The Weathe)r Somewhat warmer with vary- ing southwest winds. i Z, .4 r lflfr iga OA444*6bbr ijatt Editorials Goodbye Pin Ball Machines ... Sanitation Rules In Ann Arbor... 0 Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLVI. No. 22 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Resignation Of Haber As State Relief Director Is Accepted Guardian Of Michigan's 'Little Social Scurities Act' Quits Post Resignation Takes Effect On Aug. 1 Prof. William Haber of the econ- omics department, state emergency relief administrator and guardian of Michigan's "Little Social Security Act," yesterday was allowedabyrGov. Frank Murphy to resign after his second attempt to do so. His resignation, which the Govern- or said would not take effect until Aug. 1, brought to a close a stormy period since May, 1934, of vitriolic attacks by state legislators and other officials on the local faculty man who has been at the head of the State's welfare during two Demo- cratic administrations with a Repub- lican regime interposed. Fathered Compensation Act As such he fathered the state un- employment compensation act, and1 will remain on the commission di- recting it "at the express desire of Governory Murphy." Rep. Elton R. Eaton (Rep.) of Plymouth uttered a vigorous attack on Professor Haber May 4 in the capitol building at Lansing in which he charged that the administrator not only enjoyed the salaries of mul- tiple state positionsand the Federal Relief directorship but was cashing in heavily on expense accounts in his. various capacities while receiving a faculty salary here beside. To these charges Haber replied with a record of his salaries showing that at no time since 1934 had they totalled more than $8,100 a year, al- so pointing out that his resignation, unaccepted, had been in. the Govern-' or's hands since last November, and' that he had given up his Federal position when he joined the faculty here, while the books accounting for expenses of administering for relief" were open to the public. Resignation Follows Act At present Professor Haber's only , positions are on the faculty here and on the state unemployment compen- sation commission, from which the senate sought to bar him last spring by stipulating that its members could hold only one state post. It was pointed out that Haber's resignation and its acceptance prob- ably followed the recent passage of the state welfare reorganization act which will go into effect Jan, 1. Until that time, according to Professor Ha- ber's letter of resignation, the work of the Emergency Relief Administra- tion will be "chiefly a winding up process" to make way for the new sys- tem, which the retiring director char-i acterized as "outstandingly progres-1 sive." Governor Murphy expressed a desire to have Haber's successor take1 (Continued on Page 3) Usage Principle In Languaget Interpretation Etymology Not Essentialf Principle, Yale Professor Tells Group "Usage, not etymology!" To this fundamental principle of language interpretation, first enun- ciated 1500 years ago by the Hindus, the attention of scholars was directed anew yesterday noon by Prof. Frank- lin Edgerton of Yale University in a discussion at the regular luncheon conference of the Linguistic Institute. Professor Edgerton, visiting faculty member in the Summer Session, de- clared that he went back to the Hin- dus for the formulation of the prin- ciple because it has never been more clearly stated than by them. It grew out of the study and analysis of the Vedic texts by the Purva-Mimansa school of Hindu philosophy. The members of this school were orthodox Brahmans who sought to interpret the Veda, written in a form of San- skrit that was already a dead lan- guage to them, in order to make it significant in their acts of ritual. Accepts Resignation Michigan First In Philippine Ceramic Work Roosevelt Court Change Collapses As Senate's Judiciary Committee University Archaeological Expedition In 1922-25 Be i sTa,1 scia-S22 Begins Totall Laid Base,_Guthe Says Manila Has Worked On Same Material Lini Fuhr, A Red Cross Nurse e y Revised Measure GOV.-FRANK MURPHY 175 Students Will Present Band Concert Clinic Band And Session Group To Combine For ProgramTonight More than 175 high school and University students, members of the regular Summer Session band and the high school clinic band, will pre- sent a concert at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli of the music school and Dr. Harold Bach- mann, director of the University of Chicago band. High school principals and super- intendents are especially invited to attend the concert ,according to Pro- fessor Revilli, in view of the fact that a great part of the program will be made up of selections played by high school students from throughout the state. The program has been divided into four parts. The clinic band will open the program by playing six numbers, and the second part of the concert will be presented by the Summer Session band playing four selections. The flute ensemble of the clinic band will follow the Session band, and it will be followed by the wood- wind trio and the woodwind ensemble. The two bands will be combined to play the fourth and final part of the program. The concert is open to the public, Professor Revelli said yesterday. 