THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, ;AN DAILY " r r r+ r rrrrrir i rur r J (. .. ,._ .. . _. 11 ART 1l ---, ed and managed by students of the University of gan under the authority of the Board in Control of nt Publications. lished every morning except Monday during the rsity year and Summ r Session. Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the r republication of all news dispatches credited to not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All of republication of all other matters herein also ed. ered at the Past Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as d class mail matter. scriptions during regular school year by carrier, by mail, $4.50. REPRE.NTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERT18ING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO "BOSTON ' LOS ANE1LS SAN FRANCISCO Per, Associated Collegiate Editorial Staff D. Mitchell . . . . - . Swinton.. .... . Norberg. ...... . Canavan . .«..... M. Kelsey..... . .. . Kesslet . . . . BnsE.sLong...... L. Sonneborn . . Business Staff Press, 1938-39 Managiig Editor City Editor Women's Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Assocate Editor i11p w. Buchen . Business Manager al Park...... ......Advertising Mnager NIGHT EDITOR: KARL KESSLER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Advertising- Good Or Evil? . . O NE OF THE most vital forces in pub- lic life today is advertising. It per- m eates our lives from the kindergarten onward. Io single factor exerts so much influence on so mpany people. Therefore, since it is so omnipres- ent and all-important, it must be a social problem significant enough to merit public attention. Advertising is one of the most effective educa- tional devices of our day. It is a new field, a twentieth century by-product of modern busi- ness. Today, before our children can read, they see and are affected by picture advertising. Thus, even by the time they enter kindergarten, modern children have been conditioned by and exposed to advertising, and a far-reaching pre-school eduction has begun. Whether this education is good or bad is a moot question. Surely advertising has many good effects. If its sole purpose were to create in the minds of the yqung, vivid pictures of life around them, cer- tainly the advertising medium would not be in vain. Then, throughout the formative schoo years advertising continues to play an important educational role. It makes children conscious of what goes oan in the world and informs them profitably from a consumer point of view. More- over, not only dpes advertising contribute to child and adolescent matter when they refuse to digest a weighty treatise on the same subject. This is, of course, due to the inherent laziness of the adult mind.. Then, since advertising is such an important factor in the life of today, it must be handled wisely. It must be truthfully, lucidly written. The main pitfall in our international advertising is its fallacious presentation. Facts are distorted be- yond all proportion to make effective copy. Face .creams are said to give you a new skin, pink and bllemish-free, like that of Mrs. Got-Bucks. Drugs are offered as panaceas for all ills. Even Federal laws have been unable to prevent gross misrepre- sentation and distortion of advertising copy. Therefore, we face today the problem of the social waste of advertising. One of the most efficacious mediums of communication to the public of all ages, all educations, is being laid waste by unscrupulous or lazy copy writers, who, seeking the obvious, easiest ways to impress the public with their commodities, resort to tawdry misleading copy of inferior quality. Our problem is to raise public advertising to the heights it merits.' -Alice Rydell Education In Safety The teaching of safety is most effective when integrated with other subjects and supplemented by one period of direct teaching if possible, Miss F. Louise Cottrell of the New' York University Center for Saftey Education told members of several classes in the School of Education yes- terday. Miss Cottrell spoke here in conjunction with a special program in safety education being spon- sored by the Center, with representatives speaking at 47 colleges and universities throughout the country. Such departments as physical education and industrial arts can take over much of the actual safety program within the grade and high schools, Miss Cottrell declared, but cannot give the time to give a broad program of instruction in safety. 