.W- ton Mk' wers today. Mostly cloudy ow, preceded by showers. ,ate temperature. L r Affr ~~Iatr Editorials "Let's Save The World"... A Glimmer of Human itarianism 6. . i Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVIII. No. 9 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1938 PRICE FVE CENT . .._v ._...®._ _ .. .. FDR To Take Fight To Foes In Dixieland Roosevelt Believes South Is 'Nation's No. One Economic Problem' President Pledges Aid in Next Session WASHINGTON, July 6.-(A'P) - President Roosevelt is seeking to carry the fighting to New Deal foes in the South, Democratic, or Re- publican. That was plainly indicat- ed by his letter opening the ad- ministration conference on economic conditions in Dixie. Mr. Roosevelt said the South was "The nation's No. 1 economic prob- lem" and virtually pledged his ad- ministration to do something about it in the next Congress. Read Two-Fold Purpose Between the lines of that com- munication, political observers read a possible two-fold political purpose, dictating the timing of the confer- ence if not its inspiration. The meet- ing was held in the midst of an off- year election campaign that has al- ready brought sharply into focus dif- ferences between the White House and some southern senators and rep- resentatives. It also came at a time when John Hamilton, Republican National Chairman, is proselyting for Anti-New Deal Democratic votes. In the circumstances, the conclusion that motives of practical politics played some part in arranging the study seems inescapable although no administration spokesman acknowl- edges it. In effect, the President's letter con- tends that Republican management of national affairs for decades after the war between the states is respon- sible for conditions in the South. His reference to 'the long and ironic ,history of the despoiling" of the I South has that implication. It is an administration answer to Hamilton's appeals in Alabama and Virginia for Jeffersonian Democratic support of a Republican ticket in 1940 to oust the New Deal from power. SituAltion Significant Even more significant to political onlookers, however, is the situation confronting Anti-New Deal Demo- ;crats in the South as a result of the President's call for a prompt and far- reaching program to "rehabilitate the South." While the southern sur- vey is presumably only a preliminary step toward working out a New Deal formula for that rehabilitation, the Roosevelt letter is definite notice to southern voters of his purposes and objectivesvin trying to perpetuate New Deal domination of the Demo- cratic Party. Whatever doubts they may have as to New Deal methods to come, no Democratic nomination seeker in the South could refuse to endorse the President's stated objec- tives. ' ~Speculation Rifek Lockwood Says England, U.S. Must Protect Eastern Interests Informs Rotarian Parley Economic Cooperation Is Needed For Peace By CARL PETERSEN Great Britain and the United States must bend their efforts toward re- storing peace in the Far East if their economic stakes are to be fostered and maintained, Dr. W. W. Lockwood of the Institute of Pacific Relations told 250 Rotarians meeting yesterday in the Union in conjunction with the district conference on International Service Work. He pointed out that Great Britain, and the United States have parallel economic interests in the Far East, the British Empire in its investments and the United States in its trade, and since, he said, the fundamental prerequisite for economic develop- ment is a situation of peace, it is to the advantage of the two powers to work to secure that situation. With regard to the United States, Dr. Lockwood said, the issue is not so much whether the 'United States should take a stand against Japan because it has come to be a competing industrial power, or for it, in order to strengthen trade connections, but rather that the United States would benefit from a condition of peace through restored economic relation with both Japan and China. There are, however, forces operat- ing which make peace difficult to se- cure, for war, Dr. Lockwood said, plays hob with all economic setups. The results of preparation for war-a great armament expansions-lead tol economic waste and the economy be- comes dependent upon armament building for its principle stimulus. Under such a condition, he pointed out, it approaches the impossible to restore a condition of peace becausel such condition would result in col- lapse of the country's economy. Dr. Lockwood envisioned either a serious defeat or only a partial vic- tory for Japan in China because of the straightened economic circum- stances in which she finds herself to-1 .8 Scholarships Made Available By Endowment, Rackham Fund Extends $100,000 For Awardst To Undergraduate Men day. At the outset of the war, hc pointed out, Japan was enjoying a great measure of economic stability, due to four factors: first, she had abundant raw materials; second, she possessed a comfortable gold reserve; third, her