THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1939, Leaves California Indian Serious -Associated Press Photo. In a letter to a Hollywood publi- cation, William Randolph Hearst, newspaper publisher announced he was forsaking his California resi- dence because of high taxes. He t said he feared many others would leave for the same reason. Safety Devices To Feature Cars For '36 Models November Auto Show At Detroit Will Exhibit New ' uper-Safe' Vehicles How automobile manufactures are doing their share in the current cam- paign to reduce traffic fatalities by making modern cars literally "super- safe" will be demonstrated by many new safety devices at.the coming De- troit Auto Show. The exposition op- ens November 9 at Convention Hall for an eight day run. The new 1936 models are guarded against accidents by a legion of safe- ty devices ranging from improved, stronger breaking systems to bodies ta practically encase the passeng- ers in four armored walls. One manufacturer has gone so far as to equip his cars withstwo separate and complete braking systems. One is the hydraulic type used as the regular means of stopping, and there is also a complete mechanical stop- ping system. Shatter-proof glass, in one type or another, has been adopted as stand- ard equipment by many manufactur- ers on their new lines. Strengthened frames and bodies predominate in the new 1936 cars, and headlights in many instances now switch the glare to oncoming cars over to the right side of the road. Special attractions for the coming automobile exposition include Nick Lucas and his orchestra, a fashion show for women, and puppet shows and plays for children. Application For Rhodes Awards Required Soon About a dozen applications have already been received for the Rhodes Scholarship competition. The closing date for arranging appointments and filing petitions is Monday, Oct. 28. The applicants will be interviewed by the University Committee for Rhodes Scholarships the following day, and not more than five will be selected to appear before a subsequent meeting of a state board, to be held Dec. 12 or 14 in Ann Arbor. From the representatives from the University and other colleges in the State, the state board will choose two students to represent Michigan in a final elimination before a district commission on Dec. 16 in Chicago. Prof. Arthur L. Cross of the history department is the chairman of the University Committee and is in charge of all applications. The scholarship, which provides for a year's attendance at Oxford, is open to any unmarried student between the ages of 19 and 25, with at least junior standing in any college or university in the country. Four students are annually selected for the scholarship from each of eight districts in the nation, each district including six states. Willey Claims Theory Untrue In Monograph Declares No Connection Exists Between Aztec, German Languages In a recent scientific monograph, Prof. Norman Willey, of the German department, attacked the philological theory which claimed the existence of a valid relationship between the languages of Indo-Germanic and Nahuatl (the language of the Aztecs). According to Professor Willey, the ultimate consequences of such a theory would have moved far beyond the limited field of philology in their importance. He pointed out that a fairly conclusive proof would have been established that a continental "land bridge" once spanned the At- lantic, forming a strip of dry land all the way from Europe to America. Al- so, for purposes of compatibility, we would have had to believe that a large part of the prehistoric popula- tion of America were rather the an- cestors of the modern European type than of the Asiatic type, stated Pro- fessor Willey. Thus, he said, our ideas concerning the history of man and of the earth would have had to be revised in a manner consistent with the claims of this new concept. Needs Evolution He remarked that a theory of such vital significance needed accurate evaluation as to its validity, for oth- erwise, the possibility existed that inexperienced and impressionistic scientists, attracted by the startling novelty and romanticism of the idea, would 'absorb the theory as axiomatic. As a result, he stated, at least a whole generation of development in the fields of geology, ethnology, and philology would necessarily be col- ored by the fallacies arisingyfrom this theory, before its bad effects could be lived down. Professor Willey, having recognized this danger, worked on an analysis of every sample of relationship upon which the theory rested. The au- thentic relationships which remained were few enough to be regarded as coincidences. He pointed out a large number of cases in which relation- ships had been formed because of an obvious ignorance of the phonetic value of certain letter combinations in Nahuatl. Comments On Theory Professor Willey has this to say for the theory: "We canont say what may have come to America from the West before the dawn of history; some obliging geologist is usually ready to supply continental bridges and conveniently appearing islands for the assistance of Atlantis theor- ists and Easter Island ethnologists. Evidently, however, philologists have been content to dismiss the book on account of the inherent improbabili- ty of its thesis, and that no one has examined from the Mexican angle is probably due to the fact that Mr. Denison (the sponsor of the theory) himself states, 'Any comparative phil- ologist may decide in an hour's time as to the value of the work and it is not necessary to understand Mexi- can.' Coupon Method Of Tax Payment Is Held Illegal LANSING, Oct. 24.