THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JULY [UGAN DAILY -,. l] ied by students of the University of authority of the Board in Control of Ished every morning except Monday during the city year and Sumnh m Session. Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Srepublication of all news dispatches credited to not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All of republication of all other matters herein also ,d. red at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as 'class mall matter. ;criptons during regular school year by carrier, >y mail, $4.50-. REPRESENTED' FOR NATiONAI ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative' 42O MAETsON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHJChE -" BOSTON 'LOS ANGELES - SAh FRANCISCO Associated Collegiate Editorial Staff mJltrh 1 _ _ ' _ )rn . . - . Pres , 1938.39 Managing editor city Editor Women's Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor' Associate Editor Business Staff W. Buchen... . . . . Business Manager Park ...... Advertising Manager NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY M. KELSEY The editorials published in The Michigan )il1y are written by members of the Daily taff and represent the views of the riters only. own & Cown By STAN M. SWINTON E WERE at the Bell with Clayt Hepler, who sped through his academic career here in five and a half years before joining the Detroit Times sport staff; Pat Conger, a five-year man now with United Press in Detroit; Steve Filipiak, one of the best radio announcers to emerge from Morris Hall, and Steve's date, a music stu- dent, who's better looking than a John Powers model. The conversation had been in something of a rut-everybody was giving a detailed descrip- tion of the goriest murder he'd ever covered. Finally, just to put things on a higher plane before the girl fainted-we'd polished off the Torch Murders, slithered through the Betty Baker case and were cheerily giving a play-by- play of how Ruth McHenry shot her mother and seven-year-old brother-Hepler burst out that he was certainly glad he wasn't drowned. A little startled, we informed him that we hadn't had the slightest doubt all evening that he wasn't drowned. He didn't look the least drowned-moist, yes; drowned, no. "You underystinate me," he said. "There are large numbers of people huddling aroud in little groups right now who think . ' m drowned. Vou see I went swimming in Whitmore Lake this afternoon. In all mod- \esty, I couldn't have been going faster if Eleanor Holm was swimming ahead Sud- denly I decided that it would be a good idea to go back, so I somersaulted in the water and gunned home Got there in no time at all, visited the kid sister and went back to, the beach. The place was full of people. Seems someone saw a fellow go down in the Lake and fail to reappear. This is something of a social error at a lake and they'd called the sheriff's office. Grappling hooks were swishing around, people were saying "poor boy" and waiting to see whether the body was bloody or not, so for a couple of hours I watched them. Then I started talking things over with a woman. It seems they'd been dragging for me! I told them I wasn't drowned and they said "Oh, we thought you were" and the whole thing ened there." We said it certainly must have been discon- certing to be grappled for. Someone said THEY wouldn't have let a crowd down like that and before the thing went any further we decided it Was about time they heard about the bloody murders WV'D covered so things ended there. Chatter The baby born to Mrs. Jack Brennan (Sis Staebler) was premature . . . weighed only four pounds. . is fighting for life. . . and will be in a, incubator at least five weeks. Jack's face beams like the sun at noon he's so proud. Up in The Daily office yesterday the former Michigan guard who's now with the Green Bay Packers, was receiving con- graulations when Helen Brady asked him how his wife got her niek-name of Sis. "Be- cause she's got two brothers," Jack said. "That's funny," Helen declared. "I've got two brothers and what do people call me--Bahe!" * * Michiga's Aviators A friend in Washington writes that four of the University's products were judged among the outstanding fliers in the national CAAA pro- gram. So good, in fact, that Roy Heath (he wrote "The Flying Trapeze" column in The Daily and got into the CAA when Football Captain Fred Janke amazingly flunked his physical exam). has been sent to Boston for seaplane training along with Don Shirley. Gerald Fredericks has been assigned to study soaring at Frankfort while John Vivian is working on soaring at Elmira, N.Y. e* * At Camp Charlevoix Herb Johnson sends a note that a counsellor's meeting at Camp Charlevoix is practically a U of M reunion. ,Ralph Heikkinen, the all-American guard who dabbles with poetry and Republican politics in his spare time, is up there. So are Frank Prael, Andrew Frostio, Thomas Hart, Harry Bingham, Don Horton and Mrs. Ann Hart. Louie Reiman, who manages the camp, was the organizer of the University