Weather dy and continued warm; undershowers, tomorrow Yl e Of ficial Publication Of The Summer Session Iait For Th Of De Editorial he Preservation mocracy . . . XLIX. No. 1o) Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1939 PRICE FIVE I mmmmmmmw Summer y Attracts Significance Of Monetary Fight Is Termed Slight By Palmer .1 Faculty Students vene Today r Discussion rsies Raised .er s t Opposing Views than 350 students, faculty rs and townspepple attended ming session of the first an- ummer Parley held yesterday on in the Union. Three speak- sented the opposing views in eting reconvened is discussing the government and al relations and e panels will meet again at 4 today in the same rooms of the n. Following this, the general n will meet at 7:30 p.m. today he North Lounge of the Union, , general discussion of important s raised in the panel discussion. e first speaker yesterday after- . was Prof. William Paton of the xl of Business Administration spoke from the conservative view- . "This talk about business men trike is the wildest sort of 'clap- " he said. "They do not sit idly vhile empty factories depreciate ,lue. I find myself vastly annoyed his mystic faith in governments in leaders," he continued. wvernment is the only way we of preserving our justice and lom according to Prof. James K. ck of the political science de-' rnent who represented the lib- The government can be either oppressor or a benefit, he con- lbs the greates num-I the radical is to har- and practice according or L. Williams of the ment who spoke as a of the radical view- Presidential Devaluation+ Power Chiefly Useful As Bluster Weapon When President Roosevelt signed the bill yesterday that extended his power to devafue the dollar, an excit- ing 'Congressional controversy end-1 ed that was probably three-fourth political in importance and only one- fourth economic.. That is the opinion of Wiliam B. Palmer of the ec pomics department, who sees the chances of the Presi-1 dent's exercising his powers as very remote at the present time. The main advantage of extending the Monetary Bill Gets Sig nature - , Of President Treasury Ready To Buy Newly-Mined Silver At Higher Price Scale WASHINGTON, July 6.-P)---Act-< ing swiftly, President Roosevelt signed today the controversial bill continu-t ing his power to change the gold< content of the dollar and to operate a $2,000,000,000 fund to keep currencyj relationships stable on the world money markets. - The measure was finally passed by Congress yesterday' and reached thec White House only today. The two monetary powers had expired last Fri- day midnight because of a filibuster in the Senate. Legality Contested Because the powers had died, some legislators insisted that they could not be revived by the legislation en-k acted today, but Administration men disagreed. Moreover, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau said he could see no way the law could be attacked in the courts. Republican c ritics in- dicated they had no place to attack it there, but that the issue would bez threshed out in the next Presidentialt campaign. New Price Of Silver After the signing of the bill, the Treasury prepared to buy newly- mined domestic silver at 71.11 cents an ounce. This price, contrasting with the old price of 64.64 cents, was put into the bill after a drive by Western silverites. No action to change the gold value of the dollar was in prospect. Ad- ministration officials have said they wanted this authority only as a re- serve for emergency. There also was believed to be no urgent, major task for the stabilization fund at present, since currencies have been fairly stable. As for foreign silver, the Treasury cut its price for such metal today to the record low of 36.75 cents an ounce, leading some officials to predict that the United States would no longer attempt to hold the world price of the metal at artificially high levels. Excursionists To See Schools 5 P.M. Today IsDeadline For Cranbrook Trip Another group of Summer Session excursionists will leave Ann Arbor at 8 a.m. tomorrow bound for the schools of the Cranbrook Founda- tion in Bloomfield Hills. Reservations for this fourth excur- sion must be made by 5 p.m. today in the Summer Session office, Room 1213 Angell Hall. Round trip bus fare will be $1.25. Lunch at the De- von Gables Tea Room will be about 45 cents additional. Students wish- ing to follow the busses in private cars, thus eliminating the bus fare, are invited to so do. At the foundation. the group will visit the Cranbrook School for Boys, the Kingswood School for Girls and the Brookside School for younger boys and girls. Cranbrook and Kingswood take students from the seventh through the twelfth