FRIDAY, JULY 9,1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THEREE NEWS Of The DAY ( To Wed Wally's First Animals Suffer When Science Helps Humans Guinea Pigs And Rabbits I Popular; Embryonic Chicks Rate Second NEW YORK-(I)-About 2,000,000 animals, 14 for every doctor, stand f World's Largest Privately Owned Plane Completes Flight (By The Associated Press) Expect Earhart Back On Purdue Campus LAFAYETTE, Ind., July 8.-(~)- Purdue University, which know Amelia Earhart well, expects to se the missing aviatrix back on th( campus next fall. Dr. Edward C. Elliott, Purdue President, other faculty members and Capt. Lawrence Aretz, manager of the University airport, were unwav- ering today in their faith that Mis Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, would be rescued. Dr. Elliott, ill at home with a cold, told his family he was confident she would be saved. Miss Earhart joined the Purdue faculty last year at the invitation of Dr. Elliott who was impressed by a lecture 'she delivered at Indianapolis. On her office door was the title "Consultant on Careers for Wom- en," but she advised both men and women students on career problems She left the University last fall on an indefinite leave of absence. The metal monoplane in which she was making her world-girdling flight was financed in part by pri- vate contributions from the Purdue research foundation directors. Michigan's Cherty Queen ys its President WASHINGTON, July 8-(P)-The Washington tour of Michigan's Cherry Queen drew to an end today after an interview with President Roose- velt, a visit to the Japanese Embassy and a trip to Mt. Vernon. Miss Eliene Lyon of Traverse City, is returning without a promise from President Roosevelt to attend the State Cherry Festival, July 14, 15 and 16. However, she has personal as- surance from the President he "has a warm spot" in his heart for Mich- igan. The 15-pound cherry pie Miss Lyon brought to the White House, the President said, would be served at his dinner tonight. He told her he once ate a piece of "gift pie" while assistant navy secretary and three hours later was in Naval Hospital un- dergoing an appendectomy. Address Of Mrs. Muench Now Milan, Michigan MILAN, Mich., July 8.-(M)-Prison dpors clanged shut today behind Mrs. Nellie Tipton Muench of St. Louis, principal figure in the sensational "gift of God" baby case, ending her long fight for freedom. Weeping in contrast to the nervous laughter with which she greeted St. Louis news photographers' attempts to photograph her behind dark spec- tacles and a handkerchief which she held in front of her face, Mrs. Muench began a 10-year term at the Federal Prison Farm here for mail fraud. She was sentenced with three others for using the mails to defraud Dr. Marsh Pitzman, wealthy bachelor physician of St. Louis. Personal Touch In Vocational Aid Is Backed Myers Claims Job Help Should Be Individual, Not General Mrs. Norma Reese Johnson, widow of a wealthy Detroiter will marry Commander Earl Winfield Spencer, U.S.N., in Los Angeles. Mr. Spencer was the first husband of the Duchess of Windsor. f behind the medical profession of the United States in easing human ill- ness. They are the animals used annual- ly for medical experiments, testing the safety of drugs and furnishing j serums, vaccines and hormones for human treatment. It is a tribute to the skill of science that nearly half of these animals are mice, used under conditions that do not involve sacrifice. Some of the mice, depicting hered- ity in disease, have pedigrees as long as those of royal families. Now It's Embryonic Chicks The last word in animal experi- ments is the embryonic chick, mere- ly a bit of unfeeling tissue, which is showing the way in important can- cer experiments. Guinea pigs used in experiments number about 200,000, rating a tie with rabbits. But the pigs are about to (iron to thirrd nlntP Tn ah .Ti ers'tuned 1 For 4 Games With Cleveland Series May Decide Chance' Of Detroit For Winning Pennant DETROIT, July 8.-(/P)-The De- troit Tigers, refreshed by a three- day lay-off, tuned up their bats to- day for a long home stand that may decide their pennant chances. In second place-only a few per. centage points ahead of the Chicago White Sox-the Tigers open a four- game series at Navin Field tomorrowi against the Cleveland 'Indians before encountering the league-leading Nev York Yankees. An announcement that Gerald Walker, hard-hitting outfielder, may return to the line-up tomorrow, cheered the Tigers, but they received some discouraging news, too, when George (Slicker) Coffman, rookie pitcher, was hit on the arm by a bal] batted by big Hank Greenberg during practice. X-rays were to be taken to deter- mine the extent of the injury. Coff- man's right forearm was severely bruised, but doctors said they did not believe it was fractured. He will be out of the line-up for about a week. Walker has not been able to play for a week because of a pulled leg muscle. Acting Manager Del Baker said he would send Elden Auker against the Indians in the opening game. He will oppose either Willis Hudlin or Earl Whitehiil. The Tigers will play their most im- portant series during the next 18 days. The Yankees, with a five and one-half game lead, follow the In- dians here next Wednesday for three games. Then in order come the oth- er Eastern clubs-Washington, Bos- ton and Philadelphia. Chicago Cubs Thank Jurges ForMany Wins' CHICAGO, July 8.