FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1937 i ___ __ -_ New Hebrew Constricting Development Basic Form Of Original Language Is Becoming Pattern, Harris Says (Continued from Page 1) ' t r The News Of The World As Illustrated In Associated Press Pictures First Michigan Port Session .. HeldYesterday tongue. Some borrowed words, fur- thermore, retained foreign accentua- tion instead of adopting the Hebraic stress pattern. In general, however, both the intimate and general cul- tural borrowings from foreign lan- guages are decreasing in number. At the same time as the foreign in- fluence is weakening, the variety of change within the language itself is increasing; said Dr. Harris. A num- ber of such indigenous effects were explained, as for example, the slight trend toward spelling pronunciation because it is not known how vowels were pronounced in the ancient lan- guage. Will Not Last Long The lack of Hebrew vocabulary on the part of the immigrants has led also to an interesting development of a variety of circumlocutory expres- sion, but Dr. Harris believes that most of these, like American slang locu- tions, will not last long. Another change of great import- ance has been the extension of word meanings and the development of new ones, because the Hebrew vo- cabulary is inadequate to name mod- ern objects and contemporary ideas. At first many foreign words were bor- rowed and given Hebraic forms, but these are rapidly being displaced by Hebraic loan-translations. S o m e- times the native word is simply used in a new sense. "Nituah," to cut meat, is now used also to mean a surgical operation, by what Dr. Harris sug- gested is a quite natural transition. "Gamar," to end or finish, has come to mean to graduate, an dis used of a student graduating from high school. "Dag maluah" literally means salt fish, hence herring, but in the ver- nacular, by some strange jump which Dr. Harris could not explain, it now means necktie. Word Coinage Phenomenon Besides this phenomenon of se- mantic change there exists that of word coinage. Any word formed on the general pattern "qattal" has come to mean some kind of tradesman, for example. The pattern "qattelet" is used as a base for the names of about 20 diseases. But the acceptance of coinages, according to Dr. Harris, is conditioned 'by their congruity with the sounds and structure of Hebrew. In the field of morphology, or grammar, said Dr. Harris in conclu- sion, the amount of change is not so much, being found chiefly in the an- alogical levelling of inflections and in the analytical tendency to break down some of the inflectional pat- terns, DAILY OFFICIAL BUTJAEMV I The bodies of Bill Lee, 8, James Theodore, 5, Inez, 3, and Margaret Elizabeth, 1, rested in the cemetery at Columbus, Ky., while their father W. J. Morse, 45, was in jail at Mayfield, Ky. for killing them with a butcher knife. Their mother, Mrs. Jane Morse, 42, was also stabbed, but survived. The graves are shown here. Fighting which broke out between rival unions left nine injured and closed the Plymouth plant of the Chrysler Corp. at Detroit. One of the injured, Frank Dillon, head of the Independent Association of Chrysler Employes, is shown in Receiving Hospital. He said his assail- ants were members of the United Automobile Workers of America union. Resolutions Ask Murphy To Expand Powers Of Port Commission ST. JOSEPH, Aug. 6.-AP)-Mem- bers of Port Commissions in 42 Mich- igan lake cities adopted articles of organization today at a first Michi- gan Port Conference here. W. P. Bradley, of Detroit, chairman of the Michigan Tidewater Associa- tion, was named chairman of the new organization, with other directors of the body as nucleus of the governing group. Resolutions were endorsed asking Governor Murphy to expand the powers of the Michigan Port Com- mission in official representation of all the port cities. An advisory board later would be designated by the present state port authority with the consent of the Governor. Purposes of organization were ex- pressed in clauses urging "Better de- velopment of Michigan's 42 harbors to crystallize efforts in securing ade- quate funds from the government for improvements and to assist in every way possible the advancement of wa- terborne commerce." The day-long session, attended by some 100 delegates, concluded tonight with a banquet at which Richard F. Malia of Milwaukee, Wis., secretary of the Great Lakes Harbors Association, and Wm. George Bruce, chairman of the Wisconsin Tidewater Associa- tion, were speakers. Recognition of "recreation com- merce" as part of the paying lake traffic which comes into Michigan port cities was one of the topics threshed out in the conference. Some cities, notably in West Mich- igan, declared that volume of freight tonnage in navigable months was in- sufficient to encourage federal ex- periditures in making harbor im- provements, but that present "rec- reation commerce" plus "industrial commerce" readily established neces- sity for miprovements on an econom- ic basis. Anchors Weighed; Newport Deserted NEWPORT, R.I., Aug. 6.