i The Weather Warmer tomorrow, continued fair L * 111 it i gait ~Iaitp Editorials Murphy's State Planning Commiission Arms Embargo On Spain,.. Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVIII. No. 2 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS p Wages-Hours Bill Gets OK Of President F.D.R. Gives 'Go-Ahead' Signal To 'Floor-Ceiling' RegulationOfPay-Hours 200,000 Expected To Receive Raises WASHINGTON, June 27.-(A') - Presdeht Roosevelt has signed the wage-hour bill, thereby giving the "go ahead" signal for a vast experi- ment in putting a "floor" under pay rates and a "ceiling" over hours. The signing was done without fan- fare Saturday, but was not an- nounced by White House officials un- til, today. The act will go into operation Oct. 24. On that date, officials said, some 200,000 persons receiving less than 25 cents an hour are to have their pay increased to 25 cents. Whether any court fight over the act will de- lay its operation has yet to be deter- mined, however. The act provides for the appoint- ment of a wage-hour administrator, and well-informed officials said they expected the President to fill this post before he starts on his trip to the West July 7. The act applies to industries in in- terestate commerce, with some ex- ceptions. They will be required to pay a minimum wage of 25 cents an hour during the first year after Oct. 24. During the second year and five subsequent years the wage rate mini- mum will be 30 cents, and at the end of seven years after the act goes into effect, the flat minimum will be 40. -To place a ceiling over hours the measure provides a maximum work week of 44 hours the first year, 42 hours the second year, and 40 hours thereafter. The administrator is empowered to set up industry committees to investi- gate wage conditions in various i- dustries and to recommend -the pay- ment of the highest minimum rates as .,son as economically justified. Thus, the 40-cent minimum might be reached In some industries in much less than seven years. Experts in the Labor Department, where the newly-created wage and hour division will be established, pointed out that the administration of the act and the recommendations for payment of the highest minimum wage will all revolve on the ques- tion of "economic feasibility." In determining the highest feasible minimum the industry committees, made up of representatives of the public, employers and the employes, will consider competitive conditions affected by transportation and living costs, comparable wages paid under collective agreements, and voluntarily maintained minima. The measure also prohibits "op- pressive child labor," exempts some industries from wage and hour regu- lation, and provides payment of time and a half for overtime except in sea- sonal industries, where the work week may run to 56 hours. Bureau experts said they had no accurate information about the num- ber of -persons whose work week might be shortened by the act, but estimated that last August 1,200,000 persons in manufacturing industries were working longer than 44 hours a week. Dr. Bell Will Talk To NEA Health And Recreation Are Lecture Topics NEW YORK, June 28 (Special to The Daily)-The program of the American Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation will be the subject of the talk to be given at a luncheon meeting today of the annual convention of the Na- tional Education Association by Dr. Margaret Bell, director of physical education for women and head medi- cal adviser for women at the Uni- versity Health Service. Dr. Bell will speak for the Amer- can Association as president-elect and will represent Dr. Neils Neilson of Stanford University who was unable to attend the meeting. The speech will be in honor of the first anniver- sary of the union of the American As- sociation with the N.E.A. Dr. Bell Europe Turns F r o m Spain To Far East (By Associated Press) The irregular movement of the Eu- ropean diplomatic pendulum swung sharply. away from the troublesome Mediterranean tonight, as dispatches from continental capitals indicated an increased interest in the Far East. In London it was revealed that Britain an France had warned Ja- pan to keep hands off the strategic island of Hainan, off the South China coast, and had consummated an agreement to act together in case of any "complications." Richard Austen Butler, undersec- retary for foreign affairs, told the House of Commons of the warning, and a foreign office spokesman in1 Paris confirmed France's readiness to stand with Britain. The two governments told Japan that if she persisted in a reported intention to land troops on Hainan, "undesirable" complications would result. Hainan is directly