fresh air camp. He played Varsity football here and was a champion wrestler. The place is one of the top outfits in the country-its roster has included the sons of Tad Weiman, Princeton coach who once mentored Michigan, President Ruthven, and J. P. Piccard, the stratosphere balloonist, among others. Te Art Of Latim-America Art objects from collections all over the country have been loaned for the exhibition of Latin- American and Pre-Columbian art which will be on display starting today through July 25 in the Exhibition Room of the Rackham Building. The exhibit, organized by Helen B. Hall of the Institute of Fine Arts, is being held as part of the program of the Latin-American Insti- tute and has been organized in conjunction with the Symposium on Art and Architecture which will be in session today and tomorrow. It will be open from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily. The exhibit contains a variety of material, in- cluding painting, drawing, etching, copies of murals, textiles, crafts and small art objects. The periods covered have been classified into three general groups, pre-Columbian, post-Con- quest and contemporary. In the pre-Columbian gallery are to be found displays from the Yucatan and Mexico, Guate- mala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and Peru. A group of Peruvian textiles showing various techniques has been loaned by the Detroit Institute of Arts, and interesting groups of pot- tery from the eastern Amazon basin and from the highlands of Peru have been offered by the University Museums. Mayan jade ornaments, stone and pottery figures, gold objects and others give an idea of the diversity of the art production of the pre-Columbian peoples. Painting$ and smaller objects, prints and tex- tiles are shown in the post-Conquest exhibit. A group of Peruvian paintings of the sixteenth and seventeenth century, loaned by Mrs. Frank Frey- er of Denver, are important parts of- the dis- play. Several eighteenth century Mexican paint- ings loaned by the Philadelphia Museum of Art exemplify religious art and portraiture work of that period. Artists of several countries have been grouped together to give a cross-section of contemprary Latin-American painting. Included in the list of contributors are Antonio Sotomayor of Bolivia, Antonio Gattorno and Daniel Serra of Cuba, Rivera and Orozco of Mexico, and Camilo Egas of Ecuador, who represent the colorful works in expression of the Latin-American temperament and ideals in painting. A chalk drawing by Jean Charlot, a Frenchman working in Mexico and Yucatan, is important in showing the influence of Latin-America on the artists of other nations. Herr Hitler's progress has been watched closely in this country; not nearly as much attention has been given to the economic aspects of his regime. Today the Germany economy is operating at full blast. There is no idle plant and there are no unemployed. On the contrary, foreign work- men are being imported. Tax rates are already high and they cannot be pushed much higher. Tax revenues are also at or near their maximum because industry is already operating at full capacity and there is, therefore, small prospect of larger earnings in future which might be tapped by the tax pollector In spite of the high taxes and the high yield from taxes, the German government is spending vastly in excess of its income. Its borrowings to meet its deficits are now running at the rate of about 3%/2 billion dollars a year, and even so it is paying some of its current bills in tax Anticipa- tion warrants. In addition, the government has been obliged to increase the amount of paper money in circulation at the rate of 300 or 400 million dollars a year. Germany must import food and raw materials from abroad and it can pay for them only with gold or with goods or services. Germany has almost no gold and so much of Germany's eco- nomic effort is being directed into production of war materials that her normal exports are far from sufficient to maintain a steady inflow of raw materials. Germany's economic situation is therefore crit- ical, and there is little reason to expect that it will improve. A significant item in the Reichs- kredit report is the statement that the German farmers are slaughtering their cows because of the high price of feed (much of which is im- ported) and the difficulty of getting farm labor- ers. This is happening at a time when ther/ is a great scarcity of butter in Germany; but. butter prices are being held down artificially and it is, therefore, not to the interest of the German farmers to increase the supply. -Chicago Daily Tribune DAILY OFFICIA 1 BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is con- structive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Bummer Session until 3:30 PM. 11:00 A.M. on Saturday. FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1939 VOL. XLIX. No. 10 Chinese Language Tea: The Inter- tional Center announces the first of a series of Language Teas for stu- dents and faculty members who speak Mandarin from 4 to 6 