grades; Brookside in- cludes grades up to the' seventh. Of particular interest to the ex- cursionists will be the Cranbrook Academy of Arts, the Cranbrook In- stitute of Science and the Christ Church. grant, as Mr. Palmer sees it, is as a weapon of bluster in international affairs to prevent other countries from devaluation of their currencies in an attempt to obtain trade ad- vantages. With the Tri-Partite agreement between' France, Great Britain and the United States in force to main- tain stability of exchangerates, and with most of the countries talking about monetary stability, Mr. Palm-d e o oee a yi m dae(X ear does not foresee an mediat ex-g change competition. Nor does he be- lieve that devaluation will prove par- ticularily effective for any country at the' present time to obtain trade ad- vantages. He pointed out that al- though France has in effect devalqed twice in the last three years and ex- change rates have fallen on France, the President has not had to use his powers. Devaluation Is Relative The problem' of effectiveness of de- valuation, Mr. Palmer said, is one of price changes. Devaluation decreas- es the value of the dollar as against gold, but does not necessarily de- crease its value against other goods. Thus a, country may devalue, but if its price level is not effected, the rmal value of the currency -unit is not changed. This was the experience of the United States following the devaluation of 1934, when devalua- tion was tried in an attempt to raise domestic prices.- It was theorized at that time, Mr. Palmer explained, that if tbe, dollar was devalued in terms of gold by 40 per cent, then prices would rise cor- respondingly. These theorists, how- ever, he said, forgot that between 1929 and 1933 the price level hid fallen 40 per cent without any change in the gold content of the dollar. Therefore, it was not the gold value of the dollar that determined its value against other goods, but such factors as the amount of dollars o, t standing, bank currency outstanding, and the disposition of people and business enterprizes to borrow and to spend. Upheld By Court -The Supreme Court pointed out in the gold clause cases that it was not reasonable for people to insist that they be paid $1,69 of the new cur- rency for every dollar loaned at, the old gold value, because the new dollar still bought more than the old ones before 1934. The effectiveness of devaluation (Continued on Page 3) Pickets Close Five General Motors Unts UAW-CIO Faction Calls Strike Of Tool An4 Die Workers And Engineers. Reuther Announces Walk-Out Effective DETROIT, July 6. --(P)- Pickets marched today at five General, Motors Corporation units closed by a strike of approximately 3,700 tool and die makers, engineers and main- tenance men who are members of the CIO United Automobile Workers. Walter P. Reuther, director of the General Motors department of the UAW-CIO, tonight hailed the walkout as "100 per cent effective." Immediate Results Few Immediate results of the strike, which is aimed solely' at work on 1940 model automobile\, were not apparent. Corporation officials said that because strikers at one plant here included cutter grinders, 5,600 Chevrolet production workers might be made idle in two or three days when dull tools would force a shut- down. In most General Motors divisions, start of production work on 1940 models still is several weeks in the future. Thus a delay caused by the walkout of skilled workers engaged in preparatory operations would not be felt in those divisions for, some time. Returns To Detroit James F. Dewey, United States De- partment of Labor conciliator who has aided frequently in automobile strike settlements, returned to De-' troit today, conferred with corpora- tion; executives, and said he hoped to arrange a conference of G.M. and union representatives Friday morn- ing. Dewey made no, comment on the corporation's position that it could not negotiate withieither the UAW- CIO or Homer Martin's AFL-affiliat- ed UAW until the National Labor Re- lations Board or a court decided which was entitled to recognition. The break-up last Sunday of a conference arranged by Dewey to negotiate union demands including wage and overtime adjustments, pre-. cipitated the strike. Noted Architect Is Honored This Noon Interested persons from out of the city as well as members of the In- stitute of Latin-American Studies will meet today and tomorrow in the Rackham Building to take part in the sessions of the Symposium on Art and Architecture being sponsored by the Institute. A luncheon this noon in honor of Carlos Contreras, prominent Mexican landscape architect, and a lecture at 5 p.m. by Prof. Robert C. Smith of the University of Illinois will high- light