THURSDAY, AUG. 20, 1936 .'I'I-IE, MICHIGAN DAILY TAGE THREE THE MICHIGAN DATTN ~PAGE ThREE I I] NEWS Of The DAY (From The Associated Press) State To Try New Prison Plan Woman Who Lives In Glass Body Is DAILY OFFICI E iT Publication in the Bulletin is con Easily Seen i ru University Copy received at the offi Angell Hall until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on NEW YORK, Aug. 19.-(IP)-The first "transparent woman" ever made, VOL. XLV. No. 44 a figure that looks like a woman WEDNESDAY, AUG. 19, 1936 sculptured of glass, with all her vital organs visible, was placed on exhibi- Notices tion today at the Museum of Science and Industry here. The Intramural Sports Bldg. will The figure is similar to that of the be closed to activities Friday, Aug. 21, transparent male exhibited at the at 6 p.m. Lockers must be renewed Chicago Century of Progress. The or vacated on or before that date. woman was made at a cost of $20,- A. A. James. 000 at the Hygiene Museum of Dres- den. The same museum made the Blue prints and directions for Sep- transparent World's Fair man, which teniber registration for College of has since been duplicated three times. Literature, Science, and the Arts; The first woman was ordered and College of Architecture; School of paid for by S. H. Camp, Jackson, Education; School of Forestry and Mich., maker of medical appliances. Conservation; and School of Music Camp said today that after the figure will be mailed the first week in Sep- has been exhibited here "she" will tember. These reports will not reach be shown to the American College of you unless the Registrar's Office, Surgeons at Philadelphia in Octob- Room 4, University Hall, has your er, then probably go to Chicago for correct address for that time. Please museum exhibition and afterward report any change of address at once. travel around to state and other medical meetings. Visiting students and teachers en- This woman is not complete. She rolled in L. S. and A.; Arch.; Educ. ; lacks muscles.rHer body is a new Forestry; Music; Your credits for glass-like material, inside of which this Summer Session will be sent are shown all her bones, her vital wherever you direct immediately af- organs including brain and- her ar- ter the grades are received if you will teries and larger veins. Camp said fill in the proper request in Room 4, he expects to have a medical lec- University Hall. between now and IAL BULLETIN structive notice to all members of the ce of the Summer Session, Room 1214 Saturday. Knox Repeats IONIA, Aug. 19.-(]P)-Mich- igan's state prison commission decided today to try out Dr. Da- vid A. Phillips' plan for classifi- cation and segregation of in- mates at the Southern Michigan prison for a six months' period. At the end of that time, Paul Chase of Hillsdale, commission chairman said, the prison board plans to submit results of the trial to the State Legislature. The commission heard the plan, developed by Dr. Phillips, state psychiatrist recently ap- pointed, in some detail. It calls for mental and physical exam- ination in order to classify in- dividuals as they enter prison. Results of the tests would deter- mine whether the prisoners would be placed in the moron class, insane, those who may re- cover from criminal instincts, or other classifications. Inmates of moron classifica- tion will be placed in 'a separate department as will those partly insane. The plan proposes to give the state a record of each case and to malle a place for those who can be corrected. It embraces an observation building for new inmates, and employment of a psychiatristaat each of the state's three penal institutions. It will be worked out in the Southern Michigan Prison in cooperation with War- den Harry H. Jackson. Leslie Kefgen of Bay City, sec- retary of the prison board, de- scribed the plan as not yet fully completed, but said a full re- port may be made at the comn- mission's next meeting at Jack- son. The commission approved the appointment of Leon Larson of Ironwood as educational director. He was recommended by Warden Walter F. Gries. Following their meeting, the commission members were guests of the Ionia free fair. Congress May Replenish Relief Funds HYDE PARK, Aug. 19.-GP)- A Congressional appropriation to replenish relief funds, which may be drained of $5,000,000 monthly to give WPA jobs to drought suf- ferers, was forecast today by Harry L. Hopkins, WPA admin- istrator, after a conference with President Roosevelt. Hopkins told reporters the $5,- 000,000 monthly would be need- ed to provide job relief ulti- mately for 120,000 to 150,000 persons in the drought regions. "The money," he said, "is cor-' ing out of the new relief act and I think the drought will have to be adjusted by congressional ap- propriation in the long run." Already, Hopkins asserted, WPA has put 90,000 individuals to work on farm-to-market roads, dams and similar projects. They are being paid an average of $40 a month, he added. The 90,000, the WPA chieftian, said are in addition to persons being helped with grants and feed ad seed loans by the re- settlement administration. Secretary " Morgenthau and acting Director Daniel W. Bell of the budget bureau, Hopkins said, attended the drought parley at the summer white house to talk over the question of financing drought relief. W. Frank Persons, director of the Federal Employment Service, and Walter Burr, assistant di- rector, also sat at the conference table. Preparing for his trip to the drought states starting Tuesday night from Washington, Mr. Roosevelt earlier in the day looked into banking conditions in the dust bowl area with the as- sistance of Leo P. Crowley, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Man Killed In Truck Crash FLINT, Aug. 19.