WV CUIV quite so cool to- extreme northeast sorrow fair. I looee, 5k igan ~~Iait Summer Session Welcome . The Editor Gets Told .. I Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVIII, No. 1. ANlN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1938 Record Enrollment Forecast For Sun PRC IIVE CENTS imer AcademiclnstitutesHighlightScholasticProgramThis Session Far East Studies, Physics, Speech, HistoryListed Michigan First University In Country With Special Renaissance Program Highlighting the academic pro- gram of the 45th Summer Session Which swings into regular routine to- day will be a quartet of Institutes in Far Eastern affairs, physics, lin- guistics, and the Renaissance. De- signed for students interested in spe- ial scholastic accent in these fields the Institutes feature world renowned experts not obtainable in the regu- lar session because of other affilia- tions. The Institute of Far Eastern Stu- dies, designed to interpret Far Eas- tern Civlizatlons to Western and Or- iental 'students alike, will offer an augmented program which includes a wide curriculum of courses, special lectures, seminars and exhibits. Started At University Established at the University last year in recognition of a growing pub- lic and academic interest in Eastern Asia, the Institute has invited several prominent scholars from other in- stitut ons to join its staff, and the enr schedule of study has been re- vised and expanded to insure a well- rounded program both to former and to newly enrolled students. Special emphasis will be devoted to the study of Oriental languages, and courses of concentrated study will be held in Japanese, Chinese and Russian. The outstanding problems of the con- temporary Far East will also be given particular attention. The Linguistic Institute, sponsored by the Linguistic Society of America, will be offered this summer for the third annual season as a regular part of the University Summer Session. Linguistics Institute The Institute is to consist of class- Work, lectures and luncheonsconfer- ences and offered for the study of language and linguistics from an historical and structural point of view, according to its director, Prof. C. C. Fries of the English depart- ment. "Linguistic scholars, Pro f essor Fries said, "have increasingly felt the need of acquaintance with a wide diversity of languages. Few institu- tions have a sufficient number of students to justify the giving of regu- lar courses which cover remote bits of linguistic territory. "The Linguistic Institute, held dur- ing the Summer Session, when those who hold academic positions in wide- ly scattered institutions may attend, makes possible an economical presen- tation of these remote areas of lan- (Continued on Page 21 2,075 Graduates Hear Ruthven Complete, Revised Program Of Special Lectures, Entertainments FIRST WEEK June 26, 4:15 p.m. Recital on Charles Baird Carillon. June 27, 4:30 p.m. Conflicting Social Philosophies. Professor Roy W. Sellars. 8:30 p.m. "Arms and the Man," by George Bernard Shaw. June 28, 4:30 p.m. The Conflict Between Printed Books and Manuscripts in the Fifteenth Century (Illustrated). Dr. William W. Bishop. 8:30 p.m. "Arms and the Man," by George Bernard Shaw. June 29, 3:30 p.m. Tea and Dancing. (Michigan League Building.) 4:30 p.m. Astronomy in Motion Pictures (Illustrated). Dr. Heber D. Curtis. 8:30 p.m. "High Tor," by Maxwell Anderson. June 30, 2:00 p.m. Excursion No. 1-Tour of Campus. Inspection of General Library, Clements Library of Early American History, Cook Legal Re- search Library and Other Buildings of th Law, Quadrangle, Michigan Union, Burton Memorial Tower, Aeronautical Laboratory, Naval Tank, and other points of interest. Explanatory talks will be given by those in charge. Trip ends at, 4:45 p.m. Theie is no charge for. this excursion. 4:30 p.m. Modern Theories of the Renaissance. Professor Douglas Bush, Harvard University! 7:00 p.m. Concert on the Charles Baird Carillon. June 30, 8:30 p.m. "High Tor," by Maxwell Anderson. July 1, 1:00 p.m. Excursion to Toledo Institute of Arts. Auspices, Graduate Conference on Renaissance Studies. 4:30 p.m. Niagara Falls (Illustrated). Professor Irving D. Scott. 8:30 p.m. General Reception of the Faculty to the students of tlze Sum- mer Session. (Horace H. Rackham School.) 8:30 p.m. "Arms and the Man," by George Bernard Shaw. July 2, 8 a.m. Excursion No. 2-A day in Detroit. Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit Public Library, tour of Belle Isle, and Fisher Building, and in- spection of Radio Broadcasting Station WJR; Detroit Zoological Park. Round trip by bus. Reservations in Summer Session office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 5:30 p.m. Ann Arbor. 