today's program. Mrs. Concha Romero James, of the Division of Cultural Relations of the Pan-Ameri- can Union, will be the guest of hon- or at a luncheon tomorrow. Smith Will Speak Professor Smith, who is known as the leading specialist in the United States on the subject of Latin-Ameri- can art and architecture, will speak on "Colonial Architecture in Brazil," in this afternoon's lecture at the Rackham Auditorium. He will lead a discussion of the question "Indi- genous vs. Formal European Ele- ments in Latin-American Art" at 8 p.m., assisted in the formal discus- sion by other featured guests of the Symposium. Tomorrow's program will start at 10 a.m. with a series of discussions on the materials found in the loan ex- hibit of Latin-American and Pre- Columbian Art which has been ar- ranged in conjunction with the Sym- posium by Helen Hall of the Institute of Fine Arts. Speakers will be Pro- fessor Smith, Mrs. Adele Weibel of the Detroit Institute of Arts and Mr. Harold L. Wallace, in charge of the pre-Columbian galleries of the ex- hibit. Luncheon At Union The luncheon for Mrs. James will * * * Leon D. Case Dies Following Lengthy Illness Former Was Here Secretary Of State Under Treatment Before Transfer Symposium On Art Opens HereToday Luncheon And Lecture To Highlight Program At Initial Day's Meeting i R 1 it i ,k c 1 t 'i1 I Mourn'ed By State Thousand Quit WP) IProtes Working Hours Extensi( Brings Nation -Whi Series Of Walk-Ou Washington Issues Terse Ultimatu The fight of the radical is for the betterment of human being, here and now, he continued. Such a per- son admits the intellectuial differ- ences in men but contends that this insures no difference in their right to cultural and materialistic benefits. Closing Hours And Penalties Are Explained- Recreational And Dancing Facilities Also Described To Meeting At League Hours and penalties for women. recreational facilities, dancing classes, dances and duties of hostesses were explained to representatives from each undergraduate house on cam-. pus yesterday in the League. Women's hours during the Summer Session are 11 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, 1:30 a.m. Friday and 12:30 a.m. Saturday, Mary Jane LeGros, head of Judiciary Council, told the meeting. Those women who were of senior standing last semester in any university or college have 1:30 a.m. permission on Saturdays, she added. Penalties Set For Lateness Penalty for the first five or six latenesses is five minutes for each minute late up to half an hour. For any lateness longer than this time, the offender must come in at 8 p.m. the following Friday, and for exces-' sive lateness, at 8 p.m. both Friday' and Saturday. All latenesses must be made up on Friday or Saturday nights of the following weekend. Disciplinary cafes must be brought before the Judiciary Council, Miss LeGros stated. Blanks for reporting any latenesses were handed out to the representative of each league and sorority house. Recreational Facilities Described Miss Helen Ellis of the women's physical education department de- scribed the many facilities for recre- ation available to women students at Geologic Features Of Niagara Explained By Professor Scott i By ETHEL Q. NORBERG Niagara Falls is retreating four feet every year, Prof. Irving D. Scott of the geology department told a; large audience yesterday at the Rack-; ham Building.; A layer of Lockport dolomite caps the falls, he explained, with shale underneath. The force of the water is continually undermining the dolo- mite, causing it to break off. Speaking on the history of the+ Falls, Professor Scott described the scenic wonder with the aid of slides in anticipation.-of the Summer Ses- sion excursion to Niagara Falls Fri- day to Monday, July 14 to 17. The Falls, about 18 miles north of Lake Erie, is composed of two drops, the Horseshoe on the Canadian side, which is the larger, and the Ameri- can. Below this is a wide and deep e Toronto Trip Plans Formed Group To View Collection At.Archeology Museum Tentative plans have been an- nounced for the trip to Toronto to study the Chinese collections of the Royal Ontario Museum of Archaeol- ogy. The group will leave Friday, July 14, and will return to Ann Arbor Sunday or Monday. Tie trip is be- ing arranged in connection with the Summer Institute of Far Eastern Studies and will be under the direc- tion of Prof. James M. Plumer, lec- turer on Far Eastern Art. Those driving their own cars are asked to inform Professor Plumer stating how many seats are avail- able in addition to the driver. In event of sufficient applicants, a part bus will be arranged, according to gorge running north called the Up-I per Great Gorge. This runs into theI Whirlpool