The Weather Local showers or thunderstorms with no change in temperature. Y it S Aitta :4 Iahtt Editorials The NLRB And Free Speech.. I Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVIII. No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS Charge Steel Made Church Fight Unions, 9,000 Jam Ferry Field To Hear' 215 Musicians Present Concert Youngstown Man Gillies Before Civil Liberties Accuses Senate Group Says Church Was Dependent On Steel WASHINGTON. July 29-(IP)-The Senate Civil Liberties Committee was told today that William B. Gillies, Vice-President of Youngstown Sheet and Tube, assembled the ministers of Youngstown at dinner one evening in 1936, delvered a fiery speech against the CIO, and "practically command- ed" them to keep their church mem- bers from joining the Union, The committee's witness was the Rev. Orville C. Jones, young clergy- man. Seated nervously beside Gillies, he asserted that "the subtle power of the steel companies was such that they (the ministers) wouldn't dare to take an independent stand." He himself did take such a stand, he related, with the result that "pres- sure" was brought to bear upon him and in the end the "antagonism" of the steel people was such that he felt it would be better for the church if he resigned. He did so, and is now located in Cleveland. Pressure Exerted "It was a matter of subtle pressure all the time," Jones said, "because the steel workers are not paid enough to support a church of their own and the churches have to depend on the officials of the steel mills for financial support. It's perfectly natural and simple and yet it amounts to such effective coercion that the ministers 4f the city do not dare express an in- dependent judgment." Chairman La Follette (Prog-Wis) turned to Gillies for his version of the story. The steel man looked glar- ingly at the minister and then said his account of the speech made at the banquet was substantially correct. But, Gillies added: "It would be far below me to exert any pressure." Threatened Strike Throughout the C.I..organizing period, he said, the "threat of a strike was uppermost." His address to the ministers, he added, emphasized the need for peace. As to statements by Jones that people resigned from his church, among them Frank Pur- nell, President of Sheet and Tube, Gillies said: "If they don't like the Reverend's remarks, that was up to them, but there was no company pressure." Purnell said his father "dug the cellar of that church with his -own hands," and h' had a deep family at- tachment for it. "The church was used by this gentleman," he said indicating Smith, "as a meeting place for known Reds. I never said anything to anyone. All I did was tp resign from the church. I resigned long before the time he is talking about." Fight On NLRB By Ford Seen To Contest Board's Charge Of Anti-Unionism WASHINGTON, July 29-(R)-The Ford Motor Company is expected to fight a decision by a Labor Board ex- aminer that it was guilty of labor spy- ing and other anti-union activity at its Buffalo, N. Y., assembly plant. Reporting, among other things, that the company circulated. anti- union literature and was responsible for tearing down a union banner, the examiner recommended today that the Board require Ford to rehire 50 CIO workers and cease "interfering" with union organization. Examiner Francis M. Shea, basing his recommendations on a 12-day public hearing in Buffalo last winter, said the 50 men ordered reinstated with back pay either were discharged or refused employment after a layoff - because of their membership in the CIO Auto Workers Union. Shea said the management dis- tri juted to its workers literature at- tempting to identify unionism with "communism" and "rackets". The examiner ruled that the circu- lation of the pamphlets constituted "a direct appeal to the working men to avoid labor organizations and a threat that the consequences of organization will be that their wage level will de- cline." -By Daily Staff Photographer This photograph of Professor Revelli and the Clinic Band is the first turned out by the Daily's new photo-engraving apparatus, work on which was begun shortly before the Summer Session began. * * * (~ By BEN MARINO Nine thousand Summer Session students and townspeople jammed the bleachers in Ferry Field last night to watch the massing of 215 musi- ,ians, members of the Summer Ses- wion and High School Clinic