8:30 p.m. "Arms and the Man," by George Bernard Shaw. SECOND WEEK July 3, 4:15 p.m. Recital on the Charles Baird Carillon. 7:30 p.m. Vesper Service and Convocation. Main Auditorium, Horace H. Rackham School. July 4 Holiday.. July 5, 4:30 p.m. A Comparative Study of the Philosophies of Taoism, Con- fucius, and Mo Ti. Dr. Hu Shih, Peking University. 8:30 p.m. Concert. Faculty of the School of Music. (Hill Auditorium.) July 6, 12:45 p.m. Excursion No. 3-The Ford Plant. Inspection of the various Ford industries at River Rouge. Round trip by bus. Reserva- tions in Summer Session office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 5:30 p.m., Ann t. U I' tI Sellars Gives First Summer TalkToday To Speak On 'Conflicting Social Philosophies' In Grad School Auditorium Institutes To Offer Special Lectures Prof. Roy W. Sellars, chairman of he philosophy department, will de- iver the first of 30 Summer Session ectures at 4:30 p.Yn. today in the Mlain Auditorium of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. His subject will be "Conflicting Social Philosophies." One of the most distinguished phil- osophers in the country, ,Professor Sellars is especially noted for his ucid 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. The second lecture of the week, and the firstin a series of twelve talks in conjunction with the Graduate Con- ference on Studies in the Rennais- sance, will be delivered tomorrow by Dr. William W. Bishop, University Librarian, who will speak on "The Conflict Between Printed Books and Manuscripts In The Fifteenth Cen- tury." Illustrated talks by Dr. Heber D. Curtis, chairman of the astronomy de- partment, and Prof. Irving D. Scott, of the geology department, and a lec- ture on "Modern Theories of the Renaissance" by Prof. Douglas Bush of Harvard University will complete the schedule for this week. Four visiting , professors speaking on problems of the contemporary Far East will appear in' the schedule of 12 lectures which will be given under the auspices of the Institute of Far Eastern Studies. MICHIGAN DAILY TRYOUTS Summer Session students wish- ing journalistic and business ex- perience may apply for work on 'he Michigan Daily editoria Istaff at 5 p.m. and business staff at 2 p.m. any day this week at the Student Publications Building on Maynard Street. Niagara Falls Heads Session Excursion List Press Contract Of University Is Withdrawn Trips to Niagara Falls and Put-In- Bay highlight the University's sched- ule of 10 excursions for Summer Session students. Points of scientific, industrial and educational interest near Ann Arbor will be visited, with all expenses kept at actual traveling cost. The first trip, a tour of the cam- pus, will be conducted Thursday, and will include inspection of the build- ings of the Law Qudrangle, the Union, Clements Library, the gen- eral Library, and other points of in- . terest. The group will meet at 2 p.m. in the lobby, of Angell Hall. Prof. Louis J. Rouse of the mathematics department, director of the Sum- mer Session excursions, will conduct the tour. The second excursion, which will be held Saturday, goes to Detroit and, will feature visits to such institutions as the Detroit Institute of Arts, Belle Isle Park in the Detroit River, the new Fisher Building,- the studios of WJR radio station, and- the Detroit Zoological Park; The total expenses for the trip will be about $2, includ- ing round trip bus fare and luncheon in the Fisher Building Cafeteria. Res- ervations for this excursion must be made in Room 1213 Angell Hall be- fore 5 p.m. Friday. Wednesday, July 6, the Ford plant (Continued on Page 3) Theatre Grou ives Shaw Drama Tonight The Michigan Repetory Players, opening the second play of the Sum- mer Session series will preseent "Arms and the Man," by George Bernard Shaw, at 8:30 p.m. today, having already given two performances of Maxwell Anderson's "High Tar." Celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Repertory Season, the players are presenting eight plays in all from June 24 through August 17. The varied bill is predominantly comedy, with a modern classic, an Elizabethan drama, two national prize winners, a favorite of the Irish theatre, and a musical comedy with which to close the season in conjunction with the School of Music. Whitford Kane and Hiram Sher- man of the Mercury Theatre, New York, have returned for their second ! Regents Remove PrintingI From Ann Arbor Pressr