THE MICHIGAN DAILY American Form Two Wells Accuses Royal Family Of Fascist Link AMERICAN STORY! lnguages, Says Norwegian ON_________________ Snead, Bulla Finish One-T wo In British Open Golf Tourney Majior League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE le sharing of a common language ngland and America is a mixed ing, Prof. Aasta Stene, of the ersity of Oslo, Norway, told bers of the Linguistic Institute rday. nglish is mutually intelligible partially," Prof. Stene explain- emocrats 0 Narrow Slate For Convention LANSING, July 5-(P)--Democra- tit strategists began narrowing the list of possible candidates for five major state offices as delegates to Saturday's state conventicn began arriving 'for the pre-convention ban- quet and informal caucuses. There were indications however, that there would be much switching and trading to satisfy geographical, nationality, labor and veterans in- terests before the final slate takes form. Slate for Tomorrow Former Governor Murray D. Van Wagoner, the gubernatorial nomi- nee, and his board of advisors did not expect to come up with a com- pleted slate until late this evening or early tomorrow morning. When they do, however, the con- vention is expected to follow his leadership. Elihminating many of those whose names had been mentioned as ps- sibilities before the delegates started arriving Friday afternoon, early ho- tel room talk centered about the fol- lowing possibilities: Schuler Proposed For Secretary of State: Charles Schuler, Muskegon City Clerk; Wil- liam Connelly, Detroit. For Attorney General: Thurman (Sam) Doyle, Menominee, and Noel Fox, Muskegon. For Auditor General: Leo J. Now- icki, former Lieutenant Governor and Budget ,Director, Detroit, and John J. Kozaren, of Detroit, present Wayne County Treasurer who was defeated for renomination. For State Treasurer: Kozaren or Nowicki if- neither is nominated for the Auditor General post. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY LOST AND FOUND LOST: Tuesday Sargent key on or near campus. Phone 7036. FOR SALE BOIS BLANC ISLAND: A beautiful cabin with 2-story living room and cobblestone fire place completely furnished, 11/2 acres overlooking Mackinaw Island. Ready to move in. Complete book of pictures available. A bargain. Don't miss this one. Inquire Wi. - .Kirby, Realtor, 500 Michigan Bank Bldg., Detroit HELP WANTED HELP WANTED: Experienced lino- type operator in union shop. Per- manent position. No layoffs. For- ty hour week. Scale, $1.55 an hour, highest in state for comparable cities. Modern plant in residential suburban city. Daily Tribune, Roy- al Oak, Michigan. MANUFACTURER of temperature instruments wants engineering stu- dent for part-time work in Ann Arbor. Hourly basis to suit your schedule. Write, stating age, year in school, and hours 'available be- tween 8 and 5 each day. H. 0. Trerice Company, 1420 W. Lafay- ette Blvd., Detroit, 16, Michigan. MISCELLANEOUS TUTORING IN ENGLISH for For- eign Students. Call at 527 Church St., No. 7. Near South University. ALL MEMBERS of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity enrolled in the summer session contact Bernard E. Burke, K.R.S. 311 Glen'Ave., by postal card. B3ROKEN STRINGS in your tennis racquet? Call at 2-7360 for over- night service or restringing. I pick u pand deliver. Dean McClusky, 417 8th St. FOR RENT ANY GIRL interested in sharing ideal apartment including piano near campus, call 4813 immediately. ed, "and the failure of Americans to understand what Englishmen mean by their words, and vice-versa, may lead to more misunderstandings than would arise if they spoke entirely different languages.- Miss Stene was a visiting professor at the University of Wisconsin dur- ing the past winter. She acquired her knowledge of English through study at the Universities of London and Cambridge, but found it neces- sary to make extensive modifications in the spoken language when she came to America. "Although the grammar and vo- cabulary of English and American are essentially the same," she said, "there are wide differences in tempo, pitch and intonation of the spoken language. For example, Americans speak more loudly than the British, leading to the popular judgment in England that Americans are bad- mannered and rude. This same dif- ference causes Americans to judge the English as being unfriendly and standoffish." Prof. Stene spoke at the first of a series of public programs which will be given by the Linguistic Institute. Other speakers who will be presented by the Institute, which continues through August 23, are Dr. Kenneth Pike, University of Oklahoma; Dr. Edgar H. Sturtevant, Yale Univer- sity; Dr. F. W. Twadell, Brown