I tundershowers tomorrow 'I, Official Publication Of The Summer Session ~Iati Editorial Education At BMack Mountain .. 11 , 0 i , PRICE FIVE CENTS 19 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1939 gi-ow-- ig Given h'Visitor SPoles' Purdom To Discuss Appearance . And Attitude In Job Interviews Hopes Plans To Confer Military Leaders wer Coordination in Considers rsaw Journey July 17. -()- Poland thusiastic reception to- jor-General Sir Edmund spector-general of Bri- 1s forces, who came to military leaders on co- ?oland's military strength f Britain and France. ia t General Maurice Gus- lin, commander-lin-chief armed forces, also might aw intensified one of idest hopes of late-the of the Polish alliance estern powers into clear ion on the military side. ng accorded the towering aside when he landed at rdrome after a speedy London ecnoed jubilation n the Polish press and Polish people generally. dish opinion, thervisit of 3ritish officer-he stands r inches and weighs 252 swered any German belief i lacked sincerity in her ,ht for Poland's independ- Ironside's visit aroused st among Nazis. The Ber- er Nachtausgabe said the Germany's foreign policy in every single point . . i play is now completely nberlain gives Poland to ent the right to provoke .") ronsicle, who was recalled sovernorship of Gibraltar become inspector-general s oerseas forces, is ex- iscuss with Polish leaders vailable routes by which and supplies might be > Poland. connection the proposed r mutual assistance agree- it by Britain akid France Russia has significance since Russia represents mediately available source Six Well Trained Students To Demonstrate Modes Of Good And Bad Attire. How to appear in that all-impor- tant interview for the job you want will be portrayed by Dr. T. Luther Purdom at 7:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Auditorium. Aided by a trained "cast" of six students, Dr. Purdom, who heads the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, will demonstrate by word and action just Excursionists To Visit Ford's Antique Town Greenfield Village Is Goal Of Tour; 5 P.M. Today Is Reservation Deadline Seventh Summer Session excursion of the season will take place from 1 p.m. to 5:45 p.m. tomorrow, and will be a trip to Henry Ford's Greenfield' Village at Dearborn. Reservations for the tour must be made by 5 p.m. today in the Summer Session Office, Room 1213, Angell Hall. Expenses will consist of round trip bus fare, $1, and entrance fee to the village and museum, 25 cents. Greenfield Village is a specially constructed town of nearly a century ago. Collected from near and far and reconstructed in this quaint village are the old.town church, the colonial style town hall, the red-brick school house, the tavern, general store, post- office, toll gate station, tin type gal- lery, blacksmith's and cobbler's shops and other typical establishments. The original Menlo Park Labora- tory and factory of Thomas A. Edi- son are also to be seen in a special section of the village. In addition there 3s open to the public a large indoor museum of early America and an ,unparalleled collection on transportation. Students wishing to follow the busses in private cars are invited to so do. Latin-American Tea what to avoid and to emphasize in the way of grooming and apparel. With the six students appearing on the platform in various "right" and "wrong" states of attire, the audience- will be able to grasp signi- ficant points more effectively than through sheer word appeal, Dr. Pur- dom believes. Dr. Purdom will com- ment on the demonstrators and sum up the important points. Frayed collars, poor "make-up", sloppy socks, unbecoming coiffures, poor posture, loud ties and scores of seemingly insignificant errors of grooming have cost many well-quali- fied students the jobs they could otherwise have had, Dr. Purdom said. Employers, meeting a job applicant for the first time, are apt to form wrong impressions from poor appear- ance which belies the applicant's real ability, he declared. The rolls of the Bureau of Appoint- ments are full of such cases. Other factors which play an im- portant part in "getting the job you want" are "attitude" and "who do you know?", Dr. Purdom pointed out. He will discuss these points on Tuesday, July 25 and Tuesday, Aug. 1. Name Speaker For Religious Meeting Here Gray Speaks On Training Teaehers New Educational Methods Aim At Responsibility TowardSociety Today Education Meeting Enters Second Day Teacher education in this country today stands at the crossroads, Dr. William S. Gray of the University ofr Chicago yesterday informed an au- dience of the Educational Conference being held this week under the aus- pices of the School of Education. One route follows traditional prac- tices, he said, while the second, now being