FollowingNLRB Report Order Was Issued . By Board June 17 The strike-ridden Ann Arbor Press was dealt a severe blow June.17 by an order of the Board of RegentsC withdrawing all University printingt from the plant.' The Regents' action came twoI weeks after the release of an inter-f mediate report of the National Labor Relations Board Trial Examiner,C hearing the Press case in Washing- ton, in which the company was re- buked for its interference with em- ployes' right to join the International Typographical Union. The University has been a chief source of business for the Press= for several years.. Hearings on the strike,1 which was started by composing rooma employes Feb. 19 following a lockout of four men who had joined the .union, were begun by the NLRB May 2. The intermediate report,y made by Trial Examiner Frank Bloom, was issued June 1., The International Typographical Union requested the University to withdraw its business from the Press when the strike was one month old, urging that the Regents refuse to give orders to firms violating the National Labor Relations Act and Michigan Public Act 153, which re- quires printing paid for by the state to be done in- a shop maintaining wage levels prevalent in the com- munity where the work is done. Fures Show Gain Of 408 Over '37 Mark 3,619 Registered, Early Returns Show;,Expect Total Exceeding 5,110 The steady climb in Summer Ses- sion enrollment over a 10-year period will be continued in the 45th annual session, figures released yesterday by Miss Marian Williams, University sta- tistician, indicated. A total enroll- ment to date of 3,619, a 12 per cent increase over enrollment last year at this time was noted in the report. It is certain, Miss "Williams pre-: dicted, that the, total enrollment this year will exceed the final mark of 5,- 110, an all-time high in Summer Session enrollment, set last year. Records show that each session since 1928 has chalked up an enroll- ment increase over the previous year, this year's figures showing that 408 more students are registered than have ever been enrolled at the close df early registration in any previous Summer Session. The total enroll- ment last year at this time was 3,211. Greatest increase in enrollment among the schools to date is in the Graduate School wthich registered 264 more students than last year, the engineering college with 89 and the. literary college with 66. Termed by Director Louis A. Hop- kins, "one of the outstanding and most recognized sessions of its' type in the country," the Summer Ses- sion offers ordinary courses and courses supplementary to those of the regular year, a series of institutes and special study curricula and many lectures and symposia conducted by prominent outside educators. Large Visiting Staff To Come F or Summer Arbor. 3:30-5:30 p.m. Tea and Dancing. (Michigan League Building.) 4:30 p.m. Political and Social Development in Medieval China. Dr. Huc Shih, Peking, University.F 8:30 p.m. "Brother Rat," by Monks and Finklehoffe.C July 7, 4:30 pm. The Chinese Renaissance in Literature. Dr. Hu Shih,l Peking University. 7 p.m. Concert on the Charles Baird Carillon. 8:30,p.m. "Brother Rat," by Monks and Finklehoffe. July 8, 1 p.m. Excursion to Detroit Museum of Fine Arts. Auspices, Graduate Conference on Renaissance Studies. 4:30 p.m. The Chinese Renaissance in Language and Education. Dr. Hu Shih, Peking University. 8-10 p.m. Visitors' Night, Students' Observatory. Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m. "Brother Rat," by Monks and Finklehoffe. 9 p.m. Social Evening. (Michigan League Building.) July 9, 8 a.m. Excursion No. 4-The Cranbrook Schools. Inspection of the five schools of the Cranbrook Foundation, Bloomfield Hills, Christ Church, and the Carillon. Round trip by special bus. Reservations in Summer Session office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 4:00 p.m., Ann Arbor. 8-10 p.m. Visitors' Night, Students' Observatory, Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m. "Brother Rat," by Monks and Finklehoffe. 9 p.m. Social Evening. (Michigan League Building.) THIRD WEEK July 10, 4:15 p.m. Recital on the Charles Baird Carillon. July 11, 3:15 p.m. Recent Political Developments in Netherlands India. Dr. Amry Vandenbosch, University of Kentucky. 4:30 p.m. Renaissance Elements in Luther. Professor Ernest G. Schwie- bert, Valparaiso University. July 12, 3:15 p.m. Dutch Economic and Commercial Policy in the East Indies. Dr. Amry Vandenbosch, University of Kentucky. 4:30 p.m. Rabies (Illustrated with motion pictures). Dr. Herbert W. Emerson. 