Uni- versity; Dr. Eugene Nida, University of Oklahoma; Dr. Adelaide Hahn, Hunter College, and Dr. Milton Cown, American Council of Learned Societ- ies. Army To Begin Return of All Overseas Dead Peacetime procedure of returning to the United States for burial mem- bers of the Army who died in mili- tary service overseas became effec- tive July 1. This procedure has not been fol- lowed since Sept. 3, 1939, the date of limited National Emergency. In cases of deaths of Army per- sonnel overseas after July 1, the Quartermaster Corps will not inter bodies in temporary cemeteries but will hold them in mortuary chapels at overseas stations until the next available transportation, either Army transport or commercial carrier. Current deaths are not to be con- fusedwith deaths during military operations. Those who died in mili- tary .operations or subsequnt to v-J Day, but before July 1, are bur- ied in temporary military cemeter- ies overseas. Final disposition of their remains will be made according to the wishes expressed by next of kin following a questionnaire which will be sent to next of kin, according to a program which is now being care- fully worked out by the Office of the Quartermaster General, Wash- ington, D.C. Mobs Kill 34 Jews In Polish Pogrom WARSAW, July 5-AP) - Mobs rampaging through the streets of Kielce in Poland's bloodiest post- war pogrom killed at least 34 per- sons and injured 42 others, mostly Jews, before government armored cars dispelled the anti-Jewish rioters and restored order today to that city of 60,000. Unverified reports said that some militiamen and security police also were killed in battling the mobs, which smashed shops and invaded Jewish homes and apartments yes- terday. Further check of the dead and injured may cause an upward revision of casualties. The government charged that "fas- cist elements" set off the pogrom, perhaps started by false reports spread by a Polish boy who claimed to have been held in a cellar by Jews who threatened to slay him. Another rumor was that a Polish baby had been killed by Jews. Writer House Says British Aided Italians DESCRIBES ACTIVITIES-Ma- jor ,General William N. Porter (above), retired chief of the Army Chemical Warfare Service, tells the Mead Senate War Investigating committee that Rep. Andrew J. May (Dem., KO), chairman of the House Military Committee, inter- vened three times with the Army on behalf of an Illinois munitions combine whose war profits are under congressional investigation. Lectures ...0 (Continued from Page 1) speak on "Psychology of Social Change" at 4:10 p.m. and Prf. Wil- liam F. Ogburn, of the University of Chicago, will deliver an address on "How Technology Changes Socie- ty" at 8:10 p.m. Prof. Bernard Brodie, of Yale Uni- versity, will discuss "The Absolute Weapon-Military versus Social In- vention," at 8:10 p.m. Monday, July 22. "The Political Impact of Modern Science on Public Health" is the topic of a lecture by Prof. Gaylord W. Anderson, of the University of Minnesota, at 8:10 p.m. Tuesday, July 23. "Recent Advances in Medicine" is the subject to be discused by Prof. Albert C. Furstenberg, dean of the University medical school, at 4:10 p.m. Thursday, July 25, and Prof. Robert E. Cushman, of Cornell Uni- versity wil speak on "Civil Liberties in the Atomic Age" at 8:10 p.m. Dr. Warren S. Thompson, of Miami University, wil discuss "The Impact of Science on Population Growth" at 8:10 p.m. Tuesday, July 30. Thurs- day, August 1, Prof. Howard B. Lewis, director of the University College of Pharmacy, will speak on "Nutrition" at 4:10 p.m. Monday, August 5, Dr. John W. Studebaker, United States Commis- sioner of Education, will deliver an address on "The High School Cur- riculum in a New World" at 4:10 p.m., and at 8:10 p.m. Prof. Howard A. Meyerhoff, of Smith College, will speak on "Some Social Implications of Natural Resources." Prof. Louis Wirth, of the Univer- sity of Chicago, will discuss "Social Science Research and the Impact of Science upon Society" at 8:10 p.m. Tuesday, August 6. "Good, Evil, and Beyond" is the topic of a talk by George N. Shuster, president of Hunter College, at 8:10 p.m. Thurs- day, August 8, and Dean E. Blythe Stason, of the University Law School, will speak on "Technology, Law, and Administration" at 4:10 p.m. "Economic Changes Produced by Modern Technology" will be discus- sed by Prof. Sumner H. Slichter of Harvard . University, at 8:10 p.m. Tuesday, August 13. Prof. William Haber, of the University economics department, will speak on "Security and Freedom" at 4:10 p.m. Wednes- day, August 14. The 20th lecture will be delivered by Dean Hayward Keniston, of the literary college, at 4:10 p.m. Thurs- day, August 