Weather Fair and somewhat warmer today and tomorrow. L Official Publication Of The Summer Session ~Iait Editorial 1 Dickinson Goes To A Party .. II . . VOL. No. 18 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 16, 1939 PRICE FIVE ( dministration )rders WPA Colorful Lighting Exhibit Awes Niagara Falls Excursion Party "s ork To Stop Minneapolis >uncement Follows tal Rioting; Mayor reatens Army Help empt To Amend w Is Abandoned, at Minneapolis in the s followed yesterday tration order closing that city and the f efforts by a group amend the new relief A officials said that val of Col. F.C. Har- al WPA commission- losing all work proj- polis for the time be- lded that the work e. given to other parts re Injured) ement came 12 hours ear a sewing project n the death of one tijury or gassing of 17 enator Murray (Dem., of an amendment estore the prevailing elief projects and ter- 130-hour work month aid the senatorial ig this idea had de-, ushing for action at ad proved to amend' Trip To Whirlpool Rapids, Brock's Monument Is HighlightOf Morning By HARRY M. KELSEY NIAGARA FALLS. N.Y., July 15. -Streamers of vari-colored lights playing 'on the Falls, shooting up in- to the moonless sky, criss-crossing and revolving, climaxed a spectacular exhibit here tonight for participants in the sixth Summer Session excur- sion. ' Earlier in the evening, solid color effects in various hues tured the Falls into a magical wonderland. Ex- Dr. Phlppson To Offer Talkg .OnRenaiss ance Geman Professor To Tell Of Old Bohemian Book In Lecture Tomorrow Prof. Ernest A. Philippson of 'the German department will lecture at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Amphithe- atre.of the Rackham School on "Der Ackermann aus'Boehmen." - Professor Philippson's lecture is the third in a series sponsored by the Graduate Conference on Renaissance Studies. The lectures are given each Monday on various phases of the Renaissance. "Der Ackermann aus Boehmen" is the title of a book written about the year 1400 by a Bohemian Czech by the name of Johann von Saaz. The title translates "The Plowman of Bo- hemia" and in some respects the work may be compared to the well- known English poem of the 14th cen- tury, "Piers Plowman." The work of von Saaz was one of the first important books written in modern high German, however, and thus was, linguistically 'well in ad- vance of the English poem, which is in Middle English and is partially un- intelligible to the average person to- day. The subject of "Der Ackermann" is a philosophical discussion. The plow- man, who has recently lost his young wife, talks it over with Death; and although this type of debate with an allegorical character was common in the literature of the Middle Ages, it is the ususual treatment of the subject in this book that Professor Philipp- son will discuss. Besides being unusual in its ideas, the work contains many allusions which suggest the influence of the Italian Renaissance, and Professor Philippson will build his lecture around the question of how impor- tant the book really is as an evidence of the new humanism in Bohemia and Germany so early in the 15th century. Atoms Are Left Behind As Physicists Picnic Proving that physics is after all a practical science, professors, gadu- ate students and wives yesterday af- ternoon tortured baseballs a n d churned the waters of Portage Lake at the annual physics department picnic. Climax of the afternoon's events was the thoroughly welcome picnic supper, at which the camera fiends, represented by Prof. Samuel A. Goud- smit and Prof. Enrico Fermi ran rampant. cursionists were told that the lighting effects were produced on the Cana- dian side by searchlight operators provided with revolving colored disks. The morning was spent circling the vicinity of the Falls by special bus. Following the Canadian Niagara Boulevard, a direct view of the Falls was had while passing through'Queen Victoria Park, bordering the horse- shoe. Later the bus passed the Whirlpool Rapids and rounded three sides of the Whirlpool itself, passing through Ni- agara Glen to Brock's Monument, where lunch was obtained byna hun- gry crowd. The city of Niagara Falls, N.Z, does not particularly appeal to most of the group, smoke and railroads proving, discouraging. Falls Street, however, the best lighted street in the country, surprised the party.' Members found that they could easily