-(Il)-Figures put the finger on Bill Jurges as the )atting sparkplug in the Chicago Cubs' rush to the top of the National jeague. They used to make cracks that Jurges' sensational fielding at short- top was the chief reason why he was kept on a Major League payroll. No- iody called him an "All-American" but there were times when pitchers passed the guy ahead- of him to get at Jurges in a tight spot. His best This 17-ton flying boat, said to be the world's largest privately owned plane, flew nonstop from San Diego to New York in 17 hours. Richard Archbold, research associate of the American Museum of Natural His- tory, brought the craft for outfitting for a research expedition to Dutch New Guinea. Undersea OilRaises Controversy Schnapps Beats Of Who Owns The Ocean's Bed Twilight Song n rac U sect p"j r p iIa . a r ce. dLrabbiIs 'Black are stepping into a new place of dig- Fortunes In Black Gold' from drillers will pour millions of nity for small animal-protectors of Believed Under The Gulf dollars into state treasuries. man. International Issue It has been discovered recently at. Of Mexico That's only for territorial waters, the Rockefeller Institute that rab- however. A more intricate problem bits will supply pneumonia serum i NEW ORLEANS-(A')-Vast for- has arisen with a report by the Unit- better than horses, which have been tunes in "black gold" are believed to ed States Coast and Geodetic Survey the preferred source.k d of the discovery of a salt dome, us- In fourth place are white rats, If be under the Gulf of Mexico. But ually the indication of an oil pool, 18 medicine had known several hun- title to the rich oil fields is in doubt. miles out in the gulf. That is the in- dred years ago what since has been Though the legal tangle is far from ternational zone. Some experts think discovered about these rodents, the raveled, drilling operations such as this new oil empire will have to be term "rat" might have taken the ,he world has not seen are going on. discovered and claimed for some na- place of honor held by the name Getting oil from soil hundreds of tion, as other new territories have "guinea pig." feet under the sea has meant scrap- been. Dogs, Cats and Ferrets ping of methods used heretofore. In the meantime, it is not so dumb For rats are more like man than Ships Sunk To Help Work to buy land covered by 10 or 500 feet any other animal in reactions to diet. With no solid bottom for founda- of water-there might be oil under As a result they have become the ;ions, derricks, boiler houses and ma- them thar waves. guides of the scientists who are show- chinery have been mounted on spe- ing how to lengthen the span of cial barges which are sunk at the / T man's life by diet. thipa f drilling site, then raised when it is1 N Ih1tco rll) Other friends of the sick are dogs, I necessary to change location. Mile cats, monkeys and ferrets. Not many upon mile of walkways have been aze Yankees are used. They are comparatively constructed so that the new, web- expensive and are reserved for work footed "roughnecks," as oil workers . . which cannot be done with lower are known, can get about. The walks In British Open animals. j are heavily creosoted and workers The ferret is a newcomer. He is gave to protect exposed skin' with the "guinea pig" for flu. Monkeys are ointment. Oldest Brother Paces Over helping fight the children's battle A fleet of one-time merchant ves- strokes, of infantile paralysis. They also are sels beached on the mud flats or at Heath In 70 To friends of the host of humans whose salt domes, serve as storage tanks Take Lead minds slip over the border of sanity ,nd have the added advantage of re- - _ for the monkey's brain structure! quiring no costly foundations. At CARNOUSTIE, Scotland, July 8.- provides a pattern for understand- one point, the abandoned French (A')-Reginald Albert Whitcombe, ing the human gray matter. convict ship, Tampico, still bearing But even in mental problems scien- the shackles that chained prisoners largest and youngest of England's tists are able to make some of their destined for the Guiana penal col- three distinguished golfing brothers, experiments with rats. onies, serves as a dock for 'deep-sea, swung over Carnoustie's shaggy The horse, because of its size and barges that transfer the oil from heath in 70 strokes today to take a consequent ability to produce in large storage ships to tankers. two-stroke lead at the half-way mark volume, is a main source- of medical Radio telephones, seismographic in the British Open Golf Champion- Hambletonian Favorite Is Unable To Gain Victory In Stallion Stake CLEVELAND, July 8.-(P)- Schnapps, brown colt, owned by W. N. Reynolds of the Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston Salem, N. C., sprang a surprise at the North Randall Grand Circuit races today when he beat the Hambletonian favorite, Twilight Song in the $6,065 championship stallion stake. Under the handling of Will Caton, who trained horses for the Czar of. Russia, Schnapps seized the first and third miles with Twilight Song-a stablemate-taking the second. Twilight Song, making her first 1937. start, broke in the lead in the third mile as Stepalin attempted to stave off the winner. As a result of his victory, Schnapps replaced Twilight Song as favorite for the $40,000 Hambletonian, Ken- tucky Derby of the harness turf, which will be raced at Goshen, N.Y., Aug. 11. In the first mile Twilight Song went to. the front at the half, but was un- able to turn back Schnapps, who closed resolutely to win by three parts of a length in 2:02 