Weather rally fair and somewhat ter today And tomorrow. Y Sir& :I at Editorial Professional Training; Yes Or No.. Official Publication Of The Summer Session XIJX. No. 6 Z-329 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1939 PRICE 'MVE CENTS te Politicos ve ansing Vacations er Session Nearly Two Thousand Students Attend Annual Faculty Reception 'Stress Facts,,pn P K lk P rPircqi' Compromise School Bill, Balanced Budget Final Bu iness Of Meeting Average Reduction In Tuition Is 12% LANSING, June 30.-(/P)-The 60th Legislature won its race against time and balanced the budget on a contingent basis, adopting a comro- mise school financing bill before its final adjournment at noon today. - The measure allows the schools a flat appropriation of $39,000,000 a year, plus $2,000,000 of any revenues in excess of present expectations. Budget Director Grover C. Dillman said the bill would leave a small "cushion" in the general fund exclu- sive of the $2,000,000 contingent al- location. School Bill Passes In less than half an hour the bill, bearing a complicated compromise formula for distributing school mon- ey, zipped' through both the House and Senate as the Republican ma- jority smothered debate. The Sen- ate adjourned a half .minute after Its 1st business was transacted. The House had about 20 minutes to spare. Attorney General Thomas Read delivered an opinion that opened the formula issue to revision. He held that parliamentarians erred in their previous ruling that a conference committee which drafted the com- promise bill had no right to alter the formula, to which big city and small rural school districts had ob- jected. The committee closeted it- self in the Governo's office and drew the new formula. $78 Per Pupil The bill etains the controversial feature on an equalization fund for the benefit of "poor" districts that would equal 15 per cent of $45,000,- 000, but carries a provision that all of the multiple funds in the bill should be scaled down on a pro rata basis in the event there was not sufficient money to carry out pro- visions of the act. It sets the av- erage uition allowance at $78 per pupil. Estimated allocations of school aid for sample cities, determined by Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, Superintendent of Public Instruction, disclosed that large communities would receive a sointwhat deeper cut than smaller ones. Elliott said the tuition of high school pupils fromrural districts fa- vored the smaller cities. No Lotteries The superintendent estimated the reduction in general would' amount to 16 per cent. Although tuition pay- ments are based on per capita ,costs, which vary in different cities, he said a "good guess" as to the average reduction in tuition would be 12 per cent. A demand by Sen. Henry F. Shea, Democrat, Laurium, that the legis- lature by resolution instruct the bud- get director to hintitute a system of state lotteries to produce not less than $5,000,000 a year for schools was squelched promptly and tabled. CIO And AFL In New Fight NLB Hearing Of Conflict In Automobile Industry WASIIINGTON, June 30.-lP)-- The latest skirmish in a struggle be- tween the CIO and AFL for suprem- acy in the automobile industry was fopght out today before the Na- tional Labor Board, which heard con- flicting demands that it intervene to settle the dispute and that it keep hands off. Before the board were petitions' from the CIO-UAW demanding board elections to determine which side should represent some 65,600 workers employed by Chrysler Corp., Briggs Manufacturing Co., and Mo- tor Products Co.' Edward N. Barnard, Detroit coun- ge1 fn + A TITA . nr h~ietnr In Dances Follow At League And Union; Tournament Bridge Contests Are Held Nearly two thousand students at- tended the annual faculty reception last night in the, RackhamBuilding, which was followed by dancing at the Union and League. Punch was served at both the re- ceptionhandsdances andbtournament bridge contests were held at the League and Union. A committee com- posed of students from different parts of the country went into action at the League to help mix people. They were Elsie Michalke of Wyoming, May Noon of Maryland and T. M. Evans, Kansas, all members of Dr. James E. Rogers recreation class. Detroit Mecea For Students On Excursion Group To Leave At 8 A.M. Today; Art And Science Centers Will Be Visited Leaving at 8 a.m. today for a day in the metropolis of Detroit, fourth largest city of the United States, members of the party taking the second Summer Session excursion will return about 5:30 p.m. with as great a knowledge of that city as can be garnered in a single day. The party will meet in front of Angell Hall where it will board busses for the 35 mile trip. Persons wishing to drive