hunderstorms tomorrow Y 13WP Iai1 Editorial Coincidence Or Sabotage? 'A Official Publication Of The Summer Session Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS .. nts Get Pollock Sees European Empire As Goal Of Hitler's Conquests ) Gift rersity sign Goes t School; Released Public Health e of gifts totalling $30,- g the title of one college 'rsity, transfer of depart- he appointments to sev- featured the June meet- Regents held last week. ;alling $25,500 from the es Public Health Service bulk of the gifts. The be used to continue pre- 'ncation and training of h personnel under the rity Act. e John and Mary R. idation of New York, $2,- ived to aid Prof. Norman in his studies of neurotic gifts included $2,000 iipment for the cyclotron )etroit Edison Company smaller donations. nsfer Department rtment of landscape de- ly in the literary college, rred to the College of In view of this change, title of that College was College of Architecture The chairman of the de- 'rof. Harlow 0. Whitte- nade an ex-officio men- xecutive committee of the Architecture and Design, lgets of the department hat of the Nichols Arbor- is administered by the were also transferred to tural school. The degree e year course was also d will now be Bachelor of architecture. The depart- e known as the depart- Landscape Architecture Racial Unity Only Screen, Professor Tells Group At Opening Lecture Picturing a power-mad Hitler seek- ing to resurrect the Holy Roman Empire with the sword, Prof. James K. Pollock of the political' science department opened the Summer Ses- sion lecture series before a near capacity audience in the Rackham Auditorium yesterday. "The Pan-German dream of a cen- tury to dominate as its 'lebendsraum' the whole of Eastern Europe appears to be revived," he declared. Exploding the Nazi myth of a cru- sade for the unification of all Ger- manic peoples in a Great Reich, Pro- fessor Pollock cited the rajpe of Czechoslovakia and Hitler's long record of broken promises in which he repudiated territorial guarantees made by speech, interview and treaty. Hitler's real purpose, he said, is not "reunion" but to acquire "instru- ments of power" with which to domi- nate Europe. He quoted Hitler's declaration of Germany's need for territory beyond mere economic wants to protect her new gains. Once acquired, he declared, the na- (tions on which Hitler has designs will not be admitted to citizenship in the Reich but will be governedaon the basis of economic and labor value. The secret of Hitler's bloodless conquests, he said, lay in intimidation followed by "piecemeal demands." n'y. ...fl.JJ U... I Mrs Edward L. Adams of Ann Arbor was appointed to the Board of Governors of Betsy Barbour Resi- dence House for a four-year term'. Mrs. Shirley W. Smith and Mrs. Clif- ford Woody were appointed to the1 same position for Adelia Cheever1 House for three years. Mrs. C. E. Frazer Clark of Detioit and Miss Sophia Refior of Toledo were ap-- pointed to the Alumni House Board for three yearst Mrs. J. Griffith Hays of Ann Arbor was appointed to the Board of'Helen Newberry House for five years. And Mrs. Howard Y. Mc- Clusky and Mrs. William Walz were (Continued on Page 6) Peru Tremors. Kill Eighteen: Officials Plea For Medical Aid ForInjured LIMA, Peru, June 26.-(P)-Re- ports from the eastern slope of the Andes told of continuing earthquakes today, with at least 18 killed and 40 injured in shocks that started Fri- day night. Pomacanchis, prosperous little mountain town, was a heap of ruins and so was Chuquicahuana. Apparently the shocks were most violent in the small region embrac- ing those places, as no damage was reported nearby. The dead and injured were count- ed at Pomacanchis .;the number of casualties at Chuquicahuana was not given. Authorities in the wrecked area asked medical aid, and officials of the department of Cuzco reported troops, nurses and food were sent. Governors Are Split Over Public Works Spending ALBANY, N.Y., June 26-VP)-New Deal Federal public works spending today split 22 governors into strict party camps as Republican Raymond E. Baldwin,sConnecticut, scored such "pump priming" as "Governnent competition with private industry." New York's Herbert H. Lehman, heir to the office abandoned by President Roosevelt when he moved Frele Dancing r After Reception OfferedFriday League And Union Open Ballrooms To Students ;t To Serve Refreshments; Both League and Union ballroomse will be open for free dancing follow- ing the faculty reception for stu- dents Friday in the Rackham Build- ing, according to an announcement yesterday by