I The Weather Generally fair today, cooler; tomorrow generally fair, some- what warmer. i:l P l r M1it Iga Alp :41lattg Editorials Is Teaching A Profession.. High School Band Clini ... Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVI. No. 23 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1937 SIC PRICE FIVE CENTS i I i Chinese Draw Soldiers From Peiping Area; Pewee Is Likely Situation In North China Changes Complexion As Hatreds Cool Sino-Japanese Pact Signed By Leaders PEIPING, July 23.-(P)-Chinese and Japanese hatreds in north China, at boiling point for 16 days, appeared tonight to have cooled enough to make war in the near future unlikely. Withdrawal of the Chinese 37th division from the Peiping area changed the complexion of a situa- tion which has been close to war since soldiers of that unit and Jap- anese first clashed 10 miles west of Peiping the night of July 7. Meets Urgent Condition It met Japan's most urgent condi- tion for restoration of peace and marked beginning of Chinese fulfill- ment of the latest of the four-year series of local, military agreements by which the Japanese army has steadily strengthened its power in north China. The Japanese assert this agree- I ment was made between their high command and General Sung Cheh- Yuan, head of the semi-autonomous north China regime. They said he ac- cepted its terms orally Sunday at Tientsin, then confirmed them in writing Monday at Peiping. The Jap- anese version said it provided for: 1. Elimination of persons "imped- ing" Sino-Japanese relations. 2. Complete suppression of Com- munists. 3. Stricter control of anti-Japanese organizations and anti-Japanese ed- ucation.' 4. Evacuation of the 37th division of General Sung's 29th army, which the Japanese said was hostile to them. Accept Sung Pact Japanese reports said the central Chinese government had accepted General Sung's pact. At Nanking, however, officials said the Nanking government had not even seen the pact and could not have approved it. Experienced observers believed the north China situation still held the seeds of grave trouble. They point- ed out Japan's military strength there had been more than doubled, while there was no assurance of suc- cess in future negotiations seeking settlement of deep-rooted Chinese- Japanese clashes of interest. 15 Are Killed As Insurgents Besiege Madrid 20 Wounded As Capital Is Shelled After Two-Week Lull In Bombardment MADRID, July 23.-(P)-Newly shattered buildings a n d blood- splashed pavements today reminded Madrid that it is still besieged and within range of enemy cannon despite recent successful thrusts of its de- fenders. After two weeks free from bom- bardment, while the government of- fensive bit into insurgent lines west of Madrid, the capital was heavily shelled twice in 24 hours. The city counted 15 killed and 20 injured, many in the squares and main avenues of the city. Workmen scrubbed at red stains on the pave- ment and cleared away rubble. Alcala street and Cibeles Square took the brunt of the first bombard- ment, while the second sent several hundred shells along Granvia and the Chamberi section near the United States Embassy. Including casulaties in other bom- bardments 15 miles f!om Madrid and in Toledo Province, a total of about 70 dead and 150 wounded civilians was added to the war's toll. West of Mardid an insurgent at- tempt at a counteroffensive, designed to smash the government's new sa- lient roughly 15 miles from the capi- tal, appeartd to have spent most of its force. One attack was rolled back The insurgents continued pounding away at the eastern side of the sa- lient-which sticks out like a thumb pointing southward-with Villanueva George's Only Duty Is Keeping WomenFrom Union'sFrontDoor Caine In From South Lyonf Farm 17 Years Ago To t Guard Entrance t By JAMES A. BOOZER h That "George".has a surname, and g that it is Johnson, is lost in a happy d wave of cordiality that exists between t him and thosuands of Michigan men. George has been the doorman at t the Union, summer and winter, since the building was opened 17 years ago. 0 He is 76 years old and has just as L much fun, he says, as he did 50 years h ago. h( .His one and only duty is to keep i women from entering the front door. 1 "It's a men's club," he says. "If women were allowed to enter the t front doors it would be just a hotel." l1 His method of keeping women from i the front entrance is to politely lift his cap and ask them to take the side entrance. If they refuse to go around there's nothing to do but let them enter. Good nature is his stock-in- trade, and a lot of it is required for the job. George seldom loses his temper, but once he was ruffled. A man and wife, guests in the Union, were descending toward the front doors on their way to State St. The doorman doffed his P cap to the pair and asked the man to take the lady out the side entrance. He simply took George