read at night on any portion of the artery. Most prevalent thought while view- ing- the Falls was, what a lot of wa- ter and how wet itlooks. supplied with statistics, excursionists found that 15 times as much water flows over Niagara Falls as goes over the African Victoria Falls, the South American Iguassi Falls and the Yose- mite Falls combined. Tomorrow those who wish will de- scend beneath the Falls in the Cave of the Winds, steam below the cata- ract in the little Maid of the Mist or visit the Niagara Falls hydro-elec- tric power house. At 6 p.m. the boat will be re-board- ed and the tour will end in Ann Ar- bor about 10 a.m. Monday after a bus trip from Detroit. Saturday Is Deadline For Dropping Courses Courses in the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts may be Oropped until Saturday, July 22, it was announced yesterday by Dean Erich A. Walter. After that time courses dropped will receive a grade of E. An erroneous notice in yester- day's D.O.B. had set July 15 as the deadline. Capitol Gossip Names Many As Candidates Presidential Possibilities Loom Thick And Fast After FDR'sSuggestion Chief Executive's List IsMystery WASHINGTON., July 15.-(iP)- President Roosevelt's observation this week that there were a dozen charm- ing young men who might be classed as potential presidential candidates set political tongues to wagging so fast that by today the list had been built up to three times that number. Opinions Differ Just who was on the President's list was a favorite guessing game in Capitol cloakrooms, but there was no unanimity of opinion. Mr. Roose- velt did not meption any names, merely telling reporters who wanted to talk about Paul V. McNutt that he thought the new Federal Security Administrator would not be found running as a candidate any more than a dozen others, some of them in the Cabinet. Senators Suggest Lists Senator Ellender (Dem., La.) said the President's list "might include:" Harry Hopkins, Secretary of Com- merce and former relief chieftain; Frank Murphy, Attorney General and former governor of Michigan; Jo- seph P. Kennedy, Ambassador to England and former Securities Com- mission head; W. O. Douglas, new Supreme Court Justice and former SEC chief; Henry A. Wallace, Secre- tary of Agriculture; and Robert H. Jackson, Solicitor :General. Senator Adams (Dem., Colo.), who frequently has differed with the Ad- ministration, said the Senate alone provided more than a dozen poten- tial candidates and listed these Dem- ocrats: Senator Barkley (Ky). Clark (Mo), Byrd (Va), Byrnes (SC), Har- rison (Miss), Wheeler (Mont), Gil- lette (Ia), Reynolds (NC) and Dona- hey (Ohio). Conferences In Education To Open Here Recover Three Into Lastin Meetings Merged General Program ag During Week in re- ray h Dr. William S. Gray To Talk Tomorrow An Educational Conference Week, sponsored by the School of Educa- tion, will be held tomorrow through Friday for the benefit of teachers,1 supervisors and administrators in thee schools.-1 Directed by Dean J. B. Edmonson of the School of Education, the con- ference will be based on recent na-1 tional reports and selected problems of school systems.t The week will include three sep- arate conferences, the Tenth Annual Summer Education Conference on State and National Issues in Educa-x tion, the Third Annual Roundtable on reading and the First Book Ex- hibit Conference. The merging oft these programs for the first time is intended to conserve the time of vis- itors to the campus and to provide a program of unusual attractiveness tor members of the teaching profession.i Mornings will be taken up by1 meetings of the Book Week Confer- ence, a cooperative undertaking of1 the School of Education and the rep- resentatives of the publishers of text-1 books and instruction materials.f Forty-six publishers have requestedt space for exhibits which will be ar-t ranged in the halls of the Universityt High School. Afternoons will be reserved for the Third Annual Roundtable on Read-J ing, which provides a noncredit study program, placing the emphasis on the newer materials and the newer methods of instruction, as well as the diagnosis and treatment of reading difficulti.e& f pupils. All programs will be open to those who wish to attend without charge and many classes in the education school will be adjourned for selected programs. Programs during the day will be held in the University