Miss Ethel McCor- mick, social director of the League. The reception will begin at 8:30. p.m. In the receiving line will be President Ruthven, the Regents and All students, both men and < women, interested in working on the social committee of the League are asked to meet Betty Kepler, '41, social chairman, between t 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. today in the League undergraduate of-- fice. Duties of the social com- rnittee include introducing people 1 and getting everyone acquainted at the League dances. No experi- ence is necessary. the Deans of the University. Dif- ferent sections of the Rackham Building will be devoted to the va- rious departments and colleges in the University. Dancing will begin at the League and Union at 9 p.m. Earl Stevensj and his 10-piece orchestra will play at the League and Bill Boyd and his orchestra at the Union. In addition to dancing , bridge and other games will be played. Refreshments will be served. The reception and dance are informal. Prison Employees Off Civil Service LANSING, June 26. -('),- The State Corrections Commission voted today, 3 to 2, to request the Civil Service Commission to remove from the Merist System approximately 140 employes including prison wardens, deputies and administrative staff of- ficers. This covers wardens at the State Prison of Southern Michigan, the Marquette Branch, and Ionia Re- formatory, and their deputies and secretaries, as well as chaplains, doc- tors, stewards, psychiatrists, educa- tional directors, farm superintend- ents, and probation and parole offi- cers. Labor Accuses Lewis Of Stopping Labor Peace WASHINGTON, June 2.-(P)-The American Federation of Labor accused John L. Lewis today of being "unwill- Once a nation has capitulated before the threat of violence, he quoted from Mein Kampf, it considers these piecemeal demands "not worth re- sisting." Labeling such methods "uncivil- ized," Professor Pollock blamed them for the 'enormous armaments" and state of confusion in the world today. "Th'us it is left to one man," he said, "to determine whether we shal have peace or war." Forecasting der Feuhrer's most like- ly moves in the near future, Professor Pollock mentioned Danzig as a pow- der keg likely to set off a general conflagration. Poland's days as the fastest growing power in Europe would be numbered without Danzig, he pointed out. Thus emasculation of Poland by annexing Danzig, already thoroughly Germanized, might well be the next blow in Hitler's cam- paign. (continued on Page 4) Jap Blockade Of French And British Holds Negotiations May Settle Dispute Over Tientsin Concession Rights TIENTSIN, June 27 -()- The Japanese blockade of the British, and French concessions here went into its 14th day amid a sudden rush of rumors that negotiations were under way to settle the British-Japanese impasse. According to the reports, which could'not be confirmed, Wang Keh- Min, head of the Japanese-fostered government at Peiping, has arrived here to attempt to negotiate a settle- ment through Wen Shih-Tseng, the Chinese mayor of the Japanese-con- trolled portion of Tientsin. They asserted the Japanese, grow- Lng tired of the two-weeks-old dead- ock, were seeking a way out of the crisis and turned to their Peiping puppet regime to save face for the local Japanese army authorities. (A ports circulated in London Monday that Britain and Japan had agreed to open negotiations in Tokyo within 48 hours, but the Foreign Office would neither confirm nor deny them. These reports said the Japanese had agreed to lift the Tient- sin blockade soon after the beginning of the negotiations.) T h e British-Japanese quarrel, which began with a Japanese de- mand that the British turn over to them four alleged terrorists who were in the British concession, since has widened into a test of Britain's en- tire Far Eastern policy. When the British declined to turn over the accused men without a hearing by a neutral board, the Japanese imposed (Continued on Page 2) { Gudakunst Asks Merit Selection Health Post Should Not Be Political,_He Says LANSING, June 26.