Rapids section, a narrow,] shallow gorge, about a third as wide7 as the Upper Gorge and one fourth as deep, he said. Between the Whirl- pool Section and the Lower Great Gorge which follows is the Whirl-+ pool. This contains an exceptional amount of dirt on the west side as a result of former glaciers. The Lower Great Gorge, passing Foster's Flat, a projection into the river which was caused by a former waterfall, nar- rows into the Lower Narrow Gorge and on into the Niagara Plain, he described. The Niagara Gorge has been cut over many thousands of years, Profes- sor Scott told the audience. When the glacier retreated from the region, the waters of Lake Erie flowed north- ward into Lake Ontario over the esca1pment at Lewiston, forming the Falls. ,The Lower Narrow Gorge, Profes- sor Scott said, was cut shortly after the glacier began to recede. Only Lake Erie at this time had its outlet in the Niagara River. The small amount of water cut but a narrow gorge. When the glacier receded far- ther north the land, relieved of the weight of the ice, uplifted and the Kirkfield outlet of the upper Great Lakes was raised above Port Huron causing the water of all the lakes to flow out through Niagara. This caused the formation of the Lower Great Gorge. The ice front again receded, a new outlet for the upper lakes called the Nipissing Lakes was formed at the Ottowa River and again' the Niagara served only for Lake Erie, which caused the Whirlpool Rapids Section. With another rise of land the Ottowa River was lifted and the present system of Great Lakes ini- tiated. Semi-Nudist Termed 0Cool' By Policemen be held at 1 p.m. in the Union, at which time she will speak on "Cul- tural Exchange between the Ameri- cas." The program will be conclud- ed by an address by Contreras at 8 p.m. on "The Planning of Mexico City and Modern Architecture in Mexico." Contreras, who has been termed one of the most influential men in Mexico, has made a special trip from Mexico City by plane for the Sym- posium. Internationally known, he has directed both official and private national planning associations in Mexico, has been a delegate to the International Housing and Planning Congress, and has designed plans for the cities of Monterrey, Veracruz, Acupulco, Mazatlan, Nuevo, Laredo, Tampico and the Federal district of Mexico. Child Killed By Local Car HOWELL, Mich., July 6. -(P)- Striking the side of an automobile driven by Miss Marian Kleinschmidt, 23, of Ann Arbor, Route 1, Lawrence, two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gallup of Howell was fatally injured today when he broke away from his eight-year-old brother, Hen- ry, and ran across US-16 to meet his father. WATERVLIET, Mich., July 6.--() -Funeral services will be held here Sunday for Leon D. Case, former Democratic Michigan Secretary oft State who died in a Milwaukee, Wis., sanitarium today. ' Case, 62 years old, had been under treatment since last winier. Shortlyt after his defeat in his campaign forE the Lieutenant Governorship. After1 the election charges were made that' employes in the Detroit office of ther Secretary.State had made improper1 use of State funds. Case was known. to have taken the alleged shortages much to -heart and his illness fol- lowed. He was at first treated in Mercywood Sanitarium of Ann Arbor and later taken to the Milwaukee in- stitution. Case's death brought expressions of.. regret from both Democratic, andl Republican political leaders.E Case's body will be returned herek from Milwaukee temorrow. The ser- vices will be held in the Congrega- tional Church at 2 p.m. Sunday., Masonic services will be conducted in the Watervliet Cemetery, where Mrs. Case is buried. Although a native of Ellsworth, Wis., Case spent most of his life in Watervliet. After his high school edu- cation he went to work in the paper mills for several years. In 1900 he joined his father in the ownership of the Watervliet Record, a weekly news-. paper, with which he was connected the remainder of his life. Center Holds First Chinese Tea Today Sponsored by the hiternational .Center, a Chinese tea will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. today at the Center, 603 E. Madison.Street. The tea is intended to give students enrolled in the CIhinese language classes in the Institute of Far Eas- tern Studies an opportunity .to meet the Oriental students of the Univer- sity and to have the practice in con- versing with them in their native tongue. The International Center is plac- ing its facilities at the disposal of the Institute and acting as, host; the plans for the conduct of the tea hour is entirely in the hands of Mr. Robert W. Clack, Grad., who is assisting Prof. George Kennedy in the Chinese