Labora- tory Schools and the evening pro- grams will be held in the Union. Tomorrow's program will feature a lecture at 1:30 p.m. by Dr. William S. Gray of the University of Chicago, on "Are We Training Better Readers by Our New Methods?"; a lecture at 4 p.m. by Dr. Gray on "Issues of Na- tional Significance in Teacher Edu- cation"; and a lecture discussion at 7:15 p.m. on "Selected Recommenda- tions of the National Education As-I sociation and the Educational Poli- cies Commission" by Dr. Frank Hub- bard and Dean Edmonson. Linguistic Institute To Hear Visitors Two guest speakers highlight the coming week's program for members of the Linguistic Institute, Prof. E, H. Sturtevant of Yale University and Prof. Leonard Bloomfield of the.ini- versity of Chicago. Professor Sturtevant will speaJ at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the am- phitheatre of the Rackham Building, on the subject, "The Phonetic Basis of Rhythm, Especially in Greek and Latin." Professor Bloomfield will conclude the public activities of the Institute for the week when he returns to Ann Arbor Friday for the third of his series of lectures on the Algonkian languages. Friday evening, in the Rackham amphitheatre, he wil ctis- cuss "Composition and Derivation in Algonkian." Nine Men Trappe In Min Exlion 19 Bodie Play illOpen On Wednesday Mental Hygtene Students, Visit EloiseHospital About 40 students interested in psychiatry and mental hygiene visit- ed Wayne County State Hospital and Infirmary at Eloise yesterday. This hospital, said to be the largest in the world, contains approximately 10,000 persons. Included in the' group are Seymour General Hospital, the Infirmary and the Neuro-psy- chiatric Hospital. With about 1,800 employes and 4,- 000 mental patients, the number of meals served daily amounts to around 34,000. A clinical demonstration of pa- tients was given for the students in which opportunity was given to ob- serve various types-of mental diseases and their causes, nature and certain methods of cure. Patients seen rep- resented cases of hebephrenia, cata- tonia, circular insanity, paranoia, simple schizophrenia, paresis, alco- holism and arterial sclerosis. Methods of cure seen were the hy- perrexator, a modern invention for fever therapy, and the occupational therapy department, designed to give the patients handiwork to occupy] their time. Pulitzer prize Hope, Despair Expressed By Officials; Cause Of Blast Is Undetermined Passages Are Filled With Poison Gas PROVIDENCE, Ky., July 15.-(/)- Nineteeh soft coal miners were dead but weary rescue squads pressed on late today in an attempt to save nine other men entombed 200 to 250 feet below the surface by an explosion last night. F. V. Ruckman, president of the Duvin Coal Company, owner of the mine in which the accident occurred, expressed hope the remaining nine might be saved. He said if they had "sealed in" behind an air-tight door, they might have enough "good" air to "last three or four days." Disaster Is Second Fred Ferguson, director of the In- diana Bureau of Mines, assisting in rescue work, however, predicted the nine had "only one chance in a thou- sand" of being found alive. The disaster was the second to strike Kentucky within 10 days. At least 71 persons drowned in "flash" floods in the eastern Kentucky moun- tains last week. Search is continuing there for approximately 10 missing persons. 10 Others Rescued Ruckman said the cause of the blast was undetermined but other mine people expressed belief it was touched off by some kind of a spark. Ten other of the 38 miners working in the mine, the third largest in wes- tern Kentucky, were rescued. They suffered from "bad air" but none was hurt seriously. The 19 dead were found at or near the scene of the explosion about 12,- 000 feet from the shaft entrance and approximately 250 feet underground. The nine still trapped were work- ing in another section about 50 feet above the 19 while the remainder of the 38 were scattered from the shaft entrance back along various levels, some distance from the explosion site. Ruckman said none of the bodies had been brought to the surface and probably would not be until after the nine trapped men had been reached by the gas-masked rescue squads. Two Summer Bands To Offer Concert Toda 'Our On In Town' Was Success Broadway; Unique HavingNo Settings Threatened; aders Confer S, July 15. -(A')- in the Army, and