by the shoul- ders, shoved him aside, and said, "We're going through here." Slightly irked, George picked upe the fellow iquietly and laid him neat- ly upon E table near the entrance. c When the man had scrambled to his E la S General Motorst Proving Track ' i Will Be Visitedr m ti Eighth Session Excursiont Goes To Milford Today p To Tour Laboratory The eighth Summer Session excur- sion today will go to Milford for a visit of the General Motors provingi grounds. Reservations were to haveC been niade yesterday. The party to visit the 1,268-acre laboratory for testing automobiles speed and endurance will' leave at 8 a.m. from Angell Hall, to return atw 2 p.m.t More than 165 tests are applied onI all kinds of road surfaces, including mud, brick, gravel ,tar-treated sur-p faces, and concrete. Engineer-guides will conduct the party through theg shops and garages equipped for measuring vibration, brake efficiencyc and steering effort.o Special points of interest are thep four-mile concrete loop where alle makes of motor cars, including Euro-b pean, are tested for speed and endur-i ance, the "bath-tub," a depressedp piece of co crete built to test effectss of water on moving automobiles, and the two straightaway concrete roads. The ninth in the series will be heldn July 28, when Greenfield Village at Dearborn will be toured.t Minor Tremors Continuing To Shake Alaska FAIRBANKS, Alaska, July 23.-(P)f -Minor tremors continued to shake 1interior Alaska today after a sharp Searth shock yesterday broke liquor bottles and other merchandise and caused six-inch to one-foot cracks in the earth. Dr. Erwin H. Bramhall, University of Alaska scientist, said today's tre- mors indicated the earth fault was readjusting itself. He said the uni- versity seismograph has registered1 more than 80 quakes since the first sharp one early yesterday. , A plane party which flew above the Black Rapids glacier, about 1259 imiles southeast of here, said the quakes had no apparent effect on thel forward movement cf that ice-river, but that falling rock had buried 2,000 feet of highway. f Gov. Murphy Signs $300,000 Park Bill - LANSING, July 23.-(P)-Governor b Murphy signed today a bill approp- a riating $300,000 for additions to the eet he had considered the error of is ways, and followed his wife toward he side doors. Students are not as wild today as hey once were, especially during pro- R ibition, he says. Students and uests at the Union invited him ownstairs for a "swig" three or four imes a week in those days, but he asn't had that many invitations in he whole time since repeal. He came to the Union after tiring f working a 200-acre farm at South yon, 14 miles from here. He says he ias not lost a single day's work since e started guarding the men's build- i ng from women visitors daily between o 0 a.m. and 5 p.m. S The Union doorman has a lot of o ime for memories as he stands at the a eaded glass doors. He used to come s n from the farm on week-ends to race (Continued on P9¢e 3)>n iO Discussion Of f b Greek. 'Mutes g Is Concluded re Prof. Sturtevant D r a w s a Pronunciation Evidence t From Ancient Tongues s d Concluding his presentation of the in vidence for the pronunciation of the tr lassical Greek "rough mutes," Prof.c E. H. Sturtevant of Yale University t ast night delivered the second of a p eries of two lectures sponsored by t he Linguistic Institute. f That the external evidence, which s provided by a study of loan-words, s s pretty shaky was readily admitted l t the outset by Dr. Sturtevant, who t n his first lecture had offered the s naterial which supplies, as he said, sl ;he conclusive proof. The theory then ubstantiated and last night sup- t orted with supplementary evidence I s that the rough mutes, chi, theta, nd phi, were pronounced as c, t, or p,k with a following h. Use "C" for Chi Dr. Sturtevant's first contention nvolved the way the Romans wrote Greek words. They used c, pro- nounced as k, for the Greek chi, and p for the Greek phi. Although they might have used c for chi anyway, ;ince there was no Latin spirant cor- responding to that k sound, yet they e would not have used p for phi, for t they had the symbol for f available. Therefore the Greek phi must have w represented an aspirate p, that is, a t p followed by the h sound. f Besides one. or two additional ar- a guments based upon Latin and Greek E relationships Dr. Sturtevant usedt considerable evidence adduced from s other languages of the Hellenistic and post-Hellenistic periods. He foundu evidence in Persion loan-words, for b instance, and also in Indic borrow-a ings, where the Greek chi, theta, andp phi are always represented by theu symbols for voiceless aspirates. t Evidence May Arise Although possible ftLire evidence1 may arise in a study of Greek words t in Egyptian suggested Dr. Sturtevantt that study is yet to be made. But 1 a strong argument is available, he added, in Coptic. In that language,I where the words are run togetherv in writing, the Greek chi, for example,t is used to represent the combination of a final k plus the initial h of ther next word. The final evidence was drawn from Armenian, which in the 6th century used aspirate signs to represent the Greek rough mutes. $20,000 Is Damage t As 11 Boxcars Burnf EATON RAPIDS, July 23.