opposite fdorth-E ern French Indo-China, and lies close to the route between Hongkong and Singapore, Britain's Far Eastern strongholds. Chinese officials re- ported that Japanese troops tried to land on the island Sunday but were repulsed by machine-gun fire. , Europe, meanwhile, closely watched Germany's movements in the Chi- nese-Japanese war, following the re- call of Oskar Trautmann, the Ger- man ambassador to Hankow, who, with the German military advisors to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek,j was scheduled to leave Hankow Tues- day. While there was no official infor- mation on Foreign Minister Joachim Von Ribbentrop's motive in calling back Trautmann for a report, ob'serv- ers saw therein the beginning of a parallel action in Spain. After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, Germany gradually with- drew from Loylist Spain and then followed with positive support of General -Francisco Franco. Germany, similarly, has given at least ideological endorsement to the Japanese cause in the Far Eastern conflict, and certainly no one in Ber- lin believes that Trautmann will re- turn to China. Tryouts Open' To All Singers' On Wednesday' 'Vagabond King' Listed , For Angust Presentation By Repertory Players " The first in a series of general try-I outs for all, singers interested in ap-i pearing in the Michigan Repertory Players' production of "The Vaga- bond King" will be held Wednesday at 5 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn the- atre. Because of the large number of, men and women needed for the cho- ruses, Valentine B. Windt, director of the Players, has opened the try- outs to all whether or not they are enrolled in the university. 'The Vagabond King" will be pre-' sented during August by the Michi- gan Repertory Players in conjunction with the School of Music and the Un- iversity Symphony Orchestra. The famous opera, which combines the music of Rudolph Friml with the original book by J. Huntley Mc- Carthy, concerns the life of dashing Francois Villon, Paris poet, vaga- bond and king. Against the roman- tic setting of fourteenth century Prance, Villon insults King Louis, fights slashing bouts with sword and pistol, and barely escapes the execu- tioner's axe. Beside the leading roles there will be a chorus of over fifty men and women singers. "The Vagabond King" will be the Grand Finale to the Tenth Anni- versary Season, and will lengthen the long list of productions tnder the combined auspices of the Players and the School of Music, Probation Granted To Homicide Driver Five years probation. was granted yesterday by Circuit Judge George W. Sample to Edward T. Rybacki, 20, of Detroit, the driver of a car in which Louis Adamski, 22, also of De- troit, was fatally injured on June 12 at N. Main and Summit streets. Ry- backi pleaded guilty to a negligent Sellars Asks New Outlook For America Delivers First Lecture Of Sunmei' Session Series In New Graduate School Sees New Deal Step To SocialPhilosophy A mid-point between "individualis- tic liberalism and collectivist social-c ism" was proposed yesterday by Prof.1 Roy W. Sellars of the philosophy de-t partment as America's future "social philosophy." Professor Sellars, delivering the first of a series of 30 Summer Ses- sion lectures in the new Graduate School, told his audience that the "old liberal tradition has to become qualified into a less individualist plilosophy, with a little more gov-I ernment correlation. "I think America has been feeling her way toward a social philosophy," he said. "The New Deal is an at-1 tempt to fumble toward one, not something deliberately planned out. "It is my hope that we may be able to reach some middle-of-the-road point between individualist liberalism and collectivist socialism." One of the most distinguished phi- losophers in the country, Professor Sellars is especially noted for his lu- cid and enlightening accounts of the various social philosophies that have been propounded in the history of, Western Civilization, from the time, of Plato to the present. Predict Record In Enrollment This S ummer Statistics Show Increase Over Last Year Of 12.1 Per Cent At Like Date Possibility of a record summer en- rollment, indicated in early regis- tration figures, was strengthened last night when later figures released by Miss Marian Williams, University statistician, showed a total enroll- ment to datesof 4,767, a 12.1 per cent increase over enrollment last year at this time. Last year's Summer Session had enrolled, at the corresponding date, 4,252 students, with the final mark of 5,110 hitting an all-time high for summer enrollments. It is very prob-; able, Miss Williams said, that the total