PAGE S THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1934 _a . Filene States Ideas On Profit And Profiteers Says Downfall Of System Will Be Brought About By Its Own Advocates PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 5. -- P) - Edward A. Filene, Boston merchant and chairman of the Massachusetts state recovery board, said in a speech before the American Academy of Po- litical and Social Science today that if the profit system is destroyed "it will be destroyed by those very busi- ness men who believe most profound- ly in the profit system and are shout- ing the loudest about individual in- itiative. "At present, however, I see no dan- ger of this," Filene said. "Practically all America seems to be behind the President in his great effort to dis- cover the underlying laws governing production and distribution and thus to effect an orderly arrangement of the processes. The academy, opening a two-day conference, has as its theme, "prog- ress toward national recovery." "Fundamentals Same" "The NRA and the other parts of the President's program have not re- pealed a single fundamental law of the social order of 1929 or of 1919," Filene said. "They have simply recog- nized the fundamental laws of that order -laws which for the time be- ing were cheerfully disregarded. "The recognition of our responsi- bilities in a machine age has come upon us suddenly, after three or four years of headache; but the responsi- bilities existed long before they were recognized. "They existed in previous adminis- trations quite as definitely as they exist today; and had we then looked realistically at the world in which we're living, we would have taken much the same course, which we are taking now. Calls Business Uncivilized' "We have been living for several generations now within a business civilization, but we have had no un- derstanding of what business is for and business has remained uncivil- ized. We thought we were governed by the almighty dollar, but that dol- lar became so drunk and disorderly that it could not solve our human problems. "But now we are beginning to understand. We are learning that business is for the consumer - the mass consumer. Only with that un- derstanding and only as we exalt and reverence the consumer's dollar, can we effect an orderly arrangement of human affairs." RFC Flops As Lender Harry Eaton of Washington, in a paper on human elements in the re- covery program, said the mainstay of the recovery program at present is the expenditure of government money. He asserted that unless future developments require abandonment of the whole constitutional system, the effort to use the police power as an agency in national planning must be looked on as a passing phase. "As lenders, the Public Works Ad- ministration and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation have been flops," he stated. "As spenders, through themselves and the Civil Works Administration, they have been making real headway once the President had given the signal to shoot. The Agricultural Ad- justment Administration has shown some pronounced results in certain sections of the country because the money has been given away, not lent." I YSED Morgenthau Takes New Job; Garner Greets Senators; Lee I. C. C. Head -Associated Press Photos Announcement Herbert E. Gaston (left), assistant to the secretary of the treasury, congratulates Henry Morgenthau, Jr., upon his appointment to succeed William H. Woodin, resigned. For several weeks Morgenthau has been acting secretary. Vice-President Garner (right) received new members of the United States Senate in his office as Congress convened. Left to right: Ernest Gibson of Vermont, Carl Hatch of New Mexico anid Joseph C. O'Mahoney of Montana. The old "regular" Democratic or- ganization in New Orleans, now op- posed to Senator Huey Long, en- dorsed Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley (above) of New Orleans for renomi- nation in the city's January 23 pri- m ary. Dieting Et Al Is Bunk, Says Dr. Clendening Alderman Oscar F. Nelson (right) and Dr. Benjamin Squires (left),t University of Chicago economist, went on trial in Chicago with 16 others, including labor union officials and alleged sluggers, on charge of conspiracy to racketeer in the cleaning and dyeing, carbonated beverages and laundry industries. Center is Attorney W. A. Cunnea, defense counsel. Oberammeraglau's Passion Play Will Be Presented This Year William E. Lee, Idaho Republican, is the newly elected chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion. Sociolooist Is Given Post By ReliefAgency Clark Tibbitts of the department of sociology has been appointed sta- tistician for the Federal Employment Relief Administration and director of the study of problems of relief in rural areas by the director of rural relief in Washington. Mr. Tibbitts was contacted in Chi- cago where he is well known as a statistician, and will be occupied with his position in Washington until the beginning of next semester, when he will return to Ann Arbor after get- ting the bureau of rural relief set up. Affliliated with the Bureau of the Census in 1930, and director of the unemployment census in Chicago two years ago, Mr. Tibbitts is con- sidered