TH.E MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY HIGAN DAILY I U i 3nts of the University of the Board in Control of d every morning except Monday during the year and Sumnm Session. Jember of the Associated Press uocated Press is exclusively entitled to the publication of all.news dispatches credited to otherwise credited in this newspaper. All epublication of all other matters herein also not of ed. office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as ;ter. B regular school year by carrier, REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO~' BOSTON ' LOB ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO er, Associated Collegiate Press, 19389 )n rg in Editorial Staff . . Business Staff Managing Editor City Editor, Women's Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor aspects of the affair. The New Orleans Times- Picayune is asking pointedly why ex-Governor Leche accepted Smith's resignation, on learning of the irregularities, and did not raise ahue and cry for his arrest until Smith had had time to leave town. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch Nagara Falls Excursion Sixth excursion of the Summer Session series will be a trip to Niagara Falls and will take place Friday to Monday of this week. The party will leave Ann Arbor at 3:30 p.m. Friday and proceed from the front of Angell Hall by bus to the Detroit and Cleveland Navigation Company docks at the foot of Third Street in Detroit. The boat will leave the dock at 5:30 p.m. and arrived in Buffalo at 8:30 a.m. Saturday. At Buffalo the group will be met by special busses which will take it around the Falls and vicinity. At 4 p.m. excursionists will check in at a hotel in Niagara Falls, N.Y., and the evening will be open for those who wish to see the night illumination of the Falls or indulge in other en- tertainment. Sunday morning those who wish may take the trip beneath the Falls on the Maid of the Mist and visit the Cave of the Winds. A party will also be conducted through the Niagara Falls hydro- alectric power house. Sunday the group will leave the hotel about 4 pm. and catch the boat in Buffalo at 6 p.m. The boat will dock at Detroit at 9 a.m. Monday and the party will arrive in Ann Arbor by bus shortly after 10 a.m. The tour by bus around the Falls will follow the Canadian road through Fort Erie, Brideburg and Black Creek, over the Welland River and through the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls Park. Excursionists will see the Table Rock tunnel and elevator, the Whirlpool Rapids elevator, the Spanish aerocar, the whirlpool and Niagara Glen, taking luncheon at Brock's Monument from which, on a clear day, Lake Ontario and Lewiston may be seen. Tickets And Expenses Tickets for the trip will be on sale one day only, Thursday, between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. in the Summer Session office, Room 1213 Angell Hall. All who wish to go must purchase tickets at that time. BOat fare will amount to $15.50. This includes meals on the boat (dinner Friday and Sunday, breakfast Saturday and Monday), berth in an inside stateroom, and all transportation in and around Niagara Falls. An outside stateroom may be had for 75 cents to $1 extra. Bus fare to De- troit and return will be $1. These tickets must be purchased Thursday.r Other expenses will include one night at an inexpensive Niagara Falls hotel, with rates rang- ing from $1 to $2.50 per person, extra trips at the Falls such as the ride on the Maid of the Mist and the trip through the Cave of the Winds and meals not served on the boat. All foreign students planning to go on the excursion should leave their passports with Prof. Raleigh Nelson, Director of the International Center, at the Center, 603 E. Madison Street, be- fore Tuesday, and proper visas for the trip through Canada will be obtained. Accompanying the excursionists will be Prof. Carl J. Coe, Director of Summer Session Excur- sions, and Prof. Irving D. Scott of the geology department. Professor Scott will explain the geo- logical characteristic of the Falls and vicinity. 1(5own &Gown By STAN M. SWINTON It came in the morning mail, a letter from the American Guild for German Cultural Freedom. Above the signature of Hendrik Willem van Loon it said: "It happened last month and you probably have forgotten. It was just another item in the newspaper. A German writer, a refugee, had killed himself. He had spent four years in the trenches but no merciful bullet had saved him from what was to follow . . . He had devoted-all his talents, all his energies towards a single purpose-to rid mankind of the nightmare of violence and hatred. You know the rest of the story. In the end, his tormented soul could no longer endure the humil- iations that were heaped upon those absurd in- dividuals who believed in kindness, in tolerance, in mutural understanding. "Suicide, the police reports called it."