THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUAi CWA Projects For University Are Launched Will Cost Approximately $75,000; Give Work To 280 Students University CWA projects which will cost approximately $75,000 and eventually provide 260 to 280 jobs have all been gotten under way. Eighty to 100 of these jobs will be of the "white-collar" variety, and will be on educational projects in vari- ous departments of the University, according to Prof. L. M. Gram, di- rector of plant extension. For this work, an important as- pect which will be to increase the value of libraries and museums by cataloguing, indexing, and preparing specimens, about $12,000 has been set aside. The Dental Library and the Museums will be two of the di- visions to benefit from this work. In the Herbarium work will center around the newly-acquired Parke- Davis collection, Professor Gram said. Some men have already been put to work on these projects, and a total of about 100 will be used when the projects are fully under way. To Extend Power Service The largest project of those ap- proved by the CWA is that of ex- tending power and electrical service to buildings on Ferry Field and to the Stadium, which will cost approxi- mately $28,000. When the extension is complete it willbe possible for the first time to supply the athletic plant with electricity from the Uni- versity Power Plant. Construction of a fireproof'- sub- station and switch house near the University Hospital at a cost of $12,- 000 has just been started. The new building will make it possible to re- move the dangerous switch room from the hospital, according to Edward C. Pardon, superintendent of build- ings and grounds. A man was killed there a short time ago, he said. Four thousand dollars has been al- lotted for weather-stripping the win- dows of University Hospital, and an additional $1,000 will be used to ex- tend city water service to the bo-. tanical gardens on Packard Street. v Will Build Tunnel The building of a heating tunnel between the campus proper and the University High School, Elementary School,kand Architecture Building will make it possible to extend all service lines to' those buildings through thespermanentstunnel. At present heat is carried through tem- porary pipes under the high school athletic field, Pardon said, he new tunnel will cost $10,000. Some 40 to 50 minor miscellaneous improvement and maintenance jobs will' requirea another $20,000. The total of $75,000 for all projects in- cludes both labor and materials. The University is furnishing the mate- rials for some of the work, while the funds are coming from the CWA. The University will not ask ap- proval on any additional CWA proj- ects unless the closing date for such works is extended, Mr. Pardon said. Should there be such an extension, he said, the buildings and grounds department will be prepared to sub- mit plans for a great number of outdoor summer jobs. Instead of exterminating the Jew, he (Hitler) should have said, "I will tolerate Jews to any extent so long as no Jew marries a Jewess." That is how he could build up a strong, solid German people.-George Ber- nard Shaw. Signiing Of Truce Ends Chicago Milk Blockade -Associated Press Photo Here is the scene as a truce was signed in the Chicago milk strike, ending four days of blockades marked by violence. Left to right, seated: Don M. Geyer, man ager of the Pure Milk association; Mayor Edward J. Kelly, and Dr. F. M. Walmsley, president of the Pure Milk council. Standing between the mayor and Walmsley is H. A. Pfister, president of the association. Others in the picture are striking dairymen. Piano Master 'io Appear In Recital H e r e Sergei Rachmaninoff Will Present Concert At Hill Auditorium Thursday Sergei Rachmaninoff, master of the pianoforte, will appear in the Choral Union Concert series next Thursday at Hill Auditorium. Rachmaninoff stands out as one of the greatest living exponents of piano wizardry. Termed "an old master," he is sort of a connecting link between the great piano virtu- osos of the present time and the masters of the past. He is similar to Paderewski in this respect. Not only a fine performer, he is a composer and conductor as well. His "Prelude in C Sharp Minor" is per- haps the most famous contemporary classic in existence. For decades great artists have included his com- positions in their programs, and hardly a teacher or pupil of piano exists who has not familiarized him- self with his works. He has been heard in Ann Arbor on numerous occasions, each time with eminent success. This is the fourth time he has given recitals here, the other times in 1920, 1929, and 1931; each a Choral Union Con- cert appearance. As a memorial tribute to the late Albert Lockwood, head of the piano department of the School of Music for over 30 years, Rachmaninoff will include on his program Chopin's "So- nata in B Flat Minor," which con- tains the famous Funeral March. Methods Of Graduate Study To Be Discussed General methods of graduate study will be discussed at the January meeting of the English Journal Club to be held at 4:15 p. m. today in the League. Prof. O. J. Campbell will speak on "The Professor Looks at the Gradu- ate Students." Mr. A. K. Stevens, Miss Jeanette Fleisher, and Mr. F. X. Roellinger will reply from the point of view of the graduate stu- dent. The meeting will be open to the public following the business session at 4:00 p. m. AMERICAN SHIP AGROUND LONDON, Jan. 11.