The Weather Fair, slightly warmer; to- morrow fair and warmer. d ilE4r Sir igan t4Iai1 Official Publication Of The Summer Session Editorials Expansion In The Federal Government .. . A Slap ToTrouble-Makers,.. Down With The Dole-Grabber. VOL. XVI. No. 19 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1935 PRICE: FIVE CENTS Education Planning Discussed H. C. Hutchins Describes Way Out Of Unemployed Youth's Problems Rioting Tacoma Strikers Quelled By Tear Gas Bombs Hyde Wants Peace Talk MadePlain Anhilation Of Vague Talk 'One Of Pressing Needs Of Society' Vague Talk Gives Confused Thought 2 Officers Killed By Man Believed To Be Kidnaper *V. Famous 'G-Men' 2,000,000 Young Persons Involved Federal Government's Aid Helps, But Real Need Is For Local Planning By GUY M. WHIPPLE, JR. Far-sighted educational planning to alleviate the pressing problem of out-of-school and unemployed youth was recommended yesterday by H. C. Hutchins, research fellow in the U.S. Office of Education. Mr. Hutchins spoke at the afternoon education con- ference held in University High school. America's youth problem involves upwards of 2,000,000 youngpersons from 16 to 25 years of age, Mr. Hutchins stated. The circumstances o these youths range from that group which has just left or graduat- ed from high school and has a home and dependable environment to the .group whose adverse economic and home circumstances have forced them to sever common social ties and go "on the road" as transients, he said. "The problems of out-of-school, unemployed youth are probably per- manent rather than transitional in nature," Mr. Hutchins declared. Administration Helping "Technological advances and the consequent over supply of experienced workers having family responsibilities has caused the age of first employ- inent to be pushed ahead from 14 to 16 years of age to 18 or 21 years. The NRA codes have served merely . ,- oginiton of mportant scal rend." President Roosevelt's recently es- tablished National Youth Adminis- tration may have an "immeasurable" eect in the rehabilitation of to- day's generation of youth if the program can be administered in such a way as to realize its full potential- ities," Mr. Hutchins told the gather- ing. "The President's program provides for an'emergency program of educa- tion, apbrenticeship training and work relief which will help to meet the needs of those young people who are existing at the lowest social and economic levels," Mr. Hutchins said. But it is more likely that the ap- proach to the solution of America's youth problem lies in local commu- nity planning and action, Mr. Hut- chins warned. The Federal and state governments can help, he stated, but their assistance will be limited for the most part to plans and recom- mendations. Community Action Requirdrl "The community itself must bring about the cooperation and coordina- tion of all agencies, both public and private, which can contribute toward the creating of a better opportunity for young people in the near future," the speaker declared. "Then, too," he said, "because of the widening gap between the age of leaving school and the age of em- ployment the public schools must recognize a definite responsibility to- ward these young people and must make provision for a type of broadly social education. suitable to their needs. "The adjustment services, the training in vocations, and the worthy use of leisure, all of which seem to be necessary for alleviating the youth problem, constitute a need which calls for a truly planned education." ooke's Birthday To Be Celebrated Faculty and students of the engi- neering mechanics department will celebrate the birthday of the English scientist Thomas Hooke, 1635-1703, at a banquet Thursday at the Union. Prof. R. V. Southwell of Oxford University, visiting professor of the engineering mechanics department, will speak on "Hooke's Life." Recently 35 of the faculty and stu- dents of the department held their annual summer picnic at Dexter Hu- 'Right To Self Def Suiject To Pro fense' Is ofessor's --Associated Press Photo. The streets of Tacoma, Wash., became the battleground for striking lumber workers again when troops were called to quell a night of rioting during which five bombings occurred and many persons were bruised and cut. Picture shows rioters scattering after national guardsmen with fixed bayonets hurled tear gas bombs into their midst. Of the estimated 1,000 persons who participated in the riots approximately 40 were arrested and detained at the national guard armory. Shakespearean Scholarship Has Fertile Future, Says Mueschke By ROBERT S. RUWITCH ; That scholars today are in a better ' position to concentrate upon the' fundamentals of the artistic develop- ment of Shakespeare than ever before is the opinion of Prof. Paul Mueschke of the English department. Professor Mueschke