- (P) -An opin- ion from the attorney general's office blocked today a proposal that Mich- igan shoppers pay their 3 per centj sales tax with coupons. Assistant Attorney General Arthur T. Iverson, in an opinion written at the request of the state board of tax administration, declared "it would not be within the province of your board to initiate the use of tok- ens, stamps, or other prepaid re- ceipts." Iverson held that the sales tax is a retailer's privilege tax, and that to sell coupons in advance to shoppers would be to impose the tax on the customer. In states where tokens are used to pay the tax, he pointed out, the state laws expressly provide for the custom. Another legal question arose to puzzle the board today. Automobile dealers met with board members to argue that a portion of the sales tax collected on cars sold and then re- possessed by finance companies should be rebated by the state. They also contended that the sales tax should not be collected on cars re- sold. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance Ile per reading line. (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Telephionerate -15c perreading line for two or more insertions. 10', discount if paid within ten days Minimum three lines per insertion. from the date of last insertion. By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one month...................S.c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months........8c 2 lines daily, college year.......7c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 nmonths.........8c 100 lines used as desired.........9c 300 lines used as desired.........8c 1,000 lines used as desired........7c 2,000 lines used as desired....... Se The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading lines per inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add Sc persline to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 106 per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 7% point type. LOST AND FOUND LOST: Black leather notebook con- taining money and credit notes. Very valuable to owner. Reward. John Park, 7217. LOST: Black zipper leather notebook at Daily Business office. Contain- ing complete notes of owner, very valuable. Liberal reward. Willis Tomlinson. 426 N. Ingalls. LOST: Black wallet containing $11 at physics lecture room 10 o'clock, Oct. 24. Money needed very much. Phone 4809. 616 South Division. 74 Italian Native Troops March Toward Aduwa PROFESSIONAL SERVICES -Associated Press Photo. Native troops, commanded by General Pirzio Birole, are shown as they drove toward Aduwa, Ethiopia, just before the town was captured by the Italian army. Prof. Fries Edits Dictionary Describing E glish Language By ROBERT WEEKS On the fifth floor of Angell Hall, in hushed rooms permeated with an erduite atmosphere a scholarly period dictionary is being edited. It is the Early Modern English Dictionary and is an attempt to describe the English language used from 1475 to 1700. Within this time are the literary products of Shakespeare, Jonson, Spenser, and Milton. The English Reformation, which separated the English church from that of Rome and brought about the English Bible, was consummated in these two cen- turies. Interest in the Latin and Greek classics also quickened the in- tellectual pulse of England at this time as did the new cosmic concep- tions revealed by the Copernican Sys- tem. This period also includes the voyages of discovery and their multi- farious revelations. Fries Is Editor Prof. Charles C. Fries of the Eng- lish department, who is the editor of the Dictionary, said regarding the years between 1475 and 1700, "On the whole, the period covered by the Early Modern English Dictionary was one in which the English thought and imagination were assimilating many elements of an entirely new culture and by no other means can this as- similating be so well traced as by a thorough description of the new words and meanings that accounted for the remarkable expansion of the English vocabulary of that time." This ex- pansion resulted in an increase in the size of the English vocabulary of 300 per cent within these 200 years, he stated. At the present time the words are being studied and edited, a task that requires the constant work of a staff of fourteen besides the assistance pro- vided by seventeen NYA workers. This material is contained on slips, each of which gives a citation telling the manner and occasion on which the word was emploved. Begun In 1858 The contributions for the Early Modern English Dictionary have