SUNDAY, AUGUST 8, 193, THE MICHIGAN DAILY P U U Movies, Talks Will Conclude Linguistic Term Symposium On Language Change To Be Held By Institute Tuesday To Show X-Ray Film X-ray motion pictures of the speech organs, together with two lectures and two round-table discussions, con- clude the summer's extra-curricular program of the Linguistic Institute, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Charles C. Fries, its director. Opening the series of the week's events will be the discussion of "The Speech Side of Personality" by Prof. Edward Sapir of Yale University, scheduled on the regular University ..ummer series at 5 p.m. In Natural Science auditorium. To Discuss Linguistic Change The Tuesday noon luncheon con- ference of the Institute will be devot, ed to a group discussion of the topic, "Substratum and Linguistic Change." Leaders of the symposium, according to Dr. Fries, will be Professors Frank- lin Edgerton of Yale University, Wil- liam H. Worrell of the University of Michigan, and Leo L. Rockwell of Colgate University. At 8:30 p.m. Wednesday there will be shown in Hill Auditorium two cine- matographic studies of human speech. First will be the Menzerath-Janker X-ray motion picture, with sound, of the movements of the vocal organs during speech. The film will be ac- companied by an analysis and dis- cussion presented by Dr. Bernard Bloch of Brown University, visiting member of the Institute faculty. Also to be shown is stroboscopic motion pictures of the vocal cords in action, with accompanying comment by Dr. Milton Cowan of the University of Iowa. A Second Round Table A second round-table discussion has been arranged for the Thursday lun- cheon conference at the Union, when Professors C. L. Meader and N. L.. Willey and Mr. McQuown will pre-, sent views of the "Linguistic Prob-, lemns Involved in the Proposal for an International Auxiliary 'Language."i Another talk by Professor Sapir will end the lecture series. He will, speak at 7:30 p.m., Friday, on the topic, "The Indo-European Laryn- geals," in response to numerous re- quests from students in the Linguistic Institute, among whom the laryngeali hypothesis of Indo-European sound changes has been a moot subject this summer. Athough these lectures and dis- cussions officially close the Institute program, a post-final luncheon con-1 ference has been announced by Dr. Fries for the following Tuesday, Aug. 17, at which time there will be an in- formal conversation concerning plans for the 1938 session of the Linguistic Institute. Tennis Star Returns Don Budge, carrot-topped tennis star, here is shown as he returned to New York with his Davis Cup teammates, bearing the 12-guart bowl they won in England after it had been held for 10 years by French and British teams. Budge, a bit flustered, holds up the famed emblem of international tennis su- premacy for cheerink thousands at the dock to see. Computes Orbit Of 1New Comet To Beat World (Continued from Page 1) as the big dipper. On Thursday, Aug. 11, it will cut through the sec- ond and third star in the handle of the dipper. Not much tail can be, seen because of its distance from the Earth, Professor Maxwell says. On Aug. 15, it will approach near- est the sun. Qn that day it turns around the sun at its perihelion, and is only 78,000,000 miles away from the center of the solar system's energy. Professor Maxwell, who studies the new comet through the Observatory's 12-inch refractor telescope, declared that the plane of the comet is tilted at an angle of 35 degrees to the plane of the Earth's orbit. Five or six new comets are reported each year, he says, but few in each decade are able to be seen by the unaided eye. A new comet discovered just the other day-on Aug. 4-is called Hub- ble's Comet. It was observed by Ed- win P. Hubble of the Mt. Wilson Ob- servatory. Peltier's Comet last year was discovered by an amateur ob- server in Ohio, he mentioned. Dis- covery is always by accident, and often by amateurs. "Only one-fourth of the comets are periodic in orbit," he says. "These return to the solar system from 3.3 years to 1,000,000 years. Halley's Comet, last seen in 1910, will come again in 1986. Halley's is the only bright scheduled comet."E Post - Mortem Baby Gaining, Doctors Report PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 7.