loudy and cooler today; orrow also cloudy. I Mg Sir Iatij The Administration And The-Trusts ... i r Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVIII. No. 26 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS Union Rioters Stall Trial of 4 UAW Officers On Red Charge Hurl 'Frame-Up' Charges Requiring Adjournmen: Of International Board Defendants Incited Riot, Says Martin DETROIT, July 25-(P)-Demon- strating supporters of four suspended officers of the United Automobile Workers Union forced a day's delay today in the quartet's trial amid 1harges of "frame-up," "irresponsible Corpmunists," and "union wreckers." Prominent also in the tense several hours before the Union's Internation- al Executive Board adjourned until tomorrow were a brief fist fight and two visits from police in futile efforts to clear a crowd of demonstrators from union headquarters. At the last the Board, controlled by Homer Martin, UAW president, refused a formal petition to permit a "committee of observers" in the trial room, and bitter words followed from both sides. The Board said such permission would "discriminate" against other union members. Committee Assails Martin A "Committee of 11," named by the demonstrating delegation, charged in a formal statement that Martin was "afraid to conduct the trials in the open," adding "it is plain a frane-up is being schemed by Martin and his ring." Martin, in a press conference, re- torted .the demonstration was "typ- ically Communistic." From time to time he has charged certain of his foes with being "Communists" or under "Communist influence."' The four officers slated for trial- vice presidents. Richard T. Franken- steen, Wyndham Mortimer, Ed Hall and Walter N. Wells-were charged by Martin with partial responsibility, in the demonstration. Board To Meet Today "These Communists." Martin said: ih referring to demonstrators re- fisd the request of the international Board, unanimously adopted, that they leave the building in order that SDemocratic and' orderly procedure migh prevail." When the demonstrators departed, with the Board announcing it -would metagain tomorrow at 10:30 a.m., proximately 50 men took over the vnth floor international offices. eporters said they weer pro-Martin men planning to remain all night and be on hand for the start of the Board's meetigg tomorrow. Defendants Supporters Mustered At the hours of the scheduled trial oday supporters of the suspended officers forced their way into the Union's International Headquarters, demanding the right to attend the trial. ,During a five - minute scuffle, George F. Addes, expelled secretary- treasurer of the union, drew blood by striking Maurice Silverman, adver- tising solicitor for the UAW news- paper, on the nose. Addes, who was ousted after a trial two weeks ago, said he swung his fist after someone struck at him. Thirty per- sons took part in the brief melee. Band Groups Present Recital High School Band Clinic Players To Be Featured Featuring various woodwind and brass ensembles, a program of novelty and interest will be presented at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium, under the direction of Charles Gil- bert, oboist of the Curtis Institute, and graduate of the School of Music in the class of 1936. Artist members of th6 High School Band Clinic will participate in com- positions for various groups of wood- wind instruments, in which the tech- nical capacities and artistic abilities of the players will be given oppor- tunity for display. The final number on the program will be an arrangement of the famous "Passacaglia in C minor," by Bach, for woodwind, horns and string bass. Originally written for the modern symphony by Respighi, Tschaicowski, Stock and others, the composition has nehip~ti arta d ealof narity. Two Bands Will Mass Personnel InHugeOut-Door Concert Friday Ferry Field Seats 10,0001 People; Prof. Prescott Of Minnesota To Direct 3 Czechs Accept English Aid For Sudeten) By BEN M. MARINO Massing their joint personnel, a group of 215 musicians, the Univer- sity Summer Session Band and the All-High School Clinic.Band, will pre- sent the largest out-door band con- cert ever staged in Ann Arbor, at 7:15 p.m. Friday on Ferry Field, ac- cording to Prof. William D. Revelli, director of the Michigan Band. This huge spectacle will attempt to set a musical precedent, said Profes- sor Revelli, which he hopes will be- come an annual affair, second in im- portance only to the May Festival. A similar concert was held in Randall Stadium last year at Madison, Wis., and a crowd exceeding 20,000 -people attended. Seats,, for approxima'tely 10,000, said Professor Revelli, are be- ing erected on Ferry Field and a capacity crowd is expected to attend. JIn case of rain the concert will be held in Hill Auditorium at 8:30 p.m., continued Professor Revelli, and oth- erwise the plans will ,be unchanged. Prof. Gerald Prescott, director of bands at the University of Minnesota will be the guest conductor