THE MICHIGAN DAILY _._. . a TIMEKOUT By KEENO Competition is the spice of life . . . even in college. And so some 34 women students have signed up thus far for the three tournaments tennis, golf and badminton . . . which the Women's Physical Education Department is sponsoring this coming week. ' Practically every state is represented in one or the other of the two contests . . . . so it should be something really big. Looking over the list of entries it may be observed that graduates seem to have taken the most interest in the tourneys ... many of them Michigan grads too. Beatrice Masseman .. . who has entered both the tennis and badminton tournaments . . . spends her spare time practicing furiously . . but in be- tween sets she takes a little ride on her bike . . . to see what is going on around her. Katherine Brown . . .whose father went to the Olympics. . . is also confident of her skill with the racquet . she will play in both the tennis and badminton tourneys. Elsie Michalke is the third contender in two events . . . she finds her ability lies in the direction of golf and tennis. Maxire Bowling who hails from Oklahoma City . . . and who is, in- cidentally, an expert swimmer . . . will play badminton. Eliza- beth MacVey . . a representative of the State of Vermont ... Elizabeth McDowell and Jean Botsford ... . both Michigan grads ....are likewise entered inthe regular badminton tourna- ment. Beatrice-Hutchins and Irene Lampkin ... who spend their time teaching in Detroit during the regular year . . . and this summer are busy in the workshops at Angell School . . . are taking time off to play golf. One dose of tennis isn't enough for Ruth Hatfield . . . a regular session student .. .she is playing in two tournaments . . . the city contest and that of the Women's Athletic Association. And so on and on . . . players and players . . . all planning to do their best and win a trophy ... and may the best ones win. Supreme Court Tonal Language BalksPay Cut} Difficulties Told Kills Amendment To Raise Prof. Kenneth Pike Talks Other State Salaries At Linguistic Meet Counter Rally And Heckler Held As Canadian Fasc-s s Or ganiz National Unity Party 2 Softball Nines .-t Still Undefeated Anti-Fascist League for Peace and Democracy in Canada, with the support of Wi. E. Dodd (left), former U.S. envoy to Germany, and A. A. McLeod, league leader, staged a counter rally in Toronto on the night the Fascist National Unity party organized. Dinosaur Pays Curators Dividends LANSING, July 14. - (P) - The Michigan Supreme Court figured in two payroll incidents today. In one, it refused to accept the voluntary pay reduction requested of all state of- ficials by Governor Murphy. In the other, it removed from the November ballot a proposed constitutional amendment to increase elective state officials' salaries. Without comment, the Court di- rected its clerk to forward its payroll for payment in the amounts "author- ized by the Constitution, statutes and exising orders of the Court." A short time later, the Court ruled that the legislature had so confused a joint resolution ordering the refer- endum on salaries that "it is impos- sible to determine which proposition was intended to be submitted." The reference to inconsistency con- cerned one section of the resolution which would have set the Governor's salary at $15,000 and that of *other state officials at $7,000, and another section of the same resolution which would have granted i the Governor $15,000 but would have given the legislature the power to fix the sal- aries of other elective officials. The Justices of the Supreme Court, who draw $12,000 each annually, would have been subject to a 15 per cent cut if they had accepted the Governor'sdrequest. Court attendants said the decision meant none of the 33 employes of the Court would be subject to a pay reduction. Teachers Meeting Is Moved To Union The meetings scheduled by the Roundtable Conference on Reading Problems .of Teachers for today in University High School have been moved to the Union instead. The times when the different de- partmental meetings will convene re- main the same. These are Reports on Specific Proposals for the Improve- ment of Reading at 9:00 a.m. ; Lec- ture on "Results of Recent Investi- gations in the Teaching of Reading" by Dr. Arthur I. Gates, professor of education, Teacher College of Colum- bia University, at 10:45 a.m.; Dis- cussion of the report, "A National Organization for Education" by Dr. William G. Carr, Director of Research for the National Education Associa- tion at 1:15 p.m.; and a lecture on "Personality Adjustment in Relation to Reading Difficulties" by Professor Gates at 2:45 p.m. Winifred Bell Betrothed The engagement of Miss Winifred Bell to Edward H. Litchfield of Lan- sing has been announced and the ceremony is planned for August 13, to take place here. Both Miss Bell and Mr. Litchfield are University graduates and were prominent in campus activities, lead- ing the 1935 J-Hop together. (Continued from Page 1) number of pitch registers. The first step is to place in similar categories all the discoverable tones of any one tonal frame, such as a two-syllable word combination, the categories de- fined by similarities of tonal patterns. In Mixteco, said Pike, there are eight classes. The next step is to isolate the high tones by comparison with all tones which are lower, and then to isolate the low tones. The process must be carried out until all the tones have been identified with pitch levels. Mixteco has three pitch levels; a lan- guage spoken by neighboring Indians has four. At this point the analyzer