THE MICHIGAN DAILY Scribes )und Of .n Strife Factions Struggle For Supremacy In Turbulent Austri -Associated Press Photos (Continued from Page 1) trong measures were t a k e n t the flood of Nazi propaganda. answer to Dollfuss' a p p e a 1, Britain, France, and Italy pro- to Hitler against the attack on an independence. The Ger- :id not cease their drive, how- In spite of every effort Aus- Nlaziism spread, and with the re from the Heimwehr for a towards Fascism of an Italian )ollfuss launched his "Father- Front" movement, which was above parties and work for the ,tion of Austria on a patriotic In September he made public >posal for a new type of gov- nt, really an Austrian variety scism, differing little funda- ly from the Italian brand. .c the Social Democrats did tively support Dollfuss, they ld opposition, knowing that s was their best protection , the Nazis, whom they feared. s refrained from drawing them coalition, however, as that drive the right wing of his ters, the Heimwehr, to the the Nazis. Just prior to the outbreaks, then, we find Doll- ;hting on four fronts; -against .tler forces of Germany and zis, Socialists, and disaffected ts of the Heimwehr at home. latter demanded that he make is promise to institute a gov- it without parties, and began. e action. To conform with emands meant the suppression socialists, and this would mean ling of a general strike by the members of that party. Doll- ew this would seriously threat- power, and likely lead to a- ctory. All these factors had onsidered in planning future This Associated Press picture provides a striking front view of the gigantic Karl Marx apartment development in Vienna, home of 2,000 laborers' families, which was shelled by howitzers of government forc es as Dollfuss troops battled Socialists in Austria's civil war. YESTERDAY WASHINGTON-William E. Hum- phrey, the mani whom President Roosevelt ousted from the Federal Trade Commission, died at his home. His death ended the legal controversy on the right of the President to re- move a member of the Commission. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. - Lieut. John H. Murrel was acquitted of charges of a criminal attack on Miss Blanche Rails, Alabama divorcee, and an- nounced that he was going to return to army service. WARSAW - The Jewish quarter in the Polish capitol was thrown into great fear when it was disclosed that a leprosy patient was at large in that section. CARAVACA, Spain - A jewel val- ued at $390,000 was reported miss- ing from the Caravaca Castle. The gem was a gold cross inlaid with diamonds. LANSING - Chairman Kit F. Clar- dy and Commissioner Harry C. Mc- Clure of the State Public Utilities Commission were removed from office by Gov. William Comstock. Tibbitts Will Continue Stay In Washinoton Clark Tibbitts of the sociology de- partment who was appointed statis- tician for the Federal Employment Relief Administration will remain ir Washington for the next few monthE and possibly for the whole semester It had been expected that Tibbitts would return to the University early in February. Mr. Tibbitts was affiliated with the Bureau of the Census in 1930, and director of the unemployment census in Chicago two years ago. Last sum- mer he was offered a position on the Illinois Parole Board, but turned it down to return to Ann Arbor to com- plete the mapping of census tract to be used in the prospective Federal Census of 1934, which is expected tc be passed by Congress in its current session. Use Of Plant Forms Shown In Exhibit An exhibition of 40 plant form:. in ornament is being shown in the first floor cases of the Architectural Building. The idea of demonstrating the myriad uses of plant forms i design was worked out by the Metro- politan Museum of Art, the New York Botanical Gardens, and the Brooklyrn Botanic Garden who supplied the living plant specimens and inspirec several high schools and schools o design in and about New Yorkto se problems for their students in tht type of design. Generally, each piece of work i made up of three parts: an accurate reproduction of the plant form, ar analysis of the form for its simple structure and finally the working o this form into an original design. One of the best examples of a de- sign applied to a special problem i a tobacco plant used in the decora tion of a humidor. Most of the de- signs are of textiles but a few o those shown are in the form of boo jackets or decorations for glassware. ,Mail Situation, May Be Opened To Legislature Possibility Of Pr e s i d e ni t Sending Special MessageF To Congress Looms WASHINGTON, Feb. 15.