-(P)- Eleven freight cars of a Michigan Central train were turned into a huge' bonfire today following a derailment here. The flames, fed by gasoline from three tank cars, destroyed a dwell- ing adjoining the right of way. The occupants, Heber Hamlin, Mrs. Al- bert Busick and Mrs. Busick's daugh, ter, escaped uninjured. Transients riding the freight train assisted townspeople in removing the fur- nishings. The Grand Rapids-Jackson branch of the valley division was blocked for seven hours. D. J. Hackett, of Jack- son, the division superintendent, said the loss would be at least $20,000. CREAMERY STRIKE ENDED Problems Of Reading Are 0 o MeetinwTopieh t o Round Table Conference t On Methods Of Teaching S Begins Here Monday w p; Discussion Is Opend To All InterestedN o A round table conference on read- a ng problems of teachers, which is l pen to all students in the Summer ession, and sponsored by the School f Education will start Monday and ddjourn Friday in the University high chool. Emphasis will be placed on the ewer materials and the newer meth- ds of instruction as well as on diag- iosis and treatment of reading dif- iculties of students, according to a ulletin issued recently. The conference is intended specifi- ally for school people who are strug- ling with the practical phases of the roblem of teaching pupils who are etarded in reading, the bulletin said. There are no requirements for ad- nission to the conference other thane n interest in reading problems. The° ound table will enable those in at-d endance to discuss case studies andn trutinize progress reports of chil-a ren enrolled in the reading sectionn n the Secondary School Clinic of' he Summer Session.r Among visiting lecturers for thee onference are Prof. Ernest Horn ofF he State University of Iowa, and9 rof. Louise Farwell Davis of the Na-I ional College of Education. FacultyI members participating are Prof. Clif-s ord Woody, Prof. L. W. Keeler, Prof.a Willard Olson, Prof. O. W. Stephen-s on, Prof. Francis D. Curtis, Prof. Ra-r eigh Schorling, Prof. Stuart A. Cour- is, all of the education school, andf ?rof. Louis Eich and Prof. John Muy- kens of the speech department. r There are no fees of any kind fort he conference. Schoolboy Rowee Banished After Futile Attempts DETROIT, July 23.-(P)-Lynwood Schoolboy) Rowe, the Detroit Tig- rs' ailing pitcher, will hurl no more his season. Manager Mickey Cochrane, who watched Rowe's futile efforts against he Philadelphia Athletics Thursdaya rom the press box, said today after a conference with acting Manager Del Baker and Coach Cy Perkins that the Schoolboy probably will leave soon for his home in El Dorado, Ark. The three Tiger leaders said they were convinced that a sore arm is bothering Rowe, who yielded five hits and five runs in the one inning he pitched against the A's. He has been uneffective in his other appearances this year and once visited a specialist. The final decision on sending Rowe to his home until next spring's training season will be made by Wal- ter O. Briggs, president and owner of the American League Club. Cochrane indicated also that Briggs will be called up to determine whether the Schoolboy will be asked to undergo an operation. Tigers, A's Break Even In Twin Bill DETROIT, July 23.-(P)-Detroit and Philadelphia broke even in their twin bill today, the Athletics over- whelming the Tigers, 16 to 4, in the first game and losing the second, 9 to 8 in the 11th inning. The A's collected 16 hits off of four Bengal hurlers-Auker, Coff- man, Rowe and Russell-in the op- ener, while Detroit got to Kelley for only six. Philadelphia went into the lead in the second inning and kept in front easily. In the seventh Wally Moses hit a home run with the pitcher scoring ahead of him. Charley Gehringer got a round trip in the night-cap. Albaladejo's Death Accident, Jury Says Coroner Edwin C. Ganzhorn last ight announced that after an inquest f almost an hour a coroner's jury ad reached a verdict last night that he death of Jose Albaladejo, 9 year ld son of Prof. Jose M. Albaladejo of he Spanish department, was the re- ult of an unavoidable accident. The jury's decision was that there was no negligence involved on the part of either Jesse Tomlinson, 47 ears old, of Dixboro, whose opened loor flung the boy from his bicycle ,s he rode passed the parked car, or' Mrs. William M. Couper, 28 years old,I )f 1604 Ferndale Ave., driver of the ar which passed over his body as it ay in the street. Candid Camera Fans Welcome At Union Dance Recognition Of Best