enrollment this year will shat- ter the old mark. The engineering college continued to show the most marked gain in en- rollments among the schools with a total to date of 430, a 31.5 per cent increase over last year. The Graduate School, with 2,674 enrolled and the literary college, with 682, also chalked up substantial margins over last year. University records show that en- rollment figures for each summer since 1928 have noted a substantial increase over the previous year, and with the 45th annual Summer Ses- sion the steady ten-year climb will. in all probability, be continued. Figures indicate that in only one school out of the 11 on campus do the women outnumber the men. The education school standings show that of a total of 262 enrollees, 220 are women. Decreases of six to thirty- six per cent of last year's mark were noted in the Music School, the School of Education, the College of Phar- macy and the School of Forestry and Conservation. All others maintained substantial margins over enrollments last year at this time. Miller Describes Gun TI Rotarians Colonel Henry W. Millei, head of the department of mechanical and engineering drawing in the College of Engineering, spoke on the Paris Gun last night before the annual meet- ing of the Rotary Club of St. Joseph and Benton Harbor. The meeting was held in St. Joseph. Col. Miller, who published a book on the Paris Gun in 1930 secured information about the gun when serving in the ordnance department of the U.S. Army during the Great Chamberlain Hedges Cries To Arm Ships Says Awaiting Return Of Agent With Conciliatory Notes From Gen. Franco British Anger Rises After 59th Attack LONDON, June 27.-(P)-With a cautious refusal to promise anything, Britain's hard-pressed Prime Minis- ter, Neville Chamberlain, turned back angry demands today that British merchant ships be amed to beat off attacking warplanes. Both opposition and supporting members of the House of Commons harried the spare, bushy-browed Chamberlain in a heated session af- ter Spanish Insurgent planes blasted two more ships flying the "Union Jack." Chamberlain promised his critics nothing and awaited the return of the British commercial agent, Sir Robert M. Hodgson, Britain's rep-] resentative in Insurgent Spain, who is expected to bring a conciliatory' explanation of such attacks from Generalissimo Franco. It was possible that mounting Brit- ish anger over repeated attacks on British shipping-today's were the 58th and 59th since the war started' -might force Chamberlain to keep Sir Robert at home and sever the' semi-diplomatic relations with Fran- co. Some quarters admitted that even Franco might be unable to curb the operations of his German and Italian pilots and planes-men and equip- ment from two countries which Chamberlain is doing his utmost to "appease." Thus in the last analysis, Cham- berlain might face the alternative of angering Premier Mussolini and Reichsfuehrer Hitler or of driving his own supporter's in Parliament into the opposition camp. ' When angry critics in Commnons demanded today that British freight- ers be mounted with anti-aircraft guns, Chamberlain replied that "a good many difficulties" stood in the way, including the necessity of struc- tural changes in the ships. Spurred by the Barcelona govern- ment's warning of possible far-reach- ing reprisals for continued bombard- ment of civilian centers by Insurgent planes, the government sped plans for operation of a neutral commis- sion of inquiry. London invited a fourth country- understood to be the Netherlar.ds- to participate, in addition to Brit- ain, Sweden and Norway. Bishop To Give Second Lecture In Series Today Printed Book, Manuscript Conflict Ii 18th Century Subject Of Talk Today Dr. William W. Bishop, librarian of the University, will deliver the second of 30 Summer Session lec- tures at 4:30 p.m. today in the Main Auditorium of the Horace H. Rack- ham School of Graduate Studies. The subject of his illustrated lecture will be "The Conflict Between Printed Books and Manuscripts in The 15th Century." Dr. Bishop's lecture will be the first of a series of 12 talks in conjunction with the Graduate Conference on Renaissance Studies. These lectures will deal with the music, literature, economics and religion of the Ren- aissance period and will be delivered by faculty members and prominent outside authorities. Dr. Hieber D. Curtis, director of the University Observatory, will deliver the third lecture of the Summer Ses- sion series when he speaks at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Graduate School Auditorium on "Astronomy in Motion Pictures." The second lecture in the Renais- sance Studies series, and fourth of the