developed, has as its aim tos provide types of training for teachers which will enable them to assume in-t telligently the responsibilities thatt society imposes on them today. Edu-s cational leaders of Michigan, he de-f clared, have adopted this second plan and are contributing significantly to the solution of many current prob- lems. Emphasizing the fact that Ger- many, Italy and Russia have defined clearly the nature of the product which they want their schools to turnl out and model their teacher trainingi agencies accordingly, Dr. Grayf claimed that if democracy is to be9 preserved and if the democratic wayc of life is to be improved, schools and teacher training agencies in America must contribute more actively iithe future than in the past to these ends. At the opening session of the Con- ference yesterday morning, Dr. Gray spoke on teaching reading in the schools. Citing evidence, he showed: that schools providing a broad pro- gram of reading guidance which recognizes the varied needs of the reader in contemporary life usually hsecure superior results. On the other hand, he pointed out that schools neglecting the important aspects of (Continued on Page 4)t Four Day Run Of 'Our Town' To Open Here Wilder's New York Stagef Hit Starts Tomorrow; No Scenery To Be UsedI Rabbi James G. Heller Will Present Four Addresses At Summer Conference Announcement was made yester- day of a second feature speaker to. appear here on the program of the fifth Summer Conference on Religion which will be held in Ann Arbor July 23 to July 28. The subject of the conference will be "The Near East, Where Religions Meet." Rabbi James G. Heller of the Isaac M. Wise Temple in Cincinnati and a well known religious leader of the middle west will speak four times on the program of the Conference. "Toward Inter-Faith Understand- ing" will be his topic at a lecture at 4 p.m. Wednesday ir Alumni Mem- orial Hall. He will lecture on Thurs- day on the topic, "Sacred Music." At a luncheon meeting Friday in the Union, Rabbi Heller will speak on "Palestine." His final talk will be given at 3 p.m. Friday in the Alumni Memorial Hall on the topic, "Present Character of the Jewish Problem." Prof. George P. Michaelides of the Near East School of Theology in Beirut, Syria, and at present the act- ing head of the department of re- ligion at Smith College, will deliver four lectureson the Conference pro- gram, according to an announcement made last week. The Conference is open to all stu- dents of the Summer Session, minis- ters of the State of Michigan, pro- fessors teaching religion and direc- tors of religious education. Spends Week In Northern Michigan; Comments On Program For Teachers Pleased by the work going on in conjunction with the University's curricula in the out-state colleges and stations, Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, director of- the Summer Session, turned his attention to his duties in Ann Arbor yesterday after a week's visit to the various stations in the northern part of the state. "The program in the four state teachers colleges is excellent," Dr. Hopkins declared. "This is a move- ment that is being watched by edu- cational institutions all over the country, and it is indeed a splendid example that an umber of independ- ent tax-supported units can get to- gether and work together for a defin- ite objective in such a wonderful spirit of cooperation. "The work in the Biological Sta- tion and the Forestry Station is, as usual, coming along in excellent shape. Besides the busy program of field study going on at the biological' camp, there is a program in land utilization being carried on there and a state project in the study of certain parasites. Dr. Hopkins was also enthusiastic about his visit to the Osburn Pre- serve on Sugar Island in the St. Mary's River. Here he lunched with former-Governor Chase Osburn, "an experience," he said, "never to be forgotten." Osburn, former regent of the University, has donated 4,000 Alumni Write To Put. Janke On Star-Squad By ED FRUTIG Letters from alumni groups throughout the country brought as- surance of whole-hearted support for the campaign to place Fred Janke, Michigan football ctain of last sea- son, on the All-Star "quad which will meet the New York Giant team at Chicago on Aug. 30. In one of the letters, captain salut- ed captain, as Archie Kodros, elect- ed to succeed Janke as head Michi- gan gridder next fall, wrote that he was "happy to see that Fred is at last to receive the honor due a great lead- er and outstanding football player." Other letters carried the same mes- sage, though each writer had his own way of expressing it. One, an alum- nus from Michigan, wrote as follows: "Hells Bells! I see you fellows have finally learned that you have one of the ablest football players ever to trod