- ()-A mes- sage to Lloyd's from Yokohama today said the American steamer Texas, bound for Dairen, was reported ashore on Sado island, Japan, in a snowstorm. Assistance was sent to the grounded vessel, the report said. Workers End Strike At New Jersey Ford Plant EDGEWATER, N. J., Jan. 10. - VP) The Edgewater local of the United Automobile Workers of America have voted to suspend their strike of the local assembly plant 'of the Ford Motor Car Co. The action marked the end of a strike which began Sept. 28 when the men walked out to enforce demands for better payand other concessions. At the height of the strike leaders es- timated 1,600 of the plant's 2,000 workers were out. Science Predicted To Defeat Religion (By Intercollegiate Press) CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 10. - The age-old battle between religion and science ultimately will be won by science when religion comes to be seen wholly as the "natural product of the human mind," according to William M. Davis, professor emeritus of geology at Harvard University. "The theological elements of Chris- tianity still held by conservatives," he said, "rest upon evidence no better than that which formerly supported many other elements, which, having been found untenable, have been given up. Hence those additional ele- ments will in time also be given up, and religion, like science, will then be seen to be wholly the natural product of the human mind." Postal Savings Here Multiply 700 Times Although stamp receipts ait: the lo- cal post office fell to $262,156.85 for 1933, postal savings business his multiplied 700 times and moncv c'- der receipts three times, Postmast~er A. C. Pack said yesterday. The tremendous gain in postal sav- ings and money orders came largely during abnormal banking conditions, and there will probably be a loss in savings this year, the postmaster said. He is not permitted to disclose actual figures for these departments, he said. Stamp receipts were $271,680.67 in 1932. The peak year in this respect was 1929, with $302,052.11 taken in. During 1933, December was, as usual, the high month, while August was low. RESERVATIONS Flight Instruiction 11 Local Passenger Flights 1 Special Charter Trips i ANN ARBOR A'IR SERVICE " Micipal Aiport Day Phone 9270 Night Phone 7739 'No Races Pure Today,' German Professor Says (By Intercollegiate Press) BALTIMORE, Md., Jan. 11. -'Al- though declining to be drawn into the modern controversy over the Nor- dic race and its rank among the races of the world, Dr. Johannes L. Hoops, professor of English language at Hei- delberg University, Germany, holds that with the exception of a few iso- lated tribes, there are no people to- day of a pure race. Speaking on the subject recently, Dr. Hoops, who is in America as an exchange professor at Johns Hopkins University, asserted: "A race is, briefly, a large group of men with some mental and phys- ical hereditary qualities. There are six principal races among European mankind." The domain of the Nordic race is northern Europe, including Scandi- navia, Iceland, northern Germany and the British Isles, he said. The surviving descendants of the Phalian race are found in northwest- ern and northern Europe. The Mediterranean race, found in the Mediterranean countries and somewhatin western Europe, is of short stature and a neat, slender build, Prof. Hoops said. The fourth race is called the Al- pine race and is found from Russia through Germany, along the Alps and through France. The East Baltic race is squarely built with massive head and face, he said. The chief characteristic of mem- bers of the Denaric race, he said, is that their heads do not project back but seem chopped off. The projecting Hapsburg lower jiaw is typical of this race. CWA EMPLOYS STUDENTS { When CWA jobs were opened up to students at the University of Ida- ho, 438 students signed up for the jobs. The work will be done about the campus, a publicly-owned insti- tution. Nazi Medical Ref Licensing Of N BERLIN, Jan. 11.- (/')-Medical circles are stirred by an announce- ment that the Nazi regime is consid- ering granting licences to 5;000 Na- turheil-praktiker, or non-medical practitioners, as a feature of a sweep- ing medical reform being conducted under Nazi auspices. Another contemplated feature is the barring of women from the med- ical profession. At a medical meeting in Berlin, Dr. Gerhard Wagner, the new Nazi chief of the medical association, repri- manded German medical authorities for having "deplorably neglected" in- vestigation into nature cures. Ban Not Practical "It is the fault of university med- ical faculties," he said, "that so many quack doctors have sprung up." He described the Nazi idea of ther- apy as a 'combination nature-cure and medical treatment method. Dr. Wagner said: "There are more adherents to nature-healing methods than one would believe. A complete ban on nature doctors would not be practicable." He suggested not that they be for- bidden to practice but that the na- tion's medical menrtake a lesson from them. "We must regain the ground lost to them during the past 10 years," he declared. "It is impossible to eliminate all nature-healers now." After admission of the 5,000, no more licenses to nature-healers would be granted for the next 10 years, he said. "We will not permit them to lec- ture publicly or to conduct vagrant practices," he declared. To Eliminate Women Touching on women studying for the medical profession, he said: "Our aim is to eliminate women completely from medical studies." Not only women but also bachelors would be hit by the reform. Lower fees, Dr. Wagner revealed, are in store for them. In fact, the entire medical fee system would be scaled to matrimony and parenthood -a measure deeply significant to orm May Bring on-Practitionei rs German medical life, German doctors being for the most part completely dependent for remuneration upon the state-controlled Krankenkassen, or sick-benefit institutions, from which, incidentally, all Jewish physicians ex- cept war veterans have been barred. Dr. Wagner's statements indicated that more value is attached in the Third Reich to a doctor's marrying early and raising a family than to studying. "The new medical course will be shortened, permitting a man to prac- tice and start a family at the age of 25," he said. More Children- Higher Fees Bachelors' fees, under the contem- plated system, would be reduced to two-thirds of the amount presently being paid per patient. The fees of a married doctor without children would be reduced to three-fourths. Only for doctors with a family of two children would the present re- muneration be retained, with corre- sponding increases for additional children. A new medical "chamber," says Dr. Wagner, will be created this year, with membership compulsory for every German medical man. Featuring Seafood Direct from The Eastern Coast . . 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