- P)- President Roosevelt soon may draft a special message to Congress on the air mail situation, reports in postal circles said today. The reports, following an open charge by Postmaster-Gen. James A. Farley that all domestic air mail con- tracts except one were products of conspiracy, did not disclose what the President will recommend. Some hope is being held out that several companies accused by Farley of "collusion" might be brought back into the air mail picture by drastic self-reorganization. Otherwise they would be barred from bidding for five years. Senator Joseph O'Mahoney (Dem., Wyo.), a former assistant postmaster- general, moved to this end. lHe plead- ed: "Let us make the guilt personal. We should not visit it upon the in- dustry." See Court Battle As the Roosevelt administration prepared for a court battle over the Iramatic cancellation of the air com- panies' contracts, Parley issued an open letter. It asserted flatly that chiefs of 14 aviation companies met in the big, gray stone Postoffice De- partment here in 1930, and that 13 zame out with lucrative holdings. Competitive bidding was aban- doned, Farley charged, and other ;ompanies were excluded from the meeting. He declared also that a sys- tem of extending contracts, main- tained under the Hoover Administra- tion, was "illegal," One Concern Untainted Parley said that only the National Parks Airways emerged empty-hand- ud from the 1930 conference. That concern alone, he asserted, will be given a further hearing. Farley charged that former Post- master-Gen. Walter . Brown acted illegally" when he extended five ,ontracts beyond their normal date :f expiration, "Then Postmaster-Gen. Brown," he said, "proceeded to build up, by the so-called 'extension' of routes, part of the system of the United Aircraft and Transport Corp., and the greater part of the American Airways and the Transcontinental and Western Air systems." MacCracken Is Sentenced William P. MacCracken, airmail company attorney, who was sen- tenced by the Senate Wednesday night to 10 days in jail, was said to have presided at some of the 1930 meetings. Brown and W. Irving Glo- ver, former second assistant postmas- ter-general, attended some of the conferences. A showdown on the Senate's right to put two aviation men in jail for ontempt was in prospect. No sooner had the Senate sen- fenced. MacCracken, and L. H. Brit- tin, vice president of Northwest Air- ways, to 10 days each, than swift preparations for a court test were set in motion. They were sentenced to the Dis- ,rict of Columbia jail on charges of treating too lightly a subpoena of the Senate Air Mail Investigating Committee. an not be certain as to why s has taken such drastic ac- the last few days. It may feeling a crisis at hand, he that crushing the socialists they could make a general :ffective involved less danger than union with them. In se suppression of the party %nd the raid on socialist head- s in the city of Linz brought ed resistance which lighted of civil war. The general vas called, but the call could ad only imperfectly, and the f it has been spent. ocialists in the industrial cen- ve put up a desperate resist-, th inferior means and in the sure defeat. There is not a iticism of the bloody suppres- the rebellion, many feeling could have been accomplished re humane, if slower, fashion. h way the Government will* ow is uncertain. There is 'able weight of opinion, how- at Austria will move steadily Fascism; first, perhaps, tow- e brand of the Heimwehr, ilian coloring, but eventually e broad stream of Hitlerist ,whose mighty current Doll- valiantly has been endeavor- Socialists and Dollfuss forces in Vienna clashed almost in the shadow of the monument (in foreground) to the memory of Admiral Tegetthof, Austrian hero, and in a fierce encounter the Socialists were routed from the North railway station, the white building in center background of this picture., CWA Workers Find New Data Concerning History Of Indian y To Make roit Speech 'ebr uary 21 Moley, former Assistant f State and former chief sevelt "brain trust," will 5 p. m., Wednesday, Feb. Wilson Theatre in De- subject of his talk will a Set Free." M o 1 e y was President chief adviser until re- n he resigned to become incent Astor's magazine pronounced nationalist, credited with greatly in- e Roosevelt international "brain truster" clashed ary of State Cordell Hull 'o men attended the Lon- zic Conference last sum- By SIGRID ARNE WASHINGTON, Feb. 15 -(I) - The great undeciphered pages of American history which lie "unread" in Indian mounds are beginning to give up their lore before the attack of shovels wielded by CWA