their own cars and follow the busses are invited to so do. First stop in Detroit will be at the De- troit Institute of Arts on Woodward Ave. At the Art Institute the Rivera frescoes, subject of much 'controver- sy several years ago, will be inter- preted by a staff member who will also act as a guide through the va- rious collections of modern and me- dieval European art, late and early Roman and Greek art, Asiatic art, and colonial, 19th century and con- temporary American art. The party will then proceed by bus down Woodward Ave., through the downtown business district and out E. Jefferson Ave., following the Detroit River, to Belle Isle. A tour around the Island will give excur- sionists a chance to see the play- grounds, the Scott Memorial Foun- tain, the zoo and the buildings of the Detroit Yacht Club and the De- troit Boat Club. Riding westward on spacious E. Grand Boulevard, the party willar- rive at the Fisher Building, whose golden tower, illuminated at night, is one of Detroit's landmarks. From this tower a view of the city may be had, and the studios of 'radio station WJR will be observed. Lunch will follow in the Fisher Building cafeteria. In the afternoon the party will proceed northward to Royal Oak where the Detoit Zoological Park is situated. There animals and birds from all parts of the world are ex- hibited in reproductions of their natural habitat,many of which are not fenced off, but are protected by moats. The party will be taken to various points in the zoo on a minia- ture railroad. The excursion will end with the re- turn trip by bus to Ann Ann Arbor. Expenses will total about $2, in- cluding round trip bus fare, ad- mission to the zoo and luncheon. Julian Frederick was in charge at the Union. Receiving in the Women's Lounge of the Rackham Building were mem- bers of the library science depart- ment, School of Music and speech and play production. Faculty mem- bers included Prof. and Mrs. Rudolph Gjelsness, Miss Florence R. Curtis, Mr. Samuel W. McAllister, Mrs. Cath- arne J. Pierce, MissKathryn Schultz, Prof. and Mrs. G E. Densmore, Dr. Harlan Bloomer, Prof. and Mrs. R. D. T. Hollister, Prof. and Mrs. Henry Moser, Dr.. and Mrs. John Henry Muyskens, Prof. Valentine B. Windt, Mr. and Mrs. Frederic O. Crandall, 'Whitford Kane, and Prof. Palmer Christian. In the East Conference Room were located -the English department and Renaissance Studies. Included in thei receiving line were Dean and Mrs.i Eric A. Walter, Prof. and Mrs. Louis1 I. Bredvold, Prof. Kenneth T. Rowe,1 Prof. Warner G. Rice, Prof. and Mrs. A. H. Marckwardt, Prof. and Mrs. Bennett Weaver, Prof. and Mrs. Nor- man E. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Karl; Litzenberg. The School of Education received students in the second floor Study1 Hall. Faculty members participatingi were Dean and Mrs. James B. Edmon- son, Prof. and Mrs. Willard Olson, Prof. and Mrs. Francis Curtis, Prof.I and Mrs. George Carrothers, Prof.; and Mrs. Leo Dunham, Prof. andI Mrs. Irving Anderson, Dr. and Mrs. Claude Eggertsen, Prof. and Mrs.i Randolph Webster, Prof. Warreni Good, Prof. and Mrs. Marshall Byrn,; and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Johnston. Visiting faculty included Dr. and Mrs. Paul Rankin of Detroit, Dr. and Mrs. John Jessup of the University; (Continued on Page 4) Still In Hiding, Smith Indicted By Grand Jury Wife, Relatives, Broker Also Named In Scandal At Louisiana University BATON ROUGE, La., June 30.-(P) -Fugitive Dr. James Monroe Smith, his wife, nephew, son-in-law and brokerage intermediary were indicted today by the grand jury investigating a million-dollar scandal at Louisiana State University, which Smith head- ed for nine years. The special East Baton Rouge par- ish jury, called into session after Smith resigned his presidency and fled last Sunday night, not only in- dicted the tall, 51-year-old protege of the late Huey Long ut also voted-bills against Mrs. James Monroe Smith, who disappeared with him; her nephew, J. Emory Adams; Smith's son-in-law, Owen W. Ware, and J. M. Brown, the brokerage intermediary. Smith himself was indicted for em- bezzlement of $100,000 of the uni- versity funds. Mrs. Smith, her son- in law and nephew were indicted for assisting the "principal offender" while Brown was indicted for "aid- ing and abetting in the embezzle- ment." Witnesses testified that Smith, earning $15000 a year as president, had had access to $1,209,000 of the school's bonds, used $591,000 of them as market collateral, and, when the market went against him, redeemed the bonds' with $500,000 in cash ob- tained from three banks by signing invalid notes. Smith's whereabouts was as great a puzzle as ever, although reports in- dicated he had passed through Wind- sor. Ont. Detroit