for Fri- day night's affair. Professor Prescott is the second guest conductor of the two bands to appear in Ann Arbor this season. He follows Victor J. Grabel, who conducted last Sunday's concert in Hill Auditorium. Unusual features of the out-door concert in Ferry Field will be the selections to be given by the combined bands, including "Stars and Stripes," by Sousa; "Varsity," by Moore; "Sla- vonic Rhapsody, No. 2," by Liszt; "From Africa to Harlem," by Ben- Lord To Of Runciman Assist In Minority Expected Solution Question PROF. WILLIAM D. REVELLI nett; and "Selections from Mozart Melodies." The program will also in- clude a number of Strauss waltzes. The band will be comprised of 60 clarinets, 20 trombones, 34 cornets, 16 flutes, 15 French horns, 14 Sousa- phones, and 12 percussion instru- ments. In addition to ensemble play-, ing, each band will offer selections. This will be the final appearance in Ann Arbor of the 1938 High School Band Clinic Band, a group of 155 high school students perfecting the tech- nique of professional stage and con- cert playing under Professor Revelli and the guest 'conductors. The Sum- mer Session Band will make two more appearances. Professor Revelli said there is a possibility of some community sing- ing as an added attraction on Fri- day's concert. J t i i s 1 1 l 1 s 1 l I 1 i New Nationalities Statute Prepared Reports from Praha last night stated that the Czechoslovakian, Government had accepted Lord Rundiman, British statesman, as mediator of the Sudeten German j minority question.-. PRAHA, July 25 --()- Premier Milan Hodza today summoned Par- liament to meet August 2 for a ses- sion at which the Government's na- tionalities statute will be submitted in an effort to appease Germanic and other minorities. The statute will not be considered immediately, however, as various other measures on the calendar have the right of way. The date on which the measure will be laid before the law makers de- pends on progress of inter-party con- sultations and on negotiations with Konrad Henlein's Sudeten German Party, the most persistent of the nation's autonomy-demanding fac- tions. To Submit Statute Informed circles said tonight Vis- count Runciman, former president of the British Board of Trade, was ex- pected soon to act as adviser to the Czechoslovak Gevernment in its negotiations with the Sudeten Ger- mans. Hodza hoped to be able to submit. the completed draft of the proposed minorities statute to the leaders of the Nazi-supported minority some time tomorrow. Authoritative sources said the pre- mier was optimistic that the repub- lic's 3,500,000 Sudeten Germans would be surprised at the liberality of the Government's provisions. Other Minorities Involved: After the draft has been submitted to the enlein4ts,.it will be ,handed to Hung n* d olish noities. Should the Germans reject the proposals, it was understood Hodza would be willing to follow Great Bri- tain's advice and continue efforts to find an early solution to the issue which is threatening European peace. Official quarters emphasized Run- ciman would serve only in an advisory capacity and not as an arbitrator.. Greenfield'Trip English Study To Be Abroad In New Course Graduate English Students To Tour Great Britain In '39 Summer Session Weaver To Lead Initial Excursion A graduate reading course in Eng- lish literature will be.combined with a tour of England for the first time during the 1939 Summer Session, en- abling the enrolled students to study the works of great English writers "on location." Covering the principal points of interest to English literature students, the tour will take approximately 11 weeks, and will be led during its first year by Prof. Bennett Weaver of the English department. The tour will offer four or six hours of grad- uate credit in the University, de- pending upon the amount of reading done, and will be opened to students in candidacy for the M.A. in English. According to the discretion of the Committee in charge of the tour, which includes Prof. Warner G. Rice, Prof Louis I. Bredvold, and Professor Weaver, all of the English depart- ment, a limited number of students who already have received the M.A. in English from Michigan may be admitted to the tour. A meeting will be held in the early part of August for those interested in enrolling for the tour, the date to be announced later. In order to be accepted as a member of the tour each student must sat- isfy the committee of his fitness to profit by travel and study in England. The reading lists to be used during the tour include three classes of books: general works on history, ar- chitecture painting, etc; works of the principal authors to be studied in the course of the tour, a minimum required for all students; special lists, one for each major author to be stud- ied. Each student will be required to choose one of these for intensive study. The tour .tentatively will begin June 23, 1939, from Montreal bring- ing the students to Liverpool on June 30, from which point a train will take them to London, the starting point for the reading course. Here. the tour will be equipped wth a bus which will take the students and director to various points of study and interest adjoining the main "trunk line" of the tour. The morn- ings will be devoted to reading and consultation, with the afternoon being given over to traveling. 