- But the secretary at the American Guild for German Cultural Freedom had forgetfully used old stationary on that plea, for aid. And half- way down the column of listed sponsors was the name of Ernst Toller, who had joined with thous- ands of others who suffered from Nazi perse- cution in the fight for kindness, tolerance, mutual understanding. The tremendously ironical point is this-Toller was the very writer to whom the letter referred; his was the tormented soul which had chosen suicide! * * * We were having a nip with the press agent of the Parker and Watts circus and a pair of fans the other day. The conversation dwelt temporar- ily on Clyde Beatty, then skipped to Dexter Fel- lows. "Out West I'm as famous as a press agent as he ever was," said Skinny, advance man for the show and adopted son of Al G. Barnes. "Yes," commented a prosperous fan whose salary was variously rumored to run from $500 to $6,000 a day. "You go to a paper with three mats in your pocket, tell the city editor you'll be fired if he doesn't run them and out of sympathy thepoor fool does." "Say," interjected Skinny. "Remember when I called you up in Texas?" "I do," said the wealthy one, turning to us. "He calls up at 3 a~m. and says TI've just had a terrific fight.' "Are you in jail?" I asked him. 'No.' 'Are you in the hospital or hurt?' 'No.' 'Then why'd you wake me up at three o'clock?' 'The damndest thing happened and I thought I'd better tell you-I won the fight!'" * * s A little later the same Texan was telling of his younger days. "The barber gave me a copy of 'The Police Gazette' one day," he said as we settled down and lighted another of the press agent's cigars. "I took it home and hid it under the chair. The next day the Parent-Teachers Association had a meeting -you know the type, very stiff prigs with steel- rimmed glasses. They were sitting there making bitter comments upon the morals of the present generation and mother was saying she was cer- tainly glad her son was a good, church-going boy. Unfortunately I was upstairs and unaware of the visitors. And I took that very moment to shout: 'Mother, will you bring up that 'Police Gazette.' It's hidden under the rug." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN tip W. Buchen . ... . Business Manager :1 Park.. . . . . . Advertising Manager NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY M. KELSEY The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. ending The Cloak I Propaganda .0. T $E DELEGATES of twenty-three youth organizations who walked out the American Youth Congress last week are be congratulated for exposing what has be- :e a standard ruse of leftist organizations. 'he deception consists of identifying certain lectivisms with Democracy and pitting them ainst the horrors of Fascism. refusi That ruse was a resolution cism and "other dic- to brand Communism silence implied mani- sm was evident in the Communist delegate, Publication in 'the BuletIn is con- structive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session until 3:30 P.M. 11:00 A.M. on Saturday. SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1939 VOL. XLIX. No. 12 League Concerts. Concerts of rec- 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. Wednesday, 2:30-3:30 and 7-9. Thursday, 2:30-4:30 and 8-10. Friday, 2:30-4:30 and 7-9. Saturday, 2:30-4:30 and 7:30-9. Requests for records to be played may be handed in at the League desk or given to the attendant. Graduate Outing Club will have a picnic at Peach Mountain to- day. ~ There will be swimming at Portage Lake, where there are various water-front facilities for a small charge. For those who do not wish to swim, there will be fa- cilities for baseball, and an oppor- tunity for hiking. The group will meet at the northwest entrance of the Rackham Building at 2:30 p.m. All graduate students and faculty members are cordially invited. The charge for food and transportation will be 35 cents. There will be a meeting regardless of the weather. The Michigan Christian Fellowship, a campus organization, meets each Sunday afternoon in the Fireplace Room at Lane Hall from 4:30 to 6 p.m. This Sunday Mr. Kenneth Pike who is enrolled in the summe school, will tell of his experiences living with a native Mexican trib and translating the Bible into thei language. All who are interested ar invited to come. Their will be grour singing, refreshments and a time o fellowship. Initial Vesper Service at the Rack- ham Auditorium, 8 p.m., this eve- ning. Address by Prof. Louis A. Hopkins Director of the Summer Session Music under the direction of Profes. sor David Mattern of the School o: Music. Congregational singing. Dancing Party: The Michigan Wol- verine is sponsoring another in it series of summer dancing parties thi evening from 8:30 until 11:00. "Mix- er" dances will provide a part of th evening's entertainment: Refresh. ments will be served. All summer session students ar cordially invited to attend. First Baptist Church, 502 E. Huro Street. 