News Mlan Speaker At Journalism Institute ; Lb u e asses Arm s Bill T Te s AcviseP eov el ToTea chers Power To Devalue 1olarAi More Meetings Today Session To Close With Luncheon No greater service can be rendered the public than the discovery and dissemination of facts, Lee A White of the Detroit News declared last night at a.dinner of the First Insti- tute on Secondary School Journal- ism, sponsored by the journalism de- partment and the National Associa- tion of Journalism Directors, closing the day's activities. Speaking of journalism in the pchools, Mr. White pointed out that students will imitate professionals and will judge themselve in com- parison to professionals. This is un- fortunate, he said, inasmuch as it entirely overlooks the changing trends in the newspaper world., Yet To Be Convinced "I have yet to be convinced," he told the group, "that young people are receiving instruction in the hand- ling of f'acts and truths." During the afternoon talks were given 'on "Trends in Magazine Writ- ing" by Prof. Donal H. Haines of the journalism department and "Trends in Annuals" by Miss Harriet L. Blum of Eastern High School"Detroit.. Professor Haines recommended avoiding too great competition in the field of writing for the beginner. He discussed news magazines and warned against imitation in high school mag- azines at the expense of educational value. Miss Blum compared various types of school annuals and illustrat- eed her talk with the Eastern High .School annual. A paper on "Teaching Critical Reading of the Press" by Stanley Oates of MacKenzie High School, Detroit, was read, as .Mr..ates was unable to attend. In it Mr. Oates said, "It is up to us to see that the ranks of the ignorant and the files of the foolish are kept down as much as possible." Opposes Imitation At the morning session a series of talks was given around the centra theme, "Appraisal of Educational Values of Publication Activities.' Prof. John L. Brumm of the journal- ism department, speaking on "The Professor's Viewpoint" oppoed the imitation of metropolitan newspapers in the school, saying "your purpose is educational; the purpose of a newspaper is commercial." Edgar C. Thompson, principal o Pershing High School, Detroit, told of the "Administrator's Viewpoint, mentioning the influence of the paper (Continued on Page 3) First Parley To Be Opened On Thursday Paton, Pollock William Will Speak At Session Students To Take Part Professors William A. Paton of th business administration s c h o o. James K. Pollock of the political sci ence department, and Mentor L. Wil liams of the English department wi open the first Summer Parley, speak ing at the general session at 4:1 p.m. Thursday in the Union. Professor Paton will present th Conservative's point of view on th general theme of the parley, "Whic Way Progress: Social Responsibilit or Individualism?" Professor Poloc will give the point of view of th Liberal, and Professor Williams wi present the Radical point of view. Chairmen and student and facult speakers for each of the four separ ate panel groups which will com prise the major part of the two-da program have also been announce Ruth Cunningham will be chairma of the panel on education, with Oli Murdock the student speaker. Edit: M. Bader, assistant superintenden of the Ann Arbor' schools, will b the faculty speaker. In the International Relation panel, Benjamin Ciardi will presid and Jack Sessions and Prof. Arthu Smithies of the economics depart ment will he the sneakers Flnv P New Deal Leaders Beaten F In Attempt To Exclude Tense Europe's Arms Embargo Measure 4 Neutrality Is Now UpTo Senators Is StillDanzig Alarmed European statesmen pon- WASHINGTON, June 30.-(AP)- dered a welter of rumors and brist- The House passed the Neutrality Bill ling official pronouncements last d tonight after overriding Administra- night in search of an answer to the i n tion wishes and including a modified question: Is there a new crisis in the b arms embargo provision. The vote wind and where? on final passage was announced by Putting two and two together, theyw Speaker Bankhead as 200 to 188. found little concrete evidence of an s The measure now goes to the Sen- impending showdown. At least they ate where an adamant "isolationist could not put a finger on such omi- bloc" of Senators already has threat- nous signs as preceded European a ened to prolong the session all sum- crises of the recent past.c mer rather that permit the bill's pas-- . l .n C sagein he ormdesredby he°Ad- Landon official circles insisted e sage ithe form desired by th' Ad- with emphasis there would be "no e 'Escape Rout retreat" by Britain in Europe, but e Defeated in their efforts 'to prevent lack of clues on Adolf Hitler's im-c inclusion of