come from various sources. First of all, there was the material inherited from the Oxford Dictionary and generous- ly contributed by Oxford University and the Oxford University Press. This dictionary was begun in 1858 and was not completed until 1928, during which time citations obtained by readers from books and pamphlets published during the 16th and 17th centuries, amounted to nearly two .and one half million in number. There was next the collection of slips called the "Supplement" of the Oxford Dictionary. These citations were those that reached the editors of the Oxford Dictionary after the part of the Dictionary containing the words with which they were concerned had been released. This consists of 50,000 slips. Another collection of citations was received which had been part of an intended historical dictionary of agri- culture terms to supplement the Ox- ford Dictionary in this particular field. This collection amounts in all to 40,000 slips. A reading program was also insti- Classified Dfrectory tuted which was based on a biblio- graphical survey of the materials pre- served in print produced from 1475 to 1700. Manuscrips were also used whenthey seemed towoffer sources for additional evidence. Volunteer readers (nearly 450 in all and repre- senting more than 200 separate col- leges and universities in this coun- try) have done most of this reading but members of the staff have also covered considerable material besides checking for accuracy, evaluating, and sometimes supplementing the work of the volunteer readers. From Many Sources From these various sources, there are in the collections of the Early Modern English Dictionary more than four and a half million slips contain- ing citations of the 100,000 words that make up the vocabulary of early mod- ern English. These slips are filed in vaults in a fire proof room on the fifth floor of Angell Hall. Professor Fries went to England this summer in order to arrange for the printing of the first section at the Oxford University Press. The Dic- tionary, which was begun in 1929 and is being supported by the Rocke- feller Foundation, will be sent to Eng- land for printing section by section and, according to Professor Fries, the first volume will be completely in press within the next year. In this fashion the work will be con- tinued until all the volumes have been printed, resulting in the only Early Modern English dictionary ever writ- ten on a large scale. TO HOLD SERVICES Funeral services will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow in St. Thomas Cath- olic Church for Charles Carroll, vet- eran Ann Arbor fireman, who died suddenly at the fire station Wednes- day morning. LAUNDRY STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Prices reasonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. 6x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. lx NOTICES TEACHER of popular and classical piano music. Helen Louise Barnes. Call 8469. 2x POSITIONS WANTED CHEF WANTS job in fraternity house, can furnish best local refer- ences. Box 52. FOR RENT REASONABLY priced two room fur- nished apartment. Corner East University and Hill. State price. Box 101 Michigan Daily. 13 FOR RENT: Suite, east, south and west exposure. Private bath and shower. Accommodates three. Extra rooni available if group of four. Steam heat. Dial 8544. 422 East Washington. 71 RAGGEDY ANN BEAUTY SHOP. Moved across the street to 1114 South University. Soft water. shampoo and finger wave, 50c. Special on all permanents. Strictly sanitary. 8x VOICE BUILDING and singing. Pri- vate and class lessons for juniors and advance students. Grace John- son Konold, 1908 Austin. Phone 4855. Formerly voice instructor in School of Music. 5x MAC'S TAXI - 4289. Try our effi- cient service. All new cabs. 3x Watches.... THE TIME SHOP 1121 S. University Ave. IF UNIVERSITY GRILL and tea room Noon Luncheon 25c Evening Special Chicken and Steak Dinner 55c Soups Pies Sandwiches A la Carte. Service Neva Vernilyea 615 EAST WILLIAM 11 IL Are Now Much Lower in Cot- cheap photographs as costly as ever - Phone 4434 for an appointment Tonight ... I BSEN'S Last Play, Recreated by BORGNY HAMMER "When Wve Dead Awaken"" is $1.00 75c 50c li- _ Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Schaeberle Music House 203 East Liberty Phone 6011 WE CARRY A COMPLETE SCHIRMER LIBRARY See us about rental pianos. All Musical Instruments repaired. DROP IN AND BROWSE AROUND _,I Last Times Today 'B roadway Melody of 1936' MAJESTIC Starts Tomorrow 4 B Days READ THE DAILY'S CLASSIFIED SECTION it DOLORES DEL RIO EVERE TT MALRSHALL U Y K I B B E E AL.LEN JENKINS S H A.W & L EE MICHIGAN t L16 It Have you ever wanted something really tasty, something cooked just right by a shop which specializes in just a few special foods? If so- DROP IN AT THE PILGR IM SHOP and have some of the most delicious waffles, doughnuts, and DAILY 1:30 - 11 P.M. W H IT NEY 15c to 6 -25c After 6 Starting Today FIRST A. A. SHOWING "STREAM LI NE EXPRESS" with VICTOR .JORY EVELYN VENABLE and Ddfl n1VD7&N - EXTRA FEATURE EDWARD TREVOR I EMARGARET HAMILTON III I