'The principal towns on the tours will be Cambridge, following London, then Stratford-on-the-Avon, Lincoln, Dur- ham, Melrose, Ayr, Grasmere, Lake- land, Chester, Hereford, Salisbury, Cobh, Southhampton and from there to New York. The students will visit the birth- places, homes, and points of inspir- ation of such writers as Dickens, Chaucer, Milton, Dryden, Johnson, Pope, Bunyan, Cowper, Shakespeare, Scott, Burns, Carlyle, Wordsworth, Southey, Ruskin, Samuel and Hartley Coleridge, DeQuincy, Hardy and others. It is hoped by the Committee that the tour will be given each summer, with a different director in charge for each successive tour. Italian Jews Face Projected 'Aryan'_Purge ROME, July 25.-P)--The Fascist Party Secretary Achille Starace de-j clared today the principal ob of the ministry of popular culture in 1939 would be "elaboration and discussion of Fascist race principles." Starace declared the Jews of every country provided "the general staff of anti-fascism." The party secretary made his state- ment in an address to the Fascist scholars, selected members of various' university faculties, who "edited or adhered to the proposition which fixes the bases of Fascist racism." He referred to the professors re- port, made under auspices of the min- istry of popular culture, which was4 published last Thursday. In it theE Italian people were declared to be of Aryan origin and Jews, it was assert- ed, "do not belong to the Italian race."' At the time the report was regard- ed as orienting Italian policy still. closer to Germany. Starace asserted that,Premier Mus- solini at various times in his writings and speeches had spoken of Italian "race" as appertaining to the so- called Indo-European group (to which supporters of the Aryan race theory trace Aryan origins). Prison Heads Open /Meeting In Ann Arbor Conference To Be Closed;I Reveal Aim Is Review Of Correction Methods An estimated 35 wardens' assistants and parole officers from 14 federal penal and corrective institutions in all parts of the country began a four-i day conference here yesterday -at the Michigan Union. Ann Arbor was se- lected as a central for the meetingI in which the Washington office of the Federal Bureau of Prisons is rep- resented. The purpose of the closed confer- ence, according to tdgar M. Ger- lach, supervisor of social service, and one of the directors of the conference, is "to review critically the methods and techniques which have been tried out in Federal institutions in the past few years, consolidate our gains and cast aside whatever may have proved ineffective or unproductive." Associating with Mr. Gerlach in the direction of the conference are Judge A. E. Wood, chairman of the United States bord of paroles; Frank Loveland, supervisor of classifica- tion for the federal bureau of prisons; and Myrl E. Alexander, acting parole executive. All are from Washington. Judge Wood and Mr. Loveland ad- dressed the meeting yesterday morn- ing, and the remaining :three days will be spent in round table discus- sions. Included on the program is a trip to the federal detention farm at Milan. All members of the conference are college-trained professional social workers. In the 22 federal institu- tions housing 17,000 inmates, repre- sented 'in the conference emphasis is placed on individualization of treat- ment, and plans are laid for parole from the -time "of incarceration. Assassination Attempt Made On Governor Of Puerto Rico Maj.-Gen. Winship Unhurt But 2 Bystanders Die And 31 Are Wounded Suspect Nationalists Of Attempted Assault PONCE, Puerto Rico, July 25.-(P) -More than a dozen shots were fired at Maj.-Gen. Blanton Winship, Gov- ernor of Puerto Rico, in an attempt to assassinate him today while he was reviewing a parade celebrating American occupation of the island. Governor Winship was not hurt, al- though the attack precipitated a shooting affray in which two Puerto Ricans were killed and at least 31 wounded, including three women. Police said one of the men killed, Angel Esteban Antongiorgi, was among the governor's attackers. They described him as a member of the Nationalist Party, a group demand- ing Puerto Rico be made independent of the United States. District Attorney G. S. Pierluissi, in charge of the investigation, said five Nationalists took part in the attack and that only one escaped. Several Arrested In addition 'to the slain Anton- giorgi, Pierluissi and those partici- pating were Santiago Gonzalez, Ra- mon Algarin Delfin, and Sepulveda Leocadio Lopez, all under arrest, and Eliphas Escobar, whose arrest has