the arms embargo, mediate plans and technicalities of w House Administration leaders nar- the British guarantee to Poland gave e rowly escaped a complete rout. A rise to speculation over whether Dan- v motion to send the bill back to the zig was an imminent danger spot. o Foreign Affairs Committee-which British officials said a declaration u would have had the effect of defeat- by Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax ing the bill and continuing the ex- Thursday that Britain's "first task ti isting neutrality law-was turned is to resist aggression" was intended s down by only two votes, in the first place to eliminate any t The harried leaders desperately doubt as to whether she would fight s fought through an uproarious ses- for Danzig. sion lasting far into the evening to One important question concern- d remove the arms embargo restriction, ing Danzig appeared, however, to lie t kg thr atte t outside his statement-what would t DramagEnters Debate happen if Germany used "ingenuity," b Each tim Ene they were beaten, as a Nazi spokesman put it, instead though Speaker Bankhead, a veter- of force? t an of the Congress which declared The British foreign office would t war against Germany, went down not say whether that would be re- 1 on the. floor and pleaded in a dra-. garded as aggression but it was em- e matic speech for elimination of the pliasized that Britain would be con- i restriction,.cal plled to fight for Poland if she de- d The roll call vote, ratifying tenta- cided to resist with force.-f y tive approval given yesterday to an amendment by Representative Vorys Plan R c (Rep., Ohio) prohibiting the expor- Pl ns Re dy n tation to belligerents during wartime t 1 of "arms" and ammunition," was For New Club ; 1 214 to 173. F The provision represented a modi- b fication, however, of the existing law Commercial Grads Name t which bans sales to belligerents of "implements of war" as well as "arms Officers, Make Program f s and munitions." t Organization of a Commerciala Graduates Club, with election of of- d 1939 Summer Directory ficers and an outline of a program k f Is Available Wednesday for the summer, has been complet- v Tmcf ed, it was announced yesterday. a The Summer Directory, official At a meeting held Wednesday, the t rstudent guide, will go on sale Wed- A etn edWdedy h nesday morning at the Michigan group chose Donald McDonald of Union and various corners of the Owosso as president; Lawrence Win- campus for 35 cents a copy it was ters of St. Charles, vice-resident announced toda cAmonpy,. Con- and Jean Brown of Mount Pleasant, F -rath 40Eeditor secretary-treasurer. A program, com- - This is the firsttime in the history mittee of Lawrence Winters, Irene0 of the publication that the Sunmer enan and Howdy Loomis was hos-r Directory has been available to the plans for the summer call for a student group at such an early date Plns fo t Lmcall for in te, SmmerSesson.picnic July 11 at Loch Alpine with in the Summer Session, members meeting at 5 p.m. in Uni- versity High School. Tickets can bec Dancing, Bridge Classes secured from the officers. er Be O itte Tueday At 4:15 p.m. July 17 the group To will take part in discussion with a _________________________tea dance following. Later in the e Fireworks will take precedence over summer J local business house willI 1 dancing and bridge Tuesday. be visited as will a mimeographing B h' c office in Detroit. Two additional [- Bath the beginners dancing class- - and duplicate bridge course will be meetings are planned. l omitted on July 4 because of the holi- At the organization gathering the - day. Intermediate dancing lessons group heard Dr. McKee Fisk, visit- 5 will be given under the direction of ing instructor in the education Miss Ethel McCormick, social direct- school and head of the Oklahoma A' e or of the League, at 7:30 p.m. Wed- and M commercial department speak. e nesday as usual. Lessons in bridge Jean Brown was chairman of the h will be offered at 8 p.m. Thursday. meeting. ;y e Fable Of Wild Horses Blasted 11 y Through Prof. Aiton s Research y By STAN M. SWINTON by Coronado to prove the falseness d. One of the United States most pop- of charges that New Spain was being n ular fables-the theory that the herds depopulated by enlistments in his n of wild horses which roamed through forces, showed the expedition pos- h sessed a number of harquebues, an- t the infant West were progeny of cestors of modern firearms; 15 cross- strays from Coronado's expedition- bows, swords, lances, daggers and e was blasted today by Prof. Arthur S. Mexican weapons. Aiton of the history department. The history professor discovered is Professor Aiton had discovered and that the historically-important docu- e, translated a muster role of the Span- ment he found had been in his hands r ish conquistador's expedition made 19 years ago. Failing to appreciate on Feb. 22, 1840, at Compostela, its importance then, he attached a d Al- v n __ -- i - - -, - - a { na 'k 1.vin r nm .vi --.ndn-n- }1 n t - . 