--(P)-An au- tomobile-truck collision in the rain killed Edward J. Van Worm- er, 79, retired Greenville business man, and injured his wife and once with Miss Davis by telephoning 4121, Extension 360 during the day, or 7456 in the evening, or by writing to the School. Sarita Davis, Librarian. Seniors: College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: College of Archi- tecture; School of Education; School of Forestry and Conservation; School of Music, who expect to receive de- grees at the close of the Summer Session should pay the diploma fee not later than Aug. 21. Blanks for payment of the fee may be secured in Room 4, University Hall. Students from other colleges, en- rolled in the Summer Session, who wish to transfer to the College of Lit- erature, Science and the Arts for the year 1936-37, should call at Room 1210 Angell Hall for application blanks for regular admission. Special Colloquium in Applied Me- chanics: The Summer School stu- dents in Engineering Mechanics who have been working on Photo-Elas- ticity will present the results of their work on Thursday, August 20, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 445 West Engineering Building. The reports will be illus- trated by slides. All interested are cordially invited to attend. > i l k turer accompany the figure. The various vital organs can be illuminated one after the other by lights concealed inside the statuette. They are imitations of natural color. It was announced that 20 years of laboratory research went into the correct placing of the organs in this artificial mannikin or womannikin. At today's opening exhibition talks on the uses of such a figure to medi- cine, anatomists and public health workers were made by Dean De Witt Lewis, surgeon in chief, Johns Hop- kins Hospital, and Roy Chapman an- drews, director of the American Mu- seum of Natural History. Chicago Police Launch Drive Agairnst Crime Loiterers Are Taken Into Custody; Finger Prints Of ManyRecorded CHICAGO, Aug. 19.-()-Bent up- on preventing the possibility of furth- er crimes of violence such as the hotel killing Saturday of Mrs. Mary Louis Trammell, 24, former Knox- ville, Tenn., stenographer, the Chi- cago police today began rounding up all loiterers found in parks in the loop. More than 100 men, 50 of them Negroes, were taken into custody. Many were finger-printed. Meanwhile police investigators said they hoped by intensive ques- tion of Rufo Swain, 27 year old scar- faced athletic Negro, to determine whether he commtted at least one other of Chicago's recent hotel kill- ings-that of Mrs. Florence Thomp- son Castle. Mrs. Castle, 24, a night club beauty, was slain in much the same man- ner as Mrs. Trammell, to whose kill- ing Captain Daniel Gilbert of the state's attorney's police said the burly Negro confessed. Both Mrs. Castle andgMrs. Trammell were beaten f a- tally. Because of the similarity of the two crimes and because Mrs. Castle's son, James, 7, told police a "big black man" killed his mother the night of June 29, the investigators planned to compare Swain's handwriting with the cryptic words-"Black Legion Game"-written with lipstick on the mirror of the bureau of Mrs. Castle's room. The detectives also sought to ascer- tain Swain's connection, if any, with the hotel killing of Mrs. Lillian Guild, 59, beaten to death May 29 in the Y. W. C. A. hotel. Miners Battle For Lives Of Comrades (Continued from Page 1) 26, and George T. Dameron, 27, a mule driver. Harry Allen, 56, who came out of the mine about 45 minutes before the fire broke out said, "I don't think there is a chance for them to be rescued alive now." "I noticed the air had been bad for about an hour before I left the mine and I told Sexton I was sure the fan had stopped." No word or signal came from the entombed men. Eben Jones, deputy state mine in- spector, said he believed the fire started from a motor car engine used to operate the main ventilating fan. I TYPEWRITING U Aug. 20. - - l - - -- - - --------------- ---- His Attack On New Deal Laws Tells Merchants 'Business Of Country Can't Be Run From Washington' (Continued from Page 1) He said it should meet the stand- ards of "simplicity, economy, and certainty," and continued: "For antime, the American people were hypnotizedi oy the -,aea thlat the government could do everything, from solving the problem of poverty to growing trees