THE MICHIGAN DAILY Auto Used For Research Lab Linguists End Meet With Talk On Dictionaries Prof. Thos. A. Knott Tells Inside StorysOf Work On Modern Word Books (Continued from Page 1) Archeologist's Hunting Ground In The Majors I l i i c 1 A motor car is the research laboratory for Maurice Ewing of Lehigh University. In the car are instruments used to compute distance from ground surface to bedrock. Mr. Ewing is measuring New Jersey bed- rock preparatory to possible oceanic charting. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session until 3:30: 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. Candidates for the degree of Ph.D. in the departments listed below who wish to satisfy the requirement of a reading knowledge during the Sum- mer Session, are informed that an examination will be offered in Room 108, Romance Language Building, from 2 to 5, on Saturday afternoon,1 Aug. 13. It will be necessary to regis- ter at the office of the Department of Romance Languages (112 R.L.) at least one week in advance. Lists oft books recommended by the various1 departments are obtainable at this office.1 It is desirable that candidates for the doctorate prepare to satisfy this requirement at the earliest possible date. A brief statement of the naturei of the requirement, which will be found helpful, may be obtained atE the office of the Department. t This announcement applies only to candidates in the following depart- ments: Ancient and Modern Lan- guages and Literatures, History, Ec- onomics, Sociology, Political Science, Philosophy, Education, Speech, Jour- nalism, Fine Arts. Stalker Hall. Student class at 9:45 a.m., Prof. Wesley Maurer of the Journalism Department will lead the discussion. Wesleyan Guild meeting at 6 p.m. Dr. C. W. Brashares will speak. Fel- lowship Hour after the meeting. All Methodist students and their friends are cordially invited to both of these meetings. First Methodist Church. Morning worship at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "The Su- premacy of Love."' First Baptist Church, 512 E. Huron St. 10:45 a.m. morning worship. The speaker will be Mr. Kenneth Morgan, director of activities of the Students Religious Association, whose subject is "The Experimental Method in Re- ligion." 9:30 a.m. The Church School meets with Mr. Herman Frinkle as superintendent. Baptist University Students. 6 p.m. Sunday evening at the Guild House, 503 E. Huron St., Miss Esman Orcutt, Graduate student, and director of the state W.W.G. organization, who re- cently attended the Youth Confer- ence in Columbus, Ohio, will give a survey of the discussions as they apply to the current youth problems. During the social tiour which fol- lows Mr. Joseph R. Blair, of Troy, N.C. who has been engaged in medical re- search in Cambridge, England, will show a series of interesting moving pictures taken in travel in European countries. > First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw Avenue. The Rev. John A. Gardner of Mid- land, Mich., will be the guest speaker at the Morning Worship Service at 10:45. He has chosen for his topic, "Moody, Modern Disciple." Dr. Healey Willan at the console and directing the choir. The musical numbers will include: Organ Prelude, "Now Come Thou Savior" by Bach; Anthem, "O King All-glorious" by Willan; Quar- tette, "O Come, Everyone that Thirs- teth" by Mendelssohn; Organ Post- lude, "Fugue In F Minor" by Bach. The supper for summer school stu- dents will be held as usual at 5:30 ph. Miss Helen Culley is in charge his week. Weather permitting the program will be held in the open-air theatre. Prof. Howard Y. McClusky will speak on the topic, "The Psycho- logical Approach to Religion." Episcopal Student Group, Picnic Hanley of the University of Wisconsin discussed the sound represented by the letters "ng" on the basis of ma- terials dealing with English rimes collected by a staff of WPA wo:kers -ider his direction at Madiso. This sound developed in English, he said, from "n" plus a velar stop and hence never was initial. With the change of stress and loss of final vowels "ng" occurred at the end of unstressed syl- lables, as in "singing." In the 18th entury, however, the sound became a new phoneme, a syllabic "n", as is represented by the spelling "singin' ". This sound, often condemned by teacpers, was so common by 1785 that John Walker, a writer on pronuncia- tion, then found it general in England. Prof. A. H. Marckwardt of the University next explained the pro- posed wide-meshed survey of the regional speech characteristics of Michigan and Indiana and some ad- jacent territory. This preliminary sur- vey, which will begin this summer, is an independent research project of the University, he declared, but its results should prove important in carrying through to completion the present Linguistic Atlas of the United States and Canada, the first part of, which will be published this fall, ac- cording to an accompanying an- nouncement by Dr. Bernard Bloch, its assistant editor. Another speaker was Prof. E. Ade- laide Hahn of Hunter College, who1 offered detailed and classified evi- dence to show that in ancient Hittite the subordinate clause almost always precedes the main clause. "Initial k' in German" served Prof. Leonard Bloomfield of the University of Chicago as a title for his discus- sion of a sound change in southern German. Although it is known that in southern German the pre-West Germanic "p-" became "pf- or f-" and "t-" became "ts-", yet trained observers have disagreed about the existence of the corresponding change from "k-" to "kx-", that is, from initial "k" to "k" plus an aspirate. Dr. Bloomfield contended that a study of the southern German pro- nunciation of such words as "gehal- ten" in comparison with such as "kalt" shows that the initial sounds are identical and thus that this dia- lect has developed an aspirate after initial "k." These "ge-" words, with loss of the vowel, are, furthermore, actually written with "k" in dialect materials, he declared as further evi- dence for the identity. Sunday night at the Saline Valley Farms. Cars will leave the church (306 N. Division) at 5:30 p.m. Sup- per 25 cents. Swimming and baseball. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Services of worship Sunday are: 8 a.m. Holy Communion, 11 a.m. morn- ing prayer and address by the Rev. Frederick W. Leech. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:30: Subject: "Love." Golden Text: Psalms 145:9. Sun- day School at 11:45. Christian Student Prayer Group will hold its regular meeting at 5 p.m. Sunday, July 31, in the Michigan League. The room will be announced Happy hunting ground for Smithsonian Institution archaeologists, bent on recovering traces of an ancient Indian culture is an Indtan ' burial mound near Farley, Mo., where pots, utensils and 'skeletons i (above) have recently been found. U.S. Ready To Conclude Trade Agreement With.Soviet Union WASHINGTON, July 30.-(A)-The United States is about to conclude a commercial agreement with the So- viet Union by which the Soviets will promise to purchase at least $40,000,- 000 worth of American products in one year. The agreement will replace an ex- isting one expiring Aug. 5. Negotia- tions have been under way for several weeks, being conducted at Moscow under the direction of the American Charge D'Affaires, Alexander Kirk. By virtue of the agreement's state- ment of the Soviet's intention to pur- chase American products, the U.S.S.R. will receive most - favored - nation treatment from the United States, which means it will be entitled to the tariff and other concessions made by this government in reciprocal trade agreements signed with 17 nations and soon to be signed with more. Negotiations have been proceeding slowly the last few days, and it may become necessary for the two coun- tries to exchange notes exending the present agreement until the new one is completed. Under the existing agreement the Soviets agreed to purchase from this country, in the year convered by the pact, American goods to the value of at least $40,000,000. Statistics show that by Aug. 5 their purchases will have exceeded this 'figure consider- ably. Consequently, there is a chance on the League bulletin board. Chris- tian students are cordially invited. Services of worship will be held in Zion Lutheran Church at 10:30 a.m. with sermon by the pastor, Ernest C. Stellhorn. Trinity Lutheran Church services will be held Sunday at 10:30 a.m. The Rev. IHenry O. Yoder will use as the theme "Must I Listen?" The Lutheran Students will meet for the regular Sunday evening meet- ing in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall at 5:30. Mr. Rolfe Haatvedt who was a member of the University of Michi- gan group who excavated intensely in Fayum, Egypt will speak on "Recent that the $40,000,000 figure will be stepped up in the new agreement. The Soviets' purchases from the United States consist in great part of machine tools. Raw materials they have in plenty. The commercial treaty with the' Soviets represents an anomaly in American accords. The Soviets get the benefits of this country's trade agree- ment tariff reductions although tar- iffs are not mentioned on their side of the agreement. " 4 nI SILVER LAUNDRY-We call for and deliver. Bundles individually done, no markings. All work guaranteed. Phone 5594, 607 E. Hoover. 3x LAUNDRY -2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 5x DRESS MAKING and Alterations. Mrs. Walling. 118 E. Catherine. Phone 4726. 34x TYPINQr - Experienced. Reasonable rates. Phone 8344. L. M. Heywood 43r TYPING -Neatly and accurately 'done. Mrs. Howard, 613 Hill St. Dial 5244. , 2x American League W L Pct. New York .............55 30 .647 Cleveland .............53 30 .639 Boston................51 33 .607 Detroit ..............46 46 .500 Washington ...........46 47 .495 Chicago...............35 43 .449 Athletics.............29 53 .354 St. Louis..............26 59 .306 National League WL Pct. Pittsburgh ....... .... .57 31 .648 New York ............54 38 .587 Chicago ................50 40 .556 Cincinnati..... .....49 42 .538 Brooklyn....... ......41 49 .456 Boston ............ ...39 47 .453 St. Louis.............38 50 .432 Phillies............ ..28 59 .322 Results of games played yesterday: American League: At Detroit; The Detroit Tigers took a double-header from the Philadelphia Athletics, 10-7, 8-7. At New York; the Yankees trounced the Chicago White Sox, 9-4. At Cleveland; the Indians downed the Washington Senators, 8-5. At St. Louis, the Boston Red Sox defeated the St. Louis Browns. 5-4. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY i i J Archaeological Discoveries and their influence on the Bible.' Youth*' Just wait 'til you actually feel the air seep through this shadow Corselette. You'll wonder how you ever got along without it! It has a dainty net (double thickness) front with a soft, lustrous satin panel - a back of porous Lastex mesh that stretches up and down - and side panels of the same material that stretches across! . This is one time when a Shadow is important to you - for coolness, for a slim, trim figure, and for complete comfort during those warm summer days! E. NORMAN PEARSON II I I