meets the real difficulties, according to Pike,, for in a tonal language there are many complicating factors which af- fect pitch. Prefixes and suffixes, for instance, cause intricate tonal per- turbations in near homonymic pat- terns. At present Pike has analyzed about 3,000 combinations, but said that he will be unable to make defi- nitive statements about the whole to- nal system until he has recorded and analyzed about 200,000 combinations. Governor May Call Reief Meet Speech wasn't free at the Toronto meeting of Canadian Fascists who thus removed one heckler doing what he could vocally to break up the meeting. While this man was getting the bum's rush, protesting crowds were milling outside the hall. The Fascists organized into the National Unity Party and named as leader Adrien Arcand, a Montreal editor. Sirnificance Of Hughes Flight Extended Into National Politics WASHINGTON, July 14.-(P)-A would seize the opportunity the flight day when man may actually follow 'gave him to re-outline the foreign Rudyard Kipling's suggestion and policy of his administration, to re- InI Leagne Play Parkerites, P.K.S. Teams Down Chumps, Snies In American Circuit After yesterday's play in the soft- ball tournament, two American lea- gue teams can still boast of a perfect record. The Parkerites, behind the pitching of Bill Poppink. of no-hit fame. downed the Chumps 5 to 3. while the P.K.S. team buried the Snipes under an avalanche of hits, winning 21 to 1. The P.K.S. boys have been poison to opposing pitchers, for they've piled up 34 runs in winning their first two games. In the final game in the American league, the Profs nosed out the Browns by a score of 9 to 8. The P.K.S. and the Parkerites share first place in the standings, with two vic- tories each. The Profs. with two wins and one loss, and the Chumps, with one win and one loss, follow, while the Browns and Snipes, with two and three losses respectively, are keeping he cellar positions filled. The National league Chemists swamped the Analyts'15 to 1, while a favored Faculty team dropped a 4 to 3 game to the Pattocks. In the final game, the Tigers registered their se- cond sonsecutive shut-out, when they beat the Physics 8 to 0. The Tigers, being the only unbea- ten team, are leading the league, while the Chemists and Pattocks share second place with two victories and one defeat apiece. The Faculty is next in the standings, with one win and one loss to their credit. The Phy- sics have won one, while dropping two, which assures them of fifth place, and the Analyts, having ab- sorbed three straight shellackings, are keeping a firm hold on the bottom rung. Organization of the Interna- tional League will be carried on Mon- day instead of today as was previous- ly announced. Jean Kyer To Meet Detroit's. GolfAce DETROIT, July 14.-(AP)-Detroit's ace woman golfer, Miss Margaret Russell, will make her bid for the state women's golf championship to- morrow when she ties up with Jean Kyer, of Ann Arbor, defending cham- pion, at the Lochmoor Club. Miss Russell, the medalist, clubbed her way to the finals with a five and three victory over Mrs. Donald Weiss, tiny competitor from the Flint Golf Club and 1936 winner while Miss Kyer was eliminating Mrs. John Arends of the Detroit Golf Club two and one. The appearance of Miss Russell in the finals will be her first, and al- though Miss Kyer has reached the finals three times, the consistent golf displayed in the current tournament by Miss Russell makes her an even bet to defeat the defending champion. O.D.MORRILL 314 S. State St. Typewriters, Stationery, Student and Office Supplies Since 1908 Phone 6615 "take hold of the wings o' the morn- ing to flop hround the earth" with the rising sun seemed close at hand when Howard Hughes set down his globe- girdling plane in New York, less than four days after his start. Hughes and his crew cut Jules Verne's old dream of an 80-day jour- ney around the earth to hardly more than 80 hours. Tomorrow, next day, within a decade, another Hughes may rise into the stratosphere, hang mo- tionless on the sun's flank above the rolling earth and come down where he started within a single day. It is a possibility that grips man's imagination, however earth-bound his own trudge through life. Time and space no longer mean much to hu- manity. The earth span has been cut already by the Hughes flight to the proportions of a week-end jour- ney; tomorrow it may be cut again to the hand's breadth of a daylight trip. The nation acclaims the Hughes flight, proud that it was Americans in an American-made ship who ac- complished that four-day miracle, yet, amid the patriotic thrills there lurks also grave concern for the peo- ple not only of this country but of all the Western Hemisphere. In the rumble of Hughes' thundering motors, mapping new air ways of peace around the world, fancy could hear also the din of bursting air bombs in Spain and in China-and some- how that din sounded closer than be- fore. The security of the Western World, behind its ocean ramparts, is not so certain as it was before Hughes took to the air four days ago. A tribute by President Roosevelt to Hughes and his men was certain. Either in that tribute or elsewhere it seemed highly probable to Washing- ton onlookers that Mr. Roosevelt Conference Will Discuss Unemployment Act DETROIT, July 14---I-)-Governor Murphy indicated today he might call a conference of relief and unemploy- ment compensation officials to find a means of caring for those persons who quit WPA jobs in the hope of receiving benefits under the state Un- employment Compensation Act. Frank