export and import trade was enjoying a boom period and fin- ally, her credit rating among the countries of the world was high. Today, after one year of warfare, which sees Japan's army straggled out over a huge piece of China, that economic stability, if not wholly dis- sipated, has at least deteriorated to a great degree. Furthermore, Dr. Lockwood said, it is impossible to con- ceive that Japan can possibly estab- lish, in the event of a victory in the current conflict, a peaceful regime in China without the cooperation of the Chinese. But, he said, the Japanese through their rthless tactics in war, have irrevocably alienated the Chi- nese and can never secure their co- operation in establishing any kind of a regime there. Kent Explains Complexities Of Latin Verse Linguistics Institute Hears Pennsylvania U. Faculty Man In First Lecture How the classical Latin poets, handicapped by the rigid metrical patterns of Latin verse, adopted from a variety of sources certain arbitrary conventions which enabled them to use certain kinds of words and phrases, was explained l'ast night by Prof. Roland G. Kent of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, visiting faculty member of the Linguistic Institute, in the first formal lecture of the In- stitute's summer program. The Institute program continues today with the regular informal lun- cheon conference at 12:10 p.m. in the Rackham building, with Prof. Morri Swadesh of the University of Wisco in speaking on "Complemen- tive ar d Elliptic Sentences in Mod- ern Edglish." Basi g his conclusions upon a de- tailed syllabic analysis of the major works'of Vergil and Horace, Profes- sor Kelit last night pointed specifical- ly to the kinds of poetic license which developed and sought to explain their origin. Onecommon device, he said, was liaisor by which the sound of one syllabe was transferred to another syllabee, as in modern English "no- ta-tall," the spoken equivalent of "not-t-all." Similar phonetic phe- nomna of colloquial Latin, according to Dr. Kent, must have been utilized by the poets in their efforts to keep their diction within the circumscribed for ial patterns. Another device was eli on, or the merging of one vowel wilh another; and still another was hiatus, or the absence of an expected eliion. Basic in Professor Kent's sum- n,ary was the contention that in Lat- in poetry it must be recognized that syllabic division does not rest upon tie word as a unit but upon the phrase, as in ordinary speech. It is this recognition of the use of the phrasal pattern of speech that en- Sbles the modern scholar to interpret on a purely linguistic basis the pe- culiar metrical phenomena of the final syllables of Latin verse. Prof. Kramers At Symposium Leiden Physicist Speaks' On Quantum Theory Prof. H. A. Kramers of the Uni- versity of Leiden, Netherlands, spoke yesterday morning in the small amphitheatre inthe Horace Rack ham Building before the members of the Symposium on theoretical physics being held June 27 to August 19 by the department of Physics. Prof. Kramers, who is here discuss- ing 'the quantum theory of electro- magnetic radiation and the relativity theory of particles as interpreted by the method ow spinors, is one of the two lecturers speaking this week be- fore the Symposium. Prof. H. A. Bethe of Cornell Uni- versity, the other guest lecturer this week, will speak at 7:30 p. m. today nl f..n rnrbai nnf Pn nrr,.n in ta a, Hu Shih Calls Chinese Unity Natural Force Is Not Result Of External Aggression, But Of 21 Centuries As A Nation Says Empire Most Important Force Chinese national unity is not, as recent events would tend to indicate, a new force brought on by war and forceful external aggression, but is the natural product of 21 centuries of national life under one empire, one law and one culture, Dr. Hu Shih de- clared yesterday in the second of a series of lectures being given in con- junction with the Far Eastern In- stitute. Dr. Hu advanced the thesis that the two fundamental developments of Medieval Chinese civilization, the problems of building a stable Empire and a national culture, are of ulti- mate importance for any intelligent understanding of the present resur- gence of Chinese natioifalism. Empire Great Force The most important single force in Chinese history was the Empire, Dr. Hu maintained, for not only did it shape and mold national politios for over twenty centuries, but it also gave birth to the notion of unified Chinese people which has always re- tained its identity despite internal vicissitudes and the threats of exter- nal barbarism. The first Empire was founded in 221 B. C., but Dr. Hu indicated that long before that there had been' a desire for some form of unity. Al- though the first Empire brought fedualism to a formal end, it was in essence a despotic government which r epr es s ed the flowering of the thought of the previous period of in- tellectual maturity. It was not until the second Empire was formulated fifteen years later that both political and