Bands, who presented the largest open-air concert in the history of Ann Arbor. The concert marked the final ap- pearance before the Ann Arbor au- dience of the Clinic Band which con- cluded its season of training under Prof. William D. Revelli, Director of the University Band. Prof. Gerald Prescott, Director of Bands at the University of Minnesota, was guest conductor for the out-door show. Under a high bank of clouds shot through with the last rays of the sun, and with cool breezes stirring through the huge grandstand, the audience listened as the gigantic bandplayed the stirring notes of John Philip Sousa's march, "The Stars and Stripes Forever." In addition to the Sousa march the massed bands played, "Komm Susser Tod," by Bach; "Varsity," by Moore; and .'Manitou Heights," by Christiansen, as an en- core. The massed band was comprised of 60 clairents, 20 trombones, 34 cornets, 16 flutes, 15 French horns, 14 Sousa- phones and 12 percussion instru- ments. each band included, "Morning Pray- er," by Tschaikoswky; "Selections of Melodies," by Mozart; "Selection of Waltz Excerpts," by Strauss; and "Goliad March," by Berryman, all played by the Clinic Band. The Summer Session Directors group offered, "Concert Overture," by Hadley; "First Movement from the Sonata for Organ," by Borowski; and "Hungarian Rhapsody, No. 1(" by Liszt. The open-air concert also marked the final appearance of Professor Revelli in Ann Arbor. He leaves the University at 6:30 p.m. today to spend the rest of the summer as a guest conductor and professor at the Col- lege of the City of New York. However, the Summer Session Directors Band still has two appear- ances left on its schedule of concerts for the 193.8 season. Other guest con- ductors who will' arrive in Ann Arbor to conduct are Clifford P. Lillya and Russel Howland. Professor Revelli prophesied last night after the concert that because the tremendously successful season experienced by the Summer Session musical groups, and last night's con- cert in particular, the affair will un- doubtedly become annual and be known as the University of Michigan Regents Take Gifts Totalling Over $16,000 Sanction Move To Create Undergraduate Studies At Teachers Colleges Meet At Rut hvei s Home In Frankfort More than $16,000 in gifts were ac- cepted by the Board of Regents of the University last night as the Board also sanctioned the proaosal to provide graduate study in State teachers' colleges under the super- vision of the University. which was also approved yesterday by the State Board of Education meeting at Mar- quette. The Board met at the home of President Ruthven at Frankfort last night at the Regents' annual dinner meeting. It was also announced last night that representatives of the Ann Ar- bor Press, whose printing contract with the university was broken early this sumimer following an NLRB de- cision against albor conditions at the Press, would be heard at the next meeting of the Regents in Ann Arbor upon the resumption of University printing at the Ann Arbor press. The following ersignations from the University were accepted by the Regents: Prof. Barbara H. Bartlett from the public health nursing de- partment of the University; Mildred A. Valentine of the sociology depart- ment as assistant director of social work in the University to accept a position at the State College of Utah. Horace J. Andrews was awarded the Pack professorship in wildland utilization. Mr. Andrews was re- cently in charge of the forest 'survey of the United States Forest Service in the Northwest. Emerson W. Conlon was appointed assistant professor of aeronautical engineering upon the resignation of Prof. :.Burdell L. Springer of the. College of Engineer- ing. Leave of absence was granted to Prof. Albert H. Marckwardt of the English department for the second semester of 1938-39, so that he may accept th eposition of visiting lectur- er in English at the University of California at Los Angeles during that time. Sabatical leave for the year 1938-39 was granted to Prof. J. E. Thornton of the English department. An appropriation of $500 was made for repairs on the Frieze Memorial Organ in Hill Auditorium. The following gifts to the Univer- sity were accepted by the Regents: $5,000 toward the income account of the new Sociological Research unit set up by the Horace H. and Mary A. Rackham Fund, given'by the Fund to begin work on the unit; $1,812 to