Editorials A Word Of Welcome ... Negligible-Only 47 Millions . L 0k ian ~Iaiti6V SAMPLE COPY Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVI. No. 41 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUG. 14, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS i ! t Rackhain Gift Allows Annual $10,000 Fund To New Clinic Causes And Possible Cure Of Rheumatism Subject For Research Major Problem In Medicine Today Rheumatism, its causes and a pos- sible cure will be the subject of a new clinic to be established here immed- iately as a result of an annual sti- pend of $10,000 provided by the Horace H. Rackham Fund, it was disclosed yesterday by Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, director of the department of internal medicine at the medical school. The clinic will make use of a staff of renowned specialists in chemistry, dietetic, surgery and bacteriology as well as the most modern equipment available in a concentrated effort to probe the secrets of a common dis- ease about which far too little is known, it was said. Dr. A. C. Furstenberg, dean of the :medical school, has appointed a spe- pitl committee headed by Dr. Rich- ard H. Freyberg to start and admin-. ister the clinic. Other members of the committee are: Dr. Sturgis, Dr. ,Harley A. Haynes, director of Univer- sity Hospital, and Dr. Carl E. Bad- ley, of the surgery department. Rheumatism was termed by Dr. Sturgis as "one of the major prob- lems in medicine today. It is wide- spread," he said, "and a crippling, painful condition for which we have no definite cure. Inadequate scien- tific research has been directed to- ward finding its cause and cure, and it may be said that our lack of knowledge concerning it might easily be termed disgraceful." Dr. Sturgis cited figures in sup- port of his contention that persons incapacitated by rheumatism out- number those suffering from tuber- culosis, heart disease and cancer com- bined. "In 1932 chronic rheumatic disease in the United States caused a loss of 7,500,000 weeks of work to those disabled," he said, and "ten (Continued on Page 4) Fliers Overdue At Fairbanks; AnxietyIs Felt Radio Stations In Alaska Look For Message From Russian Airmen FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Aug. 13.-(P) -United State officials privately ex- pressed anxiety tonight over the sil- ence surrounding six Russian trans- polar fliers, overdue here on their flight from Moscow along the course of a possible commercial airline to America. At 5 a.m., (10 a.m. E.S.T.), the huge four-motored plane was heard radio- ing its call letters to the wireless1 station at Point Schmidt, northern Siberia. Radio stations in Alaska, Canada and the United States listened in vain for further word from the plane, pi- loted by Sigismund Levaneffsky, one of the Soviet Union's most famous airmen. In Seattle, Soviet representative A. Vartanian, who said earlier he ex- pected the fliers here by 11:12 a.m. (4:12 p.m. E.S.T.) refused to comment on their long silence. United States officials, who declined to be quoted, privately expressed fear for the airmen, who they estimated were five hours overdue at 9:12 p.m. E.S.T. -But other observers pointed out that headwinds which buffeted the huge ship might have delayed it many hours on the 4,000 mile flight to a refuelling here before continuing on to an eventual destination at Oak- land, Calif., more than 6,600 miles from Moscow via Fairbanks. The plane had not been directly heard from here since passing over the North Pole region at 12:45 a.m. (5:45 a.m. E.S.T.) and subsequently was believed to be fighting heavy headwinds and fog on the final stretch of its 4,000 mile hop from the Soviet capital to Fairbanks. In Seattle A. Vartanian, Soviet rep- resentative who said the plane had Heads Commission Attention High School Heads Fellow School Administrators: It has occurred to several alumni of the University that both the University and the high schools of the State would benefit if "The Michigan Daily" could be placed in the libraries of all the high schools of the State at least once a week. "The Michigan Daily" will give the high school students a pic- ture of University life that will help them to decide upon their college education. Moreover, it would be very helpful to high school classes in journalism. If the University knew that the weekly issue of the paper was going into every high school, it could insert some items of special interest to high school students, and especially point out oppor- tunities for higher education. If you favor the idea of having "The Michigan Daily" sent to your school during the year, please write a letter to "The Michigan Daily" to that effect. I am sure that an interested response from the Michigan high schools will enable The "Daily" to carry out plans to further this purpose. Sincerely yours, B. C. FAIRMAN, Superintendent and Athletic Director, Reed City, Mich. Girls On One Side nd Boys On Other Was Rule In Old Library U. S., British Battle Fleets Race To Defend Menaced Shanghai Foreign Quarter Senator Black New Court Ml!ember City Millions Are Gripped By Terror As Artillery Roars Along Whangpoo GEORGE J. BURKE George Burke, appointed chair- man of the civil service commis- sion yesterday, is attorney for the University of Michigan, and Stuart Perry is an advisory mem- ber of the Board in Control of Student Publications. * B * Burke Named Civil Service Board's Head' Murphy Picks Ann Arbor Attorney, Two Others' For Commission Jobs DETROIT, Aug. 13.