8:30 p.m. Concert. Faculty of the School of Music. (Hill Auditorium.) July 13, 12:45 p.m. Excursion No. 5-The Ford Plant. Inspection of the various Ford industries at River Rouge. Round trip by special bus. Reservations in Summer Session office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 5:30 p.m., Ann Arbor. 3:15 p.m. Netherlands India in World Politics. Dr. Amry Vandenbosch, University of Kentucky. 3-5:30 p.m. Tea and Dancing. (Michigan League Building.) 4:30 p.m. Arthritis (Illustrated). Dr. Richard H. Freyberg. 8:30 p.m. "Shoemakers' Holiday," by Thomas Dekker. July 14, 3:15 p.m. A Comparison of British, Dutch, and French Colonial Policy in Southeastern Asia. Dr. Amry Vandenbosch, University of Kentucky. summer with the Players as guest directors and actors, "High Tar," Anderson's fantasy of the Hudson Highlands, opened the season last Wednesday, and will be given again next Wednesday and Thursday, . Fantasy and realism are adroitly mixed as Van Dorn sits quietly among the rocks and sees before him in the dusk the figures of the Dutch sailors who were shipwrecked near the Tor in Henrik Hudson's day, and who, living a phantom life for the last 300 years, are patiently waiting for (Continued on Page 5) I 1 ' ,VV3I VLL wpv F _ lagnificent New $2,000,000 Graduate School Available To Summer Students More Than 65 Prominent Outside Educators Join Faculty For The Session More than 65 outside educators, many of them leaders in their spe- cific fields of research, will farm an important part of the faculty of the 45th annual Summer Session. Prominent among visiting fasulty members will be the 15 who will teach in the School of Education. Among these are: Ross L. Allen, Assistant Executive Director of the American Camping Association, and former editor of the Journal of Health and Physical Education and the Research Quarterly, who will give a course on "The Camp As An Mducational Agency." Others include Henry F. Alves, Senior Specialist in State School Ad- ministration in the U.S. Office of Education, who will teach State School Administration and Public School Finance; and Miss Edith M. Bader, Supervisor of Elementary' Schools and Assistant Superintendent of Schools in Ann Arbor, who will give a course on construction of the elementary school curriculum. Among the 13 visiting faculty mem- bers of the Music School for the Sum- mer Session are: Noble Cain, con- ductor of the Chicago A Capella Choir and noted adjudicator ,of state and national music festivals who will offer courses in Choral Literature; and Victor J. Grabel, organizer of jGrant Park concerts, Chicagorand general music director of the Chica- goland Music Festival, who will act as instructor in Band Clinic. Prof. James Holly Hanford, a mem- (Continued on Page 2) President Says Citizens Must Earn Security At the Commencement Day Exer- cises June 18 the second largest grad- uating class in the University's his- tory heard President Ruthven extoll usefulness to the community as the single criterion which justifies as- surance of financial security to the individual. - The president told the class of 2,075 that "Michigan has among its graduates quack doctors, shyster law- yers, teachers whose development was arrested at commencement, business men who short change their customers and steal our natural re- sources, unethical dentists and phar- macists, ministers who are careerists father than pastors of souls, vain, sel- fish and gossipy women, narrow- minded, bigotedhand intolerant men, and alumni who become less rather than more socially-minded and cul- 3 c (Continued on Page 4) Insurgents Advance On Spanish Fronts HENDAYE, France (at the Spanish Frontier), June 26.-VP)-Simultan- Urges FDR Ask Hague To Resign From Committee NEW YORK, June 26.-(P)-Presi- Building Intended For Social Center v ham and Mary A. Rackham Fund. The first endowment, consisting of a site for the building, the building and furnishings and a capital sum of four million dollars, was later sup- plemented by the addition of another ami +t ha Acmtrt tn ttd in Auto Ban On StartingToday The rules governing the regulation of automobiles for the 1938 Summer Session will become effective at 8 a.m. today. No restrictions are made for the use of cars for the following three classifications of students: those who are engaged during the academic be a lost art." A large study hall, library and peri- odical rooms are furnished "for those who wish to read uninterruptedly or to browse in scholarly fields other than their own." In t-he recesses of the building A commodious and resplendent