15, on "The Humanities in a Scientific World." Concluding the series is Dr. Arthur H. Compton, chancellor of Washington University, who will speak on "Atomic Energy, a Human Asset" at 8:10 p.m. Friday, August 16. No. Main - Opposite Court House -- Starting Today - Eddie Dean in ROMANCE OF THE WEST (in Technicolor) LONDON, July 5-W)-H. G. Wells, in an almost unprecendented attack upon a British King's family, asked publicly today whether the Royal Family was involved in the "huge" sums which, the House of Commons was told recently, the Italian govern- ment of Benito Mussolini paid to Sir Oswald Mosley, British Fascist lead- er, before the war. The 79-year-old novelist and his- torian declared in an article in the magazine Socialist Leader that if the Royal Family were involved, "Then there is every reason why the House of Hanover should follow the House of Savoy into the shadows of exile and leave England free to return to its old and persistent republican tra- dition." Buckingham Palace authorities could not be reached for comment on Wells' blast-one of the very few attacks on the Royal Family to appear in a British publication in many years. The Socialist Leader is published weekly by the Independent Labor Party, left-wing offshoot of the Labor Party. Wells said of the British Royal Family: "Even this German-ruled . . . monarchy which links the English with the crumbling monarchist sys- tem of the world is menaced by a gathering accumulation of revela- tions. Things are coming out and they are bound to come out. "Why cannot these tainted people do the sane and patriotic thing while they may still be treated with consid- eration? "Now they can be bought out and set apart with the sort of dignity and honors they value. Later on, their dismissal may have to be ruder." Suggesting that a "royal reserve" for exiled kings and queens be creat- ed "in America or elsewhere, where people appear to be hungry for uni- forms and titles," Wells said: "The genuine democratic com- munities throughout the world need to know what is going on in this hushed-up business of the huge Mosley funds and how far our own Royal Family is involved in this affair. Archeologist To Continue Work. Greenmnan Leaves for Ontario Huron Site Dr. Emerson F. Greenman, well- known University archaeologist and anthropologist leaves this morning for Killarney, Ontario, on the north shore of Lake Huron, to continue his explorations on sites of early Ameri- can culture, ranging in age from 1400 to over 10,000 years old. Dr. Greenman began his excava- tions in 1938 and has continued them since, in cooperation with the Canadian government. He has found evidence which has led some leading authorities to the opinion that the early primitive tribes of northeastern North America may have come from western Europe, rather than from eastern Asia. Five students will accompany Dr. Greenman, who will instruct them in Archaeological Field Methods. They expect to return in early Sep- tember. Back the Famine Drive Continuous from 1 P.M. ALWAYS COOL! ST. ANDREWS, Scotland, July 5- (P)-Outsteadying a jittery field in a strong wind, Sam Snead won the first postwar British Open Golf Championship today with a 72-hole total of 290, winning back for America the trophy it had not held since 1933. The rounds of the slammer from Petra Outlasts Brown for Title At Wimbledon WIMBLEDON, July 5-(P)-Thir- ty-year-old Yvon Petra, who sold his Paris sidewalk cafe six months ago to concentrate on tennis, reaped the first big dividend today when he de- feated Geoff Brown, 23-year-old Australian, in a hard-fought final of the All-England Championships, 6-2, 6-4, 7-9, 5-7, 6-4. The giant Frenchman, whose six- feet, seven inches earned him the nickname "Eiffel Tower," subdued his much smaller opponent with a whistling service and smashing game at the net. An All-American final was assured in women's doubles tomorrow when the top seeded teams of Louise Brough and Margaret Osborne and Pauline Betz and Doris Hart came through on schedule in. today's semi- finals. The Misses Broughdand Osborne, four-time American doubles cham- pions, had little difficulty subduing their Wightman Cup teammates, Dorothy Bundy and Mrs. Patricia Canning Todd, 6-4, 6-2, but the Betz- Hart combination was given a real scrap before it advanced over Mrs. Kay Stammers Menzies and Mrs. Jean Nicoll Bostock of Britain by 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Cullenbine's .Bat Beats 'Cleveland DETROIT, July 5-P)-Grabbing the slugger's role heretofore reserved for Hank Greenberg, outfielder Roy Cullenbine of the Detroit Tigers plas- tered two honmers today and drove in four runs as Detroit took a 7 to 