- (P) -Gov. Frank Murphy appointed a three- member commission to administer Michigan's new civil service law to- day. He announced the Civil Service Commission's personnel early in theI day, saying the three members named had been reluctant to accept the po- sitions. I Burke, Perry, Mrs. Jones 1 They are George J. Burke, Ann Ar-1 bor attorney, chairman; Stuart H.c Perry, Adrian publisher, and Mrs.I Paul Jones, Grand Rapids civic lead- er.s The Governor said he would re- turn from the west Aug. 23 and after1 that will designate a director of the' civil service commission, who will oversee approximately 9,000 state employes. - Murphy said he would consult the three commissioners be- fore selecting a director. In naming Burke, who said he would resign as a member of the state corrections commission, to the chair- manship, Governor Murphy said: Praises Local Man "In character and ability he is second to none in the Democratic party in the state." Perry, editor and publisher of the Adrian Telegram, frequently has urged civil service in state govern- ment. He is a Republican. He has been a director of the Associated Press since 1923. Mrs. Jones, who, as a Republican, supported the Democratic ticket in last year's election, is a former pres- ident of the Michigan League of Women Voters, a non-partisan or- ganization that has advocated civil service. State Budget Is Given To Smith To Be Balanced LANSING, Aug. 13.-(P)-The task of finding a method of balancing the state's budget was turned over to Budget Director Harold D. Smith to- day by Governor Murphy. Before he left for Detroit, the Gov- ernor took a parting crack at the 19.37 legislature for having approved expenditures that were $15,000,000 greater than anticipated revenues. "I asked the finance committees of both houses not to go outside the revenues in shaping the budget," Murphy said, "but they chose not to do that. It is something that must be Scorrected. Outside of emergencies, it is not good administration to have an un- balanced budget. Some way we will keep the outlay within revenues and maintain the credit of the state. I have asked the budget director to make a comprehensive study of the situation and give me his recom- mendations when I return to Lan- ctin" Famous Chimes Preserved In Engineering Building But The Rest Is Gone In the days when girls were coy and men were bashful, convention dictated that the men students sit on one side of the reading room of the "old library"hand the women students on the other. However, toward the closing years of the "old library" this practice was discouraged. It was also violated when the library was crowded and at' other times by bold individuals who slid slose to the imaginary boundary line so that some naive damsel might sidle close to him; or vise versa. This was the case in the "old li- brary," the building which occupied; the site of the present library before the new one was built. It was a curiously shaped structure with ap- pendages jutting out on all sides. Dr. William W. Bishop, present librarian' and first librarian of the new build- ing, likened the library to a Mississip- pi steamboat-the rotunda, the prow; Phi Eta Sigma Plans Smoker For Freshmen Prof. Litzenberg Will Be Chief Speaker At Union Gathering For Men A smoker for freshmen men, fea- turing talks by some of the Univer- sity's most prominent faculty mem- bers, will be sponsored by Phi Eta Sigma, freshman scholastic honorary society, Thursday, Sept. 23, at the Michigan Union, Burgess Vial, '40, announced yesterday. Among the speakers who will ap- pear at the ,meeting are Dean of Men Joseph A. Bursley; his brother, Prof. Philip Bursley, director of Or- ientation, and academic counsellor; and Prof. A. D. Moore of the College of Engineering. They will talk brief- ly before the presentation of the chief speaker of the evening, Dr. Karl Litzenberg of the English depart- ment, a member of the fraternity. Refreshments will be served also, Vial stated. A record of half A and half B for either the first semester or year is necessary for membership in Phi Eta Sigma, one of the highest honors available to first year students. Suspend Issuance Of Liquor Licenses LANSING, Aug. 13.-(P)-Edward W. McFarland, chairman of the State Liquor Control Commission, said to- day the Commission would suspend issuance of new beer and liquor li- censes on September 1 and might not issue others until the start of the new licensing year next May. The commission chairman empha- sized that the order would not apply to municipalities which may vote this year to permit the sale of liquor by the glass. "Naturally, it would be unfair for 4L . ,.., . '. ... .. .,.F ,.. 