been ordered. The parade was in connection with the 40th anniversary of the landing of the United States troops in the Spanish-American War. The Na- tionalists had issued a manifesto against holding the celebration. The second fatality was Col. Luis Irizarry of the Puerto Rican Na- tional Guard. The wounded includ- ed . Obdulio Rodiguez, the Gover- nor's chauffeur; Miguel Angel Garcia Mendez; speaker of teHouse of Rep- resentatives; and Francisco Lopez Dominguez, Commissioner of Agri- culture and Commerce. No Americans Hurt None of the governor's official party was seriously hurt nor were any of the continental Americans of the large crowd which had gathered in Ponce for the celebration. Despite his narrow escape from harm, Governor Winship was calm. His only comment, made to those standing beside him, was: What poor shots they are!" A few moments later he delivered a prepared speech in a firm voice. At its close the crowd cheered him loud- .ly. i Reconstruction Of Past Made By Languages Linguistics Expert Shows Relation Between Old TonguesAnd History Opening the series of public lec- tures to be presented this week by the University under the auspices of the] Lingustic Institute, Dr. Roland G.1 Kent, professor of comparative phi-i lology and chairman of the depart- ment of linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania, yesterday afternoon explained how the linguistic scholars of the world are aiding in the great task of reconstructing the past by re- constructing the languages of the past. With the deliberate choice of many9 illustrations drawn from more fa-I miliar languages, Professor Kent re- vealed the processes of lingustic re- search which are applicable to the, study of all languages. The whole process, he explained, must always begin with what is com-: monly known as a word. "When we look at words, we see such relation- ships as are suggested by the fact that English 'father' and 'foot' are not greatly unlike French 'pere' and 'pied,' Italian 'padre' and 'pied,' Spanish 'padre' and 'pie,' and Latin 'patrem' and 'pedem.' Closer study reveals also that there must be re- lationships among French 'pleuvoir' (rain), Italian 'piovere,' Spanish, 'llowr,' Portuguese 'chouver,' and Latin 'pluere.' "Thousands of such obviously re- lated examples show us that sounds and forms of languages change with regularity, and thus utlimately we are able to build up a science of language. Even the many exceptions," said Dr. Kent, "are often explicable and form rules of their own. "When we look farther afield, we can find such correspondences as ex- ist in English 'foot,' German 'Fuss,' Gothic 'fotus,' Latin 'pedis,' Greek 'podas,' and Sanskrit 'padas.' The study of word-groups limte these pro- vide material for generalizing that, for example, there is some relation- ship between German 'f' and Latin 'p' and between English 'h' and Latin '.'", 7 That the results of such studies have made clear the existence of an Indo-European family of languages was pointed out by Dr. Kent, who said that the general outlines of this group were discovered by the lan- guage scholars of a century ago. The general divisions of this family are: Indo-Iranian or Aryan, Armenian, (Continued on Page 3) T n 1 annma an T aisr TR ma Petition Filed To Renominate Gov. Murphy Delegation Roll Replete1 With Names -tae's Democratic Leaders By T. H. PECK LANSING, July 25-(IP)-Michigan Democrats turned their "happy fam- ily" face to the world today as peti- tions qualifying Governor Murphy for renomination were filed with the' Secretary of State. The roll call of the delegation that filed the petitions reads like a "who's who" in Michigan Democracy. State Chairman Edward J. Fry, who gave Murphy such a toung-lashing over civil service policies. was there peer- ing over the Governor's shoulder a he skimmed through some of the 3,000 signatures that were filed. So was Fry's brother, State Treas- urer Theodore I. Fry, who has been urged repeatedly to enter the primary race against Murphy. In fact all the members of Murphy's "cabinet" but three, whowere out of the city,. took part in the ceremony and those three, with the exception of Lieut. Gov. Leo J. Nowicki who has none, sent their deputies to represent them. Highway commissioner Murray D. Van Wagoner, whose camp was thrown into a case of jitters by re- ports that Fry planned to qualify for the Democratic gubernatorial race at the last minute and thus jockey "himself into position to win the nom- ination by default should Murphy accept a Federal appointment and withdraw, was in the foreground. Other participants included Na- tional Committeeman Edmund C. Shields, Harry Meade, powerful Wayne County chairman and head of Murphy's last campaign; Patrick J. O'Connor, party chairman in the sixteenth congressional district; Frank X. Martel, president of the Detroit and Wayne County Feder- ation of Labor, and William Skrytzki of Detroit who provided the link be- tween the Governor and the Lieuten- ant-Governor. Chandler Poisoned, His Doctor Finds FRANKFORT, Ky., July 25.