his work really cut out for him. Almost every piece of Roosevelt leg- islation that has been enacted felt the imprint of Robinson's labors. Al- ways aggressive, resourceful in de- bate, dogged and determined he pro- ceeded from one winning battle to another. In debate, he wielded not a rapier but a sledge hammer. Bulky of body, powerful of voice he was a familiar figure standing at the first desk of the first row on the Demcratic side of the chamber, fighting the battles of the New Deal. Not gifted at the witty repartee in which some of his colleagues delight, his defensive weapon was a knack for withering opposing arguments with scorn, with sarcasm piled higher and higher as he deliberately proceeded from one word to the next. Of all the battles that he won, perhaps, he was proudest of strug- gling with and conquering a temper that in the old days would flare into action at the slightest provoca- tion. Once he knocked a fellow club- member down at the tee of Washing- ton Country Club and was expelled from the club for doing so. Many members of the Senate watched him fight his own anger. They saw him, involved in a bitter debate, standing with fists clenched until the knuckles were white, strug- gling for control of himself. An "easy, Joe!" from his close friend, Senator Harrison of Missis- sippi, was a frequent 'helper. In later years, that battle won, too, his fighting disposition was tem- pered with a kindliness, and an amia- bility which brought him dozens of friends that his earlier belligerency had alienated. He was a leader in every sense of the word, and jealous of his preroga- tives as such. Once, not long ago, a routine motion was in order. Bark- ley made it. Robinson, entering from the cloakroom, shouldered him aside and repeated the motion. His friends chuckled and loved him the more for such things. Always he lived quitely. For years, he and Mrs. Robinson occupied a small apartment, just across the Cap- itol plaza and scarcely two hundred yards from the Senate chamber. Sometimes the duties of his office were such that for weeks he got no farther from the Capitol than the apartment and no farther from the apartment than the Capitol. SPECIAL 500 Sheets CLEANSING TISSUE M L19Ec MILLER DRUG STORE 727 NORTH UNIVERSITY PHONE 9797 relation between the sensory pro- cesses, especially the auditory, and the muscular movements. Then, with the coming of the teeth, developes the problem of differentiating between certain consonants such as f, v, and th. The need for a detailed understand- ing of this whole development was shown by Professor Muyskens to be closely related with speech defects, because any kind of physiological disturbance, such as injury or dis- ease, during any part of this period, may affect the speech mechanism. This effect will be conditioned by the time of its influence and not, by the kind of disease, so that a treatment of the child for a speech disorder must begin with the earliest of the disturbed processes and proceed reg- ularly through the subsequent normal stages of speech development. Additional value in the biolinguis- tic approach, Professor Muyskens said may be seen in the fact that such treatment not only can rehabilitateI the speech defective as a normal speaker but also, because of the close integration of physiological and psy- chological processes, can often bring about a normal mental development of a hitherto mentally retarded child. The third Institute lecture of the week will be that by Dr. Zellig Harris of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Harris will speak at the luncheon conference today at the Michigan Union on the topic, "The Alphabet and its Relation to the Morphologic Structure of Semitic." First round play in the table tennis tournament will1 off today at the Intramural building, it was anounced by dolph W. Webster. A field of 17 entries will duced to nine with the comple this afternoon's play. All m must be played today. Following is the complete todays matches together wi time and table number: Miller vs. Tooker, 4:15, tab Key vs. See, 4:15, table 2 Andrews vs. Laut, 4:45, tab Grant vs. Sandusky, 4:45, Panzarella vs. Huntington table 1 Owens vs. Stavitsky, 5:15,t Williams vs. Hinkle, 4:30, t Schiessler, bye Hess, bye Welty, bye. The annual handball tournament annual for Summer Session students will be run get underway today and tomorrow Sports with five first round matches sched- y Ran- uled for play in the courts of the In- tramural Sports building, it was an- be re- nounced by Randolph W. Webster. tion of The matches will reduce the field natches of 13 to eight contestants. Three of the men drew byes, while the rest list of must play their matches at the time th the scheduled. Following is the complete list of ble 1 matches, together with the time and number of court: ble 1 Thursday, July 15 table 2 Ros svs. Kilburn, 4:15, court 1. ,5:15, Naeseth vs. Olson, 4:15, court 9. Lathrop vs. Fuqua, 4:15, court 7. table 2 See vs. Estep, 4:15 cour,t 3. table 1 Friday, July 16 Sandusky vs. Andrews, 4:15, court 1 Byes Gates, Andrews and Scheissler. I SPECIAL LOT SPORT SHIRTS Reduced to One-Half Price FOR QUICK SELLING irt in this lot costs you over 50c - Values to $1.50 VAN BOVEN, Inc. I i III Have You SHIRT $1.95 each --3 for $5.65 Regularly priced from $3.00 to $5.00 SPECIAL LOT Imported & Native at these Cotton Flannels SHARPLY Broadcloths REDUCED Fine Chambrays Linens PRICES oxford Cloths The price concessions indicated are exceptionally generous and in every case apply to standard VAN BOVEN merchandise of dependable quality and acknowledged correctness. I 11 LOST Something? Find it ...... .....:n :: .;:;:. ; ::... ~~........... .........::.. through I III I III DATILY CLAS SIFTED ADVERTISING I II ".....M - mmmak_ ---111