8th Excursion Will Visit GM Proving Track The General Motors Proving Grounds at Milford will be visited tomorrow by the eighth Summer Ses- sion excursion. Reservations should be made by 5 p.m. today. Among points of interest will be roads of varying grades up to 24 per cent, difficult curves, several road- bed surfaces, and the four-mile con- crete loop where automobiles are sub- ject to severe speed and endurance tests. The "bath-tub," a depressed piece of concrete, built for testing the effects of water on moving automo- biles, and the shops and garages equipped for measuring vibration, brake efficiency, steering effort, and the like, are to be inspected and are all to be explained by engineer-guides. The proving grounds, 30 miles from Ann Arbor, have facilities for apply- ing 165 different tests. All kinds of road surfaces are included in the 1,- 268 acre laboratory-mud, brick, dirt, gravel, tar-treated surfaces, and con- crete. The archaeological expedition of the University of Michigan in the Philippines in 1922-25 laid the foun- dation for an extensive exploitation of the wealth of ceramics of the islands, Dr. Carl G. Guthe, director of Uni- versity Museums and of the archae- ological museum, told the audience of yesterday's Summer Session lec- ture. "The University of Manila has un- dertaken the work of searching out the archaeological material of the islands which we uncovered," Dr. Guthe, who led the expedition, said. "Our trip was more or less in the nature of an introductory exploratory survey, made with the intention of finding out whether the locality was a worthwhile field for research. The area covered by the survey, the southern half of the islands, is about as extensive as the southeastern United States, although most of it is water, the land amounting to terri- tory comparable in size to New Eng- land and New York. The expedition made use of a sailing yacht, manned by an American skipper and a native crew, in its travels to various parts of the archipelago. Cruises of as long as four and five weeks at a time were often made in the vessel, according to Dr. Guthe. A total of 15,000 miles was covered, and 542 different sites were visited. Of these 134 were burial grounds 231 graves and 99 caves con- taining material. A large number of empty caves were also searched. The superstitious natives, who re- fused to enter the burial caves, which they believed to be inhabited by evil spirits, as. well as great natural dif- ficulties presented by the rugged top- ography of the country handicapped the expedition, which succeeded, how- ever, in gathering 4,500 catalogue numbers of which about 80 per cent were ceramic, for the University col- lection. The burial caves, which often con- tained the most valuable specimens found on trips, were usually rather. hard to work in because of the dis- order resulting from incursions of birds, wild beasts and native medicine men. Sometimes the cave floors were (Continued on Page 3) 2nd Vesper Service To Feature Chorus The second Vespers service, to be held on the Library terrace at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, will feature the Sum- mer Session Chorus under direction of Prof. David Mattern of the music school. Dr.sE. W. Blakeman will give an invocation, and the Rev. R. Edward Sayles of the Baptist Church, will present the evening message. Hymns to be sung by the assembly include "Eventides," "Laudes Do- mini," "Serenity," and "Mile's Lane." July Regents' Meeting Is Today At Frankfort President Ruthven will entertain the Board of Regents tonight at a dinner at his summer home at Frank- fort before the regular July meeting, which will also be held in the Ruthven home. Included in the program for the week-end entertainment of the Re- gents is a rodeo to be staged for them Saturday in Frankfort. According to University officials, the subject of replacing or repairing the Automo- tive Laboratories, damaged by fire here two weeks ago, may come up for discussion during the Friday night meeting. Left U.S. In January In First Contingent Sent By Committee By JAMES A. BOOZER A story rivaling that of Florence Nightingale at Scutari in 1854 is that of Lini Fuhr, who returned a few weeks ago from bleeding Spain, where she served as nurse in Ameri- can hospitals in and near Madrid. Her six months at the front of Spanish civil war gave her a ringside1 seat to the struggle between the Loy- alist government and the Fascists- so close that falling bombs sometimes shattered windows in the hospitals' where she toiled, along with other nurses and doctors in the American1 Red Cross Health Service, without sleep for days at a stretch.1 She is one of a contingent of 100 doctors and nurses sent to Spain, andi Bombardments In Spain Kill 63, Wound 150 Heaviest Toll Is Recorded In Cohenar Viejo; - Air Attack Lasts 4 Hours MADRID, July 22.-(P)--Sixty- three persons were killed and more' than 150 wounded-in intensive insur- gent bombardments of Madrid and two towns today. The heaviest toll was in Colmenar -Viejo, about 15 miles north of Ma- drid, where an air bombardment killed 50 and wounded about 100. Several houses were wrecked, and some burned. In Madrid, eight -were killed and 20 wounded in the Central Cibeles Square by a single missile which fell near a street car during a severe shelling. Madrid was not bombed. The insurgents loosed about 400 bombs in their four-hour air attack on the town of Quintanar De La Or- den, taking a toll of five dead and 32 wounded. The bombers started at 11 p.m. last night and continued un- til 3 a.m. today. Along the twisting front west of Madrid, government and insurgent artillery subjected enemy lines to ter- rific bombardments. One body of Gen. Francisco Fran- (Continued on Page 4) Charge Mrs. Price With Perjury In Scot tsboro Case DECATUR, Ala., July 22.