-(M)-The anchors are weighed, sails are set and the great fleet of pleasure craft which gathered here to see Harold S. Vanderbilt's Ranger defeat Endeav- out II, T.O.M. Sopwith's second chal- lenger for the America's cup, tonight was homeward bound. A few days ago it was almost pos- sible to walk across Newport Harbor, down to Brenton Cove, stepping from one varnished deck to another, so close were moored yachts of all de- scription. Tonight, aside from yachts of New- port residents, few other than the cup boats remained. With Ranger and Endeavour II in Brenton Cove were Sopwith's first Endeavour, which -failed to lift the trophy three years ago; Rainbow, the sloo pwith which Vanderbilt defeated her, and Yankee, thrice unsuccessful candidate for defense nomination. They wait the starting gun in the New York Yacht Club cruise which begins at New London, Conn., Aug. 16. More than a thosuand craft of all description assembled for the races and none went home with so much as a broken rail or scratched paint, so effective was the coastguard patrol. SCHMELING LEAVES FORN.Y. BERLIN, Aug. 6. - OP) - M a x Schmeling, who watched Gustav Eder outpoint the French welterweight Charles Pernot in a 12-round bout tonight, said he was leaving for New Work Aug 11. He will see the Tommy Farr-Joe Louis bout in New York Aug. 23, then take a hunting trip in Canada in September. M Wilber Rothar (above), care- taker of a building in the Bronx, was arrested by federal authorities in New York on a charge of at- tempting to extort $2,000 from Gcorge Palmer Putman by claim- ing Amelia Earhart, Putman's wife, was a patient on a ship near New York and would be surrendered upon payment of the money. Now you can sit OUT -OF -DOORS Simulating war time conditions, Japanese volunteer Red Cross nurses rush a companion to a field hospital when the gas mask she was wearing proved faulty. Japan has thousands of these nurses mobilized for service in the "unofficial" Sino-Japanese war. on summer evenings -- i Broach Strike Is Ended After Intervention Firm Capitulates To UAW; Victory Starts 'Complete Local Unionization' (Continued from Page 1) L1te (Continued from Page 3) ence nd the Arts, Architecture, Educa- tion, Forestry or Music on the blanks of the school or college in which the student is registered, and return these reports to the Registrar. Grades for students registered in any other units than the above should be sent directly to the Secre- taries of the Schools or Colleges con- cerned. The Bureau has received notice of the following Civil Service Examina- tions: Dental laboratory mechanic, $2,000 a year; assistant dental laboratory mechanic, $1,440 a year; and Dental Hygienist, $1,620 a year; in public health service, treasury department, and veterans' administration. Associate and assistant naval arch- itects, $3,200 and $2,600 a year re- spectively; optional branches of ship piping and ventilation, hull struc- tures and arrangements, scientific ship calculations, general and small boats. For further information, please call at the office, 201 Mason Hall. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Infor- mation. First Mortgage L o a n s: The University has a limited amount of funds to loan on modern well-located Ann Arbor property. Interest at current rates. Apply Investment Of- fice, Room 100, South Wing, Univer- sity Hall. to house and in front of every shop in Ann Arbor." He called for volun- teers and nearly the entire group responded. Reuther also urged the workers to forget the struggle with the manage- ment and give their full cooperation when they return to work Monday. Non-strikers who have kept produc- tion going on a limited scale for the past two days will be at work again today putting the plant in readiness for re-opening Monday. In a formal statement released lastj night Reuther said, "The letter from the company as per the suggestion of Governor Murphy this morning has been unanimously accepted by the employes. "It is a complete and overwhelming victory in Ann Arbor for the UAW. We have all the assurance with which we started, for we got an agreement in writing above the signature of E. K. Morgan. "This marks the beginning of a union drive in Ann Arbor which will never cease until the city is 100 per cent union and working conditions and wages are immensely improved." Parade Is Held A victory parade was held by the strikers and affiliated UAW members from Ann Arbor and nearby cities, followed by a rally at the Unitarian Church annex. Early yesterday morning the two sides had seemed in a mood which made speedy settlement appear im- possible. A heavy picket line had been thrown around all entrances to the factory, reinforced by cars parked bumper to bumper, to prevent non- strikers from repeating the entrance they effected Thursday. Shortly before 7 a.m., however, a police scout car ordered the pickets to move cars which were blocking driveways, and almost immediately a line of workers' cars made for the west entrance to the company grounds. Reuther and his wife refused to give ground, however, and as the line of cars crossed the sidewalk, Mrs. Reuther was forced to jump on the radiator of the first car to avoid being run down, and was carried about 60 feet onto company premises before she could get off. Reuther grabbed a worker riding on the run- ning board and pulled him off, but was not carried into the grounds by the car. Pickets Stop Workers Estimates of the workers employed in the plant yesterday ranged from 15 to 30. Throughout the morning pickets stopped isolated workers and trucks seeking to make deliveries or pick up shipments, and heckled of- fice workers and men engaged in putting up a 6-foot fence around the company property at the rear of the factory., Another brief flurry occurred at noon when a worker ran the picket line at the front entrance carrying a bundle of sandwiches for the men inside. He was seized by pickets and dropped the food, but another worker inside the plant opened the door and scooped them in, after which the first worker broke loose and followed him inside. Office work- ers went out for lunch and were al- lowed to return. During the morning Sheriff Jacob B. Andres andtProsecutor Albert J. Rapp came to the plant andf warned against using rocks several of the younger strikers had gathered at the picket posts, also cautioning them to remove tacks they had strewn in the driveways. Except for the two brief flurries, however, the picket line was orderly throughout the day. While the officers were in front of the plant they were summoned in- side by a long-distance call from Lansing, and came out to inform the strikers that a settlement appeared near, with the discussion to be re- sumed here during the afternoon. Mrs. Reuther, however, acting for her husband during his presence in Lansing, said that the picket line' would not be withdrawn until the settlement was delnite. TYPEWRITERS FOUNTAIN PENS Student Supplies 0. D. Morrill 314 SOUTH STATE STREET the ELECTRACID E SELLING OUT There is only a short time left to this GOING-OUT-OF- BUSINESS SALE. Values that have set Ann Arbor buzzing with excitement. Be thrifty and put in a supply for high qual- ity merchandise. Merchandise like this will never again be offered at these low prices. We still have a few RUBBER RAINCOATS and CAPES that sold to $1.69 ..........................Now 50c WOOL SHOULDERETTES and BED-JACKETS in dainty pas- tels, black and purple. These are so practical on chilly eve- nings when the schedule calls for studying far into the night. Were Now 98c $1 95 ..- -.-.....-. keeps. your garden, porch, or. veranda free from annoying If you are unable to sit on the porch at night or step into the yard without being driven frantic by mosquitoes, you will find the Electracide a boon. Electracide is a light trap that attracts and destroys mosquitoes, moths, gnats, beetles, fish flies and other insect pests. You simply plug it into any convenience outlet, like a portable lamp. It costs only 1 c an hour for electricity. Electracide also destroys many insects which are damaging to shrubs, flowers and fruit trees . . . the codling moth, bud moth and fruit tree leaf roller. Experiments in apple orchards have shown that, with this protection, trees produce greater yields of clean fruit each year. See the Electracide on display at department stores, hardware stores and electrical dealers. TAKE "ARBOR SPRINGS" ON YOUR VACATION Guard your health . . . take along pure, sparkling Arbor Springs water. Its delight- ful taste is matched with its One lot of small and medium PAJAMAS that sold size RAYON GOWNS and LIsUAC 2 N11 T'I