-(P)-Dr. Don W. Gudakunst, who will step down from the office of State Health Com- missioner July 1 to be succeeded by Governor Dickinson's personal physi- cian, Dr. H. A. Moyer of Charlotte, issued a public plea tonight for the removal of the post from politics. "The appointment by the Governor of a new state health commissioner has brought out one most important point that is a fundamental fault in the present method of appointing the Michigan health commissioner," Dr. Gudakunst-said. "There is urgent need for a change in. the law in respect'tothis impor- tant appointment. The health of the public canhbe safeguarded in proportion to the skill, ability and training of the director of the state health program." Dr. Gudakunst endorse dthe rec- ommendation of the American Pub- lic Health Association, in a recent survey of Michigan public health work, that the state council of health be made responsible for the appoint- ment; subject to the Governor's ap- proval and with regard to qualifica- tions established by the association The association recommended a five- year term, with removal only for cause. Sen. Thomas Views Orient In Talk Today Asia's Plan In Curricula To Be Topic Of Speech In Rackham Building Speaks Tomorrow And Thursday Also First in a series of three lectures on the Far East by Sen. Elbert D. Thom- as of Utah will be "The Place of Asia in Our University Curricula" at 8 p.m. today in the lecture hall of the Rackham Building. Senator Thomas is chairman of the Senate Labor! Committee, and a Foreign Relations C Unitied States Sena many years as a mi, dent of the Far East a number of books i tical problems. With Ins and Education member of the ommittee of the e. He has'spent sionary and stu- and has written n Oriental poli- itute Appearing as par of the Institute of Far Eastern udies Senator Thomas will discu the problems and various aspects of the Asia's place in the curricula of a University. Two further lectures will be given by Senator Thomas. At IIpm. tomorrow he will speak on "Te Far East and the World" and Thurday on "Amer- ca and the Far East." Senator Thomas Views Far Eastern Situation By HARRY L. SONNEBORN Labor, education, te Far East and football are primary interests of Sen. Elbert D. Thomas of Utah, he ex- plained to a Daily interviewer yes- terday. Senator Thomas, a Demo- cratic member of the Senate since 1933, will speak here today, tomorrow and' Thursday on Far Eastern prob- lems. Two of the world's most unpredict- able questions, he saidr are the pres- ent Far Eastern crisis and the possi-. bility of a third term for President Roosevelt. To Control Convention There can be no doubt that Presi- dent Roosevelt will retain control of his party convention, Senator Thom- as stated, citing similar situations as evidence. But the question of whe- ther the country would react favor- ably can only be answered at the polls, he said, and he added that only President Roosevelt can answer the question of whether dr not he in- tends to be'come a candidate. Sena- tor Thomas preferred not to specu- late on whom another Democratic candidate might be. While nations a generation ago might have jumped into war under conditions paralleling those at Tient- sin today, the modern tendency to count costs and avoid armed conflict when possible makes it even more difficult to forecast results, Senator Thomas stated. esides being chair- man of the Senate Labor and Educa- tion Committee, he is a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, has spent many years as a mission- ary and student of the Far East and has written a number of books on oriental political problems, one of them in Japanese. Treaties Forgotten Treaty rights in China dating from 1858, held by England, France and the United States, should under in- ternational law be upheld by Japan as a "protector," Senator Thomas said, but he added that in a world where international law was largely ignored, these treaty rights might better be forgotten. China was attempting to gradually push the one-sided treaties out of force, however, he explained, and if Japan can be made to uphold them, the three Western nations will be better off. It remains to be seen, he said, whether. Japan will go on in Shanghai and the other great cities of China as she has in Tientsin, with regard to the rights of other nations and whether she will set up a puppet state as in Manchukuo, or leave gar- risons to enforce the long-awaitec unification of China. President Roosevelt Goes Fishing For Troul HYDE PARK, N.Y., June 26.