4. .. the towers, the smoke stacks; the book stacks, the rear paddles. Two towers flanked both sides of the building, one of which contained the clock and the famous chimes which were modeled after the re- nowned chimes at Jesus College in England. The old University clock was preserved and set in the new library but there was no place for the chimes. At 7:27 a.m. and at 5:27 p.m., the chimerical song would melodiously ripple over the quiet of the campus bringing in the daylight and usher- ing it out again. The campus was different in the horse and buggy days of the "old library" and when the chimes would ring all would listen at- tentively and appreciatively to its melody. It was the one distinctive' event in the waning hours when eve- ning cast its mantle of darkness over the campus and all activities were put aside. There was tradition, sen- timent, and reverence wound about the chimes. It was a sad day when the old tower fell, marking the end of the "reign of the chimes." They were put in one of the engineering buildings where they still sing their song but are heard by few students amid the confusion and noise now existing on the campus. The library was completely covered with ivy which gave a stately and dignified appearance to the exterior. It was one of the landmarks and the most centrally located building on the campus. The interior of the library truly breathed of a studious atmosphere. On the first floor of the. building (Continued on Page 4) Steam Shovel Aids Tenement Search NEW YORK, Aug. 13.-(P)- Searchers aided by a steam shovel dug deeper today into the mud and splintered timbers of three tenements which collapsed on Staten Island Wednesday night, in search of two more persons missing in the accident that took 19 lives. Preparations were made for five investigations into the crumbling of the shackly, undermined building and for burial of the victims. Nearly all residents of the struc- ture were either unemployed or on relief, Borough President Jostph A. Palma said. Sending in the. name with a list of other nominations, President Roosevelt named Senator Hugo Black, of Alabama (right) to the Supreme Court bench. The nomination was a complete surprise to Black's colleagues on Capitol Hill. Ne is shown here accepting the congratulations of Vice-President Garner. B. w. 0. C.'s In Mauve Decade Laugh At Modern Self-Reliance Women Students Of '90's church took turn) and walking were v d DdNo "hot-stuff" then, 500 girls had 2,000 Unsuperviseii; Did Not boys to choose from. Have To Keep Hours Being the third girl to get on The Daily was Mrs. Wrentmore's distinc- By STAN SWINTON tion, and it was easy to tell that she belonged to the select group of Call the modern girl self-reliant if B.W.O.C.'s of '93 and '94 which in- you will, but back in the '90's Mich- cluded Ann Coleman, who along with igan women weren't supervised by a Mrs. Wrentmore founded the first Dean, didn't have to keep hours, campus Y.W.C.A.; Gertrude Burke, would have laughed at the idea of first female Daily reporter and later dormitorisgve"hae p- head of Vassar's English department; ties when they felt like it and lived Maude Merritt, the campus in co-educational rooming houses-~ beauty of '93. rent ore, thi rd o ms. Marare "We didn't pay any attention to WtorTethidywoanat..O.eonfhthe men on The Daily sentimentally staff of The Daily and a B.W.O.C. of then," Mrs. Wrentmore said. "Ger- the Mauve Decade, for that.y. trude Burke was the first woman on Clair Kenyon, '95, was a typical the staff. In those days the paper was Michigan girl of that era, according put out downtown in the Daily Argus to Mrs. Wrentmore (who doesn't look building," the former student said. old enough to have been in school in "It was a 4-page affair with smaller those long past days). Miss Kenyon pages than you have now and con- Chinese Airplanes Bomb Jap Flagship SHANGHAI, Aug. 14.--(Satur- day)--(P)--A squadron of Chinese airplanes today attacked the flag- ship of the Japanese naval force stationed behind the Japanese consulate, causing undetermined damage and throwing the city into an uproar of fear and excite- ment. The warship was the cruiser Idzumo. Japanese immediately asserted no damage had been caused but the cruiser remained engulfed in smoke. The attack occurred within a stone's throw of Shanghai's lead- ing hotels, apartments and com- mercial Institutions, the Idzumo being tied up at the northern end of the famous Bund. An eyewitness said three air- planes came from the northeast, rained down their explosives and inmediately shot up into the air to disappear from view. The attack followed the re- sumption of hostilities early this morning when the roar of field guns and the chatter of machine gun fire today ushered in an- other day of anxiety for Shang- hai, torn by Sino-Japanese con- flict. SHANGHAI, Aug. 14.