TH.E MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, TH9IHGA AL CHIGAN DAILY 711 TOWN & GOWN By STAN M. SWINTON A N E6. ' -/ d and managed by students of the University of an under the authority of the Board in Control of t Publications.N ished every morning except Monday during the silty year and Sumni r Session. Member of the Associated Press, Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the republication 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 mail matter.- criptions during regular school year by carrier, y mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO ' BOSTON. LOS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO From the intriguing address of 20, Queens Road, Leigh-on-Sea, Essex comes a letter written by Major Allen Swinton, a distant relative who has been spending most of his time since retiring from active service writing short stories for boys magazines. In the letter is an interesting appraisal of the British militarist's viewpoint of international affairs. "The international situation over here re- mains a strain," the Major writes, "And I antii- pate another crisis shortly.'Nevertheless I feel a bit more hopefl as 'I think the current British policy must be the right one, otherwise the Axis would not take such violent pains to break it down. Tientsin, of course, items from Berlin- first to try and isolate this country by making you and the French back up for fear of getting caught in our fracas and secondly to try and draw our efforts off from Europe while they pull some new coup. "Neither, I think, will work. The English are at last awake, ready to fight and rapidly assum- ing their most dangerous mood. The axis could nlot have played better the British hand if they had tried and, in my opinion, Hitler is already past his zenith-that point was the day he faced Chamberlain at their last meeting, and the slide therefrom began when he marched into Prague. But unhappily it may require a war to prove it. Even that, I feel, grows more unlikely as the odds against him mount-with the one reserva- tion that one of his nature, cornered, may stake all upon a lightning yar, This, last September, could quite likely have succeeded but I think not now. If war should come today there would be considerable lightnings upon German soil, as our new Air Force is a wow. So, if we can but see next Christmas without war, I for one shall feel sanguine." Major Swinton then goes on to give a techni- cal, military description of what he feels the Axis powers would do in the Mediterranean in case of war. And, interestingly, he ends by say- ing "Hearing as we do less and less of the Anieri- can standard of living slogan and with more and more relization of the narrowing scope of foreign trade together with the possibility of a world to live in without British power, which has always been a sure ,shield for the Americas, the time for a rapprochement or even of a free union of the 36 states and the British Commonwealth is ripe and the possibility greatly less remote than many think." * * * Dexter Rosen at the S.A.M. house phones in a fervent request that we plead with the sartorially minded burglar who dropped into his room the other night and stole a brown suit, brown tie, brown shoes, brown shirt, studs, fraternity pin and glasses, to think things over. Dexter says he's not one to quibble and will gladly donate some colorful underwear or maybe even a brown hat if the burglar will return the glasses. "I am," he said a little unhappily, "getting damn tired of groping." A Symbolic Incident We've never taken much stock in the trylon and perisphere as the symols of the World of Tomorrow. After all, they are just a bayonet blade and a ball. To the cynical, it will seem that the true symbol of the World of Tomorrow was provided yesterday, when a mechanical para- chute jammed and imprisoned a couple midway between the tvp of the tower and the ground. Label it: "Up in the Air-the World of To- morrow." Completely wacky, woozy and cockeyed. No secure anchorage to anything above, and no solid foundation beneath. Just suspended in un- certainty. "Cokie" Rathborne and his wise-cracking wife were lucky. They had a life-net beneath them. If the World of Tomorrow jumps the track and, whirs off into ideological space, there's no assur- ance there will be anything to catch it. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch Report Disclaimed To the Editor: I wish to disclaim responsibility for the in- accuracies and disproportion in the report pub- lished in yesterday's Daily of my talk entitled "A Visit to Delphi." The notice was not submitted to me for correction or revision. --Dr. Roger Pack r9 Associated Collegiate Editorial Stafff D. Mitchell' . Swinton . Norberg Canavan W Kelsey 'Kessler n E. Long GSonneborn Press, 1938-39 Managing Editor City Editor Women's Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor ,Associate Editor Associate Editor Business Staff Philip W. Buchen . . . . . Business Manager Paul Park... . . . . Advertising Manager NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY L. SONNEBORN The editorials published in The Michiigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the\ views of the writers only. Dickinson Goes To A Party... - f LD REPROBATE" is one endearing O) term which wve will never be able- to apply to the Governor; and more's the pity. The Governor just recently returned from a journey down to New York State, where he at- tended the thirty-first Conference of Governors. On his journey he attended a number of social functions. He was accompanied at these by his personal secretary and his granddaughter. "Never would I have permitted either to have gone without constant watch," he told reporters when back in Lansing. "I knew what they were going to face. What a responsibility. What