cultural stabilization could be achieved. The founder of this dynas- ty was a genius, Dr. Hu said, a man with a profound respect for learning and books, a "rough rider Emperor" who was converted to education and intellectual endeavor by a famous Confucian scholar. Practice Lao-tse Teaching It was in this dynasty, Dr. Hu maintained, that a succession of rul- ers who consciously and deliberately practiced the Lao-tse teachiig of non-interference and inaction on the part of the government, arose and placed the Empire on a new solid foundation by making the people re- alize that a unified nation meant peace, properity and the spread of an indigenous culture. Federal Policies On Schools Tld Mexico May Sell Half Of Oil To Reich Expropriated Companies May Attempt To Block Sale By Proceedings American Concern Named As Buyer MEXICO CITY, July 6.-u)-The Mexico Government has contracted to sell $10,000,000 worth of oil to Davis and Company of New York in a deal described tonight as a broad step toward solution of the nation's problem of disposing of her vast stores of black gold. About 50 per cent of the oil will go to Germany and the remainder to general European markets, principal- ly those of Scandinavian countries, reliable official and unofficial sources discolsed tonight. The deal was reported by these sources to have been consummated yesterday. It was approved by Presi- dent Lazaro Cardenas some weeks ago. The oil will be obtained from wells expropriated on March 18 from 17 British and American companies and from wells owned by the Government prior to taking over the foreign- owned companies. A possible hitch in the deal was seen in a statement by ousted of- ficials of the expropriated companies that they would start attachment proceedings against any tanker carrying oil from the expropriated wells. It was pointed out they could file such claims against the carriers, claiming the cargoes as their proper- ty when they show up in foreign ports. On the other hand, some sources said the oil might be kept in the Mexican Government's name until it is discharged, thus averting litigation since governments can not be sued without their consent. Unless legal complicatioes develop, a tremendous increase in imports from Germany and a possible drop in like shipments from the United Sta es was seen as t possible result. Adamis to Address Luncheon Today Ti rd War Veteran Dies Before Bivouac GETTYSBURG, Pa., July 6.- P)- A third veteran of the war between the states- one who did not see the "Last Reunion" of the Blue and Gray he had traveled hundreds of miles to attend-died tonight as former com- rades and foes neared their homes. John W. Weaver, 95, of Maldrow, Okla., succumbed to a'heart condi- tion in a Gettysburg Hospital. A similar cause was ascribed for the deaths, earlier in the day, of John W. Cooper, 91, of Largo, Fla., also a former Confederate soldier, and Dan- iel T. Price, 91, of Marion, Ind., a member of the Grand Army of the Republic. Planes, Boats Offered In Hunt For Expedition. Two University Women In, Party, Now Two Days Overdue On Colorado LEE'S FERRY, ARIZ., July 6.- (I)-Offers to search by plane and boat for the four men and two women daring the Colorado River were made today as the expedition, two days overdue, failed to appear at this nor- thern Arizona outpost. The expedition, headed by Norman D. Nevills of Mexican Hat, Utah, and including two women, Elzada Clover, 40, University of Michigan botanist and her assistant, Lois Jotter, 25, left Green River, Utah, June 20. It was due here July 4. While government men here said they might ask that a plane be sent in search if the party failed to arrive Friday, Liet. P. S. Lyons, U. S. Coast Guard bier stationed at Biggs Field, El Paso, Tex., said "We are stationed here to engage in work of this sort. If there is any real fear that the party is in peril we'll start a search at once." Group To Make CranbrooK T.rip Prof. Rouse To Lead Party On Excursion Saturday x . . . Settlement As Bombs And Bullets Mark Anniversary Of China's First Armed Resistance 3 Bombs Thrown At JapSentry Post SHANGHAI, July 7.-( Thursday)- (P-Exploding bombs and assassins' bullets today ushered in the first an- niversary of China's armed resistance to Japanese invaders and threw the .internatinal settlement into turmoil. Two Japanese and two Chinese were killed. ' A British Colonial soldier and four Chinese were wounded in the sudden surge of violence. Three bombs were thrown simul- taneously at a Japanese sentry post on Garden Bridge, a flating restau- rant off the Bund-now used as Japanese Gendarme headquarters- and the Yokohama Specie Bank Branch also on the Bund. One Chinese was killed and another wounded. Police reserves and foreign defense units were immediately called out to guard against more serious outbreaks of terrorism in China's commercial capital. A cordon quickly was thrown\ around the foreign area blocking all traffic between the International Settlement and Japanese-occupied territory. An unidentified