9:30 a.m. Church School. 10:45 Morning Worship. Rev. Paul B. Irwin of the Firs Baptist Church of Flint, Michiga will speak on "A Call to Worship." First Church of Christ, Scientis 409 S. Division St., Sunday morninm service at 10:30. Subject: "Sacra ment." Golden Text: Psalms 51:10. Sun day School at 11:45. The Lutheran Students, their wive and friends will meet at Zion Luth eran Parish Hall this afternoon a 4:30. Cars will leave from there fo the Beck home on Jackson Road fo: the steak roast. Each person is aske to bring 25 cents. Professor Pau Kauper of the Law Faculty will b the speaker at the meeting after th supper. Church Worship Services will b held in Trinity Lutheran Churc at 8:15 a.m. and 10:30 a.m Rev. Henry o. Yoder will deliver th sermon at both services. Trinity i located on the corner of East Wil- liam and S. Fifth Ave. Church Worship Services will be held in Zion Lutheran Church at 10:30 a.m. with sermon by the Rev Ernest C. Stellhorn. Unitarian Church. Sunday, 11 a.m. Rev. Lester Mondale of Evanston Illinois, on "The Role of Imagery in Mental Health." 7:30 p.m., stu- dent discussion. Christian Reformed and Reforme Church. Services will be held at the Michigan League Chapel a 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Rev W. Stuart, instructor in Bible His- tory at the Grand Rapids Christiar High School, will conduct both serv- ices. Wesley Foundation. Class in "New Testament Religion" led, by Dr. E W. Blakeman at Stalker Hall at 9:45 a.m. The subject for this week wil be "New Testament Problem of Man.' Wesleyan Guild meeting at the Meth- odist Church at 6 p.m. Prof. Ben- nett Weaver will speak on "Sources of Power." Social hour and refresh. ments following the meeting. We will adjourn in time to attend the Vesper service at the Rackham Build- ing. RADiO SPOT L I G H T WJ R WWJ WXYZ C KLW 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC RetI 1240 K- NBC Blue 1030 KC - Mutual Sunday Afternoon 12:00 Church Music Children's Theatre Baritone 12:15 Garden Hour to t 12:30 Mother's Album Symphonette " Salvatore Stefano 12:45 Musical Your Government D'Artega Quartette 1:00 Democracy Black Ace varieties Dance Music 1:15 It toConcert orchestra 1:30 Cabin Folks Detroit at Chicago Allen Roth Church Service 1:45 "t ," 2:00 Grshwin Concert tn Three Cheers Sunday Afternoon 2:15" Booman's Notebook , 2:30 " " Festival of Music Chapel Hour 2:45 ~,frI 3:00 Musical Fun "oNat'l Vespers Tabernacle 3:15 "'" 3:30 St. Louis Blues Tiger Talk Leopold Spitalny Haven of Rest 3:45 Detroit at Chicago " 4:00 Father Coughlin " string Ensemble Nobody's Children 4:15 " " Jimmy Dorsey " 4:30 of " Red Norvo 4:45 " Ray Perkins 5:00 Gay Nineties " Grenadiers Lucky Break 5:15 "~ 5:30 Hollywood" Paul Laval Dance 5:45 Vera Richardson Harry Heilmann Sunday Evening 6:00 Aldrich Family Popular Classics Dance 6:15"a!,rr 6:30 Music Playhouse Band Wagon Radio Guild Baseball Scores 6:45 " "o,!Melodic Strings 7:00 Gerald Smith Charley McCarthy NBC Symphony American Forum 7:15 '"' r 7:30 Stevenson Sports 7:45 t t I i 8:00 Ford Hour Mverry Go Round Hollywood Play. Revival 8:15to~st 8:30 " Album of Music Walter Winchell 8:45 ~"to Irene Rich I 9:00 Playhouse Circle Chas. Barnett Goodwill tour 9:15 "to, 9:30 Melodies " Cheerio 9:45 Eton Boys 10:00 Exchange Prog. Russel Barnes News; Graystone Church 10:15 " Old Timers Graystone 10:30 Hermit's Cave Dance Music Isham Jones Recital 10:45 " Vera Richardson 11:00 News News Bunny Berigan Reporter 11:15 Sterling Young Dance Music A Music 11:30 Sammy Kay Eastwood Artie Shaw 11:45 To be announced 12:00 Sign Off Weather Sign Off Jimmy Dorsey SALL i :CUT-'RATE' ;.. 4 preacher. Dr. Frank will speak on the topic "The Christian Duty of Non-Conformity." Special music by the choir directed by Hardin Van Deursen with William Barnard at the organ. 