a town of city projects s' WPA strike at a ay after a night of ioting that left one 17 injured. E. Stassen canvassed ith a committee of who bluntly turnedf tion that they send . employes back to r George E. Leach of nounced any new bring a call for regu- How To Get The Job You Want To Be, Answered By Purdom 'I Art Guard troops in training Riley, near Little Falls, re under orders to hold available for possible in the Twin Cities. The nided down quietly today, 11 officers and men to re- onstant touch with their o they couldbe mobilized otice if the need arises. First Of Three Meetings To Show Importance Of Grooming, Apparel Why people don't get the jobs they "might have had" will be answered for Summer Session students Tues- day by Dr. T. Luther Purdom, Direc- tor of the University Bureau of Ap- pointments and Occupational Infor- mation. The meeting will be the first of three to be held on successive Tues- days at 7:15 p.m. in the Rackham Auditorium to demonstrate right and wrong approaches to the problem of getting a job. "We have about 5,000 people on our rolls seeking employment," Dr. Pur- dom declared. "A large number of them don't' get jobs which actually are available." Failure or success in landing a job, assuming requisite ability and train- ing, depends largely upon three fac- tors wich Dr. Purdom has labeled "appearance," "attitude," and "who do you know?" Each meeting will be devoted to one of these problems. Dramatizing each point to make it more graphic, Dr. Purdom has trained were main super on she Haring Lecture, Is Tomorrow Central America Is Topic Of VisitingProfessor Prof. Clarence H. Haring of Har- vard University, member of the In- stitute of Latin-American Studies, will discuss "Central America and the United States" in a Summer Session lecture at.5 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Auditorium. Professor Haring will trace the social and political evolution of the people of Central America since In- dependence and will outline their re- lations with the United States. He will discuss the colonial background of the countries and the backgrounds of their republics. Professor Haring, who was at one time a Rhodes -Scholar, is one of the most prominent men in the field of Latin-American study. He has writ- ten several articles and texts on Latin-American colonial history and has been chosen to participate in political and educational projects in that field. He is a member of several a "cast" of six students to demon- strate by word, manner and dress just where people slip-up in ap- proaching prospective employers. After illustrating the "wrong" methods, the demonstrators will turn about and show the audience how it should have been done. Dr. Purdom will play the role of commentator. Attacking the problem from the angle of "appearance" in the first session, Dr. Purdom will emphasize significant "Do's" and "Don't's" of grooming and apparel which influence prospective employers when they in- terview candidates for available jobs. "Attitude" will be discussed on July 25 and "Who do you know?" on Aug. 1. All interested may attend. Local Churches Offer Varied Services Today Guest Ministers, Faculty Speakers Will Highlight Programs And Meetings Special guests as ministers, organ- ists and speakers will be heard in the Ann Arbor churches today. Dr. John Dunning, president of Alma College, will preach the morn- ing sermon at the First Presbyterian Church this morning. Morning wor- ship is at 10:45 a.m. Dr. Dunning's topic will be "Why Not Try God?" Dean Chester Lloyd Jones of the University of Wisconsin will speak at the Presbyterian student supper to be held in the Council Circle at the rear of the church. The supper begins at 5:30 p.m. Dean Jones will speak at 6:15 p.m. The Rev. Lester Mondale of Evan- ston, Ill., will deliver the morning sermon at the Unitarian Church on the subject, "Norway - Another Middle Way." Prof. Leslie P. Spelman, professor of Organ at the University of Red- ian. Redands. Calif. .n fnrmer 'Our Town,' Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning drama, will be the fourth production to be offered, by the Michigan Repertory Players. The play will open Wednesday night' for a four-day run. It was probably the outstanding success of the New York stage last year. Opening in February, 1938, it ran to capacity houses both that year and during the past year, while on tour. The