Shot Will Be Given At League Next Week An opportunity for candid camera enthusiasts to try their skill will be offered to students at the regular dance to be held from 9 p.m. to mid- night tonight in the Union ballroom, according to Phyllis Miner, '39, chair- man of Saturday dances. Pictures of anything in the ball- room, orchestra, dancers or bystand- ers, may be taken, Miss Miner said. Recognition for the best shot will be given at next Saturday's dance in the League by the Summer Session League Council. Snaps should be sent to the League next week as soon as they are developed. Students are specially urged to submit unusual pictures of dancers. Charlie Zwick's orchestra will play for the dance, and "Night Ride" and "Image of You" will be featured numbers. Refreshments may be ob- tained in the Union taproom, which is only open to women when dances are held. Another usual feature of the week- end dances, provided by the Council, are the dance assistants. Those se- [ected for tonight's dance by Miss Miner are: Della Gardner, Mary Calwell, Betty Hassell, Betsey An- derson, Amelia Perkie, Laura Jane Zimmerman, Eleanor Reed. Kathleen Clifford, Katherine Kerr, Almo Schock, Peggy Norris, Mar- jorie Wenhem, Phyllis Cozart, Eva Goldman, Hope Hartwig, Janet Al- lington, Jean Bonisteel, Jean Geyer, ona Thornton, Barbara Bradfield and Miss Miner. Guldahl Takes Back Remarks About British Texas Students On Tour Make ( Stopover Here A University edition of Parnassus n wheels parked on the campus long nough to hold its daily classes yes- erday. Thursday evening more than 50 tudents from West Texas State A [eachers College drew their motor aravan to a halt next to the southern ranch of the University Hospital, itched tents on the lawn and pre- >ared a two night bivouac. They are ust at the beginning of a six weeks' n our of the eastern part of the United States and Canada, many of them aking full credit courses en route. Yesterday Prof. Calvin O. Davis of he School of Education lent his ervices to the party for their class in R dministrative education. to The party is made up mostly of stu-a ents but includes several faculty a nen from the Teachers' College as t12 well, and will continue on to Niagara C 1alls, Toronto, Montreal, Quebec, New England, New York, Philadelphia, se Washington and back home to Texas. bi This is the first year in which the innual trip has been made in the t ast. v Nine passenger cars, a truck and a p itchen trailer make up the expedi- ion. Food is all cooked by the camp- rs themselves. Running water was g 'urnished for their stay on the cam- A pus by a hose connected with a fire m iydrant. w p Sayles, Chorus, To Be Featured m; s In 2ndVespers in le Program On Library Steps r Followed By Nineteenth u Carrillon Concert i The second Vespers service will be c held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow on thet Library terrace. The Summer Ses- l sion Chorus under the direction of t Prof. David Mattern, of the music a school, will lead the assembly in five hymns, and the Rev. R. Edward Sayles of the Baptist Church will give c he address. b After aninvocation by Dr. Edward i W. Blakeman, counselor of religious s education, the assembly will sing "Ev- Nf entides," "Laudes - Domini," and m "Mile's Lane." Reverend Sayle's mes- v sage will follow The Chorus, with Leo Luskin as t accompanist, and Warren Foster, h soloist, will present two spirituals, C "Jubilee," and "Go Tell It On The s Mountains." n After the assembly sings "Seren- F ity," Dr. Blakeman will offer a bene- p diction to close the meeting. The 19th Summer Session carillon concert will follow the Vespers ate 8:30 p.m. Prof. Wilmot F. Pratt, car- N illonneur, will include three hymns in the program which will include Je-s rome Kern's "Old Man River."', Cool Air Starts Rout Of July's f 2nd Heat Waveh CHICAGO, July 23.--(P)-Cool air a began a rout of July's second heato wave today and brought a promise oft generally comfortable weather east of the Rockies. High temperatures had reached their peaks during the past three days on the plains. All the affected areas except the southern plains, said J. R. Lloyd, forecaster at the Chicago station of the weather bureau, were expected to cool off by tomorrow. Lloyd explained that the change al- ready had begun to matnifest itself in the northwest portion of the north' central states, sending thermometer readings lower in parts of the Da- kotas, Minnesota, Nebraska, .Iowa, Wisconsin and upper Michigan. The cooler air, riding along with sho "ers in many places, the forecas-. ter said, should spread eastward and southward Saturday, reaching as far as St. Louis to the south and Ohio and the lower Great Lakes area on the east.+ 36 Police Students G Finish 'Curriculum' WASHINGTON, July 23.