aches of mind. But I hadn't measured fully the new liberties under repeal." "Thank God our girls came home unsullied and never will fully know how near the brink they were." Rot, my dear Governor, tommyrot. Your girls came home "unsullied" and the chances are, so did all the rest of the young people who enjoyed themselves at the occasions. Just because alco- holic beverages were served and couples danced in a public place is no sign that aforesaid place was immediately turned into a den of iniquity from which no decent girl could emerge with a pure soul and an honorable reputation. Besides, no girl is ever "sullied" in a public place against her own will. We young people of Michigan, and of the United States, would like to know why it is that the Governor does not think us as cap- able of living as decent a life as he did when he was young. True, we don't all live on farms. The city, however, is as safe as the farm. Dodge City passed with the cowboy and Indian. -harry M. Kelsey DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication In the Bulletin 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 16, 1939 The Teaching Division of the Bu- 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- catiohs 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- merit, 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 Infor- mation. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Michigan Civil Service examinations. The last date for filing application is noted in each case: Examination Monitor Classes B and C, salary, B, 60c per hour; C, 50c per hour, July 25. Institution X - Ray; Laboratory Technician B, salary range: $105-125, July 25. Student Personnel Assistant (En- gineering) A; entrance salary: $100, July 26. Student Personnel Assistant (Busi- ness Administration) A, entrance sal- ary: $100, July 26. Student Personnel Assistant (Gen- eral) A, entrance salary: $100, July 26. Attendant Nurse C2, salary range: $75-90, July 26. Complete announcements on file at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion, 201 Mason.Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational In- formation. Graduate Outing Club will have a picnic, including swimming, base- ball, and hiking, today at Clear Lake County Park, about twenty- five miles from Ann Arbor. The group will meet at 2:30 p.m. at the north- RADIO SPOTLIGH WJR WWJ WXYZ CKLW 750 KC - CBS - 920 KC -NBC Red 1240 KC - NBC Blue 1030 KC - Mutual Sunday Afternoon 12:00 Church Music Children's Theatre Baritone 12:15 " Garden Hour 12:30 Mother's Album Black Ace " Male Chorus 12:45 Musical .1 Al Goodman Quartette 1:00 Democracy Your Government Varieties ConcerttOrchestra 1:15 " Mischa Kottler 1:30 Cabin Folks Boston at Detroit Allen Roth Church Service 1:45 111>1 2:00 Grshwin Concert Three Cheers Sunday Afternoon 2:15 " " Booman's Notebook " 2:30 " " Festival of Music Chapel Hour 2:45 ~ 1 3:00 Musical Fun " Nat'l Vespers Tabernacle 3:15 3:30 St. Louis Blues Tiger Talk Leopold Spitalny Haven of Rest 3:45 1" Boston at Detroit~. 4:00 Father Coughlin B t News Nobody's Children 4:15 " " Jimmy Dorsey 1 4:30 ""Red Norvo 5:00 Gay Nineties " Grenadiers Concert orchestra 5:15 ,1 5:30 Hollywood Paul Laval Dance 5:45 " Vera Richardsun Harry Heilmann " Sunday Evening 6:00 " Aldrich Family Popular Classics Melodic Strings 6:15 ~. ,,. 6:30 Music Playhouse Band Wagon Radio Guild Baseball Scores 6:45 111,1 "Sports 7:00 Gerald Smith Charley McCarthy NBC Symphony Melody Design '7:15 111 1.I 7:30 Stevenson Sports " Goldan Band" 7:45 N ., ~ ma 8:00 Ford Hour Merry Go Round Hollywood Play. Revival 8:15 8:30 " Album of Music Edwin C. Hill 8:45 '" " Irene Rich / 9:00 Concert Feature Chas. Barnett Goodwill Hour 9:15 I ,~R 9:30 Melodies " Cheerio 9:45 John Steelman " n 10:00 Harry James Russel Barnes News; Graystone Church 10:15 " old Timers Graystone I 10:30 Hermit's Cave Dance Music Isham Jones Recital 10:45 Vera Richardson 11:00 News News Bunny Berigan Reporter 11:15 Benny Goodman Dance Music MVSusic 11:30 Sammy Kay Eastwood Artie Shaw 11:45 To be announced "° 12:00 Sign Off Weather Sign Off Jimmy Dorsey west entrance of the Rackham Bldg. The Michigan Christian Fellowship All graduate students and faculty invites students to its regular Sun- members are cordially invited. Charge day afternoon meeting at 4:30 p.m. 40c. Transportation will be by cars, in the Fireplace Room, Lane Hall. and all those with cars= are urged to This Sunday Mr. Arthur Saunders, bring them. Drivers will be recom- who has just recently returned from pensed for their expense. There will China, will speak on the subject, be a meeting regardless of the weath- "Fulfilling the Ministry in China." er. There will also be singing and re- freshments. Band Concert. The High School Clinic Band of one hundred high Carillon Recital. On accountof.the school musicians, and the University band concert in Hill Auditorium at Summer Session Concert Band, will 4:1ndococrSundHy atonuly give a concert in Hill Auditori- 4:15 o'clock Sunday afternoon, July um this afternoon at 4:15 p.m. 16, the carillon recital will be post- under the direction of William poned , until immediately after the D. Revelli; Dale Harris and Cleo band concert, about 5:15 o'clock. Fox, guest conductors; and Er- nest Hares, pianist, soloist. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, general public, with the exception of 409 S. Division St., Sunday morning small children, is invited without service at 10:30, subject: "Life." admission charge. Golden Text: Amos 5:14. The Disciples' Guild is organized Sunday School at 11:45. this summer especially for the bene- fit of the summer-students, and for First Presbyterian Church, 1432 the young people of the church. You Wastenaw Ave. are cordially invited to meet at the 10:45 a.m., Morning Worship Serv- Guild House, 438 Maynard Street, at ice. Dr. John Dunning, president of 2:30 today to go swimming at Portage Alma College, will be the gnest Lake. The meeting time for regular preacher. Dr. Dunning will speak on meetings, however, is 5:30 at the the topic, "Why Not Try God?" Spe- Guild House. Take advantage of cial music by the choir directed by this opportunity. (Continued on Page 3) MICH]IBAN 44 I at Eourth Week's Schedule Sunday 4:15 p.m. 5:15 p.M. Monday 9:00 a.,. 