-(jP)- President Roosevelt went fishing to- day. From mid-afternoon until dinne f-4..,. ha. Qn-,.nn a cQhAM hankrnat Curtis To Sho~w Movies Of Sun TodayIn Talk, Astronomy Head To Speak At 5 P.M. In Second Lecture Of Summer "Recent Studies of the Sun" will be the topic of the second Summer Session lecture to be delivered by Prof. Heber D. Curtis, director of the University's McMath-Hulbert Ob- servatory, at 5 p.m. today in the Rackham auditorium. Professor Curtis, head of the De- partment of Astronomy and prom- inent in the field of research, will build his talk around actual motion pictures of solar phenomena on the surface of the sun. These motion pictures are unique in the field of astronomy. No other observatory has instrumentation for similar motion pictures of solar phe- nomena. Developed at the Univer- sity in 1936, the process of record- ing actual movements of solar bodies is considered one of the outstanding contributions to the scientific study of astronomy in recent years. The pictures are considered espe- cially valuable from an educational standpoint for they enable audiences to see condensed into a few second movements and scenes extending over long periods and present gra- phically phenomena otherwise diffi- cult to visualize. The films, when projected under proper conditions, exhibit scenes of grandeur and radically change pre- conceived notions of the surface of a star as shown by "still" photographs. The Day In Washington ..-. (By Associated Press) The Senate passed monetary legislation already approved by the House, but eliminated the Presi- dent's authority to devalue the dollar further, fixed 77.57 cents an ounce as the price for newly mined domestic silver and ended Ireasury purchases of foreign sil- ver. A Senate appropriations sub- committee approved the $1,735,- 000,000 relief bill passed by the House, but deleted provisions ear- marking $125,000,000 for Works projects and -substituting a three- man board for the present single administrator. A joint Senate-House confer- ence on TVA legislation failed to adjust differences in bills passed by the Chambers, and Senator Norris (Ind.-Neb.) said there was "no possibility of agreement." Speaks Today * * * Scandals Rock LongDynasty's StateR'egime BATON ROUGE, La., June 26- (A)-Earl K. Long was sworn in as Governor of Louisiana at 7:15 p.m. tonight after Gov. Richard W. Leche stepped down as a climax to a day of swiftly moving developments ob- scured by mystery, scandal and em- bezzlement charges.. Leche, as chief executive, accepted his own resignation by proclamation effective at, 7 p.m. and Long was, sworn in immediately in hastily ar- ranged ceremonies at the Governor's mansion. Long, who served as Lieutenant Governor under Leche, took over the chief executive's post in an atmos- phere of confusion and uncertaint3 which shook the old strongly en- trenched political dynasty of his bro- ther, Huey P. Long to its very foun- dations. Long Impatient Scandal and mystery rocked Huey Long's strongly-entrenched Louisi- ana political dynasty today while his brother impatiently waited to become governor.. State police late today reported to Gov. Richard W. Leche they= were without clues to whereabouts of Dr. James Monroe Smith, president of Louisiana State University, who van fished at dusk last night just before Leche announced "financial irregu- larities which may reach, a total of several hundred thousand dollars" in university affairs.. Smith disappeared immediately af- ter turning in his resignation to Governor Leche, thus creating a new sensation in the swift-moving po- litical drama here as Leche called off, his announced resignation and said he would retainIcontrol pending in- vestigation. Board Meets With Leche Late today the University Board of Supervisors met with Leche to go over auditors' reports which. informed persons said showed unauthorized is- sue of University bonds that might total up to $750,000. -TheLL myy f Smith 'sdisappear ance, apparently with his wife and another couple, was heightened by the cryptic remark of one official here today that despite the asserted "irregularities" the university "might not lose - a single cent." Smith handled the expenditure oft more than $13,500,000 in building up. the university from enrollment of less than 2;000 to more than 8,000t since he was put in as president by. Huey Long in 1930. Police Watch Police throughout the state1 watched highways and trains for Smith. The man who py his owna statement made it his creed to "get along with the politicians" appar-1 ently 'began to slip in Adminisra- tion grace last week when he said university sale of material for pri- vate purposes was not its policy and would be stopped. This statement was in disagree- ment with a previous explanation by Governor Leche defending use of university trucks in delivery of. university-fabricated material to a building site near New Orleans, owned by a close friend of the gov- ernor. Anxious politicians streamed into, the governor's mansion today for conferences with the chief executive, who several days ago said he would, quit today because of ailing health and a desire to travel. Dean Mayer Dies AUSTIN, Tex., June 26.