'resident Roosevelt Signs Relief Bill, Asserting It Will 'WorkHardship' 10 Billion Dollar Debt Tops Record WASHINGTON, July 1.-(Satur- ay) - (P) - President Roosevelt's ower to devalue the dollar died at idnight, stamped out in the Senate y relentless Republican filibusters ho gleefully left the last, killing peech to an implacable Democratic oes of the Chief Executive. That speech was delivered by Sen- tor Tydings (Dem., Md.) who de- lared in stern, measured tones that ongress must keep its historic pow- rs over money to itself. With thedollar devaluation pow- r expired the $2,000,000,000 ex- hange stabilization fund, with hich the Treasury for five years had ndeavored to protect the foreign alue of the dollar against the raids fother governments and of spec- ilators. And 'with both went the expecta- ions of Western silverites for ob- tatutory price for the product..th aining immediately an increased tatutory price for the product of heir silver mines. In a vote-trading teal earlier in the week they and he Republicans had drastically al- ered the Administration monetary ill. A law enacted in 1934 established he stabilization fund and authorized he devaluation of the dollar, but pecited that both authorities should xpire last midnight. .The Admin- stration monetary bill was intro- luced to continue them for two ears. Earlier in the week the Republi- an-silverite alliance amended the neasure to strike out the devalua- ion authority and fix the silver price. Senate-House conferees eliminated he anti-devaluation amendment, ut left in the measure an increased reasury price for silver. So, left out in the cold by the con- erence report, and contending that. he devaluation authority was a men- uce to business and business confi- dence, the Republicans had only to keep talking until midnight, pre- vent a vote on the new legislation and let the President's power over he dollar expire. Relief Bill Signed WASHINGTON, June 30. -(P)-- President Roosevelt signed the relief bill tonight, thereby making $1,755,600 00 available to WPA and other agen- cies for the fiscal year starting to- morrow. At the same time he asserted in a statement that the measure contained four provisions "which will work definite hardship ana inequality on more than 2,000,000 American citi zens." He said that the measure had reached him from Congress at 10 p.m. and "obviously I cannot with- hold my signature and stop work relief for the needy unemployed." Deficit Third Highest WASHINGTON, June 30.-(P)- Fiscal New Year's Eve found the Treasury's income $3,580,000,000 short of costs tonight, and the gross na- tional debt roughly $40,378,000,000. The deficit was the third highest in peace-time history and the debt Weas the largest in history. The Federal bookkeepers turned the ledger pages to the next fiscal year, which is expected to show high- er expenditures and a larger deficit. Not counting the $3,860,000,000 extra budgetary lending program suggest- ed by the President, the next year's expenditures, on the basis of pending appropriations, are expected by offi cials to exceed revenues by roughly $3,700,000,000. Clara A. FloranCe - Heads Dormitory Clara Arnesen Florence, SM, has been named president of Betsy Bar- bour dormitory for the summer. it Language Reconstruction Described By Bloomfield With a description of what he termed the "complicated but excit- ing" task of reconstructing hypo- thetical original sounds of the par- ent language, Prof. Leonard Bloom- field, chairman of the department of linguistics of the University of Chi- cago, last evening initiated the first of a series of Linguistic Institute lec- tures on the comparative study of the Algonkian Indian languages. The far-reaching research project which Professor Bloomfield and his co-workers are engaged in is one of unique significance to language scholars throughout the world, since it is an endavnor to annly to nan nut- gonkian language have been worked out from the minute study of the present tongues, principally Fox, Cree, Menominee and Ojibway. The consonant "I" in the parent language, for example, develops pho- netically into "1" or "y" in Cree, "t"f in Blackfoot, "n" in Atsina, which is a dialect of Araphoe, "1" in Shawnee, and "n" in the Great Lakes group in- cluding Fox, Menominee, and Ojib- way. Thus the hypothetical form "elenyiwa" (man) becomes "iyiniw" in Cree, but "ineniwa" in Fox and "inini" in Ojibway. Another illustration provided by Professnr Rlonmfie1 renresented the