THE WEATHER RAIN. I P # ummurr AdW r ht", 19 a 41 t AW Iai1 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vol. X, No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS .. KOEHLER WILL SPEAK! ON PSYCHOLOBICAL SUBJECTTOIORR1O HAS HAD MUCH EXPERIENCE IN AFRICA WITH STUDY OF ANTHROPOID IS MOST EMINENTI SCHOLAR IN FIELD I Prof. Koehler to Speak on Mentality of Apes in Natural Science Auditorium Prof. Wolfgang Koehler of the University of Berlin will lecture on the subject, the Mentality of Apes, tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock in' Natural Science Auditorium. Pro- fessor Koehler, who is acting as guest instructor in the psychology department this week, is director of the psychological institute at the University of Berlin and the recog- nized leader of the new psycholo- gical movement: Gestalt psychoo- gy. In 1913 Prof. Koehler went to the Anthropoid station at Tenerife to make a six-months' study of the behavior of apes. While there the war broke out, and he was unable to return for' four years. As a result of his lengthy reseirch, he published his well-known volume, "The Mentality of Apes." Koehler Adopts Psychology At the time of these observations, Prof. Koehler was tending toward the ideas embodied in the Gestalt psychology, which has flourished to such an extent during the past ten years. Gestalt psychology,, which takes' its name from the German word for "shape," or "form," emphasizes the experience as a whole rather than being composed of parts or single elements: sensations, etc. Much of its terminology is new as it has renamed many of the psy- chological processes due to the fact that much of the old material has, been reinterpreted in the light of the dominant idea of unity of form. Lecture Based on Book Prof. Koehler's lecture wlil be il- lustrated and will be based upon the material found in his book which bears the same title as the lecture. Indhis experiments with apes he used champanzees, sub- mitting them to many varied kinds of simple mental tests. He also used small children, dogs, and hens in his experiments in order tot se- cure estimates. As he states in the preface of his book, one of his purposes was to "ascertain the de- gree of relationship between an- thropoid apes and man." Prof. Koehler has lectured in this country before, having acted in the capacity of guest instructor at Clark for half a year and likewise at Harvard for an equal length of time. Flyers Drink Whiskey On Arrival In Spai, (By Associated Press) STANDERT, Spain, July 10-Ro- ger Q. Williams and Captain Lewis Yancey after a tran-Atlantic air voyage of three thousand four hun- dred miles, from Old Orchard, Me., slept on their laurels here tonight before completing their flight to Rome tomorrow morning in their airplane, Pathfinder. Want of gasoline forced them down today as night was falling over the northern Spanish coast not far from the very spot where their French comrades of the Yel- low Bird had to land. They did not seem fatigued when the As- sociated Press correspondent found them drinking a glass of whiskey with Governor General Saliquet. Williams and Yancey said they ha drealized a few bours after leaving Old Orchard, they could not BERLIN'S BABY RE[SCUE WORK BEGUN BY BRITISH EXPERTS ON SUBMARINE 471 SALVAGE IS IMPROBABLE DUE TO GREAT DEPTH OF OCEAN FLOOR EXPECTED CASUALTIES RAISE ENGLISH PEARS Injured Seaman on Larger Gressel Dies; Similar Disasters Take Toll of 221 Since War (By Associated Press7 LONDON, July 9-Two British submarines collided today in St. George's channel off Fishguard, sending the H-47 to the bottom with a loss of all but two of her crew of 23, and damaging the L-12 and killing one member of her crew. Rescue work was immediately be- gun. The best diving apparatus available were dispatched from London and Portsmouth. These are to be used in the search for the H-47, one of the smaller type of British submarines used for training purposes, which went down in 270 feet of water.f The first Lord of the Admiralty, Alexander, had little hope that the crew of the H-47 could ever be NATIONAL SWEETHEART J-1 FLYERS SET RECORD, DETERMINED TO STAY IN AIR FOR_"MOUTH" DROP NOTE TERMING SELVES "COUPLE OF TOUGH HOMBRES" MENDELL, REINHART BEST RECENT MARK Commercial Aviators Re-fuel and, Remain in Air to Stay Till Motor Stops Picture of little Miss Mary Ellin Berlin, daughter of Irving Berlin, famed song writer. HANCOCK COENLN Former Grid Captain Will Act as Yearlings Line Coach During Coming Season FORMERLY AT OSHKOSHI (Special To The Daily) MADISON, Wis., July 10.-How- ard Hancock, athletic director at the State Teachers' College, Osh- kosh, has been secured by the Uni- versity of Wisconsin to serve on the football coaching staff for the 1929f season. Hancock will be line coach of the freshmen, working under Guy Sundt. Since assuming his post at Oshkosh Normal he has been a prominent figure in the state's college athletics. The new mentor learned his foot- ball under John Richards, formerj Badger coach. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 19171 and that season was captain of the eleven. He playeu tackle. At the j present time Hancock is enrolled' in the Wisconsin summer session, studying toward his master's de-3 gree in physical education. The signing of the former Car- dinal grid captain provides the new' yearling coach, Guy Sundt, with an able tutor for the linemen. Some time ago it was announced that Jack McAuliffe, former Beloit Col- lege athlete, would probably be obtained to work with the Frosh backs. Although McAuliffe has not been definitely signed, tlat technicality will be taken care of upon the return of Glenn Thistle- thwaite. League Will Honor Staff Of Library The faculty of the library science department will be the honor{ guests at the tea which the Michi- gan League will give from 3:30 to 5:30 this afternoon in the garden of the League building. Miss Mar- garet Mann, Miss Gertrude Maginn, Miss Edith Thomas, Miss Adelaide Evans, Mrs. Gertrude G. Drury, Prof. Carleton B. Joeckel, and Prof. F. L. D. Goodrich will be honored. Miss -Grace Richards, adviser to women, will also be present. Miss Dorothy Woodrow, '30, summer president of the League, and Miss 10 - _ 0--11 1- 4-!1 brought up alive. He announced in the House of Commerce that sal- vage of the submarine in such a depth of water was most improba- ble. The H-47 lay tonight three times as deep as the level to which the American Submarine S-4, sank in 1927. Battleship, dockyard, tug, and expert submarine officers hasten- ed to St. George's channel tonight from Portsmouth and Plymouth Naval Stations. Ocean salvage experts tonight thought it would be possible to locate the hull if the weather con- tinued fine, but the great depth at which it lay would make diving operations most difficult. BASEBALL SCORES American League Washington 2; Detroit 1. Boston-Cleveland-Rain. Chicago 6; Philadelphia 4. 1 ew York 8; St. Louis 7. Nationa4 League Boston 6; Chicago 2. St. Louis 7; Philadelphia 4. New York 8; Cincinnati 5. Pittsburgh 3; Brooklyn 1. Miss Julia Bradham Evidently gentlemen no longer prefer blondes, for the National Association of American Business clubs, meeting in Asheville, N. C., chose Miss Julia Bradham, brunette, of Rocky M6unt, N. C., as "sweet- heart" of the organization. U. S. Commences Issue Of New Species Today; Bills Smaller' (By Associated Press) CULVER CITY, Calif., July 10.- Two commercial aviators, L. W. Mendell and R. B. Reinhart set a new world's endurance flight record here today with their single-mo- tored biplane Angelo, and con- tinued to pilot the ship with no in- dication of a landing. At 2:29 P. M., Pacific coast _time, they bettered by an hour the record of 174 hours and 59 seconds, estab- lished last Saturday at Cleveland by Roy L. Mitchell and Byron K. Newcomb. Show Dissatisfaction Apparently not satisfied with beating the former record by a mere hour the plane was re-fuelled and continued in flight late today with the men in excellent spirits and the plane in apparently good condition. When they took-off, the aviators planned to fly at least 200 hours or until they were forced down. When the record was beaten the men flew low over the airport here and werelcheered wildly by the crowd below. Mendell stu~ck his head out and grinned through his whiskers and Reinhart came out on the fuselage and waved and shout- ed something inaudible. Try for Real Mark 'We're going to stay up as long i as the old motor hangs together, if it runs a month, we'll stay up a month. We both feel better than before we started. We're going to show you a regular he-man record. We're going to stick close to the field now in case something hap- h pens. We told you when we went up we'd stay until the motor fell apart. We're going to, because Many New Features Are Found in New Money of all Size This is the day Uncle Sam starts taking your money away from you. Of course he's going to do it grad- ually, but even at that, it will make a difference in the size of your bankroll. We're going to have new paper money, you know. The new bills are only two-thirds; as large as those you have in your; pocket now-2 9-16 inches by 6 1-4 inches. Maybe they will slip through the fingers easier. The one dollar bill bears a picture of Washington' on one side and a great big 1on the other. George was our first president, you will remember. If there were a three dollar bill, it would bear a likeness of Jefferson; but as there is none, we find him on the two. Lincoln is pictured on the five, Hamilton on the ten and Jackson on the twenty. The fifty has U. S. Grant on one side and the Capitol on the other. Frugal Ben Franklin will adorn the hundred. Perhaps you'll be interested to know what the bills of higher denomina- tions look like; we present herewith a complete table of the new money: On Face On Back $1-Washington ....Ornate "One" $2-Jefferson ...........Monticello $5-Lincoln....Lincoln Memorial $10-Hamilton ...........Treasury Wisconsin's Gridiron Stars Find Summer Work Outdoors $20-Jackson.........White House were a couple 0f tough nombres." $50-Grant ................Capitol $100-Franklin; Independence Hall PLAY IS FASTER $500-McKinley.............. ,, IN TENNIS MEETS .........Ornate 'Five Hundred $1,000-Cleveland....... .Ornate "One Thousand" Play in both the Intramural as $5,000-Madison.................well as the Ann Arbor City tennis .Ornate "Five Thousand" tournaments is moving along at a $10,000-Chase.................fasterpace than over the week end, .~Ornate "Ten Thousand" As yet no dates have been set for' h . a ...obvatee Thofsald the finals but it is expected that The face or obverse side of all if the play continues at the pres- r errency is printed in black, the ent rate of speed the finals will reverse in green. Silver certificates be played on the week end of the have blue seals and serial numbers; 21st. U. S. notes, red; gold certificates, The play of Bob Johnson, elon- yellow; Federal Reserve notes, gated Detroit net star and a mem- green; national bank notes, brown. ber of this year's freshman team, All bills of less than $500, except stamps him as a ranking favorite the one, carry pictures of buildings I for top honors in all four tour- on their backs. When you get a neys. $5,000 bill, don't carelessly jam it__ into your pocket until you have Lcturer From Oxford looked at the back. If it has a pic- ture of a building, you'll know it is Gives Talk On Science a counterfeit. Perhaps the new__ money will be a little confusing at "Astrophysics is of great benefit first, but there's one thing you can to science in the aid which it gives bank upon: even in its changed to physicists in the study of the form, it's just as hard to get as atom," declared Prof. E. A. Milne, ever. visiting lecturer from Oxford Uni- (Special To The Daily) MADISON, Wis., July 10-Many types of outdoor labor have been sought by Wisconsin's football players whose vacationing amounts to nothing more than three months of physical conditioning. The boys who will answer Coach Glenn This- tlethwaite's call September 15 have lost no time in securing jobs which keep them in the open air and de- veloping their physiques for the autumn grind. A great variety of tasks may be found in the list of summer occu- pations undertaken by the Badger gridiron athletes. Some of the men have remained in Madison to at- tend morning classes in the sum- mer school, and must content themselves with exercising in the afternoons, whether at work or at recreation. In checking on the behavior of his football players, Thistlethwaite found among their new roles sev- eral lifeguards, a motorcycle pa- trolman, waiters, farmers, miners, camp supervisors, as well as day laborers of all descriptions. Num- bered among those who are guard- ing the bathing beaches are: Russ Rebholz, promising young half- back, Howard Jensen, leading re- cruit end, and Sam Behr, Milt Gan- Capt. John Parks, guard, is sail- ing for Europe this month. The new Badger pilot will have charge of a group of young folks on the tour abroad. Hal Rebholz, veteran' fullback, is a traffic officer in one of Madison's suburbs, and Lewis Smith, end, is peddling ice in Mil- waukee. Harold Smith, tackle on the freshman eleven last season, is doing manual labor in Freeport, Ill., his home town. Larry Shomaker, center, is toil- ing in the mines at Herrin, Ill., while' "Moose" Krueger and Nello Pacetti, two new men, are using the pick and shovel with street la- bor gangs. Milo Lubratovich, giant Serbian tackle from Duluth, is driv- ing a tractor; George Casey, one of last fall's wings, is with a bridge construction concern, and Ebert Warren, another end, has gone up north as a councillor in a boys' camp. Al Leithan, a lineman who show- ed promise in spring drills, is la- boring in a grain elevator. Chetl Miller, reserve center in 1928, has been handling lumber in the yards since the close of school. Doug Simmons, a recruite pivot, is learn- ing the roofing game, while Henry Hardt, also an inexperienced line- a Y i r versity, in an illustrated lecture on MichiganSt"Star Colors and Their Interpreta- tion," delivered at 5 o'clock yester- Will View Heavens( day in Natural Science auditorium. The speaker showed how the Only a limited number will be weight and distance of stars are admitte dto the observatory on vis- estimated by the mathematical itors' nights, July 15, 16 and 17. physicist by calculating the char- Tickets may be obtained at any acter and density of the fogginess time in the office of the Summer between them and the earth. Meth- session by students upon presenta- ods of determining the constituents tion of their treasurer's receipts. of the stars were shown, and the Since the number has been limited use of the spectrascope in the study to 150 for each nght, all are urged of the composition of the sun was to get their tickets early. Last sum- discussed by Professor Milne. mer visitors' night proved so popu- I The lecture was especially inter- lar that quite a large number were disappointed. Each night there will be three sections limited to 50 persons each. The first group will meet from 8:15 to 9 o'clock, the second from 9:15 esting for the way in which several sciences were used to develop the one subject. Principles of mathe- matics and physics were applied to astronomical problems, and the results were astonishing. The close