workers. Men, digging in a mound near Bradenton, Fla., have d i s c o v e r e d what archeologists believe may be the town of "Ucita," visited by Her- nando de Soto, the Spanish explorer who landed on this continent in 1539. In North Carolina they have found what may be another step in De Soto's progress across the continent, the town of "Quasili," a Cherokee Indian village. Scrap by scrap the CWA workers, led by scientists from the Smithson- ian Institution, are putting together early history. At the project near Bradenton they have found three small glass beads. That means the Mayajuaca and Ais Indians who once lived there had met Europeans. The work progresses slowly andi carefully. The men are trained to dig so as not to break the relics they find. Each shovel of dirt is si-fted through wire. As the relics are found they are placed on boards just over the place where they were unearthed, so the exact layout of the vanished city can be reconstructed. Near Bradenton the CWA workers have been uncovering the exact out- lines of a "mortuary temple." Sev- eral such are known in the country and are believed to have been the final burial place where primitive tribes placed their dead after bury- ing the bodies. The Indians built this Florida tem- ple so well, by charring the posts for the walls, that. the workers have found outlines of a room about 25 feet square and two cremation altars. Excavations have uncovered six cylindrical sticks of resin about six inches long and one-half inch in di- ameter which may have been the This mound is believed to be the site of an old Hitchiti village. Thej tribe seems to have had contact both with Europeans and with tribes from the northern part of this country. In a nearby village the CWA workers have excavated the outlines of a rec- tangular house. The fifth state seeing explorations under CWA f u n d s is Tennessee. There excavations are being made in the Shiloh national park at Pitts- burgh Landing. Both original and civil war relics are sought. Dr. Frank M. Setzler, archeologist at the Smithsonian Institution, is directing the work. Prof. Young Named To . Serve On Union Board Announcement of the selection of Prof. Leigh J. Young, of the School of Forestry and Conservation, for a position as a faculty member of the Union board of directors was re- leased recently. He replaces Prof. Henry C. Anderson, of the College of Engineering, who was appointed to the newly-created position of Direc- tor of Student and Alumni Relations, Professor Y o u n g has heretofore been active in student affairs, in ad- dition to figuring prominently in the city government as a member of the common council. "Psychology has determined by ac- tual experience that success depend's 85 per cent upon personality, and 15 per cent upon brains" a Ouachita college professor declares. Emil Fey, vice-chancellor, who as a leader in the Fascist heimwehr took personal comnand of troops fighting Socialists in suburban Vienna. 'Township Government' Title Of Bromage Report "Recommendations on Township Government" is the title of a pamph- let supplement to the February issue of the National Municipal Review, written by Prof. Arthur W. Bromage of the political science department. Professor Bromage's report is the third in a series sponsored by the Committee on County Government of* the National Municipal League. Pro- fessor Bromage has for two years been chairman of the League's sub- committee on township government A foreword to the February sup- plement is written by Prof. John A. Fairlie, of the University of Illinois, who is prominent in the League. During Lent.. --You'll Find a Great Variety of Lenten Dishes on The Tavern's Bill of Fare . . Strictly Fresh Eggs. . . Seafoods Daily from the Coast ... Lake Fish Daily from the Surrounding Great Lakes . . . Truly, Every- thing You Could Possibly Wish For ... The First Regular Membership Dances of the New Semester Will Be Held rnoned Moley from sity, where he was ic law, to head the aculty members now brain trust." « 4 + * Leo Franklin To, Lk At Hillel Services Leo M. Franklin, rabbi of >le Beth-El of Detroit, will eaker at the Hillel services a. m., Sunday in the chapel eague. His subject will be ar and New Gods." or of his thirty-fifth year the Hillel Foundation will tea in his honor at 2:30 iday at the Hillel Founda- rs. I. L. Sharfman, Mrs. Isaacs, and Mrs. H ir s c h ,.;. l . R X } ja' 1, 1 " f "" ,P 1t Saturday from 9--12 Friday from 9--1, and Friday Feature Dishes Fried Deep Sea Scallops . Fried Fillet of Sole . . . . . Baked Fillet of Haddock . . ' . .15c . 12c *. 15c Open Afternoons and Evenings III.. I