language classes, (By Associated Press) Additional thousands throughout the country, though confronted with a "take it or leave it" ultimatum from Washington, quit their WPA jobs Thursday in protest against exten- sion of their working 'hours under the new Federal Relief Act. Local construction union leaders, miffed by abandonment of the "pre- vailing wage" principle for paying skilled WPA laborers, began voting official strike sanctions for the spon- taneous walkouts, and broader na- tional action was contemplated by the AFL in Washington. Some Heed Warning Numerous. workers, on the other hand, heeded Washington's general warning that they had only five days to return to work or be fired, and they took up their tools again. Administrators of.the WPA, mean- while, prepared to make considerable reductions in relief work rolls on their own part to comply with Fed- eral- orders resulting from new legis- lation. A reduction of 200,000 in last month's WPA payroll of 2,600,0000 has been ordered for the nation as a whole, and under the new act those employed continuously for 18 months soon would be laid off temporarily, with some exceptions. Of ficials Explain While Washington officials ex- plained resignedly that the new 130- hour working month, -against -which employes are protesting, was ordered by Congress and could not be changed, some local relief officials reinforced Federal work-or-quit orders with warnings that those who would not accept WPA pay might not get home relief. Administration Refuses To Recognize Strikers WASHINGTON, July 6.--OP)--The Works Projects Administration de- clined tonight to recognize as a strike the current widespread walkout of WPA workers'and warned the denon- strators they would be dropped from the rolls after five days' absence. "I find it difficult to regard this work stoppage as a strike," Commis- sioner F. C. Harrington said at a press conference. He explained that a- strike usually was called to force negotiation of some point but that "nobody is in a position to negotiate" a law passed by Congress. Protest Relief Act The' WPA demonstrators are pro- testing against a provision in the new Relief Act requiring them to work 130 hours a month to earn their security wage. In some cases, it has resulted in a sharp reduction in hourly wages. For instance, a worker who had been receiving one dollar an hour and whose security wage was $65 a month would have to work exactly twice as long to make the same money. Linguistic Scholars Study Form Of Languages In Central India Though its sound-patterns are the simplest found in all the Dravidian languages, yet Kolami, a minor lan- guage spoken by 31,000 people in central India, presents phonological features of unusual interest to the linguistic scholar, Dr. Murray B. Emeneau told members of the Lin- guistic Institute at the regular lun- cheon conference yesterday. Isolated in an Indo-Aryan area, Kolami has undergone phonetic changes that differentiate it from its relatives in the Dravidian group, Dr. Emeneau said. Its phonemes, or minimal meanignful sounds are much simpler, for example, and generally correspond to English phonemes ex- cept that Kolami has two retroflex rnv '.c. a iahs ..Aflx "t' "and "r voiced retroflex "d can occur in combination with a voiceless ponso- nant. An outstanding characteristic of the Kolami orphophonemes, or meaningful sounds having gram- matical function, is found in the way consonant clusters break up in cer- tain situations, the speaker pointed out. Since the language had not hitherto been studied, Dr. Emeneau had to analyze the speech of several natives before he could determine the basic principles involved. It was observed that, for instance, the word "veleg" (fence) becomes "velekt" in the dative singular an'd "velgul" in the nominative plural, and that "ayak" (rubbish) similarly benmes "vakt." and "avkui l. Ul- Favors Requirement Harrington said that he personall favored the requirement, and thi the recommendation for it originate with the WPA. He said it simplifie the operation of projects to requi all employes to work the same nun ber of hours and also prevented WP workers from earning their month security wage within a short tin each month and then taking an ou side job under an assumed name. Dr. Rosselet Speaks Before French Clu Dr. Jeanne Rosselet, director the Maison Francais, addressed tl meeting of the French Club last nig on the topic "La Vie dans les Eco] Normales Superieures." Dr. Rosselet described the life these teacher training schools France. The schools, one for men ai one for women, were founded Napoleon and have produced su geniuses as Louis Pasteur, Jules R mains and other well-known Fren fies. Her talk wie as demonstrat