in- itiate the Phi Kappa Phi trust fund for educational purposes by the local chapter of Phi Kappa Phi; $1,850 for scholarships in the Institute of Far Eastern Studies being held here this summer, by the American Council of Pacific Relations. $1,500 to continue the Bissel schol- arship in surgery by M. R. Bissel, Jr., of Grand Rapids; $1,400 for scholar- ships in the Fresh Air Camp coun- selor courses by the University Fresh (Continued on Pale 4) Rebel Counter-Attack Repelled As Loyalists Cling To Gandesa TREMP In'xs'zzrge hd overmeniT AreA\.Areaz ABARIMASTRO e'BALAGUEP. -e OMANRESA C(Ai/ERA LEA A IUADA SA&ADELL FA 5ORJASSLANCAS BARCE[ON A, ~ONT0ANCW l VENDREL NFALSE REUS / ARRAGONA ANMESAdieranean Sea: TORTOSA ____ Franco Attempts To Rebuild His Lines After Aerial Attack And Land Thrusts In Catalonia Area Meet Failure; Rebel Forces Lose Bridges } Soviet Troops Repulse Japs In Flare-up On Siberia Border Japs Attempt To Take Hill Which Russians Claim Is In Their Territory Both Detachments Report Casualties HENDAYE, France (At the Spanish Frontier), July 29-I'P)-The Spanish Government "people's army" clung close to Gandesa tonight despite counterattacks by land and air and a- man-made flood in the Ebro River Valley designed to sever supply lines and cut off retreat. Government forces withstood severe counter-thrusts and the pounding of bombs to consolidate earlier gains in their five-day counter-conquest in South Catalonia. Barcelona dispatche belittled the trategy of the Inurgent in opening all dam on the Noguera Pallaresa and Segre Rivers, northern tributaries of the Ebro, insisting that the flood hurt Generalissimo Francisco Franco's forces more than the Government's. These reports said the Ebro rose from three to five feet but that pon- toon bridges carrying reinforcements and supplies merely rose with the river. On the other hand, Government1 aerial scouts reported the flood hadI washed out many of the Insurgents'l Greeks Have A Word For It-Revolution ATHENS, July 29.-0P)-Greece's plump little Prussian-trained dicta- tor, General John Metaxas, was re- ported to have smashed with light- ning speed today an anti-Fascist re- volt on the fabled island of Crete. Within four hours after announc- ing the Insurgents had seized Crete's capital city of Canea, the Fascist Government in Athens said it was all over. The leaders of the uprising were reported arrested, while Government forces were pressing measures de- signed to prevent a further outbreak. The bespectacled Metaxas, known as "Little John," had dispatched army, naval, and air forces as soon as word of the rebellion reached the mainland. The individual programs offered by Band Festival. LinguitsSee X-Ray Photos Of Vocal Cords Two Speakers Highlight Meeting Of American LinguisticSociety Here Contrasting extremes of linguistic research appeared in the subjects of the two invitation speakers who last evening featured the guest program ih Ann Arbor of the first summer meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. Representing the branch of philol- ogy which deals with the 'study of ancient languages was Dr. Albrecht Goetze, Laffan professor of Assyri- ology and Babylonian literature at Yale University, who spoke on "Um- laut in Babylonian." Representing that newest branch of linguistics which treats- of the results of ex- perimental techniques in acoustic in- vestigation was Dr. J. Milton Cowan, assistant professor of German at the State University of Iowa, who presented and discussed stroboscopic and X-ray, motion pictures of the vocal cords in motion. Ancient Assyrian in the north and Babylonian in the south are really dialects of the same language, their mother tongue Akkadian, said Profes- sor Goetze. A most important differ- ence between them was that of um- laut, or vowel raising through the influence of phonetic environment. Assyrian kept the older forms of the vowel 'a'; in Babylonian 'a' before 'a' became 'e', and 'a' after (e' became 'e', as shown in the comparison of Assyrian "belat" (mistress) and Babylonian "belet." These two situations, Dr. Goetze' explained, account for most of the "e" vowels, but the remainder pre- sent a problem which can be solved by the application of the laryngeal theory. Primitive Semitic, he declared, had four laryngeal consonants which had disappeared or coalesced by the time of Akkadian, but which left their races in the language, as in this Crickets Leave Hearth For .Housewives' Hair ROCHESTER, N.Y., July 29.