--(Saturday) -(R)-Warships from the Asiatic leets of the United States and Great Britain sped under forced draft to Shanghai tonight to take part in the defense of that city's International Settlement,, as flames against the night sky over nearby Chapel left foreigners in danger reported even greater than that of the Chinese- Japanese warfare there in 1932. Chapei In Flames For the second time in less than six years bitter artillery duels set afire Chapei and other districts of Shang- hai along the Whangpoo River as latest developments of the struggle between the two Oriental nations left Shanghai's 3,500,000 panic- stricken. Into the International Settlement 4,000 United States citizens and 8,- 000 British nationals were crowded for protection along with nationals of other countries. Guarding the Americans and British and the vast accumulation of wealth and prop- erty they hold in Shanghai are 1,050 U.S. Marines and about 950 British infantrymen, the latter force to be doubled as soon as a battalion of Welsh Fusiliers being rushed from Hongkong arrives on the scene. Navy Vs. Army The Japanese navy and the Chinese army had turned Shanghai's north- trn and western environs into a bat- tl. ground. They spent Friday in artillery duelling along the Whangpoo, the city's outlet to the sea, and along the northern fringes of Hongkew, that part of the International Set- tlement which Japan dominates. The guns were silent at midnight, but the flames told how well they had done their work. Nearly all day the battle had ranged from Shang- hai itself probably as far as Woo- sung, 10 miles away, where Japanese warships were reported to have bombarded the Woosung forts, com- manding the confluence of the Whangpoo and the mighty Yangtze. Yarnell Heads U.S. Fleet Admiral Harry E. Yarnell, com- mander in chief of the United States Asiatic fleet, aboard his flagship, the heavy cruiser Augusta, and Vice-Ad- miral Sir Charles Little, commanding Britain's China squadron, on his flag- ship, the cruiser Cumberland, were enroute toward Shanghai. In the Shanghai battlefield it was some 7,000 Japanese bluejackets, backed by at least 21 warships stretched along the Whangpoo, against steadily increasing numbers of Chinese soldiers belonging to the regular forces of the Central Govern- ment. Foreign authorities estimated the Chinese numbers at 30,000. Many of these belonged to the 87th and 88th divisions of the Central could make a snappy oyster stew, pull a swell hand of taffy and pop corn that melted in your mouth-and she'd walk to Ypsi on dare, too! Once she even rode horseback to Whitmore Lake but that was a bit too much even for that strenuous day, according to Mrs. Wrentmore-at least she ate standing up for the next few days. Social life on the campus in the days when a wooden Indian gaped at the State Street passerby who was busy dodging the horse-and-buggy ;raffic, was, as now, capped by the J-Hop, but that's about the only sim- ilarity. Dances given by clubs and fraternities, church socials (each tained class news, athletics and an- nouncements. They always gave the girls the dull assignments. What was the campus' attitude toward these pioneer Michigan news- paperwomen? "Well, they gave us a little credit for being modern and up to date." Ku Klux Issue May Be Raised Black Foes Law Quadranole Is Realization Of Dream Of William W. Cook: By JAMES A. BOOZER Building is more emphatically Gothic.C The Law Quadrangle, embracing Four square towers rise from the cor- architectural styles from Gothic to ners of the structure to a height of Renaissance, was not erected in ac- 90 feet. Each is capped by a short cord with the fiats of any one period,9' Gt. and apped by art but designed rather to embody the Gothic spire, and around the tops are best features of old English Inns of the coats of arms of the 48 states Court with those of the Oxford and carved in white limestone. Cambridge colleges. The new Law School is, with one The Law Quadrangle is a realized exception, the only institution in the dream of its donor, William W. Cook. country where in on closely connected Plans for .the buildings were formu- unitaall the equipment for carrying lated more than 20 years ago by on an advanced professional study Mr. Cook, assisted by Dean Bates and iscentered. Within two blocks are the late President Hutchins. The located all the dormitories, class- buildings composing the group are rooms, offices, libraries, commons and the Lawyers Club, the John P. Cook recreational facilities for 300 men. Dormitory, the William W. Cook Mr. Cook, who amassed the largest Legal Research Building, and Hut- portion of his fortune through in- chins Hall. Construction was paid vestments while practicing law in New for with one of the largest single York City, never returned to see the -.- - -. ya ai l i fulfillment of his dream. He was, WASHINGTON, Aug. Word spread about the night that the Ku Klux 12.-W)- capitol to- Klan issue' might be raised by some senators fighting the 'appointment of their1 colleague, Hugo L. Black of Alabama, to the Supreme Court. One of Black's senatorial oppon- ents, who refused to be quoted bya name, said he understood a study was being made of reports that the j Alabaman had once been supported for office by the Klan. This senator said that if anything of a documentary nature could be, found it would be submitted to the judiciary committee which must pass upon the nomination. Some other members of the small Senate group openly opposing Black declared, however, that they were "washing our hands" of any such tactics. They added their objections were on legal grounds only. The Roosevelt administration won the first round in an almost unpre- r