to be well qualified for his position. Last summer he was of- fered a position on the Illinois parole board, but turned it down to return to Ann Arbor to complete the map- ping of census tracts to be used in the prospective Federal Census of 1934 which is expected to be proposed and passed on by Congress in its cur- rent session. Fe r Of Mob Aepion.Causes Arrest Delay Two Negroes Implicated In Statement Issued By Baltimore Detectives CRISFIELD, Md., Jan. 5-- )- The threat of "possible mob action" ',oday caused authorities, investigat- ;ng the murder of an aged Marion Station woman on New Year's Eve, to delay the apprehension of any suspect in the case. A formal statement, issued by two Baltimore detectives co-operating with Somerset County officials in the probe, indicated a Negro was wanted in connection with the slaying of Mrs. Margaret Brumbley, whose body was found on her bed early Monday. "Due to information received hrough authorities of possible mob action," the statement of the de- tectives said, "we thought it advisa- )le to postpone our activities until we received advice from higher au- thorities." The detectives, Sgt. Walter Mar- tin and Sgt. Stewart Deal, declined to elaborate on the statement. While Sergeant Martin refused to say who were meant by "higher authorities," they were understood to include the sheriff, state's attorney and circuit court judge. Mrs. Brumbley, an 85-year-old farm woman, was found, lying partly clothed, on the bed with her head battered by a blunt instrument and stabbed twice. The stab wounds were believed by authorities to have been made with an oyster knife. Crisfield and Marion Station are located in Somerset County where on Oct. 18, a mob dragged George Armwood, Negro, accused of attack- ing an aged white woman, from the Princess Anne jail and hanged him near the outskirts of the town. The intimation of mob action was received with expressions of surprise by Gov. Albert C. Ritchie at Anna- polis and Charles H. Gaither, Balti- more police commissioner, who sent Martin and Deal here at the re- quest of Somerset County officials. Among other fines imposed upon undergraduates at Union College, Schenectady, is a fine of 6 cents if caught wearing hats within the walls of the college. Published For Summer School Many Courses Are To Be Offered By Schools And (dolleges Of University (Continued from Page 1) four camps are maintained in dif- ferent parts of the country for sum- mer work. A biological station is maintained on Douglas Lake in Che- boygan County, where extensive re- search and field work is carried on. Camp Davis, the camp for field work in surveying, is located near Jackson, Wyo. Intensive field cours- es in geology and geography are con- ducted in the vicinity of Mills Springs, Kentucky. The School of Forestry and Conservation maintains a summer camp in the Upper Pe- ninsula. Courses in the various schools and colleges vary in length, including those of four, five, six, eight, and 10 weeks duration. The session of the Medical School is six weeks in length, except for certain courses which con- tinue for eight weeks. The Law School session is two periods of five weeks each, while courses in the Division of Hygiene and Public Health are six weeks in length. To meet the needs of teachers and educational administrators who can not attend the full session, a nm- ber of special shorter courses of for weeks duration are offered in the School of Education. All the other schools and colleges are in session for a period of eight weeks. All departments are offering full programs, and numerous educators from other parts of the country will be on the campus to supplement the regular faculty. Added features of the session will be courses in fine arts, offered only every other Sum- mer Session, and a Physics Collo- quium in that department. The College of Engineering will of- fer a wide range of graduate courses in chemical engineering, a Summe Session speciality, and special work in engineering mechanics. Profes- sor Stephen Timoshenko's courses in this department will be handled by Professor Westergaard of the Uni- versity of Illinois. The abridged announcements of the Summer Session just issued may be secured at the director's office, and copies may be seen in the various' department offices. The complete an- nouncements, which will be ready for distribution about March 15, and which give full descriptions of each course, may be ordered from Louis M. Eich, secretary of the session, Shull Elected Head Of Body Of Naturalists Prof. A. F. Shull of the zoology department was elected president of the American Society of Naturalists at the recent meeting of the society held in Boston. The group is the oldest biological society in America, having been or- ganized in 1833. Its membership in- cludes representatives of all the high- ly specialized branches of biology. The aim is to diuect attention to those fundamental phases of biology, such as evolution, which lie at the basis of all the specialized biological sciences. Professor Shull has at various times in the past been secretary, member of the executive committee, and vice-president of this body. He was formerly president of the Mich- igan Academy of Science. He is