Session will be given by Prof. J. N. Douglas Bush of Harvard Univer- sity at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Graduate School Auditorium. His subject will be "Modern Theories of the Renaissance." New Mall Relieves Ann Arbor Motorists' Parking Difficulties Pacific Track Squad Downs Big Ten; Golf Team Is Third Barclay, Palbier Are For Second After Day's Competition Tied First Congestion In State Street Traffic Is Alleviated By Spacious New Roadways Gratified Ann Arbor motorists will testify to the utilitarian as well as esthetic purpose served by the north end of the recently completed Cam- pus Central Mall in providing park- ing space for hundreds (not actual count) of local automobiles. What is now the spacious double parkway, seen on the above model be- tween the League and the Carillon Tower, was, up to three months ago, N. Ingalls Ave., a narrow street which did little -either to beautify the cam- pus or solve Ann Arbor's parking difficulties. The parkway provides parking fa- c 1 t t a C {{ t Ottawa Artist Here To Play Carillon Bells Following the departure from the University of Prof. Wilmot F. Pratt at the end of the summer session, Frank Percival Price, Canadian mu- sician, will serve as guest artist on the Charles Baird carillon from Sept. 20 to Nov. 30. Mr. Price is acting Dominion caril- loneur at the Peace Tower of the Parliament buildings at Ottawa, and is believed to have played more caril- Ions than any other musician. As a composer, Mr. Price won a Pulitzer prize in 1934, and he is the author of a widely accepted book on the tech- nical features of the carillon. During his sixteen years t of per- forming on various carillons, Mr. Price has been the only non-Euro- pean carilloneur to tour Europe pro- fessionally. Born in Toronto, Mr. Price received his musical education in Canada and abroad, and in 1927 was graduated from the Mechlin Car- illon School as the only non-European to win a diploma from that institu- tion. In addition to his present post Mr. Price has served as official caril- loneur at the Massey Memorial caril- Ion in Toronto and the Rockefeller Memorial carillon in New York. No permanent successor to Professor Pratt has been named to serve follow- ing Mr. Price's visit. Prof, D umoud Vi I 1Embark Noted Civil War Authority To Lecture Abroad In recognition of his knowledge of the American Civil War period, Prof. Dwight L. Dumond of the history department has been selected to de- liver a series of eight lectures at the University of London nextrFebruary and March on "Anti-Slavery of the Civil War in the United States." The lectures, to be presented uin- dei the auspices of the University of London Commonwealth fund, will necessitate a six-week leave of ab- sence for Professor Dumond, during which time he plans to further hi. research into the origins of the Civil War with the aid of British docu-, ments. Professor Dumond has taught in the history department since 1929 and is widely known as an authority both on contemporary American his- tory and the history of the South. His leave next spring will be from Feb. 4 to March 18. Directory Out Soon The Summer Directory of the Uni- ,,-a, ci.-v p nescha muifshi1n cilities on both sides of its two 28- foot-wide roadways, helping N. State Street to look more like a traffic thor- oughfare than a catch-as-catch-can parking lot, and showing off the new $2,000,000 Graduate School to ad- vantage. However, there is -more to the Mall than the parkway, for included in the area designated by the term is the stretch of ground running from the General Library to N. University Ave- nue between the Natural Science and Chemistry buildings. This area is due for some new landscaping under the direction of Mr. William Pitkin of Rochester, N. Y., consulting landscape architect for the Mall project, ac- cording to Walter B. Roth, assistant superintendent of the Buildings and Grounds department, in charge of the project. 1. The Mall will be deemed finally completed only after construction of the new building for the School of Music which can be seen on the model behindwthe Carillon Tower and Hill Auditorium. Land for this building cannot be secured until funds have been appropriated for purchase of the privately owned property on the western side of the parkway. Work completed to date on the Mall has been ca'rried on through a joint ap-I propriation of $30,000 by the Re- gents and the WPA. Regents Accept Gifts Totalling Over_$14,200 Upjohn Pharmaceutical Co. Donates $2,700 For A Surgical Fellowship B ill Watson Places In Discus Throw EVANSTON, Ill., June 27-()-In shadowy twilight descending on Northwestern University's stadium, track and field stars from the