1' '1 In the Exhibition of Latin-American Art now being held in the Galleries of the Rackham Build- ing, perhaps the most unusual room is that in which paintings of the Colonial Period are dis- played. Examples of the art of Peru, Mexico, and Brazil have been assembled, giving an idea of the products of artists of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries in those Latin-American countries. This exhibit is being sponsored by the Institute of Latin-American Studies and has been organ- ized from works loaned by museums, private in- dividuals, and artists throughout the country. It is going to last until July 25. The materials displayed have been classified generally into three main periods: PreColum- bian, Colonial and Contemporary. The six paintings from Peru are a part of a large collection belonging to Mrs. Frank Bar- rows F1reyer, now of Denver. Mrs. Freyer is of a family which has claim to a long Sanish an- cestry. She visited Peru in 1920 with her husband, Captain F'reyer of the United States Navy, who was sent on a Government mission to reorganize the Peruvian Navy. At that time Mrs. Freyer formed this collection, which also includes splen- did examples of furniture, and since bringing it to this country she has had the whole collection exhibited in several leading museums. The Uni- versity is especially fortunate in being able to include in this exhibit some of these little-known works of art. The paintings are brilliant with gold and color, particularly in the costumes, and present many unusual features. The works are mainly religious subjects and were painted either by Spanish artists who came to Peru, or by Peruvian artists taught in Spain or influenced by Spaniards com- ing to their country. There is a mingling of. Spanish, Flemish and Incan styles and tradi- tions, with some Byzantine or Oriental influences entering through Sp;anish contacts. One particu- larly appealing painting shows the Virgin dressed as an Inca Princess, naive and thoroughly charm- ing in its unusual interpretation. Our Lady of Victory of Malaga shows a magnificent treat- ment of design and splendor of detail. An inter- esting note in'the Adoration of the Magi is the use of llamas instead of camels and the guards dressed as Indian boys. Mrs. Freyer feels that her collection of paint- ings will help to create in this country a better understanding of the splendid culture of the Colonial Period in Peru, with the fruitful inter- mingling of the ideas and culture of Europe with the existing civilization of the Incas. The paintings of the seventeenth-and eigh- teenth-century Mexico are equally important, and are loaned to our Ann Arbor exhibition by the Philadelphia Museum of Art. These eight paintings are only a few from the large Lamborn Collection of that Museum, collected in the years 1881 and 1883 by Robert H. Lamborn during a visit to Mexico. The works are painted on can- vas or copper panels; the artists were many of them monks. The Saint Augustine was done by an artist actually born in Spain, Balthasar Echave, who was one of the first Spanish artists of the early seventeenth century to go to Italy izing safety programs within the schools. She prescribed letting each community and each school meet its own peculiar safety problems, using something from all of the various safety methods now used. The bicycle problem is more serious in the United States than is realized, Miss Cottrell said. She pointed out that use of bicycles has about doubled in the last few years and that accidents have increased proportionately. In 1935" 330 persons were killed in bicycle ;ccidents and 13,000 were injured. In 1937 the sale of bicycles doubled, and deaths from accidents consequently totaled 810. Over 32,000 persons were injured on bicycles in that year. She recommended a patrol for every school in a large city and showed how safety education had been effective in reducing the number of accidents. Research on the field of safety training has disclosed the fact that young persons have more accidents than older people, Miss Cottrell said, explaining this as the result of the fact that the younger persons take more chances and are not as careful as older persons. It has also been dis- covered that pay-day is tied up with the distribu- tion and number of accidents, she said. A third conclusion that has been reached as the result of study is that certain persons are more prone to accidents than others, mainly be- cause of faulty coordination. All of these fact, have been effective in indicating new methods of attack on the safety program. In conclusion Miss Cottrell pointed out that the teaching of safety education through text books has been handicapped by the lack of uni- formity in laws of different states. Most states now subject bicycles to the same regulations as automobiles, she said, and there is a further tendency in some regions toward a greater uni- formity of regulatory laws as between the states. Recalling the President's toast to George and Elizabeth, a New Jersey woman reminds us that "raising that glass of champagne would have been a cause for impeachment five years ago." Right-o. Now bring back prohibition and let's end it all.S-St. Louis Post-Dispatch and to come under the influence of artists there. He later came to Mexico, and his son was also an artist of note in the new country. Spanish influence is strongly evidenced, for the works of Velasquez and Murillo were well-known to the artists of Mexico. Miguel Cabrera was a Zapo- tecan Indian born in Oaxaca, while Miguel de Herrera was an Augustinian friar. The anony- mous portrait of the famous Mexican poetess, Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, a member