-(P)- Perjury charges were hurled by the defense today at the testimony of Mrs. Victoria Price, accuser of nine Negro defendants, in the Scottsboro case, and a witness testified the young white woman once told him she was not raped. The defense surprise came during the trial of Charlie Weems, one of the Negroes accused of assaulting k Mrs. Price and Ruby Bates. After Samuel Leibowitz, defense chief, had moved for exclusion of testimony by Mrs. Price, the star State witness, on the ground her statements were "perjured," he placed Lester Carter on the stand. Carter said he was a hobo on the freight train aboard which the State contends Mrs. Price and Ruby Bates were assaulted by a gang of Negroes on March 25, 1931, near Scottsboro, Ala. "There wasdno rape," Carter said Mrs. Price told him in Scottsboro jail after the train was stopped by a posse at Paint Rock, Ala. Mrs. Price asked him to support her attack story to prevent "trouble over riding a train," Carter testified. In Spain Six Months, To Return her experiences she will not forget while she lives. One of the most in- delible of them she mentioned last night in a talk in the Methodist Church, sponsored by the Committee of Medical Aid to Spanish Democracy. In the overflowing hospital set up near Madrid in the bitter cold, a Dutch volunteer was to be op- erated on by Dr. Edward Barsky, chief of the Medical Bureau hospitals there. Peter was the wounded boy's name, and he had been lying in the cold for five days since the abdominal wound. After coffee made of burn peanuts to sustain her after 22 hours without a wink of sleep, Lini Fuhr went down the rows of hundreds of groaning sol- diers to the Dutch boy to talk to him in his own tongue, and while she should have been getting two hours sleep before having to arise again at1 6 a.m., she stayed by him until he was carried to the surgery room in the school house improvised as a hospital. Dr. Barsky had made the initial in- cision, had found the kidney torn by a dum-dum bullet, and was tying up the arteries, when the lights flickered three times. An airplane raid- A match was hastily thrown into a vessel of oil, candles were lit in the cold, and the operation was not halt- ed, as the omnious sound of Fascist planes droned above in the early morning dark. , All the time Peter knew the effort was just that. How could he hope to live after five days with a demolished kidney? Using her precious last hours of sleep, Lini Fuhr stayed by (continued on Page 4) Earthquake Hits Alaska;, Endures Over A Minute Eart~h Cracked From Four To Six Inches In Places Along Main .Artery FAIRBANKS, Alaska, July 22.-WI) -Half-dressed men and women ran from homes and hotels, frame build- ings swayed and merchandise tum- bled to floors as a strong earthquake struck Fairbanks and the Alaskan territory today. The quake began about 7:09 a.m., Fairbanks time, and lasted more than a minute. Termors were re-current throughout the day. Three Shocks A second severe shock came at 7:55 a.m. The third, at 8:01, was so severe it put the University of Alaska seis- mograph out of commission. There was no report of injuries and estimates of damage were not avail- able. Concern was felt for persons in the Black Rapids glacier district near the Big Delta river about 125 miles southeast of here. Communications lines were down and it was felt here the area may have been "greatly dis- turbed." It was recalled that tremors were felt there within the last few months, starting the glacier moving forward rapidly again after it virtually had ceased its advance, which had caused apprehension for the nearby Rich- ardson highway. Damage Slight A survey indicated most damage consisted of broken windows and damaged merchandise. Motorists arriving late today from the south reported the quake cracked the earth from four to six inches in places along the Richardson highway, forcing up gushers of water and mud from four to six feet high along cer- tain stretches. Suburban and long distance tele- phone lines were out of service, but Peaceful Ways Of Settlement Seen In East TOKYO, July 22.--(/P -Both Japan and China tonight appeared to have decided to seek settlement of their North China conflict by peaceful means rather than war. / Here and in Nanking government measures pointed strongly in the di- rection of peace. Domei, the Japanese news agency, reported from Peiping that the cen- tral Chinese government had agreed to local settlement of the clash of Chinese and Japanese interests. Officials said this would remove the most dangerous source of friction be- tWeen the two powers. They ex- pressed belief it would dispel much of the tension which has gripped the Orient since the night of July 7, when sniall Japanese and Chinese units clashed near Marco Polo bridge 10 miles west of Peiping. The Japanese war office issued or- ders which indicated a halt in prep- arations for large-scale war. Chinese and Japanese troops alike were reported evacuating the imme- diate zone of conflict west of Peiping. Provision For Increase Of Court's Size Will Be Stricken From Bill Former Co-Ed Clouds Detroit Seer's Crystal When the girls on campus last yearj told Maryanna Chockley, president of Judiciary Council, that she was allR wet, she usually had a comeback in{ drastic shape, and the habit sticks. A Detroit horoscope caster, Mrs. Ceola Kramer, chief of staff at the1 Temple of Light, told Maryanna that, she had a "quick mind," and that1 teaching would be her only successful) profession. She also threw in the in- formation that Maryanna's mother# would die in four months, that Mary- anna lacked confidence in herself, and for a bonus, that the United States would never have a dictator- ship. Unfortunately