3/5. serums. Calves furnish vaccines. Faculty Group Fetes Graduate Students At Tea More than 100 students attended the informal tea, given by the School of Education from 5 p.m. until 6 p.m. yesterday in the University Elemen- tary School Library. The tea hon- ored the graduates of education who are new on campus this summer. Prof. Clark Trow, who is chairman of the School of Education social committee, was in charge of the tea. Assisting him as members of the com- mittee, were: Mrs. Paul Remus, Miss Ruth Cunningham, Miss Cynthia Ruggles, Mr. Vinn and Mrs. Trickey. Among the guests were: Dean and Mrs. Clarence S. Yoakum, Dean and Mrs. Peter Okkelberg, Professor and Mrs. Clifford Woody and Dean and exploration from power boats and ship with a score of 142. luggers, tractors that travel on Two shots back of Ed Dudley at marshy land or water, and amphi- the end of yesterday's first round, bian planes that reduce to minutes Whitcombe covered the stretched- trips from field to field that former- out 7,200 yards of Carnoustie in ly took days are used in this strange three under par, leaving Dudley two variation of the endless hunt for oil. shots behind. Louisiana In Lead Dazed by the first day of sunshine The new wealth being forced from in a week, the Americans missed the depths of the gulf dwarfs the what little chance they had to take plunder that the pirate, Jean Lafitte, the lead. But generally they one brought through the tortuous strengthened their positions within bayous and lakes to New Orleans. The striking distance of the leader as Vast trapping operations that once the tournament moved into its final were the major industry of marshy 36 holes, to be played tomorrow. Louisiana have been overshadowed. Eleven players from the United Louisiana is in a favorable position States qualified with 36 others, Gene in the new industry. It had a head Sarazen, Tony Manero, Kirkwood, start in exploring submerged proper- amateur John W. Bailey of Battle ties. And it probably is the largest Creek, and American-born British .' Counseling and vocational guid- ance should now be an individual service and not a group service, Prof. George Myers of the education school told a group of students yesterday in the auditorium of the University high school. "New emphasis should be placed upon - self inventory service, and teachers should realize more fully the exploratory value of their subject," he said. The main points involved in voca- tionmal guidance, as pointed out by Professor Myers, are occupational in- formation service, self inventory service, personal data collecting serv- ice, individual counseling service, vo- cational preparation, placement and follow-up and adjustment service. He spoke of the opposition to vo- cational guidance, and defined voca- tional guidance as "the process help- ing an individual choose, prepare for, enter upon and progress in an occu- pation." Sanity Examination To Be Given Dyer LOS ANGELES, July 8.-P)-Al- bert Dyer, 32, confessed sex slayer of1 three little girls, won a sanity exam- ination today on insistence of the I t i r t ! 1( ownqr of oil lands in the South be- cause of public domain over water season mark was compiled in 1933, Mrs. James B. Edmundson. when he hit .269. Mrs. Willard C. Olson, Mrs. James Today slugger Jurges boasted a Edmondson and Mhs Woody pre- feverish .362 mark-the building of sided at the tea table during the af- which started just about the time the ternoon. Cubs opened their big drive. On June- 4, Jurges was hitting .286. Since Gravel Road'Oilinur then he had added 76 points to his O-in average, since June 5, the Cubs have To Cost $1,000,000 won 19 out of 27 engagements, whichI indicate that the star shortstop's, hitting had something to do with the LANSING, July .8.-W)-The State rush. Highway Department today launched Consistently enough, Billy Her- a $1,000,000 payment dust-laying from the time he joined the Cubs in pormo eodr ors n the National League's hottest second- progra on secondary tourist and base combination, gets an assist on farm-to-market gravel roads. the latter's sudden hitting spurt. Murray D. Van Wagoner, state Herman, a major league hitter ~.~_ fro mthe time he joined the Cubs in 1931, noticed that Jurges was cutting down on the ball. The result was ground balls that sometimes skidded 1 past infielders for base hits, but more often didn't. Herman showed his mate a few things about leveling off his swing-and the Jurges batting;L f ,I bottoms that never can be sold. But state land offices from Ala- bama to Texas are wrestling with theI knotty problem of under-sea owner- ship-whether the land is in state or federal jurisdiction. If it is ad- judged state property the royalties highway commissioner, announced bids would be opened July 22 on 13 projects, covering 142 miles, for the surfacing of highways with dust- proof oil aggregate grading, drainage and other preparations for surfac- ing already have been completed un- der joint auspices of the state and the works progress administration. --- hut th11G jpyg C10 wt{UW two of them. The most noted mem- ber of the tribe, elder brother Charles who captained the British Ryder Cup forces, managed to get around in 71 and was tied with Dudley at 144, two strokes off the pace. amateur Champion Robert Sweeny, failed. One Whitcombe would have been enough for any championship today, but the leaders had to c ntend ith BLUE LANTERN ISLAND LAKE Friday Night Only TWO BIG BANDS Don Redman A comedy of Wall, Street. / :1 A e" I