-(P)- Gov. A. B. Chandler, ill for days, is the victim of water "doctored with a poison," Dr. J. W. Bryan, his Louis- ville physician said in a statement today. The doctor said he did not know what kind of poison it was but added "if consumed in sufficient quantities would have caused death." The nvernor . miling as of old, Is Tomorrow 2nd Excursion To Villkege Starts At 1 P.M. Next to the last in the Summer Session series of excursions this yearl will be a second trip to Henry Ford's Greenfield Village, near Detroit, starting from Angell Hall at 1 p.m. tomorrow.; Buses will conduct the excursion party . under the direction of Prof. Louis Rouse of the mathematics de- partment to and from its destination. The expenses for the trip are $1.25 per person, covering bus fare and ad- mission to the Village grounds. This year in addition to the regular features of the Greenfield Village tour, namely, the post office, black- smith shop, country store, red-brick school house, and colonial style town liall of the typical central Michigan town of four score years ago, several new attractions are being planned. These will be a tour of the museum, and a sight-seeing tour of the or- iginal Menlo Park Laboratory and Factory of Thomas A. Edison, trans- ferred to the Village by Henry Ford. Miss Virginia Ritter To Present Recital Miss Virginia Flowers Ritter, pian- ist, of Clarksville, Tenn., will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree in the School of Music at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in the School of Music Auditorium. Miss Ritter received the Bachelor degree in music from the University of Michigan in 1936. She is a pupil of Prof. and Maud Okkelberg. Her program of selections will in- clude "Sonata (K. 310)," by Mozart, in three movements-allegro maes- Watson In Trai Reeves Says Meridian Bounds Not Drawn To Favor Nations By HARRY L. SONNEBORN Verde Islands, from the north pole Although those boundary lines to the south pole, separating the which follow parallels of latitude or lands of Spain and Portugal. He longitude are never set up with re- stated that a commission was formed gard for geographic, social, or racial in 1494, a year after the papal bull factors, neither are they made to give was issued, to mark the boundary any one nation strategic military ad- plainly upon the land it crossed. The vantages, and often prove to be the commission never met. most just, as in the case of the 49th The first international boundary parallel boundary between the United recorded, Professor Reeves said, was States andCanada. Prof .Jesse S. the one between the Greek state of Staes andCandaPro, JsseS. onia and- the Peleponnesus. This Reeves of the political science de-oundryhsmedynneus. umni partment said last night. boundary was marked by a column Speaking in the last of a series of which declared which side was not four public lectures by members of Peleponnesus, he stated. It was point- the faculty of the Summer Session in ed out that the Romans were the first International Law, 1 rofessor Reeves to punish the violations of boun- told an audience of approximately daries, although these boundaries 100 persons that "there are no more were usually between provinces of artificial boundaries in the world the empire and not really interna- than in North America, particularly tional in nature. in the United States." Under the feudal system of the "Any such line," Professor Reeves Middle Ages, a system of "marches," pointed out, "is necessarily made be- or buffer regions between states, was fore colonization and without any 'used, a system that has since been knowledge of the conditions of the eliminated by the modern boundary Wins Shot Put In New York Field Carnival NEW. YORK, July 25.-)(A')-Bill Watson of Michigan, Harley Howells of Ohio State and Mozel Allerbe of Tuskegee Institute starred in a twi- light track and field meet conducted by the Ancient Order of Hibernians at Macomb's Dam Park, this evening. Watson won the -shot put with a heave of 51 feet, 7-8 inches. Howells won the 440-yard 'n min 48.3 over a fast field. John Borican of Virginia State and the Shore A.C. was second, eight yards behind How- ells, who broke the track record. Charles Miller of Califorinia U. and the ,Olympic Club was third and Charles Beetham of Columbus, Ohio, fourth. Ellerbe, who sails tomorrow with most of the other athletes for com- petition in Europe, won the 100 and 220-yard dashes, the former in 9.8 the latter in 22.4 around two turns. Clyde Jeffrey finished a foot behind Ellerbe in the 100 and Wilbur Greer, of Michigan State, was second in the furlong. Prof. Bidwell To Offer Concert Of Bach Music A program of Bach compositions will be -featured by Prof. Marshall Bidwell, guest professor of organ on the School of Music faculty, in a special concert at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium.