The Weather Lower Michigan: Occa- 41IiMa saonal showers and, local Th thunderstorms Friday and Th Saturday, somewhat warm. r Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVII NO. 5 ANN ARBOR., MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1938 Dance, Bridge Chamberlain Not Likely To Act Speech Expert Must Guard U. S.,Britain, .Against Franco Says Heneman Cs' 9' t Await Guests a SCalls Language Civil Liberties Professor Sees British lain is a member, is due simply to .FDA WarnsScrap Nva Atpersonal jealousies and personal pre-HFDWan Scp Nv l At Reception Prime Minister Safe judices against the Prime Minister," store Key On Present War Issue he added. EYn3)-Presi- fl .. Professor Heneman read accounts dent Roosevelt condemmed the burn- lp'v p TAT Editorials .ss Education And e Faculty Reception... e 'Realistic' itish Policy . PRICE FIVE CENTS France r .o ~I W11U i Departments To Receive In Rackham Building Students To Be Guides Formal Welcome Slated ForTonight .Dancing and a bridge tournament at the Women's League will be in- cluded in the Summer School Recep- tion, beginning at 8:30' p.m. today in the Assembly room on the third floor f' the Horace H. Rackham School of GraduateStudies. The reception, an annual affair, is the first formal welcome to all students and faculty members of the schools and colleges participating in the Summer Session. The Administrative Receiving Line will be divided into two sections, with the first greeting guests from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m., and the second serving from 9:30 to 10:30 p.m. Director Louis A. Hopkins of the Summer Session, and Mrs Hopkins will head both lines. Fourteen Departments Members of the 14 departmental faculties of the Summer Session will receive guests in headquarters set up in different rooms of the Rackham Building._ The dance, slated for the League ballroom will begin at 9 p.m., with Charles Zwick's orchestra playing. Student officials, under the direction of Jean Holland, president of the League, will assist guests in meeting partners. The bridge tourney will be staged in the Ethel Fountain Hussey room. Prizes will be awarded. Twenty-five members of th Michi- gan Dames, headed by their presi- dent, Mrs. Myron A. Shilling, will introduce the guests as they are re- ceived by members of the administra- tion in the Assembly Room. Men Will Guide A number of mein students will be present as guide to show the guests "the Rackham uildng. This group, headed. by Arnold White, will in- lude; Wilson Whiting, John Sayre, RPhillip Busche, Robert Mitchell, Henry Adams, Edward Egle and Har- old Nickels. Women students acting as hos- tesses and guides for the reception are members of the Women's Edu- cation Club. The list will include: Mary Eliza Shannopi, Gladys Griffith, Mildred Huffman, Bertha Bergthold, Shirley Butler, Nell Morgan, Cather- ine Belworthy, Demarious Fredick, Pearl Hix, Helen Taylor, Mary Jane Mary Virginia Bush, Ruth Coles, Knott, Mary L. Bell, Mary Miller, Virginia Johnston, Mary Michael, Frances Quigley, Emma Musson, Bea- (Continued on Page 4) Stock Exchange Surprises 'Street' With New Head NEW YORK, June 30-UP)-Tak- ing Wall Street completely by sur- prise, the New York Stock Exchange today chose 31-year old William Mc- Chesney Martin, Jr., as its first paid president, passing over a list of 200 names which included pro- minent men in banking, business and the law. Climaxing a months-long drive for internal reform in the nation's num- ber one securities market, in the course of which Martin, a member, had occupied the non-salaried posi- tion of chairman of the exchange, and was its acting president, the young St. Louis broker was lifted into of- fice on less than 24 hours notice by a unanimous vote of the governors of the Exchange.' To comply with the constitution of the exchange, Martin announced his retirement from the St. Louis brokerage firm of A. G. Edwards & Sons, and arranged to sell his "seat" on the exchange here. The office of chairman will re- vert to Charles B. Harding, of the New York firm of Smith, Barney & Co., who becomes "acting" chairman. SEC Commissioner John W. Hanes was formerly a partner in Harding's firm. The nominating committee has the right to suggest a candidate forI successor to Martin as chairman, but need not do so. No decision had been reached immediately as to the com- mittee's course. By HARRY SONNEBORN Reports that public opinion might force Prime Minister Chamberlain of} Great Britain to take action against Spanish Insurgent bombings of Brit- ish ships trading with Loyalist Spain were discounted yesterday by Prof. Harlow J. Heneman of the political science department. "No one can safely predict what will happen in the future," Professor Heneman pointed out, "but I feel that Chamberlain can continue to control a majority in the House of Commons, even though a section of public opin- ion seems to be against him." He said unforeseen incidents might easily change the whole course of events. Chamberlain's opposition is not a unified one, according to Professor Heneman. He explained that it con- sists of Liberals, Labor Party mem- bers, and a scattering of Conserva- tives.- "This gConservative opposition, is mostly composed of men who hate to see a loss of British prestige and- damage to British sea power," Pro- fessor Heneman said. "Then, too, some of the opposition in the Con- servative party, of which Chamber- in yesterday's Daily of reports that a note fromsRebelhGeneral Francisco Franco was on the way to London, presumably carrying a proposal for a neutral port in Spain where British ships could carry on their trade. He said that if such a proposal is adopt- ed, it may quiet the discontent in the Conservative ranks, but it would probably draw accusations from the Labor party that Chamberlain had granted some kind of concessions to Franco, whom the Labor party ordi- narily oppose. "This attitude of Tories and Liber- als toward British prehtige is inter- esting," Professor Heneman said. "A few years ago, when British engineers were imprisoned and tried ,in Russia, England threatened to break off trade relations if necessary to save her face. Now some 57 Fascist attacks on British ships have been made, four seamen have been killed in the last week, and the attitude is entirely different." "When the Anglo-Italian accord was signed this spring," Professor Heneman continued, "it was generally thought that the Spanish war would soon be over, and it is quite possible (Continued on Page 4) Six Man Track Squad Enters A. A. U. Meet No Single Key To Middle A VS Lecturer Saysl Team To Leave Today;I Schwarzkopf Twists An Ankle But Will Run By MEL FINEBERG (Summer Daily Sports Editor) Sorely beset by leg injuries and back sprains, a gallant band of Mich- igan trackmen left this morning for the high point of cinder activities, the National A.A.U. Meet at Buffalo, July 2 and 3. The five men who have been carry- ing Michigan colors in the post var- sity competition and one addedmem- ber will continue at the Queen City meet. Headed by an injured Bill Wat- son, the squad includes an equally in- jured Elmer Gedeon and Ralph Sch- warzkopf, Jim Kingsley, Wes Allen and Stan Kelley. Added To Injured List Ralph Schwarzkopf was added to the injured list Thursday when he twisted his ankle. Schwarzkopf was showing some friends from North Carolina, who are also planning to go to Buffalo, the Horace H. Rackham Graduate School Auditorium when he looked backward, something he would never do in a running race. In the semi-darkness of the auditorium he missed a step, fell and twisted his ankle. Ralph will still be able to run but the injury, while not serious, will probably hamper him in the two- mile. Watson, still troubled by the back strain which has bothered him in his post season activity, may not attempt a triple. Big Bill may forego the dis- cus and concentrate on his two best events, the broad jump and the shot put. May Not Compete Thle third member of the squad's sick list, Elmer Gedeon, although he has decided to make the trip, was not sure that his injured leg would allow him to compete. Gedeon, one of the five best hurdlers in the coun- try when in shape, has not even at- tempted a hurdle since a week ago Wednesday. If he does run he will enter only one event, the 120-yard high hurdles. The competition in this meet will be just about as stiff as any meet in the world, including the Olympics. The cream of American athletes, primed for this meet, are ready to go. Glen Cunningham, Archie San Romani, Ben Johnson, Ken Car- penter, Earle Meadows, Dave Albrit- ton, Al Tolmich, Mel Walker, Lou Zamperini, Don Lash, Perrin Walker, Fred Wolcott, Southern California's National Intercollegiate Champions, and a myriad of the country's finest track and field men will be on hand to dedicate the track of the new Roesch Stadium in Buffalo. Engineering Convention Takes Professors East m' - Professor Bush, Harvard, Finds Renaissance Needs A Broader Interpretation Recent theories of the Renaissance stress the continuity between the middle ages and subsequent eras, Pro- fessor Douglas Bush of Harvard Uni- versity stated in the second of the lectures under the auspices of the Graduate Conference on Renaissance Studies in the main auditorium of the Rackham School. After presenting a resume of the leading theories of the Renaissance, Professor Bush suggested( as the main line of continuity the tradition of Christian humanism which, extend- ing from John of Salisbury to Milton, was a synthesis of classical culture and Christian values. "The difficulty with most theorists of the Renaissance," said Professor Bush, "is that they attempt to open all