for Mrs. Kramer,, Maryanna's mother was not sick, as the forecaster had been informed, Maryanna did' not want to be a teacher, and does not plan to be one. To show confidence in herself, Mary- inna revealed that she was a police- woman, and signed a complaint against Mrs. Kramer under a state law making it a misdemeanor to take money for revealing the future. The dictatorship question will have to work itself out, however. Regular Dance Tonight To Be Held In Union 'Night Ride' Featured By Zwick's Band; Cutting To Be Allowed A performance of the English hit, "Night Ride" by five brasses, and an interpretation of "Image of You" by the Glee Club, will be featured by Charlie Zwick's orchestra at the in- formal dance to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tonight in the Union ball- room, according to Jeanne Geyer, '39, chairman of Friday dances. The informal dances this week-end are being held in the Union as part of the Summer Session League Coun- cil's plan to acquaint students with both the League and Union ballrooms. ountain service will be available on teterrace of the Union tonight. , "These dances provide a grand op- portunity for meeting your fellow Defeat Is Admitted By Adiinistration WASHINGTON, July 22.-(P)-The Senatevhanded theRoosevelt Court Bill over to its enemies in the Ju- diciary Committee today to be strip- ped of its furiously-disputed provision for increasing the membership of the Supreme Court. For the first time, administration leaders frankly admitted defeat, con- ceded that their long fight for enact- ment of a measure changing the makeup of the nation's high tribunal had reached an unsuccessful end. To Reduce Measure Under an agreement reached to- day, the committee is now to reduce the once robust and dispute-awaken- ing measure to a thin shadow of its former self, to a few non-controver- sial clauses on the lower courts. On the first roll call vote the Sen- ate has had in nearly six months of controversy, the administration lead- ers voted,-with the jubilantly gleeful opponents of the bill, that such pro- cedure be followed. 'Freshmen' Decline To Follow But, a younger group of Democratic senators, adhering to the end to the President's plan, declined to follow. Indignantly in some cases, they voted against recommitting the bill. The result of the roll call was 70 for re- committal, 20 against. With the undisputed death of the Supreme Court provision and other disputed clauses, a suggestion for a constitutional amendment, of un- specified form, emerged from within the Administration, regarded by some as the beginning of a new Administra- tion drive. Secretary Ickes was its backer. An unusual session of the Judiciary Committee, attended by leaders of both sides in the controversy, settled the fate of the bill earlier in the day. The opposition was in clear control. It was decided that Senator Logan (Dem., Ky.) should move recommit- tal, and that the committee should then draft a new bill including only provision for intervention by the At- torney General and direct appeal to the Supreme Court when the consti- (Continued on Pae 3) U.S. Personnel In Government Trails Europe's Professor Pollock Speaks Over Radio, Comparing Systems Of Both Because America is not yet public- administration minded its adminis- trators are generally inferior to those of Europe, Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science department, said Wednesday in a radio address entitled "Public Administration in Europe and America-A Comparison." Professor Pollock attributed the su- periority of European administrators to the highly selective system of en- trance into the service, to the salary scales and to the honor and high moral attached to positions of public trust. Public administration progress has been the most important part of the development of government in late years, he said, yet Americans con- tinue to condemn the public service and sneer at its members. In addition to selected personnel, the speaker laid the superiority of the European service to three causes: the highly developed control of finances and the treasury by the government, the simpler structure of the adminis- tration set-up with the greater em- phasis on the executive branch, and the methods of protecting citizens from arbitrary acts of government by special courts. He condemned the negative approach to administrative organization as employed in the Experimental Naval Tank Here Does Great Lakes Ship Testing By BETSEY ANDERSON scale models of vessels to test in the All types of ships are tested in the tank. laboratory maintained by the Depart- With the exception of the govern- ment of Naval Architecture and Ma- ment naval tank in Washington, D.C., rine Engineering in the basement of the flying boat hull testing tank at the West Engineering Building, Prof. Langley Field, and two small flumes, Louis A. Baier, associate professor in this tank is th only one of its kind the department stated recently in an in the country, Professor Baier said. interview. Holding about 500,000 gallons of The majority of the Great Lakes water, the tank is connected with all ship testing is done in the tank and I the fire plugs on campus and by students," Miss cially as there Geyer stated, "espe- is cutting after the intermission." Unescorted men will not be allowed into the ballroom be- fore the intermission. The following women have been chosen to act as dance assistants: Maryanna Condit, Mary Louise En- ders, Eleanor Reed, Eliza Shannon, Janet Collings, Cynthia Adams, Joan Takken Rosamond Le. Florence tl[7fI ~ T1~Rd: TW' 7AT. T.A :F ' t|