o'clock today. These teassare especially planned for the classes in Chinese in the Institute of Far Eastern Stu- dies. A considerable group of Chi- nese students has agreed to cooper- ate. All Chinese students who are in town whether registered in the Summer Session or not are urged to attend. Lecture, "Colonial Architecture in Brazil." (Illustrated). This lecture will be given by Professor Robert C. Smith, University of Illinois, at 5 p.m. today, in the Lecture Hlal of the Rackham Building. Courses 215 and 216, Laboratory Courses in Roman Antiquities will meet in Newberry Hall, today, July 7, at 7 p.m., instead of Wednesday, July 5. Visitors' Night. Students' Observa- tory, Angell Hall will be open to all students enrolled in the Summer Session this evening, from 8 to 10 o'clock. Graduation Recital. Mary Porter, organist, will appear in recital this evening at 8:15 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. The public i i- vited to attend. "The Good Hope" by Heiman Hei- jermans will be presented by the Michigan Repertory Players at 8:30 p.m., this evening, at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The Smith League House, 1102 East Ann Street, will be at home this evening, from 9 to 11 o'clock to the graduates and friends of the following colleges: Alabama State College, Alcorn College, Atlanta University, Bishop College, Fisk Uni- versity, Howard University, Knox- ville College, Miner Teachers Col- lege, Shaw University, Talladega College, Virginia Union and West Virginia State College. The Record Concert for this week will be held Saturday at 3 p.m. in the Men's Lounge, second floor, east, in the Rackham Building. The pro- gram has been arranged by Mr. Rich- ard Lee and will be as follows: Lo- hengrin, Prelude to Act One; Wag- ner; Chaconne, Bach (Stokowski and Philadelphia Orchestra); Fifth Sym- phony, Tschaikowsky; Londonderry Air (Ormandy and Philadelphia strings). Everyone is we\come at these weekly concerts. School of Education (Undergradu- RADI O SPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ WXYZ CKLW 750 HC - CBS I 920 KC - NBC Red 11240 KC - NBC Blue I 1030 KC - Mutual Friday Afternoon 12:00 Goldbergs Julia Blake News News commentator 12:15 Life Beautiful Feature Farm Almanac Turf Reporter 12:30 Road of Life Bradcast Golden Store Black and White 12:45 Day Is Ours Words and Music Fan on the Street Songs 1:00 Ed Mcconnell Feature Betty & Bob Freddy Nagel 1:15 Life of Dr, Susan Tyson Interview Grimm's Daughter Word Dramas 1:30 Your Family Kitty Keene Valiant Lady Music 1:45 Girl Marries Gardener Betty Crocker Muse and Music 2:00 Linda's Love Mary Marlin Navy Band Quiet Sanctuary 2:15 Editor's Daughter Ma Perkins t 2:30 Dr. Malone Pepper Young " Henry Cincone 2:45 Mrs. Page Guiding Light. Book Ends To be Announced 3:00 Minuet String Trio Club Matinee News Commentator 3:15 Promenade " Moods in Music 3:30" Merle Clark Wayne and Dick 3:45 Duncan Moore r News To be announced 4:00 Musical Detroit at St. Louis Police Field Day Jamboree 4:15 Melody, Rhythm X"Xylophonist 4:30 " Affairs of Anthony. 4:45 Alice Blair "'Bob Armstrongo 5:00 Miss Julia " Hollywood Hilights Muted Music 5:15 To be announced Stuff Smith Orch Turf Reporter 5:30 Tomy Talks " Day in Review Bsaseball Scores 5:45 Musical Spotlight Harry Heilmann News Friday Evening s6:00 News Tyson Review Hal Kemp Stop and Go 6:15 Inside Sports Bradcast o 6:30 Calling All Cars Midstream Lone Ranger "Fintex Sportlight 6:45 " George Krehbiel " Jimmie Alien 7:00 Western Skies Cities Service Universal Music WashingtonNews 7:15 "'' Factfincier Acadian Serenade 7:30 Johnny Presents " Don't Forget Crossroads 7:45 t oEvening Serenade 8:00 99 Men and Girl Waltz Time Plantation Party Musical Varieties 8:15 , f~f 8:30 First Nighter Death Valley Harry Horlick Jamboree 8 :45 of, 9:00 Grand Central Lady Esther 1001 Wives Dance Music 9:15 1 o . Detective O'Malley 9:30 Ripley Radio Extra Horace Heidt Congress Review 9:45 ofr I,1 10:00 Amos 'n' Andy Sports Parade Graystone Police Field Day 10:15 Waring Family Vic and Bade 10:30 SportsaFred Waring Tommy Dorsey Doc Sunshine 10:45 Cab Calloway ~ ~harry James 11:00 News News Larry Clinton Reporter 11:15 Beach Comber Dance Music E i" I Music 11:30 Eastwood Erskine Hawkins " 11:45 sterling Young " of'o 12:00 Sign Off Westwood Sign Off Bill McCune ates): No course may be elected for Requests for records to be played credit after Saturday, July 8. may be handed in at the League desk or given to the attendant. Diploma Applicatimns: Graduate Students who, at the time of regis- Graduating OutingClub will have tration, did not submit the blue di- a picnic at Peach Mountain on Sun- ploma application form and who ex- day, July 9. There will be swim- pect to complete requirements for Ming at Portage Lake, where there the master's degree during the Sum- mer Session must file such an appli- (Continued on Page 3) cation in the office of the Graduate School by July 8, 1939. Filing of an ENDS TODAY application in any previous semester T OFEATURES or Summer Session does not satisfy "WO FRATUD" this requirement. "BOY FRIEND" C. S. Yoakum and "SWEEPSTAKES League Concerts. Concerts of rec- WINNER" ords from the Carnegie Music Set are held in the Concourse of the Michi- gan League as follows:/ Sunday, 2-4 and 7:30-9:30. Monday, 2:30-4:30. Tuesday, 2:30-4:30. and 7:30-9:30. SATURDAY Wednesday, 2:30-3:30 and 7-9. Thursday, 2:30-4:30 and 8-10. Mats. Friday, 2:30-4:30 and 7-9. 