doors with one key, or rather, that they shut their eyes to all but the door to which they have the key." The tendency to account for the com- plexity of the Renaissance by over- emphasizing but one aspect of the period has led to the creation of myths concerning the Renaissance. Much of this myth-making, accord- ing to Professor Bush, goes back to such nineteenth century historians as Michelet, Burckhart, and Symonds, who looked upon the Renaissance as a complete break from the middle ages and as a manifestation of mod- ern "individualism." Recent ,research has indicated a much closer tie between the middle ages and the Renaissance proper than has hitherto been believed. The main1 obstacles to a realization of this fact Professor Bush traced to lack of in- formation about the middle ages, to a Protestant bias, and to the pre- conceptions of secular liberaliftn. The Graduate Conference on Re- naissance Studies continues its pro- gram with an excursion to the To- ledo Institute of Arts this afternoon, Prof. Bloomfield, Visiting Faculty Member Findst No 'Primitive' Tongues Lecture Is Third Of Summer Series "By looking at man through lan-1 guage we can learn more about man." This, in brief, constituted the an- swer given yesterday by Professor Leonard Bloomfield to the question, "Why study the languages of primi- tive peoples?" which was the subject of the first luncheon conference of the 1938 Linguistic Institute. "More specifically," said Dr. Bloomfield, professor of linguistics! at the University of Chicago and visiting member of the Institute fa- culty, "we can learn not to keep on saying the many wrong things about language that long have been said by people who did not know many languages. "We find out, for example, thata what we had always assumed to be regular and inevitable because it is1 true of our own language or of Euro- pean languages in general is, as a matter of fact, distinctly extraordin- ary and irregular. Of course, we do not know even our own languages very well as yet. There has never1 been, for instance, a complete des- criptive grammar of English that would be satisfactory to the person to whom English was not his native speech.". Admitting that, at least to his au- dience, the question-topic was chief- ly rhetorical since his hearers be- lieved in the value of linguistic study of the languages of primitive people. Dr. Bloomfield nevertheless criti- cited the wording of the topic be- cause to the linguist there are no primitive languages or primitive peo- ples. 'eThe language of a so-called primi- tive peoples," he delared, "is looked at by the linguistic scientist simply as a tool of communication. And since he finds sane, intelligent speak- ers in these primitive groups he can only conclude that the language which they speak is not a primitive language." Martin -Lewis Parley Fails UJAW Rift Sticks Despite 'Talk At Capital WASHINGTON, June 30-(N)-A conference between John L. Lewis and Homer Martin, president of the CIO's United Auto Workers Union, ~pparently failed today to produce formula tofenddfactional strife that has split the giant auto union. Martin emerged from the confer- ence to tell reporters he had "abso- lutely no intention" to revoke his re- cent suspension of five high officers of the auto workers' international board. The suspended officers have been charged by Martin with disrupting a "harmony program," and have been ordered to face trial before the Board July 26. Asked what his attitude would be if Lewis requested him to withdraw the suspension order and reinstate the five officers, Martin said: ing of libraries, the exiling of scien- tists, writers and musicians and the censoring of news, literature and art - in an address today to members of the National Education Association at the World's Fair site. Without naming any country, he said such things turn back "the clock of civilization." "If the fires of freedom and civil liberties burn low in other lands,"1 he said, "they must be made brighterl in our own. "If in other lands the eternalS truths of the past are threatened by intolerance, we must provide a safe place here for their perpetuation." "There may be times when men and women in the turmoil of change lose touch with the civilized gains of centuries of education," the Presi- dent continued, "But the gains of education are never really lost. "Books may be burned and cities sacked, but truth, like the yearning for freedom, lives in the hearts of humble men and women. "The ultimate victory of tomorrow{ is with democracy, and through de- mocracy with education, for no peo- ple can be kept eternally ignorant or eternally enslaved." He declared for state and local control of schools and their curricula with the Federal government supple- menting only the resources of the poorer communities. Earlier, the President made a new declaration against war and re-iter- ated the policy of the good neighbor as a model for the rest of the world in helping lay the cornerstone of the Fair's $3,000,000 Federal project. 150 Turn Out For First Tour Of Ann Arbor Expect Large Attendance For 'A Day In Detroit,' Next Scheduled Trip More than 150 students toured the campus yesterday on the first ex- cursion of a series being sponsored by the University this summer, and ,he large number evincing interest in the tours is favorable to a large turnout for the second excursion, "A Day in Detroit," according to, Prof. Louis Rouse of the mathematics de- partment. The objective of the journey to De- troit is to inspect important institu- tions in the downtown area. The par- ty will visit the Detroit Institute of Arts, Belle Isle Park, the new Fisher Building, and the Detroit Zoological Park. After the tour of inspectionithe party will have lunch at the Fisher Building Cafeteria. The party will then proceed to visit the broadcast- ing studios of Station WJR. The excursion will start at 8 a.m. from in front of Angell Hall and will return to Ann Arbor at about 5:30 p.m. Expenses for the day, in- cluding bus fare and luncheon, will be $2 per person. Jares Roosevelt Treated For Ulcer' ROCHESTER, Minn., June 30-W) -James Roosevelt, son and secretary of the President, was reported in an "unchanged condition" at St. Mary's Hospital here late today. He is un- dergoing medical treatment for a small gastric ulcer. Physicians said his general condition is excellent. Hospital attendants said young Roosevelt is "not seeing anyone" ex- cept his wife who came here Mon- day. Earlier today, a statement was is- sued in Roosevelt's behalf saying he was "indignant over certain outright misrepresentations" in an article in the current Saturday Evening Post which said he is making between $250,000 and two million dollars an- nually selling insurance. BULLETIN TOKYO, June 1-(Friday)-OP) -The government today listed 197 dead or missing and 13 of Japan's main railways disrupted in two days of storm, and earthquakes. A typhoon, which had been roar- ing toward the country's easter" Guardian Trust Co. To Pay Creditors LANSING, June 30-P)-The Michigan Supreme Court today sus-_ tained a circuit court decision and opened the way for release of between $4,400,000 and $6,200,000 to creditors of the old Union Guardian Trust Co. of Detroit. The Supreme Court's ruling upheld an opinion by Circuit Court Judge Adolph F. Marschner that dividends ranging between 171/2 and 25 per cent be paid creditors through a loan from The Manufacturer's National Bank. The exact amount creditors will receive, unless something unforseen happens to block the expected pay- ment, will depend upon success in collecting stockholders' assessments. Bill Barclay Is Eliminated In College Golf Michigan Senior Beaten On 35th Green, 2 and 1; Turnesa Also Defeated After a day of sensational shooting which saw Willy Turnesa, young Holy Cross favorite, and Michigan's Bill Barcay, last year's semi-finalist, fall by the loser's wayside, the Na- tional Intercollegiate Gof1 Tourna- ment today entered the semi-final stage. Barclay, only Wolverine qualifier, was upset by Bert McDowell, a Louis'- iana State.sophomore, 2 and 1. The versatile Michigan senior was favor- ed over the Kansas City shooter and the match was close all the way. It was until the 35th green where Mc- Dowell canned his putt that the match was finally decided. Turnesa, 23-year-old member of the Elmsford, N. Y., Turnesa's, after going into a 2 up lead through 18 holes of the 36-hole quarter-finals, could not cope with the steadiness of Bob Babbish, University of De- troit sophomore, and fell by the way- side 3 and 2. Lew W. Oehmig of Chattanooga, Tenn., and the University of Virgin- ia, who tied the Holy Cross senior for medal honors in the qualifying, stepped out to take a brilliantly- fought duel from Henry Castillo, Louisiana Stat sophomore 3 and 1. Franco Forges Ahead Slowly On East Coast Loyalists Offer Stubborn Defense But Insurgent Heavy Guns Turn Scales HENDAYE, France (At the Span- ish Frontier), June 30-()-The Spanish Government today appar- ently was fighting a losing battle to keep the Insurgents from pushing through the defenses of the Teruel- Mediterranean highway in the drive for Valencia. Insurgent field headquarters re- ported heavily reinforced troops pen- etrated the Government's lines in two places in the Onda sector. Galicians commanded by General Miguel Aranda swept down to the edge of Artana, a village 30 miles north of Valencia. Eleven miles northwest of Artana, another force under General Garcia Valino was in action near Fanzara. Insurgents reported Valino had forced a crossing of the Mijares River south of Fanzara but the Government denied this. Government bulletins said the In- surgent advance in the