the chalk stripes for the Univer- sity of Michigan. Congratulations, and may your campaign prove suc- cessful." Buried deep in the pile of mail from Janke supporters was a gray en- velope with the name of Camp Al- Gon-Quian engraved in an upper corner. It was from the big, 208 pound tackle, one of the camp coun- selors, and was flooded with state- ments of gratitude and enthusiasm. Showing his appreciation, he said, "The very fact that it is evident that so many people have confidence in me, makes the campaign a success without waiting to see the result." Fred has been gaining rapidly in the tabulations and at press time rated number 10 in the nation wide voting to fill the tackle positions on the All-Star squad. Dr. Hopkins Returns From Visit To Colleges, University Stations WPA acres near his summer residence on Sugar Island to the University, and here experiments and obsrvations in forestry are being carried out. Starting a week from yesteday, Dr. Hopkins left with Dean Clarence S. Yoakum of the graduate school and Dean Samuel T. Dana of the forestry school. At Mt. Pleasant in the morn-j ing they met President Anspaugh of Central State Teachers College and the faculty who are participating in the University curriculum there. From here they traveled to the Chittenden Nursery in the Manistee National Forest. Conducted by the Department of Agriculture, this is the largest tree-producing nursery in the United States, producing 32,000,- 000 trees a year. An evening's boat trip took the party across Lake Michi-t gan to Menominee.- At Iron Mountain the next morn-1 ing, Dean Yoakum addressed a ses- sion of the Rotary Club, and the party then proceeded to the Forestryt Station on Golden Lake, about 15 miles west of Iron Mountain. Herer Dean Dana and Dr. Hopkins dis-e cussed administrative matters withr Prof. Robert Craig and met M. J. Fox, a benefactor of the camp. Dr. Hopkins was worried by a bear that has been visiting the camp every. night, but said that he was not going% to be perturbed if no one 'at theA camp seemed to be bothered.- Delighted with the scenery of thei Porcupine Mountains, to the north and west of Golden Lake, Dr. Hop- kins, Dean Dana and Dean Yoakumj were not so pleased with the food accommodations. Here in the high- est point in Michigan, about 2,000 feet, the three had a beautiful view., over Lake Superior on one side and over the Lake of the Clouds on the other. The only food they got, how- ever, was a strawberry ice cream coet and a chocolate bar. At Houghton they visited some of the facutly of the Michigan Colleget of Mining and Technology and metl Prof. Axel Marinn of the engineering (C ontinued on Page 4)t .. i Flu Is Subject < Of Talk Today By Andrewes Lecturer Is Investigator Of Causes Of Disease; To SpeakAt 5 P.M. Influenza and the history of its analysis will be discussed by Dr. C. H. Andrewes in a talk entitled "On the Influenza Trail" at 5 p.m.today in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building, Dr. Andrewes is a member of the Medical Research Council of the Na- tional Institute for Medical Research in Hamstead, London, England. He is a recognized authority on virus re- search, and has contributed consid- erably to the present knowledge of influenza possessed by the medical profession. Working with Laidlaw and Smith, he revealed the cause of influenza in . humans as due to the effects of two germs. A Gram-negative discovered t by the German bacteriologist Pfieffer and a minute filter-passing virus similar to those discovered in swine afflicted by a disease analgous to human influenza were found to be responsible. By injecting the filtered washings from the noses and.throats of influenza pateints into ferrets and white mice, Practically All Protestants Are Now Back On Job AccordingTo Officials Roll Cut Appears As Next Problem Except in a few scattered communi- ties, notably in Minnesota and Penn- sylvania, the WPA strike appeared last night to be at an end. Works projects off icials in half a dozen affected states reported vir- tually all the protestants against the new wage regulations back on the job, except for those who had found other work, or had been dismissed for be- ing absent five consecutive days. 