-(A)- Thirty-six police "students" recruit- ed throughout the United States last April for a 12-week's course in crime fightin rwill be graduated tomorrow laims Threat )f Court Bill Vade Tribunal Vlore Liberal dministration Speaker Cites Three Decisions Influenced By Debate ' arkley Opposed To Early Adjournment WASHINGTON, July 23.- (Pl-The oosevelt Administration contended day that its defeated court bill was partial success in that it induced e Supreme Court to interpret the onstitution more liberally. A spokesman for the President him- lf told newspapermen that since the ll was proposed, the Court, feeling e influence of the ensuing contro- ersy, had reversed itself on vital Dints. Renew Administration Plea In addition, while a restless Con- ress talked of adjournment in mid- ugust, or earlier, he renewed the ad- inistration's plea for enactment of age' and hour legislation, a farm rogram and a housing bill before the d of the session. If Congress should adjourn with- ut disposing of these measures, he lade it clear that the President is re- rving a decision on calling a na- onal legislature into special session a October to attend to them. Senator Barkley, the majority ader, outlined a program for the emainder of the session and predict- d that Congress will not adjourn ntil the measures are enacted. Besides the new court bill now be- g drafted by the Senate Judiciary ommittee, the list included the wage our and housing measures and a bill o plug holes in the tax laws. Bark- ey did not include the farm bill, or he reorganization of the government sked by President Roosevelt. Garner Continues Efforts Meanwhile, Vice-President Garner ontinued his efforts to close the ugly reach which the Court Bill opened ni the ranks of Democrats. At his uggestion,kSenator Burke (Dem., eb.), a leading opponent of the neasure, called on President Roose- elt. In support of his contention that he controversy over the court bill ad brought a new trend in Supreme ourt decisions, Mr. Roosevelt's pokesman cited three decisions an- ounced by the high tribunal since eb. 5, when the Court Bill was pro- )osed. Reverse Narrow Conception The decisions on the Social Se- urity Act, he said, reversed a narrow onception of the federal spending ower enunciated in the prior deci- ion invalidating the Agricultural kdjustment Act. The decision upholding the Wagner Labor Relations Act, he added, re- versed last year's decision on the Guffey Coal Act and greatly broad- eed the power of Congress in the ield of commerce. Lastly, he cited the decision up holding the Washington Minimum Wage Law as reserving the decision of a, year ago on a similar New York aw and entailing a new conception f the due process clause as applied to the states. Successor To Sen. Robinson Is Nominated Gov. Bailey Made Choice Of State Committee; No PrimaryTo Be Held LITTLE ROCK, Ark., July 23.-(R) -Overriding demands from some factions that a special primary be called, the Democratic State Com- mittee today nominated 42-year-old Gov. Carl E. Bailey to be Joseph T. Robinson's successor in the United States Senate. He will enter the special election which he himself will call, probably for Sept. 14, to fill the vacancy Traditionally, Democratic nomina- tion to major office in this state is tantamount to election. Whether Bailey will be opposed in the special election, by a Republican, or by fel- CHICAGO, July 23.-(")-Ralph Guldahl, America's National Open Golf champion, the main speaker on criticism of British sportsmanship among the recently returned U.S. Ryder Cup squad, said today his re- marks had been misinterpreted. Guldahl, with the other members of the squad which trounced the Brit- ish Ryder cuppers but failed to do anything nearly as well as expected in the British Open Title tournament, was requested in a telegram from George Jacobus, president of the Pro- fessional Golfers' Association of America, to wire him an expression of regret over anything said reflect- ing on British sportsmanship. "The British P.G.A., and the Brit- ish golfers treated us wonderfully," Guldahl, competing in theChicago open tournament said. "I still think the galleries did things which were not sportsmanlike, but that's likely to happen anywhere. My statements mayhave given the wrong impres- sion." Gene Sarazen said he had no com- plaint over treatment in Great Bri- tain, andrdid not say that he had no desire to play abroad again. Prepare For Sale Of Seized Property tI I I E Monkeys Break Loose; Go Down Hospital Wall Havoc was caused last night at the University Hospital when three mon- keys escaped from the roof of the hos- pital and climbed down the side of the building. One of them, while going down the -111 -- 1>v nn- - - A f hey a n n ra LANSING, July 23.-(I)-The staff of the Auditor General's Department enlarged by the addition of extra help, prepared today to begin the gi- gantic task of listing descriptions of 1,500.000 tax delinquent parcels of property in preparation for the "lar- gest sale of tax-delinquent property