- (IP)-A plague of crickets ". . . . in our beds, in ou-t pajamas, in our flour bins, and in our hair . . ." stirred a chorus of complaints from sleepy-eyed nousewives to- day. Health officials said it was the greatest invasion of the chirping bugs the city has known. Twenty women voiced protest to- the Health Bureau, with Mrs. James Studley key-noting: "We can't sleep. It's terrible." Investig'ators located the head- quarters of the inharmonious hubbub in a dumping ground, own wooden bridges for miles south of the dams in the Pyrenees foothills. Four divisions of Government troops were reported to have turned Gan- desa, Franco's South Catalonia Divi- sional Headquarters, into a sort of no-man's land. Government advices said the attackers shoved so close to Gandesa during last night-when Franco's planes were grounded-that they forced Insurgent troops to evac- uate. Legal Scholar Lecture Topie Of Professor J S. Reeves Discusses Hugo Grotius And The RepublicOf Letters "Hugo Grotius and the Republic of Letters" was the subject of a lecture given at 4:30 p. m. yesterday at the Rackham School by Prof. Jese S. Reeves, W. W. Cook Professor of American Institutions. The Republic of Letters, Professor Reeves explained, consisted of the learned men of Leyden, Paris, London, Rome and other important cities dur- ing the early part of the seventeenth century, when Grotius was getting his education and training and meeting those of his contemporaries who helped him to become the most noted jurist of his era. The lecture was illustrated through- out with lantern slides. Portraits of Grotius himself, various buildings in- cluding the castle where he was once confined as a prisoner, and portraits of his contemporaries were included. Professor Reeves delivered his lec- ture in the form of an outline of the life of Grotius, emphasizing particu- larly the contacts this life made with the so-called Republic of Letters. He discussed Grotius' early training at the University of Leyden, his fellow students there, his work with the French East India Company, and his legal training, which was the result of informal study rather than a regu- lar university course. A member of the faculty of the Summer Session in International Law, and a former member of the political science department, Professor Reeves was recently appointed W. W. Cook Professor of American Institutions. Adjourn \Trial Of UAW Men For One Week DETROIT, July 29.-(P)-The Unit- ed Automobile Workers' Executive Board, irked at delay in the trial of f o u r suspended vice - presidents, abruptly adjourned the hearing to- day for a week. It adopted revised rules which President Homer Martin said made it "probable that no more witnesses will appear." Evidence will be submitted by af- fidavit, the board decided, and oral arguments will be heard when it re- convenes Aug. 6. "No one yet has discovered a way of cross-examining an affidavit," was the comment of Maurice Sugar, de- MOSCOW, July 29--(P)-Japanese- Manchoukuo detachments were re- pulsed by Soviet\ troops today in a new Siberian border incident which prompted a Russian protest to Tokyo. A communique describing the inci- dent said there were dead and wound- ed on both sides, but did not give the extent of casualties. The skirmish was said to have taken place when Japanese-Manchoukuo forces attempted to occupy a hill near the junction of Siberia, Manchoukuo and Korea. The communique, which asserted the hill in question -was in ,Soviet territory, declared that as a result of measures taken by Soviet frontier guards the Japanese-Manchoukuo de- tachments were "Decisively driven from Soviet territory.' "Immediately after the news was received in Moscow," the communique said,- "the (Soviet) Charge D'Affaires at Tokyo was instructed to lodge a vigorous protest with the Japanese Government against these new pro- vocations by Japanese-Manclioukuo militarists, to demand exemplary pun- ishment of the guilty, and to warn the Japanese Government that the Soviet Government is placing the en- tire responsibility for consequences of these actions on organs of the Jap- anese government in Manchuria." Chinese Defend Hankow SHANGHAI, July 29-W)-A fierce struggle between Chinese troops and an overland Japanese force, at Su- sung, was reported tonight as Han- kow's defenders strove desperately to