'Forget The Strike' Lieut. Col. Brehon Somervell, New York 'city WPA administrator, ex- pressed the general attitude of most state WPA heads by saying, "forget the strike. I've forgotten it. We have a real problem on our hands now." The problem he referred to is that of making a 300,000 cut in the rolls by Aug. 1. About 75,000 are to be dropped in New York city Sept. 1 under this cut. and under the new act's provi- sion for a 30-day furlough for those who have been on the rolls 18 con- secutive months. Urge Wage Restoration In Washington, American Federa- tion of Labor officials called on Con- gressional leaders to urge restora- tion of the prevailing wage on WPA projects, but received no promises and most Congress members agreed that there was virtually no chance that the new relief 'act would be changed at this session. William Green, AFL President, said the union officials were "neither en- couraged nor discouraged" in their talks with Capitol Hill leaders. He related, however, that Speaker Bankhead and Majority Leader Ray- burn (Dem., Tex.) suggested that the group call on members of the House Appropriations Committee, and that from previous conversations with Chairman Taylor (Dem., Col.) of this committee and Rep. Woodrum (Dem., Va.), chairman of a subcommittee which handled the WPA bill, "we got the idea there was no chance." Niagara Falls Excursionists Return Home Sunday Spent In Visiting Cave Of Winds And Hydro-Electric Plant Dispute Settled' for Polar the most ii of supply Music Faculty Offer Program Program Tonight Includes Lieder, Organ And Duet Faculty of the School of Music will present a concert at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Thelma Lewis, soprano, with Er- nest Hares at the piano, will sing a group of lieder. Professors Wassil, Besekrsiky and Joseph Brinkman will play a Beethoven Sonata. The pro- gram will be closed by a group of organ numbers played by Prof. Pal- mer Christian. The program follows: Sonata, Opus 30, No. 2 .. .Beethoven Allegro con brio, Adagio cantabile,, Scherzo, Finale. Wassily Besekirsky and Joseph Brinkman Auch kleine Dinge......Hugo Wolf In dem schatten.........Hugo Wolf, Liebesbriefchen..........Korngold Du bist so jung.. .. .Erich Wolff Thelma Lewis .Spiritual, "A Zion". .....Miller Fidelis ........... . . Whitlock Choral in D minor .......Andriessen Palmer Christian Prof. Pick To Give Lecture In Germ an Swiss folk music, illustrated with slides and recordings, will be the subject of a talk in German by Prof. Hanns Pick of the School of Music at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Deut- sches Haus, 1315 Hill. Members of the Deutsches Haus, students in the German department and all those interested are invited to attend and refreshments will be served following the speech. Professor Pick is professor of cello and chamber music and is very well To Be Given Today Students and faculty of the Insti- tute of Latin-American Studies and others interested are invited to attend a Latin-American tea to be} held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. today at the International Center, 603 E. Madison Street. The tea will provide an opportun- ity for students in the Portuguese and Spanish language classes to meet the students of those nationalities who are in the University and converse with them in their native tongue. The program is under the general direction of Prof. Preston E. James, Director of the Institute. Deleware Indian Here To Help Record Tribe's Fading Language Outstanding success of the New York stage last year, the famous scenery-less "Our Town" by Thorn- ton Wilder, will open tomorrow for a four-day run. The play opened in New York in February, 1938. There, as during the past year on tour, the drama played to capacity houses. The play was written to be played without scenery but with only occa- sional props to strike a universal note. It tells the life of the Webb and the Gibbs families in a small New Hampshire town. The chief character, however, is the stage man- ager of the production, who also acts as the village philosopher. Whit- ford Kane, guest director and actor, will play this role in the Ann Arbor, production. "Our Town" was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for the best play of 1938. Wilder also won the Pulitzer, prize for the best American novel with his "Bridge of San Luis Rey." The Players have a special interest in the play for Martha Scott, a Michigan graduate and a former member of the Players and of the winter troupe, Play Production, was a success in the lead of the original New York production. Mary Pray, well known here for several years with the Summer Players, will take this part in the production here. Dr. Onderdonk By HAROLD B. ALLEN Willie Long Bone, acting head of that historic Indian tribe, the Dela- wares, has become an enthusiastic admirer of Ann Arbor. Some of his1 admiration is for the wealth of trees, but most of it is owing to the fact that, never before, in all his 71 summers spent on the sun-scorched plains of Kansas and Oklahoma, has he en- joyed such a cool summer as he has found in Michigan. Short, heavy-set, usually clad in' blue-gray overalls and sometimesl wearing a big straw hat, Mr. Long Bone has been observed with curiosity by many students on the campus, who have wondered who he is and what he does in Angell Hall. Here's the answer. Though neither a student nor