the author of several scientific works and a contributor to various period- icals' Live A Will The s You Please And It Be The Same In End, He Asserts COLMA, France -Nine persons were drowned in a flood caused by a burst pipe which supplied turbines on an electric power project nearby. HALLE, Germany-Lutheran bish- ops declared their intention of se- ceding from the German Evangelical church unless Reichbishop Ludwig Mueller yielded in his insistence that a German Christian be a member of the new church cabinet. HAVANA - The peace plan for Cuba advanced by Benjamin Fer- nandez de Medina, Uruguayan min- ister, received great opposition from the backers of President Grau San Martin. WASHINGTON- Leading Demo- crats privately discussed the possibil- ity of forcing a caucus on patronage matters. DETROIT-The Detroit Council of Churches began operations under the code which it adopted at its recent fifteenth annual session. ROME-Sir John Simon, British (By Intercollegiate Press) KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 5. -All this stuff about dieting, exercising and abstaining is more or less poppy- cock, in the opinion of Dr. Logan Clendening, debunker of medical myths. "Live just about as you please," he says. "It will probably come out about the same in the end anyway. A man may forego smoking, chewing, drinking, eating meat, and cussing, and then be run over by a hit-skip driver. Think of all the fun he missed.. "And these health faddists-did you know graham bread was named after a man named Alexander Gra- ham, who was going to live forever, but unfortunately died at the age of 51? "Most of the hygeia foisted on the public is made up out of some earnest reformer's mind. "Among the people who live long- est often are the guys never seen withou$ a snipe in their mouths Their relatives have been plying them with liquor for years trying to get rid of them, but they just live on and on and on. "We have no proof that exercise lengthens life or makes one immune from infectious diseases. Each year we read of football players laid up with pneumonia or appendicitis. A lot of the people who live the longest are the ones who never stir out of a chair except to go to the bathroom or the dining table. "The anti-niccutine uplifteOs say) women are ruining their health and sprouting beards by smoking. There's a place up in Nova Scotia where the women, who have always smoked, and pipes, at that, are known for their fertility. The death rate of their children is very low." The Oberammergau Passion Play, the story of the passion and death of Jesus Christ, will be presented this year in commemoration of the three hundredth anniversary of the deliverance of this mountain village from the plague of the Black Death in 1634. Students and teachers are expected to attend this extraordinary perform- ance of the great spectacle in even more numerous crowds than in 1930, the last presentation year, when more than 400,000 witnessed it, one-third of whom were estimated to be Amer- icans. According to F. H. Boegenrieder, a citizen of Oberammergau, who de- scribed the event in the last issue of the annual publication entitled "Christmas," the traditional story of! the making of the Passion Play vow relates the struggles of the commu- nity, threatened by the horror of the Black Death which was decimating the citizens of nearby towns. Every road leading to the village was block- aded for fear someone might expose the inhabitants to the disease. In spite of the precautions which were taken by the town council, a man brought contagion to the vil- lage, and during the winter of 1632- 33, nearly 100 persons succumbed. All efforts to stop the plague seemed in vain.' Turning to God in their extremity, the village fathers made a vow in the village church that "if God would deliver them from this calamity, they would henceforth, out of thankful- ness and in remembrance of this ter- rible scourge, present, every 10 years, the Passion tragedy," that is, a sacred dramatization of the suffer- ings and death of Jesus Christ. Since that time, the Passion Play has been given every 10 years ex- cept in 1811 and 1822. The War was responsible for the inability of the citizens to present the drama in 1920, and the depression of 1922 wiped out the entire proceeds of the perform- ance. Since the original presentation of the Passion Play, the work has re- mained almost unchanged, the elim- ination of several parts having been made necessary with the shortening of the spectacle from three days to one day. Health Service Records Sell-Oiit For Infirmary It took only three days to fill all the available beds in the University Health Service with the resumption of school after the Christmas holi- days, according to attendant nurses interviewed yesterc; ay. Coldst and kindred ailments were the most nu- merous complaints with a variety of indispositions accounting for the other occupancies. I wish to announce my appointment as student representative of the N EW YORK cNcratb Y diiuu CROSLEY DUAL FIVE $2(.00 Now, for the first time, students or other resi- dents may have the con- venience of delivery to their rooms or homes on Sunday. I can also handle mail subscrip- tions for the daily issue. II lil 11