in a desert. But they did not stay hypnotized. They have decided that a government which makes even little pigs flee for their lives is a peculiar kind." The Republican Vice-Presidential candidate told the merchants their service as distributors was "not clear- ly understood everywhere," saying "many * * * see the merchant as a mere. unproductive middleman." He called this "economic antagonism," and added: "Not so long ago a high govern- ment official urged a political alli- ance between workers and farmers to take over the government. Such a proposal is monstrous. The foment- ing of class hatred * * * makes us a nation of armed camps, snarling and fighting to obtain special advantages from government." He criticized also the President's' re-employment agreement of 1933 saying that had it been enforced it "almost certainly would have closed up half the small shops, small bus- inesses and small industries." Only the big fellows could have lived under it," he said. In demanding economy, Knox as- serted that "half of the people will be supporting the other half" if costs of national and local govern- ment follow the rising scale of the last six years. He said the Roose- velt administration's social security legislation would require the federal government "to go into the intimate private lives" of some 30,000,000 cit- izens. Inurging "certainty," he declared that "philosophy of 'try-anything- once' is not sound even for a tin- horn gambler," adding: "For a government of a great na- tion it is intolerable." STARS OVER ONTARIO CALLANDER, Ont., Aug. 19.-(iP)- The Dionne quintuplets, movie ac- tresses again, donned blue bathing sults and sun bonnets to match to- day, as "shooting" started on "Re- union," their second full-length film. They were filmed about their house and in their bathing pool. The LENS] By ROBERT L. GACH In a recent motion picture a sign is shown over a studio entrance that reads "Miracle Pictures, Inc. If it's a good picture it's a Miracle." There is however, a method of producing pictures that are really miracles. A camera with double extension bel- lows or a set of supplementary lenses is needed as the whole process is simply the photographing of small objects at close range. This form of photography is known as Table Top Photography. On any table top you can, with a little ingenuity, create any impos- sible picture and then, photograph it. A tennis ball properly illuminated will make a swell moon, and the picture may even be better than one through a telescope. Model cars can produce wrecks more realistic thant the real thing. The baby's playbox should produce a wealth of subjects for table top work. A visit to the dime store always provides you with sets that would rival those used in Hollywood. (Maybe). Snow-covered mountains can be made from table salt, toy soldiers and accessories can produce scenes from the World War. And there are a million other things like this that I could think of, but that is your problem. Use the old bean and fig- ure out just what you can do: it is a peach of a way to spend a rainy afternoon, and in view of the fact that Mazda light can be placed where you want it, it is to be preferred for this work. So tlis should be classed as a branch of night photography. F i al Meeting Of German Table Held Members of the German Table said "Auf Wiedersehn" until next sum- mer at a banquet given Tuesday eve- ning, Aug. 18, in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Prof. and Mrs. H. W. Nordmeyer, Prof. and Mrs. Fred B. Wahr, and Prof. J. A. C. Hildner numbered among the 25 guests. During the course of the banquet, which brought to a close the lun- cheon-and dinner - meetings at which students conversed in Ger- man, Professor Hildner was present- ed with a charcoal drawing of him- self and a baton with which to lead German songs. Also presented with a gift were Miss G. T. Ochs and Mr. M. F. Reck. Beside singing German songs, the German Table members were also entertained by magician tricks per- formed by Mr. Bierbrich, several se- lections from a quartet, and a skit directed by Miss Ochs. Arthur H. Grossman acted as toastmaster. Farley Lashes At 'Scare' Drive Attacks GOP Campaign As Effort To 'Break Down Faith OfPeople' (Continued from Page 1) people do not care to repeat that experience." Pointing to the recovery of the of the automobile industry, Farley said, "I do not suppose there is any American city that has leaped from the depth of depression to a comfortable level of prosperity more definitely and to a greater extent than Detroit. "However, what is true of that great Michigan city is equally true of every industrial community be- tween the oceans. For that reason the story I am now telling is just as applicable to Bridgeport, Conn., for example, or Pittsburgh, or South Bend, or Chicago or any other great manufacturing and industrial me- tropolis, as it is to Detroit. "Each one of the great manu- facturing centers was flat on its back a little over three years ago and each one of them is today alert, alive and full of the thrill