-(')- Medical science, having won its first round in a fight for the life of three and one-half pound Frances Mary Bcccassini, turned today to problems of feeding and encouraging the baby to breathe without the aid of oxygen. As the tiny girl entered her second day since she was delivered in an operation one minute after her dis- ease-doomed mother died, h er chances to live appeared definitely brighter. Dr. William G. Turnbull, superin- tendent, said after a visit to the baby's room in the Philadelphia general hos- pital he was "pleased with the baby's condition." Dr. John Corbit, assistant chief sur- geon who performed the post mortem delivery, slept last night for the first time in more than 36 hours. More Hopeful He said he was increasingly hope- ful because the baby was crying at in- tervals and breathing regularly in the miniature oxygen tent which he built of X-ray film and adhesive tape. The doctors said they would con- tinue to strengthen the baby with in- jections of saline solution and would continue feeding her glucose, water and two drams of milk every two hours. They planned another attempt to- day to force the baby to breathe with- out assistance. They were hopeful she might be taken out of the oxygen tent. She was removed for a few minutes Friday, but was returned to the tent because her breathing became irregu- lar and her color poor. Her temperature had been reduced from 105 degrees to nearly normal to- day. This was accomplished by turning off, one by one, electric lights ar- ranged beneath the combination ox- ygen tent and crib. Routine Work Dr Corbit waited for the baby's mother, Mrs Mary Boccassini, 27, to die Then he operated at once Hope for the mother's recovery from tuber- culous meningitis had been aban- doned Dr. Corbit said the baby would not have been born normally for two weeks to a month. The operation did not upset the routine of the 28-year-old doctor, two years out of medical school. During the day he delievered two babies, born normally. The Rev. John McLaughlin, resi- dent chaplain at the hospital, chris- tened the Boccassini baby Frances. The father, Dominick, Boccassini, said the baby' was named for her ma- ternal grandmother. "I hope she will live," he said. "I know my wife wanted the baby very badly, and so did I." Pres. Roosevelt Arrives At Hyde Park Residence HYDE PARK, N.Y., Aug. 7.-(A)- President Roosevelt arrived here by special train from Washington today and motored to his nearby estate ov- erlooking the Hudson. He had ar- ranged a trip around his 560-acre forest preserve later in the day. Settled For $200,000 ~fltmrlP4 Ha. Autize,'4 i $750,000 For Building Of Research Institute WASHINGTON, Aug. 6. -(A)- Cancer-has been put on the spot. If human skill can "get" this ruth- less killer, the United States will do it. Congress has authorized the ex- penditure of $750,000 to build a Na- tional Cancer Institute at Washing- ton next year. It has added $700,000 A settlement of $200,000 has to finance research work. It has au- been made at Pittsburgh, on Mrs. thorized $700,000 every year to fi- Dorothy Moore Davidson, above, nance a search that will be more re- by young Philip James Davidson, lentless than any manhunt the G- who married the Kentucky girl men ever staged. when both were students. me rad. On Trail A Century For more than a century, scientists Ger anGr n have been trying to trail this malig- nant slayer. But in all those years Owes Success the yhave not been able even to learn what it looks like, how it works, how( it makes its insidious way into the human system. Last year it killed 137,000 persons in the United States. Final Event Of Deutscer One reason the hunt has been so Verein's Program To Be baffling is that researchers have been compelled to work more or less in- Banquet Aug. 16 dependently in separate laboratories. It has been difficult to coordinate Deutscher Verein has enjoyed a studies, compare notes. most satisfactory curriculum this But with a national cancer insti- summer, club members agree, a cur- tute for centralizing the fight under summm, sthe direction of the United States riculum, the success of which has Public Health service, medicine will been due in no small measure to the have a better chance to track down singular efforts of Arthur H. Gross- one of the front-rank health enem- man, director of the social activities ies. I and guiding force in the club's pro- It's comparatively easy to get hu- gram, according to one club member. man killers. Police