spoke yester- day afternoon in Natural Science Au- ditorium on the regular Summer Session lecture series. His subject was "Recent Trends in Shakespear- ean Scholarship." to the speaker, "knows more about Shakespeare than has ever been known before "because it is able to view him in a perspective which has come about through several centuries of critical effort. Professor Mueschke traced the de- velopment 6f Shakespearean scholar- ship since the eighteenth century. That century, he said, was one which Talk On Wills SWill Be Given By Prof. Simes Law School Instructor Will Lecture Summer Series At5 P. M. Today Prof. Lewis M. Simes of the Uni- versity Law School will deliver the thirteenth regular lecture on the Summer Session series at 5 p.m. today in Natural Science Auditorium. His subject is "Some Curious and Prac- tical Aspects of Wills." In his lecttl'e todrty, Professor Simes will give some popular and interesting aspects of the law of wills and will also point out practical suggestions in the drafting of wills. He will also present a number of famous cases of interesting wills, among which will be that of Ben- jamin Franklin. Professor Simes received his Ba- chelor of Arts degree from the Uni- versity of Chicago in 1912 and his degree in law in 1914 from the same institution. He also received a grad- uate degree in law in 1927 from Yale University. He is at the present time adviser for the American Law Institute for the Restatement of the Low of Prop- erty. He is also a member of the American Bar Association and of the Order of Coif, honorary scholastic society in law corresponding to Phi Beta Kappa in literary colleges. To Hold Rites For Dr. Burton Today MT. CLEMENS, July 15. - (/P)- Last rites for Clarence H. Burton, MD. D.D.S. son of the late Clarence gave us a long line of distinguished editors and they were followed in the early nineteenth century by some of the very finest critics, Lamb, Hazlitt, DeQuincey, and Coleridge. In the mid-nineteenth century, the speaker said, "the shakespearean skies became very cloudy." This he attributes to the fact that it became the custom to worship Shakespeare as a miraculously perfect artist, in short, "to put him in a world by himself." "This idolatry continued," Profes- sar Muescke decla ed"until the opening our own century." There are, in his opinion, three im- portant steps in the recent study of the great Bard of Avon. These he outlined as (1) attack on Shakespeare by the skeptics (2) a gradual refine- ment of the historical method of study as applied to Shakespeare's dramas, and (3) the possibility of a more far-reaching study of Shake- speare's artistic development. To the skeptics, Professor Muesch- ke attributed a kind of common sense which led the critics away from idol- atry, but, he said, "they failed be- cause they themselves lacked those qualities of mind which they could not find in Shakespeare." In discussing the second point of the recent developments which he cited, Professor Mueschke said that this group of critics was able to broaden the conception of the his- torical study of Shakespeare by go- ing beyond the source of his dramas. For the future in Shakespearean scholarship, the speaker sees an in- creasing ability to realize Shake- speare's "abiding faith in the dignity of the human mind." "Though it may not be an easy task in a changing world," he stated, "it is for us to make Shakespeare's faith contagious." State To Help In Camp For Young Convicts Films Of War Horrors Shown z By Onderdonka Former Faculty Membera Says His Posters Will Be Displayed Until July 22f Three silent films and a talking picture were exhibited last night atc the Union by Dr. Francis S. Onder-v donk, a former members of the fac-s ulty of the University, as a part ofs his movemen to provide e ?ca n in- the h orrors ., ,fv- An In addition to the films, Dr. On- derdonk has a collection of posters, thought to be the largest in thet world, for the discouragement of war.r The collection was -started in 19161 in Vienna and is composed of postersr from almost every country in thes world. Dr. Onderdonk, who is the instigator of the Peace Films Car- avan, an organization seeking to es- tablish an international exchange ofs peace films for the education of all nationalities, stated that the exhibi- tion would continue until July 22 inr Room 316, Michigan Union. In the 571 cartoons, photographs,, and pictures, there are all types ofs artistic reproductions which are con-s sidered valuable from an artistic standpoint as well as for its contents. Among the most famed contributors to the collection, Otto Dix, oftens called the Erich Remarqueof the etchers, is the artist of startling sketches. Other European artists who have contributed include Jean Carlu, A. Daenens, Arthur Stadler, B. Nowak and E. Holadek. Russell O. Berg is one of the many American cartoon- ists represented. Dr. Onderdonk has shown his films at Harvard, Brown, Princeton, Cor- nell and many other colleges and uni- versities in the United States. He emphasized that he was not at- tempting to cover every point of a peace movement. His desire is to establish and specialize in the visual; means, such as motion pictures and posters, for preventing war, he said. Four Cubans Are Sentenced For Kidnaping HAVANA, July 15.-(P) - The Cuban government struck a severe blow at kidnaping today when the Urgency Court sentenced to death four men convicted of the kidnaping of Antonio San Miguel, seventy- eight-year-old multimillionaire. It was the first time in the re- public's history that a death sen- tence had been dealt a kidnaper. They were the first such sentences under the recently enacted "Falla Law" against gangsterism. The Falla Law was decreed shortly after Eutimio Falla Bonet, young millionaire, was kidnaped and then Righteous Scorn By THOS. HERMAN KLEENE The tragic manner in which vague phrases "lead us astray" in the in- epretation of international law was lecried last night by Prof. Charles Cheney Hyde of Columbia University in the third of a series of public lec- ures annually presented as a part of he program of the Summer Session an Teaching International Law. He described as "one of the pressing nieeds of our society" deliverance 'from some of the tragic phrases still narking portions of international law." Speaking on "The Tragedy of oiods in International Law," Pro- essor Hyde cited various common legal phrases which permit broad and vague conclusions open to divergent nterpretations. Legal Dogma Cited "Vague conglomerations of ideas" and "confusion of thought" in inter- n.ational law originate from such leg- al dogma as "right of inquisition," 'discovery," "extraterritoriality," "p- itical offender," "right to self-de- fense," uti positidies," and "reprisals." Professor Hyde particularly scored the use of the phrase "right to self defense' and other similar vague clauses in peace treaties as permitting varied interpretations. "If it is de- sired to stop hostile acts between state and state," Professor Hyde pointed .out, "it should be provided ,hat a-apecific act 6h l aajk ote y not be committeed regardless of what its purpose may be." The change in the meaning of the term "reprisal" was cited. Once a method by which a state took and held territory until settlement, it is now "a method of getting even," he said. Used Loose-Jointedly "It is employed in a loose-jointed manner without any reference to the original intended meaning," he said. In international law., Professor Hyde stated, it is necessary to know,' not whether there has been a denial of justice, whether an individual is a "political offender," or whether a' state participated in a war for rea- sons of "self-defense," but whether international law has been violated. The fourth in this series of lectures will be presented next Monday night when George A. Finch, managing edi- tor of the American Journal of In- ternational Law, speaks on "The United States and the Development of the European Situation." Many Britishers Offer To Fight For Ethiopians LONDON, July 15. - (T) - Many Britons began to offer their services as volunteers in the Ethiopian Army today as Great Britain's peace efforts in the controversy were given another push. The Government is working with France, hoping that the two may find some road to settlement of the dispute which could be presented at the meet- ing of the League of Nations Council about July 25. While the2Government has held up permission of arms firms to ship riu- nitions to Addis Ababa, it is unable to prevent British citizens from enlisting in the Emperor's army. A rush of applicants have sent their names to the Ethiopian legation here. These offers are "much appreciated," the minister said, but pending fur- ther instructions from Emperor Haille Selassie he is not taking active steps to enlist volunteers. Both Sir Samuel Hoare, foreign secretary, and Lieut. Col. David John Colville, secretary for overseas trade, dodged a barrage of questions in the House of Commons today on the question of arms exports to Ethiopia. Hoare sai dh h ad not arrived at a William Mahan, Sought In Weyerhaeuser Case, Is SuspectedInShooting Loots Washington Bank Of $500 Cash G-Men Are Concentrated In Northwest On Trail; Believe Capture Near TACOMA, July 15. - (P) - Chief of Police Frank Chadwick and Officer Harry Storem, of the Puyallup Po- lice department, were shot and killed today by a bank robber who Pierce County officials declared possibly was William Mahan, sought for the kid- naping of nine-year-old George Wey- erhaeuser. Deputy sheriffs said the descrip- tion of the man tallied closely with that of Mahan and disclosed that the method of the bandit in holding up the Orting Bank near here today was similar to previous crimes known to have been committed by Mahan., Further indication that Mahan might be the killer was seen in the concentration of G-men in the North- west, reported to be on the trail of Mahan. Officers Are Silent* One report said yesterday that Federal men hoped to close in on Mahan by Wednesday, although offi- cers would neither confirm or deny that they believed his capture immi- nent. The last definite trace of Mahan, so far as the G-men have been will- ing to state, was at Butte, Mont. He barely escaped from Federal agents then, fleeing from his motor car as they approached. In the car offi- cers found more than $15,000 of the '$200',000 ransom Paid for'the: We4 haeuser boy. Capt. Yoris, of the Seattle police department, declared that in his be- lief the man might be Mahan. It was recalled that Mahan had been suspected of being one of two men who held up the Eatonville Bank two years ago. No one has ever been apprehended for this crime. The Orting robber, playing a lone hand, grabbed $500 in currency which the bank teller had in his cash drawer. Made Fast Getaway He jumped into a car and was on his way out of Orting before pedestrians realized what had hap- pened. ° Bank officials called Puy- allup police and Chadwick and Stor- em drove at once toward Orting. They met the robber outside of Sumner. When they attempted to stop the man he fired upon then, wounding both fatally. He then dashed in the direction of Puyallup. The man was described as about 27 years of age, and was wearing a blue denim shirt. Police said the license plates on the killer's auto were stolen from Harley H. Fluke, of Seattle, while his car was in Tacoma three months ago. .7 ''-- A -Associated Press Photo. Melvin Purvis (above), 32-year- old "-man" who brought an end to the careers of Dillinger and other notorious gangsters, and his sue- cessor as head of the Chicago office of the Bureau of Investigation, Daniel M. Ladd (bdow). Purvis resigned for "purely personal rea- sons." Prof. Christian Will Open First Concert Today Noted Organist Will Play French Pieces: Hackett Also On Program Tonight's first concert of the Sum- mer Session ,to be given at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium, will feature Prof. Palmer Christian of the School of Music at the organ. Professor Chris- tian, who was absent from his posi- tion on the faculty during the past semester while touring Europe, will play a number of selections from the French school of organ music. A group of German songs will be by Prof. Arthur Hackett of the School of Music, tenor. He will be accom- panied by Mrs. Mabel Ross Rhead. A novelty for violin and piano in the form of a sonata by the modern Spanish composer, Turin, entitled "The Poem of a Woman of San Lu- car," will be played by Wassily Besek- irsky and Joseph Brinkman, both of the School of Music faculty. The selections which Professo Christian will play are "Fantaisie in A" by Cesar Franck, "Intermezzc (Symphony No. 6) by Widor, "Pre- lude" by ,Samazueilh, "Tocca 'Thor Art the Rock' " by Mulet. a Grant In Aid Donation l To Launch Program Is Announced By Burke IONIA, July 15. -(W) - The state will be asked to help establish a re- habilitation camp for young convicts who have been sentenced for their first criminal offenses. The legislature approved a propos- al in 1935 which called for the segre- gation of first offenders in such camps, where they would be employed at healthful outdoor labor, such as re- forestaion, under discipline of a semi- military nature. The lawmakers failed, however, to vote an appropriation to establish such camps. Attorney George J. Burke of Ann Arbor revived the proposal at a joint meeting of the prison and crime com- missions here Saturday. He announc- i r -t AMERICAN LEAGUE W L New.York'...........48 28 Detroit...........49 32 Chicago ............42 32 Cleveland........ . .39 36 Boston ..............41 38 Philadelphia ........31 42 Washington.......3 45 St. Louis...........22 54 Games Yesterday St. Louis 3, Washington 2 ( nings). Games Today Detroit at Philadelphia. Chicago at New York. St. Louis at Washington. Cleveland at Boston. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L New York..........51 23 St. Louis ...........47 29 Chicago....... . . .46 32 Brooklyn . . . ... 33 42 Pittsburgh .........42 37 Cincinnati.........37 42 Philadelphia ........31 45 Boston ..............21 58 Major League Standings Pct. .632 .605 .568 .520 .519 .440 .423 .289 11 in- Professor Fletcher wil lsing "Ade- laide" by Beethoven, "Fruhlings- glaube" by Schubert, "Trockne Blu- men" by Haile, and "Frulingsnacht" by Schumann. The general public with the exception of small children is invited to attend the concert. GRADUATE STUDENT HELD Chi Phi Chang, 32, a graduate stu- Pet. .689 .618 .590 .440 .532 .468 .408 .266