that goes with renewed activity and the happy pros- pect of still greater prosperity. "Governor Landon's supporters," he charged, "are attempting to alarm the consuming public and particu- larly the housekeepers with a wild story regarding the prices of food, etc. "Among the other items I have seen recently in some of the Repub- lican propaganda bulletins is that a pound of lamb chops, priced at' 35 cents, had 17 cent taxes, making the total selling price 52 cents a pound. "These cooked-up price lists are being put out by the Republican headquarters in Chicago, presumably in cooperation with the Chicago meat packers. They were formulated by the Republican brain trust, there, under the direction of a high-pow- ered advertising salesman." "There is no disclosure of how the 17 cents. of taxes is calculated. The only federal taxes that could apply are the income taxes." "In the case of the butcher this would give us the increase in the cost of the lamb chop in 1936 over what it was in 1932 or 1933, a frac- tion of a cent so small that the statisticians have not been able to arrive as yet at the minute figure. "Presumably, in order to get 17 cents of taxes everything from the butcher's license fee to the tag on the family dog must have been count- ed in. "With such items, of course, the administration at Washington has no more to do than it has with the velocity of the wind in Chicago." ' Lecture Course, 1936-1937: The Uni- versity of Michigan Oratorical As- sociation' has the pleasure to an- nounce its program for the next school year: Oct. 29, Cornelia Otis Skinner, Or- iginal Dramatic Sketches. Nov. 12, FatherkBernard J. Hub- bard ("The Glacier Priest")-Motion picture lecture. Nov. 24, Bertrand Russell speak- ing on, "Education and Freedom." Dec. 9, H. V. Kaltenborn speaking on "Kaltenborn Edits the Nevs." Jan. 14, Bruce Bliven speaking on "The Press-Truth, News or Prop- aganda?" Jan. 21, Edward Tomlinson speak- ing on "Haitian Adventure" with col- or motion pictures. Feb. 25, Capt. John Craig speak- ing on "Diving Among Sea Killers" with motion pictures. March 16, The Martin Johnsons speaking on "Wild Animals of Bor- neo" with motion pictures. For further information address The Oratorical Association, 3211 An- gell Hall, Ann Arbor. Candidates for the Teacher's Certi- ficate: Students who expect to re- ceive a teacher's certificate at the close of the Summer Session must pay the fee by Aug. 21, Blanks for this purpose may be secured in the office of the Recorder of the School of Ed- ucation, 1437 U.E.S. Notice to Householders: Rooms are being sought for teachers attending the Training Conference for Nursery School Teachers sponsored by the Michigan division of the Works Pro- gress Administration which will be held at the University Elementary School from Sept. 7 to 18. House- holders who have rooms available for this period are urged to list them at Major Leagues AMERICAN LEAGUE New York......... Cleveland......... Detroit ........... Chicago ............ Washington ........ Boston ............. St. Louis.......... Philadelphia....... YESTERDAY'S W. L. .75 40 .64 53 .63 54 .61 56 .59 57 .59 59 .44 72 .41 74 3GAME S B .6 .5 .5 .5 .5 .5 .3 .3 St. Louis 13, Detroit 8. New York 7, Washington 4. Philadelphia 5-7, Boston 4-2 (f game 13 innings). Cleveland-Chicago (postponed account of rain). TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at St. Louis. Boston at New York. aWshingtoneat Philadelphia. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. New York..........69 46 E St. Louis...........69 44 C Chicago .............66 48 Pittsburgh ..........59 56 Cincinnati ..........55 58 . Bostno ..............52 61 . Brooklyn...........45 69 . Philadelphia ........41 72 . YESTERDAY'S GAMES New York 3, Brooklyn 2. Pittsburgh 5, Chicago 4. Boston 9, Philadelphia 1. Cincinnati-St. Louis (not sch uled). TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Pittsburgh. St. Louis at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at Boston. Brooklyn at New York. fi P ( 5' .5 4 .4 3 .3 Le i let. 652 547 3 8 52 1 09 00 379 357 rst on et. 00 311 579 13 87 60 95 363 LIH MAN PROGRfCStwuk&i7'ACS J r . - -=- " i11 1 iaf . /- I CLEA IAN NA- Thursday and Friday OF ALL OUR REMAINING ANN ARBOR AND JACKSON STOCK OF SUMMER N1 DRESSES, CORTS r -i THOMAS A. EDISON THE ELECTRICAL WIZARD, Thom- as A. Edison, earned his livelihood in his youth at the key of a tele- graph. Through his genius was developed multiple telegraphy per- mitting speedier transmission of messages. and ACCESSORIES C4 Too Many Garments To Enumerate" At Prices You Cannot Afford To Ignore" THE GARMENTS that will be presented to.our customers in this sale are as lovely as any we ever have offered in any bargain event. Being highly desired merchandise we urge you to arrange for an early visit to Ann Arbor's Fashion Center, IIi IN THE INTERVENING YEARS tele- graphy has become so specialized that The Associated Press news of world events is read by you almost simultaneously with their occurrence. To keep abreast of world events read I s' I