check the right wing of the Yangtze Valley offensive. g Susung is in Anhwei province, about 25 miles north northeast of Kiukiang, the river port which fell to Japanese marine assault on Tues- day. It lies near the border of Hupeh province. First Summer Hawaii Clipper, With 15 Aboard, Lost Over Pacific Ocean's Typhoon Cradle Gigantkc Search By Sea, 1,580-mile jump to Manila, terminus Air Begun By Military of her regular 8,200 mile route from California. Forces; Radio Is Silent . Radio listeners spread the alarm when four hours passed without a Dr. Earle B. McKinley, one of routine report from the plane, which the passengers on the lost Clipper usually gave its position and flying is an alumnus of the University, conditions every thirty minutes. having been graduated from the Fourteen warships sped out of literary college in 1916 and from Manila Bay to join the hunt. Planesi the medical school in 1919. He was made ready to leave the Philippine active on campus, having been a East Coast to search the shore line on member of Phi Rho Sigma, the possibility the big aircraft reach- Delta Tau Delta, Griffins, Owls, ed insular waters. Sphinx and Galens. The plane's radio silence carried MANILA. July 30-(Saturday)- I forebodings to the searchers. She was (A)-The 26-ton Hawaii Clipper, with equipped to send and receive mes- 15 persons aboard, was ominously sages from the ocean surface, and, missing today in the typhoon cradle of barring the possibility of a high dive the Pacific. into the Pacific, was considered as United States Military and Naval seaworthy as any small yacht. forces quickly launched a gigantic From her log to Pan American Air- search by air and sea, hoping the huge ways, there was an inkling also that transpacific flying boat alighted safe- the big clipper was heading into un- ly on the water, but they listened favorable weather. The last message fruitlessly for her radio. mentioned rain. For several hundred They pinned their immediate hopes miles she had been speeding through nn the A ,'v,- x, ,rv',Avnrn+ Dt. iaQ ,iwhiahI, -as-.tn' ,r m 1, ind- Symphony Set For Tomorrow. Thor Johnston's Summer Orchestra Opens Season In Hill Ahiditorium The Summer Session Symphony Orchestra under the . direction of Thor Johnson, Grad., will open its summer concert season at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. For its first appearance, the Or- chestra will offer as its two major se- lections, the "D Major Symphony," by Haydn, and a Suite by the French composer, Debussy. The orchestra is made up of stu- dents in the School of Music and stu- dents in other colleges interested in the field. A full complement of in- struments is available to the orches- tra's use and the program ranges from the early classics to the modern. The Aria for Stringed Orchestra which follows the Haydn Symphony is an arrangement by Mr. Johnson of the original score by the German composer, Mattheson. The program is to conclhde with the overture to Weber's romantic opera, "Die Freischutz." Pope Deplores New Italian 'Aryanisni' ROME, July 29-(P)-A reply by Pope Pius XI to the new doctrine of Italian Fascism which holds that Jews "do not belong to the Italian race" was published today by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Ro- mano. The Pope did not mention Jews by name but he listed charity toward others as an article of the Catholic faith and said: "We do not want to separate anything in the human fam- His Holiness linked the new Ttalian ( r l calm but rain was falling. Despite the negative result from the initial searching, Pan American Airways officials remained optimis- tic. The Clipper was in charge of Leo Terletzky,. ace Pan American pilot, and K. A. Kennedy, a division traffic manager of the company, was among the passengers. The other passengers were Major Howard C. French of Portland, Ore.; Dr. Earle B. McKinley, noted author- ity on leprosy, and Dr. Fred C. Meier, principal Pathologist of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, both of Wash- ington, D. C.; E. E. Wyman, Curtiss- Wright Aircraft official of New York City, and Wah Sung Choy, Chinese restaurateur of Jersey City, N. J. In Terletzky's crew -were First Of- ficer M. A. Walker, Second Officer G. M. Davis, Third Officer J. M. Sauceda, Fourth Officer J. W. Jewett, Engineer H. L. Cox, Assistant Engi- neer T. B. Tatum, Radio Officer W. McCarty, and Steward I. Parker.