know what they Assisting Grossman with the minor are out for. tasks were the members of the sum- Not Much Is Known mer German faculty and the students But what is the killer, cancer, like? of the department. Doctors just know a few of its ef- The grand finale and gala event of fects. That something makes groups the season will be the Deutscher of cells in the body go wild, that the Verein banquet which is to be held cells start acting differently, multi- Aug. 16 in the Grand Rapids Room ply, form a "growth" and kill. of the League. Those in charge of They know they can save patients1 the program refuse to disclose the by cutting out the growth, or treating nature of the entertainment to be it with radium. But this cure is un- offered as they term the evenings certain unless the cancer is found program "surpris elements." The fullIeargr. club membership is expected to at- There have been a great many tend, as well as any other students theories about th ecause of cancer who care to. that have alarmed people from time Activities which Deutscher Verein to time-theories about pipe-smok- has sponsored this year under the ing starting cancer of themouth, direction of Grossman include: bruises starting cancer or the one A musical evening, which featured about certain types of cooking uten- the Glee Club directed by Vernon sils being dangerous. Cancer experts' Kellet, an evening of magic by Walter have knocked down all those. But the Biberich, a picnic at Dexter Park, an tarry stuff in tobacco is demonstrat- evening of music and dramatic read- ed to be able to cause cancer if ap- ings (solos by Miss Thelma Lewis and plied in large quantities. H. A. Van Deursen of the School of What clues are left? Music. Precious few. Doctors know only these few facts: People over 40 are more likely to get cancer, but when people under 40 contract it they die quicker. Cancer often strikes several mem- bers of a family. Unskilled labor suffers from it more often than professional workers. IIt strikes workers in certain indus- tries more often. Not Always The Same Geography and climate seem to have little effect. To make the mystery worse, can- cer doesn't always act the same. There can be a different kind of cancer, or malignant tumor, for every tissue in the body, according to Dr. R. O. Lil- lie, chief pathologist of the U. S. public health service. And one per- son can have more than one kind of cancer. Some cancers just grow into lumps. Some grow through the organs im- mediately around them. And some skip around the body. So what's the answer? Under the new bill, the public health service will pool all the frag- ments of knowledge about cancer, train doctors to work on 'the most promising theories. They'll give money to other laboratories. They'll buy radium so that more people can be treated with that method. They are strengthening the hope that cancer will be put down for the count soon now, just as the great' killers of other years, yellow fever and cholera, have been put down. DAILY OFCIAL (Continued from Page 2) and use of the international auxiliary language, Esperanto, will be held in Room 25, Angell Hall, at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday evening, Aug. 10. Member- ship is open not only to university students and faculty, but also to any- one else who may be interested. Those who have completed Esperanto- courses in the past and contemplate further work in the future are espe- cially urged to attend. Excursion No. 11: The Ann Arbor Daily News, Wednesday, Aug. 11, at 2 p.m. This trip offers an oppor- tunity to observe a modern newspa- per plant in operation Trips ends TYPEWRITERS FOUNTAIN PENS Student Supplies 314 SOUTH STATE STREET I United States Mobilizing For Fight To Finish Against Cancer I PATROLMAN ARRESTED - NEW YORK, Aug. 7.-(P)--Police Commissioner Lewis J. Valentine an- nounced tonight the arrest of Mo- torcycle Patrolman Arthur Chalmers for the slaying of Irma Louise Pra- dier, '35, a French maid whose bullet- torn body was found July 19 on the Harlem River speedway. i f 1 i HITS WAGNER BOARD PITTSBURGH, Aug. 7.- (P)- Counsel for the National Electric Products Company tonight charged "The National Labor Relations Board apparently is nothing more nor less than an agent for the CIO." 25c to 2 P.M. Today! NOW PLAYING! IT'S A FACT *®* 00 There's N SHRINKAGE When You Have Your WHITE CLOTHES Cleaned by 11 t w r _