sector was limited to a bit of territory evacuated in a "slight withdrawal" of defense forces after heavy Insurgent artillery and aviation bombardments. The Government said its opponents 'Escalator Clause' Invoked To Permit Construction Of 45,000-Ton Vessels Pact Also Allows Sixteen-Inch Guns WASHINGTON, June 30 -(M- The United State's hands became free today for the building of 45,000- ton battleships armed with 16-inch guns. An agreement with Great Britain and France announced in London permits the three governments to build the craft, vastly more powerful than anything now afloat. The pact arises from reports that Japan was building huge craft beyond the for- mer treaty limit of 35,000 tons. As to the United States, construc- tion probably will be started after four 35,000-ton warships, already de- cided upon, have been laid down. In addition to these four, two other 35,000-ton craft, the North Carolina and the Washington, already are be- ing built. Through invocation of the "escala- tor clause" in the 1936 Naval Treaty, the United States, Britian and France lifted the 35,000 ton limits of that treaty today. Britian, through an announcement in the House of Commons by Alfred Duff Cooper, first Lord of the Admiralty, declared her intention of building two 40,000 ton ships under the 1938 program and of sticking to that limit if other European powers did so. To officials here this had the ap- pearance of creating two types of fleet, the Pacific and the Atlantic, In the Atlantic the 'maximum would be 40,000 tons, in the Pacific, 45,00. A similar distinction was made in the Naval Treaty between Britian and the Soviet Union whereby the Soviets agreed to adhere to the limi- tations of the 41936 treaty for their European fleet but not for their Asiatic fleet. Today's announcement may mean, that Britain will get an earlier start than the United States on building warcraft larger than 35,000 tons. The United States cannot possibly lay down the 45,000 ton ships until next year. Plans alone require a year to complete. President Roosevelt was given au- thority in the billion-dollar Fleet Ex- pansion Act to order battleships up to 45,000 tons if he considered them necessary for national defense. Carrying out a continuous program to replace ships approaching the 26- year limit. of. maximum military use- fulness, the navy intends to ask Con- gress next year for funds to start one or two more battleships. Indi- cations are they will be 45,000 ton- ners. The United States, on the grounds that knowledge of Japan's naval pro- gram was too indefinite to fix a limit, came out first for no restriction at all on size and for 18-inch guns. Murphy Warns '4 th' Motorists I IU~VV VV tXU C A State Officials List Of '37 Mishaps Six Jesse Owens Just 'An Also Ran' If The Old Records Are Correct, gy KEN CHERNIN Jesse Owens swept the Olympic boards and cinders, but it looks as though he'll have plenty of trouble making any improvements on the professional track records. Unless the professional marks are products of weird imaginations faulty clocks, or elastic tape measures, Jesse will make as much impression on the pro records as a set of buck store teeth would on rock candy. The famed Buckeye comet is a co- holder of the world amateur record for 100 yards. streaking over the distance in 9.4 seconds, but did you ever hear of a gent named R. F. Wil- liams? Mr. Williams says the record book, covered the same distance in was accepted as a world record. But Mr. J. Howard of England is listed in the books as the pro champ in the event; and, says the pro records, he is credited with a jump of better than 29 feet, which he accomplished in 1854. One man was found who re- called the feat, and he intimated strongly that Howard could outjump, any kangaroo that lived. Jesse has bettered one pro mark, however, for he is credited with 20.3 in the 220-yard dash down the straightaway, as against Jack Don- aldson's pro mark of 21.1, made in Canada, The pro record for five standing jumps with weights also was a corker of track history among the boys who LANSING, June 30-(AP-Governor Murphy joined with the State High- way department and State police to- day in ,an appeal to Michigan mo- torists to makes the Fourth of July weekend a safe one on State high- ways. Governor Murphy pointed out that State agencies may cooperate fully in a safety program but that the final success depended on the individual motorist. He asked special vigilance against drunken drivers. A year ago the State record for the "Fourth" weekend was the worst in the nation-38 persons being killed and 50 injured in 31 fatal accidents. For the benefit of the cautious mo- torists, G. Donald Kennedy, deputy State highway commissioner, and State Police Commissioner Oscar G. Olander listed the six outstanding causes of accidents last Fourth of July. They were: