World's Fair Visitors See Byrd's South Pole Ship Whipping Post To Curb Crime NEW YORK, Aug- 14.-(P)-Uni- veisal finger-printing, use of the whipping post, exile, tight parole laws and' a kind of American Scot- land Yard were urged on a Senate sub-committee today as methods to curb racketeering. The- committee, headed by Senator Royal S. Copeland, held its first re- gional, open hearing in the Bar Asso- ciation Building with more than 200 interested spectators. Among the first speakers were Senator Copeland, Edward P. Mulrooney, former police commissioner of New York, Joseph Keenan, special assistant attorney general, and James Bolan, present police commissioner of New York. Keenan urged a Federal bureau to colordinate its efforts; Mulrooney advocated universal finger-printing, "20 lashes with 20 years," and Fed- eral control of fire-arms. The latter also thought parole laws should be tig'htened and agreed exile of racke- teers to an island prison "would help." Commissioner Bolan presented a dispassionate discussion of crime sta- tistics, laying emphasis on kidnaping. "The police are not fearful that they cannot cope with the situation," he said. "They only ask the public to assist them." 'Too Much Red Tape' Bolan told the committee there was "too much red tape" to getting a witness from one state to another. He believed a Federal co-ordinating bureau would be valuable in detecting crime, but he warned that too much outside assistance would be resented by local authorities. Prof. Rayniond A. Moley, recently designated by President Roosevelt to study. racketeering, sat with Mul- rooney to listen to the proceedings. Boan said it was a common thing to find paroled criminals returning to the police line up, but he was not in general opposed to the parole sys- tem. He. said an aroused public opin- ion would have a salutary psycho- .logical effect upon the courts. "Then you think an aroused, ag- gressive public opinion would help a great dea' asked Copeland. "Yes," he replied. Favors Regulation He favored regulation of the sale of fire arms, but did not believe that the law-abiding citizens should be denied the right to carry a gun. Copeland asked him about the sub- machine gun, especially if it was use- ful to the police. Bolan said it was useful, but added that the police could do without it if it were taken away from others. "I am informed,"' Copeland said, "that there is no military use for the submachine gun." Proposes Crime Bureau Former Police Commissioner Gro- ver A. Whalen followed Bolan with several specific recommendations, among them a central crime bureau, and amendment of the Sherman anti-trust laws to curb racketeers He also urged that the state labor department be called,upon to investi- gate every application for a charter. He urged an amendment of the Federal Constitution to give the Gov- ernment concurrent jurisdiction with the states in crime, especially for homiides, felonies and firearms. Copel'and told him that a bar asso- ciation committee was now drafting such an amendment. " His"'next recommendation was that a duplicate copy of all complaints be forwarded to the Bureau of Investi- gation of the Department. of Justice. "W'ould it be advantageous," asked Copeland, "to incorporate in the NRA codes a provision against the paying of tribute tor racketeers?"' "That's an excellent idea," Whalen replied. Lewis E. Lawes, warden of Sing Sing Prison, today told the commit- tee that "There can be no catching up with crime until state lines are virtually abolished." "This is war," Lawes said. "If we don't have some sort of martial law to stop crime we'll have lynch law; and then we will have to have mar- tial law. We know who the racke- teers are." By KARL SEIFFERT A newly-built auxiliary barque groaned on the bilge logs as she slipped from the ways in Arendahl, Norway, one day in 1885, to spend nearly half a century in obscurity be- fore she leaped to a place among the most illustrious ships of all time. Almost without exception the fa- mous vessels of history have gained renown as warriors in the smoke and fire of naval battle, but this sea- worthy old Norwegian barque, unlike so many of her sister-ships of fame and fable, was destined, in her forty- third year, to find glory and distinc- tion on a mission of purest peace. It was in 1928, under the name "City of New York," with Admiral Richard E. Byrd in command' and Larry Gould, Michigan graduate and professor in the geology department here this summer, as second-in-com- mand, that the old ship went down to the Antarctic, to return the fol- lowing season with fame for herself and new prominence for her scientist commanders. Today the 40-foot-thick sheets of Antarctic ice no longer grind against her wooden sides, for the City of New York, moored to a wharf, in a lagoon at A Century of Progress, the Chicago World's Fair, has become a museum of polar exploration, and throngs of curiosity seekers at the exposition daily swarm her decks and cabins. The first major expeditionary ship ever to enter the Great Lakes, the City of New York sailed into Chi- cago only under canvas, for her en- gines had been removed to make it possible for her to enter the shallow lagoon. Aboard her now are men who were members of the crew of 72 who went with Byrd to the Ross ice bar- rier, , where he established Little America and flew across the Pole. Visitors hear from those who par- New HolyWar On Tem selves JONESBORO, Ark., Aug. 14.--UP)-- The law took over the Jonesboro Baptist Tabernacle today in the in- terest 'of harmony. Sunday two opposing factions held services in the church at the same time. They sang different hymns simultaneously. 'Then some of the congregation fell to fighting. When police took charge, they confiscated three shotguns, loaded with buck- shot, which they said they found near the choir platform. Doctrinal differences between fol- lowers of the Rev. Dale Crowley, pastor, and the Rev. Joe Jeffers, evangelist, had been brewing.- De- spite a temporary injunction obtain- ed by the Rev. Mr. Crowley, the Rev. Mr. Jeffers decided that one of his followers would preach yesterday. Two thousand people came to the service. The factions offered differ- ent prayers at the same time. Then one sang "I'm Bound For The Prom- ised Land," while another intoned "Will There Be Any Stars in My Crown?" This confused the piano player, who played a third hymn. Officers took charge, arresting five with assault with deadly weap- ons, mainly guns. A guard was placed on thee tabernacle till a court settles the dispute. THE CITY OF NEW YORK ticipated in them stories of adven- wlen you ask him about Poral ex- ture and hardship in the eternal cold ploration he'looks past you reminis- of the bottom end of the world, and cently and murmurs speculatively on see an elaborate collection of sledges, ice-anchors, sleeping bags, and" nu- vague plans for future geological ex- merous other objects of expedition- peditions. ary paraphernalia, as well as an en- It was Gould who became a geolo- tire library of photographs taken on gist as a result of a friendship with the trip. Prof. William H. Hobbs, head of the Among those who manned the reology department, that dates back City of New York on her voyage of eolohy dartment, t d k ck science and who now are aboard her to the days when Gould took care as guides and lecturers are Capt. of the Hobbs' furnace, later to teach Alan Innes-Taylor, relief air pilot; in the geology department himself, Charles Kessler, dog driver; Arthur and take part in two University Berlin, fireman; and George Tenant, Greenland expeditions, go south with cook. Byrd in '28, return to the United The City of New York, according States and become head of the geol- to authorities; was used on the Polar ogy department at Crelton College, voyage because the construction of and finally come back for the sum- vier hull is such that she is far better mer to Ann Arbor and the University able to withstand the pressure of after five years' absence. Antarctic ice than is the most pow- erfully built steel ship afloat. Where almost endless fields of ice many ;athoms thick would 'crush other ; Ships, it merely forces the City of LTew York up out of the water, in- stead of jamming her hull in its ir- resistible grip and grinding it to bits. Polar Mailbox Shown Among the exhibits now open to public view is an Antarctic mailbox with letters posted in 1928 and de- livered nearly two years later, mute testimony to the months of isolation which the valorous 72 spent with no communication other than by radio with the outside world. Also on exhibition are mounted specimens of the animal habitants of the farthest southland. There are seals weighing 600 to. 800 pounds, in- cluding the Weddell seal and the crabeater seal, two polar mammals whose personal characteristics and temperaments vary to extremes. The Weddell is a mild-tempered beast which explorers and the few others who frequent his habitat use for food for dogs and men; the crabeater is a menacing brute whose prey in- cludes even the killer whale. Four penguins, including two "em- perors" and two "adelies," also are being shown on the City of New York. They are known to explorers as among the friendliest of all Polar animals. Give Lecture Tours The men now aboard the old barque conduct periodical lecture tours of the vessel and its exhibits daily, and tell visitors-of the land of boundless ice as they point out Little America on the relief map of the Antarctic regions, and indicate the bay of Wales, where the party dis- embarked at Christmas, 1928, and built a camp eight miles inland on ice 42 feet thick. But Larry Gould, Admiral Byrd's right hand on the 1928 trip, is not there. He is here in Ann Arbor, and TYPEWRITERS - PORTABLE New, Seconsd-and Rebuilt, sni th-Corona, Noiseless, Unierwood, Royal, Renington. 314 S. State St., Ann Arbor. TtLIP OPEN a pack of YESTERDAY'S WEATHER (By University Observatory)w Temperature at 7 a. m., 55. 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