25c Saturday, 2:30-4:30 and 7:30-9. h. - - , ' I Ay Preservation LU Democracy .. L AST WEEK delegates to the American Youth Congress refused to' endorse resolution condemning all foreign "isms," in- luding fascism, Nazism, and communism. Sub- equent events, the walkout of 23 delegates and schism in the Congress, clouded the real issue, ut with that we are not concerned. The Bill of Rights of the Constitution, as we ire aware, specifically provides that rights of rreedom of speech, the press, and peaceful assem- )lage "shall not be abridged." Laws, to have any eal value, must be taken in spirit and not merely y letter. The "abridging" of rights of free speech ed assemblage would certainly follow if any eal action were taken following a condemna- ;ion of any political group. This is far more important than it may appear n the surface. Democracy is and must be for- ver maintained on the premise that any of its nembers may legally make themselves heard at my time. Restriction of speech or censoring of he press are practices peculiar to those nations here dictators must keep themselves in power y the use of such forceful methods. It was Abraham Lincoln, and not Stalin, Trot- ,ky or Marx who said, "Whenever the American eople become dissatisfied with their govern- aent ,it is their inalienable right to overthrow it, y force if necessary." That right, as a founda- on stone of the freedom upon which democracy built, must be preserved, through the enforce- ent of a tolerant Bill of Rights. -Harry L. Sorlneborn Cong ress To Date The first session of the Seventy-sixth Congress assembled today to vote on the continuation the presidential authority to devalue the llar. Pressing close on the heels of this bittery ught point are the issues of neutrality legisla- on and the administration's proposed lending 'ogram. If the neutrality question gets to the mate, the session will be prolonged indefinitely, y anti-administration members, who forecast r it the fiercest debate since the historic battle er the League of Nations. But whether the session runs to mid-July or to August, it may be appraised for the most rt fairly enough now." How does it rate after ter, six months of life? How does it look in the ht of the promises and prospects last winter fore it opened? A veteran Washington correspondent of the st-Dispatch has weighed the session in the lance and to say that he has found it wanting to speak in mild terms. When the session met in January, the Novem- r election was only two months old. There was uch talk of a policy of independence by the ti-administration Democrats, who had bested e ill-starred purge, and by the Republicans, ose numbers had been increased materially the election. Economy was to be the rule. overy, much talked about, was to be achieved. and legislation was to encourage business, too g harassed by experimental reforms. Neither the leadership nor the projected re- ts have been achieved. Congress, for all that s said earlier, did not replace the leadership Mr. Roosevelt with a positive direction of its n. Any thoughts it may have entertained for inomy were soon forgotten. Log-rolling was S The Best in DEVELOPING and PRINTING GACH CAMERA SHOP . Nickels Arcade j 1 DU Dotr l Also Pete Smith's "BIG LEAGUERS" "RADIO HAMS" Sportlight WORLD ACTION NEWS T oday's Events 11:00 a.n.t 12:15 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 7:00 p.ma 8:00 p.mL 8:15 P.m. 8:30 p. 9:00 p.m. Physics Symposium, Prof. Enrico Fermi, (Amphitheatre Rackham Building) Luncheon, Latin American Institute (Union). Summer Parleys (Union). Chinese Tea (International Center). "Colonial Architecture," lecture' by Prof. Robert C. Smith, University of Illinois (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Summer Parleys (Union). Visitor'sNight (Student Observatory, Angell Hall). (' t Miss These k-RGAINS in Otgan Recital by Mary Porter "The Good Hope," by Herman Dancing (League Ballroom). (Hill Auditorium). Heijermans (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre). :'FE.RENCE BOOKS "I - - I - Snoot tariff bill days had there been so bare- faced a deal across party lines! How the Republicans will find in this Con- gress a record on which they can go before the country in opposition to the extravagances an- spending excesses of the Roosevelt administra- tion is more than hard to see. For the silver trade that this Congress has already authorized ex- penditures which set a peacetime record. When the session recessed for the, holiday, it had al- ready approved expenditures of $13,110,000,000 for the fiscal year now commenced-an increase over the year just closed of upward of two billion dollars. fre . .3forI