5 twilight decision over the Cleve- land Indians. Virgil (Fire) Trucks coasted to his 10th pitching victory after the Ti- gers scored three runs in the fifth inning for a 4-0 lead. Trucks went all the way to yield nine hits, two more than the Tigers collected oft Red Embree and Don Black. White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., were 71-70-74 and 75, and the 290 was two under par for the famous old St. Andrews course. The last Ameri- can to win the title was Denny Shute. Second to Sammy with scores of 294 were Johnny Bulla, another American who also was second in the last British Open played in 1939, and South Africa's Bobby Locke. It looked for a while as though each of them had missed a golden oppor- tunity to win by missing two-footers and three putting the home green, but as it turned out it made no dif- ference because Snead, burning up the second nine behind them in two under par finished four strokes in front. Back of Bulla and Locke at 295 were the veteran Henry Cotton, lea- der of the field when play started this morning; little Dai Rees, who fired a record 67 yesterday; Norman. Von Nida, the Australian, and Charley Ward, 34-year-old British professional. The two other American pros- Joe Kirkwood and Lawson Little- finished further back in the field. Kirkwood faltered badly in his morn- ing round today with a 78 and finish- ed with 298, and Little carded a 299. Both turned in 74's for the final round. The 33-year-old Snead's prize mo- ney amounts to only 150 pounds ($600) but as this is one of the major international golf events it will be worth much more to him in pres- tige and exhibition fees when he re- turns home. Bulla estimated earlier this week that an American pro could make $20,000 out of the title. Snead did not make an estimate. Snead is flying back to the United States July 9 and will play in a tournament in Kansas City July 11. Boston ....... New York. . . Detroit....... Washington .. St. Louis ..,.. . Cleveland..... Chicago. .. Philadelphia YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 5, Philadelphia 2 Washington 6, New York 1 St. Louis 1, Chicago 0 Detroit 7, Cleveland-5 TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Detroit Chicago at Cleveland (N) Boston at Washington (N) New York at Philadelphia (N) * * * NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Brooklyn .......46 25 .648'.,. St. Louis....... 40 31 .567 6 Chicago....... 37 32 .536 8 Cincinnati .... 33 34 .491 11 Boston........33 38 .465 13 Philadelphia.. 30 36 .455 13x New York......30 41 .422 16 Pittsburgh .. 29 41 .414 16% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 7, Brooklyn 6 St. Louis 1, Chicago 0 Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 3 TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at Boston. (N) Philadelphia at New York Cincinnati at Chicago Pittsburgh at St. Louis Red Sox Rally Tops Aff's PHILADELPHIA, July 5-(AP - Bunching four runs in the eighth inning, th Boston Rd Sox wallopci the Philadelphia Athletics tonight, 5-2. An estimatd 25,000 arc-light fans watched Joe Dobson limit the Mackmen to five hits. W 52 45 40 36 34 34 27 21 L 22 30 32 34 39 40 43 59 Pet. .703 .600 .555 .514 .466 .459 .386 .300 GB 7 11 . 14 171/. 18 23 29 r MICHIGAN Now Showing Memories of Hawaii Let's Go Cartoon Gunning and News ;;: Coming Sunday "SMOKY" Will James' Story in Technicolor F i /3a cical Cxperierwe in RDVE RTI SING LAlYOUT AND DESIGN. The advertising- department of The Michigan, Daily offers you an excellent opportunity-to acquire practical experience in the field of Advertising Layout and Design. if you have had no previous training, you will be given free instruction. You can obtain business experience and personal contact with advertisers that you can secure no other way. For those of you who are not especially interested in "Advertising Layout and Design", there are the clerical staff and the accounting department. Veterans are es- pecially welcomed to become members of the Daily staff. a-u- Last Day Today TARZAN AND THE LEOPARD WOMAN and GIRL ON THE SPOT -- Sunday & Monday - LITTLE GIANT with Abbott & Costello and BORN FOR TROUBLE with Van Johnson Last Times Today HEX tm UFRUSTY' TED DONALDSON MARK T DENNIS A O M A Pi TR Coming Sunday 0 ter A plus Stephanie Bachelor in PASSKEY TO -DANGER! News and Serial 4. I ""NI ART CINEMA LEAGUE, INTERNATIONAL SUMMER PROGRAM WEDNESDAY, July 10 . "HEART OF PARIS" (French) with Raimnu, THURSDAY, July 11 Michele Morgan THURSDAY, July 18 "THE WILDFLOWER" (Spanish) FRIDAY, July 19 with Dolores Del Rio TH-4 }R,' PA'Y' irly 29 "ARRIAC AND T ITRICE" (9 Raimal TRY-OUT MEETING TUESDAY, JULY 9th AT 3:00 P.M. I MV - Ii inuu U I