of a religi- ous order, who lived during the second half of the seventeenth century, is a very fine character portrayal. The painting loaned by the Detroit Insti- tute of Arts, A Visit to a Ruined Chapel, is by the Dutch artist Frans Post, who accompanied the Count Maurice of Nassau Siegen to Brazil during his eight-year period of Dutch occupa- tion of that country. This work of the mid-sev- enteenth century is one of the earliest landscapes of America. The fine folio volume on loan from the General Library of the University was pub- lished in 1647 by Blaeu in Amsterdam. It relates the history .f Count Maurice in Brazil and is important in connection with our exhibition be- cause the fifty-six large etched illustrations were done from drawings made by Frans Post in Brazil, and show an extraordinary variety in sub- ject, with landscapes, marines, maps, and battle scenes, and giving an insight into the architecture of the country as/well as the richness of the country itself. Miss Helen B. Hall, Curator of the Institute of Fine Arts, and Harold Wallace of the Zoology Department with the help of Prof. Robert C. Smith of the University of Illinois, organized the exhibit. cown&G own By STAN M. SWINTON Today's column describes what happened in the League ballroom before and after Alice Rydell wrote some paragraphs under the head "Thru the Looking Glass" telling us just what we can and cannot wear to a League dance. . * * LEAGUE DANCE: B.A. (BEFORE ALICE) Jerry crept into the ballroom on his hands and knees, pushing the inevitable peanut with his nose. Suddenly he felt a thrill of alarm and quickly swept the room with a glance, putting the sweepings in a little pile beside the orchestra. There before him was Wishwumple Warple, carrying his head in his hand. "A trifle informal, this habit of carrying your head in your hands at a League dance, isn't it?" Jerry inquired. "Yes," Wishwumple Warple admitted shyly. "But I like it. The blood makes such pretty pat- terns on the floor. Sometimes I feel sorry that I have only one head to give for the League dances." Together they went over to the other side of the room where Tommy Prerevolution, a capital- istic soul, was following the suggestion to be printed in Thru the Looking Glass next week. He owned white suits-linen, panama, palm beach and what have you-and had followed Alice's advice literally. They were out of the moth balls and on the dance floor. However they failed to make him handsome as Alice said they would, probably because he failed to wear any of them and contented himself with a triangle of zebra hide. All three, Tommy, Jerry and Wishwumple were silent, intent on playing hopscotch on the linen, panama, palm beach and what have you suits. Sometimes they dodged strangers who were cutting initials into each other's legs or paring toenails but mostly they just played. Every mo- ment or so someone-probably Philip W. Buchen -would scream "Read The Daily Classified." That was all. Nothing more. LEAGUE DANCE AA (AFTER ALICE) Jerry sat there, munching a trifle moistly on his caviar and flicking imaginary specks from his immaculate white suit. A beautiful blond creature sat beside him. "Shall we dance?" she finally asked shyly. "No, dear," he answered. "I shall stay here flicking imaginary specks from my immaculate white suit. You go dance." Over in the corner Wishwumple Warple III slowly exhaled wispy, white opium smoke as he square-danced. His partner looked up at him with fiery eyes, probably because he kept flicking ashes into them. "Did you," she asked, "Did you read the Chicago Tribune this morning?" "Yes," he said. "Horrible, isn't it, the way they've gone to the left. I actually think they'll split with the Silver .Shirts any day now. And, please dear, don't say 'read'. It reminds me so of barricades." "Terribly sorry," she said. "Terribly, terribly sorry." "That's all right. It just disconcerted me. After all, those people can live on sugared pecan rolls if there wasn't any bread." Tommy Tommy came up. "Hello," he said, passing by. Wishwumple looked at him with longing in his, eyes. "I wish I were a brilliant conversationalist like Tommy Tommy," he said. Suddenly Philip W. Buchen walked over. He'd read Alice's column about how to dress and act at a League Party also. He'd learned how to act from it too. "My darling," he was softly murmuring into his girl's shell pink ear, "Have you read those perfectly wonderful Daily classifieds?" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is con- structive notice to all members of the University. Copysreceived at the office of the Summer Session until 3:30 P.M.I 11:00 A.M. on Saturday.I The Teaching Division of the Bu-I reau of Appointments has received calls for the following positions: (1) recent young women gradu- ates: (a) General Science and physiol- ogy-Ellenico (near Athens) Greece. (b) English and history-Natal, South Africa. (c) Chemistry-Smyrna, Turkey. (2)Single men with at least a mas- ter's degree: (a) English-University in China. (b) English, German and French- University in China. Candidates meeting these qualifi- cations who are interested, please re- port to the Bureau at once. 201 Ma- son Hall. Office hours: 9-12 a.m., 2-4 p.m. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Infor- mation. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Civil Service examinations. Last date for filing application is noted in each case: United States Civil Service: Meteorologist, salary: $3,800, July 31. Associate Meteorologist, salary: $3,200, July 31. Assistant Meteorologist, salary: $2,600, July 31. Farm Agent, Indian Field Service, salary: $1,800, July 31. Junior Bank Examiner, salary: $2,000, July 24. Senior Inspector, Navy Depart- ment, salary: $2,600, July 31. Inspector, Navy Department, sal- ary: $2,000, July 31. Junior Inspector, Aircraft, salary: $1,620, July 31. Buffalo Civil Service: Assistant Examiner, Municipal Civil Service Commission, salary: $2250, July 19. Applicants need not be residents of Buffalo. Complete announcements on file at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational gnfor- mation. No Classes in Physiology will meet today. Students, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Except under extraordinary circumstances, courses dropped after today will be record- ed with a grade of E. E. A. Walter Graduate Students Specializing in Education: The Advisory Inventory Test will be given this morning at 9 o'clock in the University High School auditorium for those who have not already taken the test. It is required of those who have completed less than 8 hours of graduate work in education. Saturday's Record Concert will be held in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Building at 3 p.m., and ad- ditional seating room has been ar- ranged. The program is as follows; Suite Number Three, Bach, Adolph Busch Chamber Players; Excerpts from Die Valkyrie, Wagner, Lawrence Tibbett and the Philadelphia Orches- ra; Symphony Number Five, Beetho- ven, London Symphony Orchestra. The records are being provided by Howard Hoving and J. W. Peters. The Two Gentlemen of Verona by William Shakespeare is being pre- sented tonight by the Michigan Rep- ertory Players in conjunction with the Chamber Orchestra of the School of Music, at 8:30 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Graduate Outing Club will have a picnic, including swimming, baseball,. and hiking, on Sunday, July 16, at Clear Lake County Park, about 25 miles from Ann Arbor. The group will meet at 2:30 p.m. at the north- west entrance of the Rackham Bldg. All graduate students and faculty members are cordially invited.Charge 40c. Transportation -will be by cars, and all those with cars are urged to bring them. Drivers will be recom- pensed for their expense. There will be a meeting regardless of the weath- er. Band Concert. The High School Clinic Band of one hundred high school musicians, and the University SummerSession Concert Band, will give a concert in Hill Auditorium Sunday afternoon, July 16, at 4:15 o'clock, under the direction of Wil- liam D. Revelli; Dale Harris and Cleo Fox, guest conductors; and Er-1 nest Hares, pianist, soloist. The general public, with the exception of RADIO SPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ WXYZ CKLW 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC Red 11240 KC - NBC Blue 1030 KC - Mutual Saturday Afternoon 12:00 Enoch Light soloist Noonday News News Commentator 12 :15 1 Stamps Organ Turf Reporter 12:30 What Price Bradcast Variety show Xavier Cugat 12:45 Campus Notes Fan on Street Leo Freudberg 1:00 Bull Session Dance Music u~xu uei, uolpoy Concert Orchestra 1:15 1:30 P.G.A. Tourney Matinee Rhythm Indiana Indigo Anthony Candelori 1:45 " * Music Please 2:00 " Vera Richardson To be announced From London 2:15 " Tiger Talk 2:30 " Tigers vs. Yankees Melodites 2 :45 " .~t 3:00 Empire Handicap " Club Matinee Songs 3:15 "* 3::30 P.G.A. Tourney To be announced 3:45 A ' y1 4:00 syncopation " Geo. Duffy Jamboree 4:15 " " 4:30 Nat Brandwynne Swing Benny Carter 4:45 " Dance Music 5:00 Melody, Rhythm Kindergarten El Chico Jack Teagarden 5:15 " ' Turf Reporter 5:30 Week in Wash. Art of Living Day in Review Gene Irwin 5:45 Vocal Embers Ink Spots Baseball Final _________ Saturday Evening 6:00 News Tyson Review Luigi Romanelli Little Revue 6:15 Grace Bermanto1 6:30 County Seat Dance Music Secret Agent Baseball Scores 6:45 ' " Friendly Music 7:00 Concert Orches. Dick Tracy Town Talk " 7:15 " The Sandlotters Mac Turner 7:30 Professor Quiz Avalon Time Brent House Hawaii Calls 7:45t 8:00 Hit Parade Vox Pop Barn Dance Jamboree 8:830 " Playhouse "AHollywood whispers 8:45 Sat. Serenade "t" Chuck Foster 9:00 > Camel Caravan Allen Roth symphonic Strings 9:15 West Remembers ,*- 9:30 P.G.A. Summary Feature Al Donahue Moonlight Music 9:45 Doris Rhodes " 10:00 News to Life Sports Parade Tommy Dorsey Freddy Martin 10:15 Dance Music Woody Heriman 10:30 Sports State Highway Isham Jones Frank Trumbauer 10:45 Sammy Kaye Dance Music 11:00 News " Rudy Vallee Reporter 11:15 Harry James'" Eddie Duchin 11:30 Sammy Kaye Eastwood Blue Barron Joe Reichman 11:45 " ton r., 12:00 Henry King Westwood Graystone Bill Ohmlan I small children, is invited without admission charge. The Michigan Christian Fellowship invites students to its regular Sun- day afternoon meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the Fireplace Room, Lane Hall. This Sunday Mr. Arthur Saunders, who has just recently returned from China, will speak on the subject, "Fulfilling the Ministry in China." There will also be singing and re- freshments. Carillon Recital. On account of the bandrconcert in Hill Auditorium at 4:15 o'clock Sunday afternoon, July 16, the carillon recital will be post- poned until immediately after the band concert, about 5:15 o'clock. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St., Sunday morning service at .10:30, subject: "Life." Golden Text: Amos 5:14. Sunday School at 11:45. First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. 10:45 a.m., Morning Worship Serv- ice. Dr. John Dunning, president of Alma College, will be the guest preacher. Dr. Dunning will speak on the topic, "Why Not Try God?" Spe- cial 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 Dean Chester Lloyd Jones of the University of Wisconsin speaking on the sub- ject "Church and State in Mexico." First Congregational Church, State and Williams Streets. Minister, Rev. Leonaid A. Parr. Public worship at 10:45 a.m. Doc- tor Parr will preach on the subject, "When God Laughs." Miss Leah Lichtenwalter will sing "Pray" by Guion. As a special feature the choir will be assisted by 20 or 25 young people of the High School Band Clinic, here for the three weeks' ses- sion. They will sing "Lord for Thy Tender Mercies' Sake" by Farrant. The guest organist will be Leslie P. Spelman, who will play "Kom, susser Tod" by J S. Bach, and "Jesu, meine Freude" by Karg-Elert Unitarian Church, Sunday, 11 a.m. Rev. Lester Mondale of Evanston, Ill., on "Norway, Another Middle Way." Church Worship Services will be held in Zion Lutheran Church Sun- day at 10:30 with sermon by the Rev. Ernest C. Stellhorn. This church is located at the corner of East Washington and South Fifth Ave. Services of worship will be held in Trinity Lutheran Church, E. William at S. Fifth Ave. at 8:15 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Sermons will be delivered by the pastor Rev. Henry O. Yoder. The Lutheran Students, their wives and friends are invited to meet at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall Sunday at 4:30. An outing has been planned at the large fire-place at Island Park. This is the third of the meetings for summer school students. Call 2-3680 by Sunday noon for reservations. Christian Reformed and Reformed Church services will be held Sunday July 16 at the Michigan League chapel at 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Doctor J. C. DeKorne, famous China missionary, will conduct both serv- ices. First Baptist Church, 512 E. Huron St. 9:30 a.m. Church School. 10:45 a.m. 'morning worship. The Rev. H. Othman Smith of Yonkers, New York will speak on the thee "Is Life Worth the Struggle." The Congregational Church an- nounces the following which will be of inerest to music lovers. At the !Sunday morning service, Prof. Leslie P. Spelman, Prof. of Organ at the University of Redlands, Redlands, California and former organist and choir director of the American Church ?f Paris, France will be. the guest organist.. Miss Leah Lichtenwalter, Director of Music in the Public Schools of Des Monies will also sing a special solo. First Methodist Church. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach at 10:40 o'clock at the morning worship serv- ice on the theme "Suffering." Wesley Foundation, Student Class under the leadership of Dr. E. W. Blakeman. The theme for discus- sion will be "Jews and Gentiles in the Book of Acts." at Stalker Hall. Wesleyan Guild meeting at the Church at 6 p.m. Dr. Harold F. Carr of Court Street Church, Flint will speak on the subject: "The Youth Situation in America." Fellowship hour and refreshments following the meeting. Kermit Eby, executive secretary of the Chicago Federation of Teachers, will speak in the Grand Rapids room of the Michigan League at 12:45, Monday, July 17 on the subject "Cut- ting Fads and Frills-Chicago's Ex- perience." Those interested may join him at lunch at 12 o'clock in the cafeteria. Graduate Commercial Club. There will be a tea Monday, July 17, at 4:15 p.m. in the West Conference (Continued on Page 3) Mats. 25c Eves 35c Starts TODAY! - Fighting furiously., living glori- ously..loving recklessly! Romance at a swift pace as handsome Brian Aherne joins forces with Victor McLaglen, hero-of "Gunga Din"! i - 0 9:00 a.m. 10:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Today's Events Advisory Inventory Test for Graduate Students of athe School of Education (University High School Auditorium). "Roman Humanism-Cicero's Testimonial," Latin Institute lecture by Professor Solmsen of Olivet College (Room 2003 Angell Hall). "Music Among the Greeks and Romans," Latin Institute lecture by Prof. Bruno Meinecke of the department of Latin, illustrated with M- 3---" MICHIGAN 1 Val- v EA A A M Romance-starved Men! Lonely Women! Fr