5:30 p.m., Summer School Vesper Service. A cost supper will be served at the Council Circle at the rear of the church. Following the supper the meeting will start at 6:15 with Dr. O. R. Yoder, Superintendent of he Ypsilanti State Hospital, speak- ing on the subject "Religion and Mental Health." First Congregational Church, State and Williams Streets. Reverend Leonard A. Parr, Minister. Public Service of Worship 10:45. Doctor Parr will preach on the subjectff "Is God Emeritus?" The Chorus Choir, directed by Donn Chown will furnish the music. Placement Registrations: Enroll- ment with the Bureau for positions is being held on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, July 10, 11, 12. This (Continued on Page 3) nose views were eviaenuy ecnoed by ihe major- y of the Congress. "Communism," he said, "is not an enemy of emocracy. It is the highest expression of democ- icy." This juxtaposing of collectivism with democ- toy has been applied in two different ways, In e first place, the collectivists have made good e of the word "democracy" to strengthen their sition in international affairs. The Spanish war as a war to preserve democracy (substitute a llectivist government). The Fascist triumphs re due to England's failure to cooperate with issia, her sister democracy (substitute collecti- At dictatorship). The trend of world events is ward a coming Armeggadon between two op- sing political philosophies-Fascism and mocracy-or so we are asked to believe. [n the second place, collectivism has been ntified time and again as the concommitant of 'ctive domestic democracy. The Fascist dic- orships are simply the inevitable extreme of e capitalist system's "soulless combinations." e way to halt fascism at home is to "democra- e" industry (substitute regiment for democra- e). Civil liberties, such as the right of assem- , are sacred for socialist, communist and other called "liberal" groups, but obviously not ant for fascists. Dissenters from the collectiv- opinion are "reactionaries," (fascists). And so ad nauseum. Many reputable political economists in the t few years have spoken against the oft-re- ited myth that Fascism is the brain-child of >italism. They have demonstrated in words gnant with warning that collectivism in any m and political democracy are incompatible nents which even the catalyst of experience inot unite; that all the collective "isms" are natural enemies but fellow-travelers on the d to totalitarianism; that humanists who ch their wagon to the star of such illusory cepts as "economic democracy" are indulging vishful thinking. .et leftists still persist in their rhetorical ap- ,s to emotion and virtue words, jumping at rt-cuts to the "abundant life" and neglecting iplete appraisal of the economic and institu- ial problems involved in their "brave new 'ld" of theory. 'he twenty-three bolting youth organizations erve a vote'of thanks for recognizing the real ificance of the resolution. -Jack Canavan 231 SOUTH STATE .... AT LIBERTY Third Week's Schedule PENN Tennis Balls 3 for 98c GOLF BALLS 3 for 69c Beach Sandals Keep KoolI with a POLAR CUB ELECTRIC PANS BEER Properly Chilled 3 for 2'5c CHAMPAGN ES WINE FILMS AGFA or EASTMAN CUT-RATE Prices Sunday 2:30 4:15 8:00 p.m. p9m. p.m. Monday 10:00 a.m. 12:45 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 4:05 p-m. 4:15 p.m.. 5:00 p.m. 7:45 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Tuesday 5:00 p.m. Graduate Outing Club, (N.W. Entrance, Rackham Building). Carillon Concert. "Vespers and Convocation," Address by Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Institute for Teachers of Latin. "Training of Teachers for Reality," by Prof. George Axtelle of Northwestern University (League). Renaissance Lecture by Prof. Panofsky (Amphitheatre, Rackham Building). "Youth, Schools and Life," by Thomas H. Quigley, Georgia In- stitute of Technology (University High School Auditorium). - Softball, American League (South Ferry Field). "Pharaoh Seeks Eternal Blessedness," illustrated lecture by Prof. W. F. Edgerton, University of Chicago (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Square and Country Dancing, (League Ballroom). Reception by Greek and Latin Departments. "University of Michigan's Excavations of Seleucia-on-the-Tigris," illustrated lecture by Prof. Clark Hopkins (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Beginners' Class in Social Dancing (League Ballroom). Duplicate Bridge (League). Faculty Concert (Hill Auditorium). Excursion to Ford Plant (Angell Hall). Faculty Women's Tea (Rackham Building). "How Children Grow," by Prof. Willard C. Olson (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Intermediate Dancing Class (League Ballroom). "Two Gentlemen of Verona" (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre). "The Dictionary as an Authority," illustrated lecture by Prof. C. C. Fries (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Carillon Concert. Bridge Lessons (League). "Two Gentlemen of Verona" (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre). Excursion to Niagara Falls for two and one-half days. Round trip by boat and bus. "Musical Activities in Ttin America" l Prf. Winlim ViCn WE DELIVER Phone 5933 I - GOTA GET TO' PAIRAMOUNTS 7:30 8:00 8:30 NMITTIOTO+4-APPiNE 1%.l p.m. p.m. p.m. Wednesday 12:45 3:30 5:00 p.m. p.m. p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Thursday 5:00 p m. II 7:00 8:00 8:30 p.m. p.m. p.m. mens Louisiana riday 3:30 p.m. I &:fft o m I