a teacher, he is giving invaluable aid to the cause of lirnguistic science this summer, for he is supplying to re'- search workers in language the ma- terials for the first scientific analysis of' the Delaware language. Long Bone came to Ann Arbor with Prof. Charles Voegelin of the department of anthropology of De Pauw University, who is one of three Linguistic Insti- tute faculty members conducting work in the recording and analysis of a living language. How important his work is may be judged from the fact that in Okla- homa only about 40 or 50 Delawares of the oldest generation can speak the language of their fathers. Unless science records this speech now, the language of a great and important Indian tribe will have been lost. True, the younger Delawares understand the language, but they, like Long Bone's children, can speak only a simplified version of it interspersed with many English words, and they prefer to speak English entirely. Though Long. Bone's wife knows only Delaware, Long Bone himself early learned English in the govern- ment schools. When he expressed his admiration for Ann Arbor's climate, he did not, as some cartoonists would have you believe, say, "Ugh, heap swell weather here." As a matter of fact, he talked about it exactly as any other summer visitor to the Uni- versity would. A strong believer in education, Long Bone is proud of his schooling, proud of the married duaghter who is a high school graduate, proud of the son, Ray, who graduated from Drake University in Des Moines but whose ambitious plans ended with death from the pneumonia that fol- lowed his being gassed in the trenches Chinese In War Zone Found' Badly In Need Of Medical Aid Back home again after a two and one-half day jaunt to the scenic wonders of Niagara Falls, partici- pants in the sixth Summer Session excursion returned yesterday to their tudies with renewed vigour. Calm Lake Erie waters rendered the group a peaceful night and .a re- freshinig sleep after a Sunday of Falls sightseeing. The party arrived in Ann Arbor at 10:30 a.m. yester- day after a bus ride from the De- troit waterfront. Sunday the excursionists travelled to Goat Island between the Ameri- can and Canadian Falls and descend- ed to the Cave of the Winds. There they donned woolens and oilcloth and mounted the boardwalk to the Hurricane Deck, on the edge of the American Falls, where they were deluged by spray and buffeted by Falls-made winds. Later they inspected the hydro- electric power house of the Niagara Falls Power Company, where 450,- 000 horse-power is generated. Excursionists figured that they were given the most inexpensive taxi service in the United States. They were conducted by cab from their hotel to Goat Island, to the hydro- electric plant and returned to their hotel for 15 cents apiece. To Show Film Humanitarianism Of World Movie Is Aim Today By STAN M. SWINTON From the war zone in far off China correspondents cable depressing word pictures of wounded soldiers endur- ing the torture of their wounds while they trudge the dreary miles to one of the few first aid stations. Statistics leave the reader sickened. Three hundred millions in that part of China which still remains free of the bloody glory reflected by Japan's Rising Sun. Millions of peasants turned soldier as they battle for their Republic. And only 77 medical units of 20 surgeons, dressers ,and nurses providing aid. Less than 100 ambu- lances and trucks in running order. A tragic description of medical sup- plies loaded into 40-pound sacks and then carried miles by weary coolies. It is for the relief of that condi- Medical Aid to China, the official United States representative of the Chinese Red Cross. In the battle against Japanese aggression China's resources have been dissipated. It veas for that reason that a group of na- tionally known American physicians founded the American Bureau. It collects funds, purchases medical supplies and trucks in the United States, sends them to Hong Kong and from there they are transhiped to French Indo-China, where they start the long journey into the interior. Money collected during the campus drive will go toward purchase of ,up- plieq which physicians report are vitally needed. Vaccines, iodine, anesthetics, seriums and, especially, quinine will be purchased. The sup- plies will be used in the battle ag ii ast malaria, cholera, bubonic plague and nfthar . mistshich aro gnearine Appeal to humanitarianism is the purpose of a film entitled "Emerg- ing World Federation" to be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 316 of the Union by Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk, formerly of the College of Architec. ture. y u f League Tea Dantces With Tomorrow's. End Affair Tea dancing for the Summer Ses- cinrn wrillln.4P it h tnro vvn, dancegy