Pa- cific Coast Conference overwhelm- ingly demonstrated their superiority over a picked Western Conference squad today by winning their second annual dual meet, 101 to 35, before 10,000 spectators. The Westerners won 12 of the 16 events, scoring clean sweeps in the 100 yard dash, the 120 yard high hurdles, the 220 yard dash, the jave- lin. and the broad jump, in addition to capturing both relays. In their tri- umph the invaders established four of five new meet records hung up. The Big Ten team, paced by Wis- consin's remarkable runner, black- haired Chuck Fenske, scored only four victories, with Fenske account- ing for two of them. The long strid- ing Badger star, rated among the six fastest milers in the world, won the "revenge mile" from Louis Zamperini, rambling Italian from Southern Cali- fornia, by a decisive 12 yards to wipe out the Southern Californian's vic- tory scored in the National Collegiate meet two weeks ago. The only other Big Ten- winners were Dave Albritton, the Ohio State Negro star, who won the high jump with a leap of 6 feet 6% inches, and Walter Mehl of Wisconsin, who won the two mile run in 9:13.5, a new meet mark. Ralph Schwarzkopf of Michigan was second. Pete Zagar of Stanford won the liscus throw with 158 feet, 5 inches. Bill Watson of Michigan was second with 150 feet. Gifts totalling more than $14,200 were accepted by the Regents at thet final meeting of the academic year, June 17, one appointment to the faculty was confirmed and one resig- nation accepted. The largest single donation was the Upjohn Pharmaceutical Co. of Kala- rmazoo grant of $2,700 to establish the Upjohn Fellowship in surgical re- search for the coming year. Don M. Le Duc, Grad., was awarded the fel- lowship. Dr. William Harris Winn, a mem- ber of the research staff of the Can- adian Royal Commission on Domin- ion-Provincial Relations, was ap- point to replace Dr. Charles F. Remer of the Economics department, who will take part in the economic confer- ence at Geneva, Switzerland during the academic year 1938-39. The Regents also expressed their appreciation to Radio Station WJR in Detroit for radio equipment during the past year valued at $7,500 and facilitiies and time with commercial value of $35,000. The resignation of Prof. Carleton Pierce of the Medical School to be- come director of the department of radiology of the Royal Hospital in Montreal was accepted by the Re-, gents. 9th District Alumni Will Meet July 16 Members of the ninth district alumni of the University, represent- ing 10 University of Michigan clubs, are scheduled to convene here for their annual meeting as guests of the Ann Arbor club on July 16. Alumni of southeastern Michigan who laid plans for the meeting in- clude Harcourt Patterson, Pontiac, president of the ninth district alum- ni- Miln o iinhant. Ann Arbor. secre- Barclay, Palmer Second LOUISVILLE, Ky., June 27-tP)- An unheralded Michigan State senior, Edward J. Flowers, of Grand Rapids, set the pace today for a record field in the opening qualifying round of the forty-first annual National In- tercollegiate golf championship. The tall, husky Michigan Stater, like the 158 other collegians who went to the post out of an entry list of 174, failed to solve the puzzling par of the Louisville Country Club, but his one-over-par 72 gave him a stroke lead at the halfway mark of the qualifying test. Two University of Michigan en- tries, Robert Palmer, also of Grand Rapids, and Bill Barclay, of Flint, along with Sid Richardson; of North- western, Robert E. Bingham, of Am- herst, and Lew Oehmig, of Virginia, were deadlocked with 738. Palmer and Barclay ; had erratic nines to blow chances of assuming the first-round leadership. Palmer took 40 blows on the par 36 outgoing side and then came home with a fine 33, the best score of the day on the par 35 incoming nine. Barclay clipped a stroke off the card for the first nine, but 3-putted the short 15th and lost two strokes with an out-of-bounds at the 17th. Students, Start New Magazine To Be Published Monthly By Independent Group There will be a summer session magazine for the first time in his- Iory when "Capus" comes from Iie presses Wednesday . The"venture, to be published week- ly by an independent group of stu- dents, will combine the ideas of the regular semester publications---hu- nor and cartoons from Gargoyle, in- formative articles and fiction from Perspectives, and pictures from Pan- orama, now defunct. "For the past several years there have been enough students enrolled in the summer session to justify the existence of a magazine," claim the editors. "As far as we know, Campus' has no prototype in any university." Fwanrh1-'eul of+"(amsmm" will m_ ii