A. Picard, chairman of the State Unemployment Compensation Commission, had announced previ- ously that workers who left WPA jobs would be compelled to wait at least a month before receiving job insur- ance benefits to which they might be entitled because of private employ- ment prior to their WPA jobs. "If these men are destitute during the interim before benefits are re- ceived they should not be left without subsistence" dtherGovernor asserted. "They have children and dependents to consider. I will go as far as the state can to help them." Picard warned WPA workers not to quit their jobs without first con- sidering whether they are eligible for compensation and added that there was some question as to the legality of procedure in the case of WPA workers qualifying for job insurance benefits. George F. Granger, acting State Emergency Relief Administrator, said the state does not plan to assume the burden of direct relief in carrying over for four weeks persons who quit WPA to await benefit payments. state his conception of good neigh- borliness and the relation his drive for expanding national defense bears to that doctrine. Buckeye Star Is Golf Victor Hunt Eliminates Jacobs In Western Amateur SOUTH BEND, Ind., July 14.-(A)- Barney Hunt of Columbus. 0., a form- er Buckeye State public links cham- pion, crushed the Western Amateur Golf Championship hopes of sensa- tional Burleigh Jacobs, Jr., of Mil- waukee, today, eliminating the Wis- consin youngster who yesterday won medalist honors, in the second round of match play, by a 4 and 2 margin. Jacobs who fired poll a brilliant 67 yesterday to set a new course record for the exacting Chain O'Lakes lay- out in winning the medal, was the tournament marvel for about 24 fleet- ing hours. He squeezed through his opening match play test, one up, over Kenneth Young of South Bend, but a combination of his own lapses on the greens, and Hunt's steadiness, blasted the 18-year old Milwaukeean's chances in the afternoon. Two former Western Amateur title-winners, Johnny Lehman of Chicago, and Paul Leslie of Jefferson City, Mo., and Louisiana State University, went to the sidelines with Jacobs. William Reed, Jr., of In- dianapolis, conquered Lehman, one up,, after a 21-hole struggle in the second round, and Leslie bowed to the veteran Cleveland star, Maurice McCarthy, by the same margin over the regulation distance, in another second rounder. Wilford Wehrle of Racine, Wis., seeking a second straight title, and Gus Moreland of Peoria, Ill., a form- er Western champion, remained in the battle however. Wehrle shot par golf to whip Billy Sixty, golfing re- porter from Milwaukee, 2 and 1, and repeated in eliminating Eddie Meister of Cleveland, 4 and 3. Moreland had to tussle for both his victories, de- feating Bob Sulzer of Cincinnatiaon the final green in the morning, and conquering Lyn Lardner, another Milwaukee player, 2 and 1, in the second round. Conference Leader. DAILY OFFICAL BLLEN (Continued from Page 2) Faith" will be given by the Rev. Hen- ry O. Yoder. Lutheran Summer School Students will meet at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall at 5:30 this Sunday evening. A program of interest has been ar- ranged for the evening. The Parish Hall is located at 309 E. Washington Street. Watermelon Cut Tonight All Southern students and their fri- ends are invited to the annual Water- melon Cut which will be held at 7 p.m. tonight in the League Garden. John T. Norris, Grad., president of the Southern Club, is general chairman Dinosaur dividends are collected by Otto Falkenbach (left) and Charles Lang of the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Out of a brontosaurus backbone they take five pennies placed there 34 years ago when the skeleton was assembled. The curator explains that it's customary for preparators to place "cornerstones" in exhibits as they as- semble the bones. ' S_- r I TIema Stresses Subject Of Lecture Thermal stresses will be the subject of the special lecture to be given by Dr. J. N. Goodier of the Ontario Re- search Foundation, Toronto, Ont., Canada at 3 p.m. today in Room 311 in the West Engineering Building. Dr. Goodier's speech will be given in connection with the Applied Mechanics Symposium on the prop- erties of metals which is being held here this summer under the direction of Prof Stephen Timoshenko of Stan- ford University. The usual weekly meeting of the Symposium Saturday morning will hear talks by Stewart Way of the re- search laboratories of Westinghouse Electricity and Manufacturing Corp. and R. P. Kroon from the experi- mental division of the same firm. CREWS TO COMPETE ST. JOSEPH, July 14.-(P)-Four crews will vie for the title of Junior Champions of the Great Lakes in the final race of the series tomorrow. Continuing our Bargain Day Prices through Saturday Classifed Directory I' I 11 'VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist. Reasonable rates. 706 Oakland, Phone 6327. 17x TYPING -Neatly and accurately done. Mrs. Howard, 613 Hill St. Dial 5244. 2x LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 5x STUDENTS or family laundry.' Shirts 12 cents. Call for and de- liver. Phone 4863 for other prices 1x TYPING - Neatly and accurately done. Reasonable rates. Barbara Grill 719 Tappan. Dial 3025 $7x TYPING-by University graduate and commercial teacher. Near cam- pus. Reasonable rates. Phone 6192 We know it's impossible to sell all these wonderful. buys' in ONE day. F AI ALL SUMMER AND LEFT- OVER SPRING STOCKS ARE REDUCED, I ... . . FOR DRY, NORMAL OR OILY HAIR For 1L1zp1if MEN, 11 U 11I I I " I _ ,i.. _ 1_ I ! w a&*A a d I II I