11:00 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 4:05 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 7:15 p.m. 7:45 p.m. Tuesday 4:05 p.m. .5:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Band Concert (Hill Auditorium). Carillon Concert. Book Week Conference (University High School Auditorium). Physics Symposium, Prof. Gerhard Herzberg, University of Sas- katchewan (Room 2038 East Physics Building). Physics Symposium, Prof. Enrico Fermi of Columbia University (Amphitheatre, Rackham Building). Third Annual Round Table on Reading (University High School Auditorium). "Der Ackermann aus Bohmen," lecture in English by Prof. Ernest A. Philippson of the German department (Amphitheatre, Rackhani Building). "Issues of National Significance in Teacher Education," by Prof. William S. Gray of the University of Chicago (University High School Auditorium). "Central America and the United States," by Prof. Clarence H. Haring of Harvard University (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Summer Education Conference (Union). Square and Country Dancing (League Ballroom). "Issues of National Significance in School Support," by Prof. Arthur B. Moehlman of School Administration (University High School Auditorium). "On the Influenza Trail," by Prof. C. H. Andrewes of the University of London (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). "Carelessness of One's Appearance," by Dr. T. Luther Purdom (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Beginner's Class, Social .Dancing (League Ballroom). Duplicate Bridge (League). Concert by Faculty of the School of Music-Prof. Thelma Lewis, Soprano acc. by Ernest Hares, pianist; Prof. Wassily Besekirsky, violinist; Prof. Joseph Brinkman, pianist, and Prof. Palmer Chris- tian, Organist (Hill Auditorium). Excursion to Greenfield Village. Tea and Dancing (League Ballroom). "School and Pressure Groups," by Dean J. B. Edmonson of the School of Education (University High School Auditorium). "Man and Nature in North Sumatra," illustrated lecture by Prof. H. H. Bartlett of the botany department (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Intermediate Dancing Class (League Ballroom). "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre). "Issues of National Significance Emphasized at the San Francisco Convention of the National Education Association," by Frank Hub- bard of the National Education Association (University High School Auditorium). "The Mental Health of Teachers" by Dr. Paul H. Jordan (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Carillon Concert. Bridge Lessons (League). Violin Recital by Kelvin Mason (School of Music Auditorium). "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre). I.- This is that great lever, Bnythe unbashful, back with the hit show of the summer. Waitllyoe see me, f and Lamour..me and those Petty gals... The WPA Situation William Green, president of the American Fed- eration of Labor, announces that his organiza- tion is prepared to press its demand for the pre- vailing wage in WPA by political reprisals upon members of Congress at the next election. With this statement the strike lately called among skilled building craftsmen on relief work projects becomes plainly an effort not alone at collective bargaining but an endeavor by a large pressure group to force the policy of the Government on a subject which is already a matter of generosity on its part. In fact, there can scarcely be any collective bargaining in the usual sense as applied to relief employment. Even leaving aside the extremely serious question whether there can be any right to strike against the Government, it should be clear that relief work is not on the footing of ordinary employment. The Government does not sell for a profit the products of the relief workers. It is not in business to make money out of their labor. Consequently there can be no economic pressure but only political from a strike of these workers, since unlike a commercial employer the Government saves money instead of losing it by every day's work that is refused over the issue of the prevailing wage rule. The effectiveness of work relief has been handi- capped from the first by the intrusion of this en- forced practice of paying the union scale of wages -which would be quite appropriate in public employment if workers were selected on a basis of fitness and craftsmanship such as good unions take pride to maintain but which becomes quite another matter when the object is to spread relief assistance as far as possible among the families Wednesday 1:00 3:30 4:05 p.m. p.m. p.mi. 5:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Thursday 4:05 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:15 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Friday 5:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 9:00 p.m. SAKDOROTHY EWp efNrLAMDURAR MANABI "Areas of International Concern in Latin America," illustrated lecture by Prof. Robert S. Platt of the University of Chicago (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building). Ice Cream Social (League Garden). Visitors' Night, Student Observatory (Angell Hall). "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre). Social Evening (League Ballroom). Ice Cream Social (League Garden). "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder (Tri aMenri1