-(P)-Will H. Mayes, 78 years old, dean of the University of Texas School of Jour- nalism, died today. He was lieuten- ant governor of Texas from 1912 to 1914. He also was a former president of the National Editorial Association. v1 iich no the vol Iur er Senate Group DestroysRight President's To PegDollar East-West Coalition Kills Two Other Provisions Of Administration's Bill Purchase Of Foreign Silver Is Forbidden WASHINGTON, June 26.-(A)- Hard-money Republicans from the east and silverites and currency ex- pansionists from the west merged into a strange Senate alliance to- day to riddle the Administration's - Monetary Bill with amendments highly unpopular at the White House and Treasury. When the confusion of a hectic day's session had subsided and Sen- ator Barkley (Dem., Ky.), the Dem- ocratic leader, had wiped the last drop of perspiration from his brow after three merciless \defeats, this unusual coalition had: Stripped -the Monetary Bill of all authorization for a further devalua- tion of the dollar by President - Roosevelt. Amendment Added Added, an amendment to require that the Treasury pay 77.57 cents an ounce for the product of the western silver, mines, giving the silver bloc - a stunning: victory in its fight for an increase over the present rate of 64.64, cents. Written in a provision forbidding any continuation of the Administra- tion's policy of buying foreign silver.. About all that remained of the original bill was its authority for the Treasury to - continue for two years- the life of the $2,000,000,000 - International Exchange Stabilization Fund. It was not a "deal" that brought Senators Delighted The silver-state Senators were, of course, delighted. For a week they had been filibustering, threatening the enactment of bills urgently want- ed by the administration. Tljeir aim was to force the Treasury to in- crease the silver figure. With today's developments, the filibuster halted-but possibly only temporarily. As passed by the House, the Monetary Bill contained no pro- vision for the silver price, and no prohibition upon a continuation of the foreign silver purchasing pro- gram. It did authorize continuance of the devaluation powers. Compromise Needed Consequently, agents of the House and Senate must now try to strike a compromise on the changes made by the Senate. Realizing that the silver price amendment could be thrown out in that process, the sil- verites spoke words of ominous warn- ing. Senator Pittman (Dem., Nev.), an- other silver leader, was even more specific. If the conferees threw out the silver price, he said, a "serious (Continued on Page 23 League Classes Are Held Tonight Four State Teachers Colleges To Offer New Graduate Work Dancing lessons and duplicate bridge will -be held tonight at the League. Miss Ethel McCormick, so- cial director of the League, will teach classes in dancing for beginners at 7:30 p.m., tonight and every Tues- day. Lessons for intermediates will be given at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays. The classes are to be held at the League Ballroom at a charge of $1.50 for the entire Summer Session. Duplicate bridge under the direc- tion of Conway Magee, research assistant in physiology, will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesdays in the Ethel Foun- tain Hussey room of the League. Bridge lessons will be given at 8 p.m. Thursdays, also in the League. Ferry Service At Straits Adjusted To July Traffic LANSING, June 26. -(P)- The State Highway Department said to- day that ferry service at the Straits would be restored to normal for the July south rush of resort traffic. George F. Loughlin, acting super- intendent of ferries, telegraphed G. A unique experiment in graduate work in the four Michigan State Teachers Colleges is being inaugur- ated beginning with the Summer Ses- sion, according to Prof. Clifford Woody of the School of Education who has been appointed Graduate Adviser to Teachers Colleges. The University Regents, in July, 1938, passed a resolution approving a formal request from the State Board of Education that the Uni- and is interchangeable with work taken here on campus. Degrees for this work are granted by the Uni- versity. They are Master of Arts or Master of Science. Determination of the need for graduate courses to be offered at the four colleges, ascertainment of the adequacy of library facilities for graduate research work and the selec- tion of staff members to give the proposed courses were made by the Council and the Adviser. Outlines of