Japanese riding a bicycle in the International Sector guarded by United States Marines was shot and killed. His assassin escaped. In Japanese-occupied West Hong- kew, a part of Changhai, a Japanese sentry was shot and killed by three Chinese who threw a hand grenade at a Japanese sentry post on the Yuyaching Road.'Bridge, -linking the Settlement with Hongkew. Three bombs were tossed against a Japanese cotton mill on the Settle- ment outskirts and a few moments later three more bombs exploded in the mill's living quarters. One Brit- dish Sikh, Colonial Soldier,.'as wound- ed. Dr. Lapp Says Thinking Aim Of Education Ability To Think Controls Public Opinion, Should Be Goal,_Speaker Holds "Thinking controls public opinion, and therefore educating to think should be the principle purpose of the teacher," Dr. John A. Lapp told approximately 100 persons in a lec- ture concerning "The Relation of the Teacher to the Contemporary Social Scene, yesterday, sponsored by the Michigan Federation of Teachers. Dr. Lap, who is chairman of the Bituminous Labor Board, said that it is very difficult for teachers to do anything about their own teaching programs, because such things are controlled too rigidly by school boards which usually, are composed of men who are not educators. "Teachers must have protection so that they may develop their own pro- grams and hold to them," he pointed out, "Of course, the teachers them- selves must be competent." He said that he believed tenure laws should be the first step to guar- antee the teachers this protection, so that they would have no fear of losing their jobs for statements they might make in classes. i Outbreak Stirs The schools of the Cranbrook Foun- dation in Bloomfield Hills will be the There is speculation, .also, as tok whether New Deal sponsors of thej southern economic survey may have had their eyes on other sections of the country as well. Stress has been1 laid on the part Negro voters, switch- ing from Republican to Democratic banners, had in the New Deal victor-t ies in 1932, '34 and '36. They areE estimated to hold a virtual balance4 of power between the two major par- ties in some of the key political states of the North and Midwest. Kentucky Primary t What President Roosevelt will say1 and do about Kentucky's heated Democratic Senatorial Contest onl his visit Friday quickened political speculation. Both Sen. Alben Barkley, the New Deal's senator majority leader, and Gov. A. B. Chandler, at times a critic of administration policies but claim- ing friendship with the President, plan to welcome Mr. Roosevelt. Chief interest centered in whether the President will add to his letter of last winter indorsing Barkley's1 congressional record and urging his re-nomination. Barkley plans to join the Presi- dent's special train in Ohio. Chan- dler has announced he will "welcome" Mr. Roosevelt when he rides across the state line at Covington. Commercial Students Meet' Students interested in teaching rnmmexrr i 1 thiFAwl ml hmv o a#- Announcement of a $100,000 en-- dowment fund from the Horace H.t and Mary A. Rackhtm Fund, which will make possible eight $500 schol- arships for undergraduate men, wast made yesterday by Dr. Clarence S.t Yoakum, vice-president of the Uni-t versity. Candidates for the scholarships, from whom the first recipients will be chosen in the next few weeks, must be unmarried male citizens of the United States, preferably residents off Michigan and under 21 years of age. The grants will go to students who hold freshman and sophomore stand- ing next fall. . In establishing the endowment, the trustees of the Rackham Fund ex- pressed the desire to aid and encour- age boys who have shown qualities of leadership. Candidates for the new scholar- ships, Dr. Yoakum said, should ad- dress their letters of application to the Committee on Rackham Under- graduate Scholarships at the Rack- ham Graduate School. Examinations and interviews will be announced later. State Representative Attacks New Deal JACKSON, July 6.--(P)-Rep. Fred Crawford, of Saginaw, charged th'. New Deal with violating "the Ameri. can System" and called tonight upo i the Republican party to lead the dat back 'tq an era of freetom for entei- prise and a profitable return of ft - vestments." J The Michigan congressman ac- dressed more than 250 Republicans attending the 84th anniversary of the controverted founding of tie G.O.P. "under the oaks" in Jacksen. Crawford attacked Federal expend- tures intended to increase employ- ment and for "pump priming"ffi said this was responsible for a mounting F r a -am rv eficeist "and con- Prof. Of Myers School next objective of the University Ex- Dr. Randolph G. Adams, Director of cursion party Saturday under the the Clements Library of American leadership of Prof. Louis Rouse of the History, will address a luncheon of Mathematics department. the Graduate Conference on Renais- Located approximately 20 miles sance Studies at 12:15 today in the north of downtown Detroit and about Michigan Union, on "The Debt of 43 miles from Ann Arbor, the Cran- Culture to the Book Collector." The brook Schools were built by a gift luncheon will be followed by a visit to from Mr. and Mrs. George B. Booth Clements Library under Dr. Adams' of Detroit. The oldest of the schools direction. -the Cranbrook School for Boys- The Conference will continue its enrolls about 210 boys in its six grades. program tomorrow at 1 p.m. with an Kingsewood Schools for Girls, built excursion to the Detroit Museum of eight years ago, enrolls 80 students. Fine Arts. Emphasis will be placed Noted for the beauty of ,their sur- on art works of the Renaissance and roundings the schools' beauty spots the 17th century, which will be which the party will visit in particu- studied and discussed under expert 'lar are the Cranbrook Academy of direction. Reservations for the trip Arts, the Cranbrook Institute of Sci- should be made at the Summer Ses- ence, the magnificient Christ Church sion office today before 5 o'clock. and Brookside School. a All-Star Game Is Nightmare To Beaten American Leaguers Sees Rights Curtailed Although much of the present ac- tivity of the federal government is significantly in the right direction where public education is concerned, there is a tendency present to en- croach on certain rights of the indi- vidual schools in the fields of voca- tional guidance and adult education, Prof. George E. Myers said in part yesterday in the auditorium of University High School. Professor Myers traced the history1 of the role the Federal governmenti has played in the progress of public education from the date of the first land grant college, through the suc- cessive national legislation and sub- sidies to the present United States Education Office's activities in es- tablishing a Federal-State Employ-; ment Office. He also mentioned the accomplish- ments of such educational bodies as the NYA, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and the Office of Apprentice- ship organized under the old NRA and now continuing to function in a slightly changed capacity. Professor Myers praised the work of the Federal-State Employment Office in arranging a modern series of vocational aptitude tests, for col- lecting information concerning mod- ern and past occupations, and for es- tablishing a system whereby the youths it employs are immediately registered for employment compen- sation. However, he frowned on the fact i'n+ I',m n oinvmn atfFiP enc rnach - CINCINNATI, July 6.-(1P)-"Well, the Minor Leaguers beat 'em," was Bill Terry's one comment today as his National League All-Stars troopedt into the dressing room and proceeded to take advantage of their second1 chance in six years to whoop it upf after a victory over the American League's gems:I Over in the American clubhouse words were few. Finishing on thei short end of a 4 to 1 count turned the annual "dream" contest into a night-; mare for the junior leaguers. Moses "Lefty" Grove, of Boston,1 who was hurling when Jimmie Foxx, his teammate, and Joe DiMaggio, slugging outfielder of the Yanks pre- sented the Nationals with a brace of runs on a couple of wild throws in the seventh, summed up the Americans' attitude with: "Let's forget it, I need a cold beer." Joe McCarthy, of the Yanks, skip- per of the American star-studded contingent, offered this pertinent an- swer to the old question, "Do you think a single game like this means anything?" "Well, it means a lot to the old tim- ers." (The game receipts go into a ting you mad," Meany answered. Foxx, who struck out in the second frame as Johnny Vander Meer, Cin- cinnati's sensational no-hit flinger, whipped a fast one by him, admitted that the Redleg was "getting better all the time." "We played a dozen spring games against the Reds, and Vandy didn't seem so tough then, but he really had it today," Foxx said. Vander Meer, getting rubbed down, said his arm felt fine and that his curve was working well, his conten- tion being backed up by the fact the Americans got but one blow, Joe Cronin's single to left, in three in- nings he toiled. Mace Brown, Pittsburgh's reliel star and fast baller, said the three and two pitch with which he fannec pinch-hitter Rudy York, of Detroit, with the bases loaded and two out in the seventh, would have been a ball if Rudy hadn't swung and missed. The ball was across the plate, but be- low York's knees, Brown said. Terry chimed in with: "It took a lot of intestinal fortitude for Mace tc throw that fast one in a spot like that." (Terry, however, spelled the "intestinal fortitude" in four letter, a 1. t a e e SUMMER DIRECTORY OUT The Summer Session Student Directory goes on sale tomorrow on campus. The directory, containing both the names of students and faculty, will be offered on campus at the earliest date in years, according to John McFate, '41L, editor. Publi- cation has been speeded up in the face of the largest summer enroll- ment in 45 years of Summer Ses- sion history. Directories may be bought on campus, at designated bookstores