play was written to be played without scenery and has only occa- sional "props." Wilder gave as his reason that he wished to achieve a uriversal significance by not localiz- ing it. The play concerns the life of two families in a small town. Although there is little real action, the beauty of character portrayal and the s ycep of the events which his people must (Continued on Page 3) Movies To Be Shown From League Of Nations "Emerging World .Federation" is the title of a composite film to be shown at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room 316 of the Union by Dr. Frances S. Onderdonk, formerly of the College of Architecture. As feature attraction of the show- ing will be a new film produced un- der the auspices of the League of Nations depicting the humanitarian functions of the League in combat- ting international drug smuggling and trade in women and children. Meinecke Tells How Greeks Achieved Balance' In Music Professor Revelli To Lead Program At 4:15 P.M. In Hill Auditorium At 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditor- ium, two Summer Session musical organizations, the High School Clinic Band and the Summer Session Con- cert Band will combine to present a concert of band music. The concert will be conducted by Prof. William D. Revelli of the School of Music, with Dale Harris of Pon- tiac and Cleo Fox of Kalamazoo as' guest conductors. Mr. Ernest Hares, supervisor of music in the St. Louis, Mo., public schools, will solo on the piano. The High School Clinic Band is composed of 100 musicians selected on a merit basis to participate in the fourth annual High School Band Clinic held for three weeks beginning last Monday. This is the Clinic Band's first public appearance of the sea- son. The Summer Session Concert Band is made up of directors, supervisors and other professionals from all over the country who are studying or teaching in Ann Arbor this summer. First part of today's program will be played by the High School Clinic Band, after which the Summer Ses- sion Concert Band will conclude the performance. The progrkam follows: Part I Youth of America March, Paul Yoder Niobe ................De Robertis Fantasie: "Robin Hood" .... Lester Brockton Stressing music principally for its moral value, the ancient Greeks at- tained a near-perfect balance be- tween realism and idealism in their classic art, Prof. Bruno Meinecke of the School of Music told members of the Institute for Teachers of Latin in their closing session yesterday. Unaware of the possibilities of har- mony as we know it, Professor Mein- ecke pointed out, the Greeks empha- sized only melody and rhythm. Not given to emotional flights, their mu- sic was marked by "terse, clear ry- thms." Of their melodies, six orig- inal themes have come down to us today. Aristotle, however, advocating a music, he said. The dytheron, a form of chorus, marked the "lyrical trage- dy" which was a stepping stone to the fullfledged drama of Euripides and Aristophenes. Music played an essential role in the well-rounded life of the early Greeks and Romans, he said. Every Greek boy was taught at an early age to play the lyre. Other instruments in use wa c'i were ancestors of our modern instru- ments were the flute and cymbals. The ancient flute, he said, approxi- mated the shape of a clarinet and the tone of an oboe of today. The Romans, he said, were fond of brass l instruments for military reasons. Band Concert To Aid In 'Raising Money For Chinese Medical Aid Another step in preparation =for the outdoor ice cream festival which will be held to raise funds for medi- cal aid to China was completed yes- terday with the announcement that the University Summer Session Band will give a special concert in" con- nection with the affair. The concert will be given from 7:45 to 8:30 p.m. Friday in Hill Auditorium, only a ,few feet from the mall on which the festivities will take place. In agreeing to give the concert "This year's festival will be much greater than last year's," Beth O'Roke, chairman of the student committee working on the matter, said yesterday. "We've been assured whole-hearted cooperation from both students and townspeople. The fine program combined with the excellent cause should bring out a capacity crowd." . The Women's Education Club, Miss O'Roke said, has agreed to take charge of distribution and sale of cake during the festival. The League