T HE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY Demonstration, Fist Fight Halt Union Hearing Temporarily Campaigning For Votes Flo IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG i". IFunny Sunny . . . A demonstration by. opponents of Homer Martin, international president of the United Auto Workers Union, and a-fist fight involving an expelled officer temporarily halted the scheduled trial of four suspended U.A.W.A. officers in Detroit. Two Toledo, O., union members are shown here trying to gain entrance to the hearing. At left is a guard at U.A.W. headquarters. Statue Of Liberty Loses Her Spikes Little Success Seen For Italian JewishDrive ROME, July 26.-(,)-The Italian press is conducting a tremendous campaign to arouse enthusiasm for the new Fascist anti-Jewish policy, but thus far there has been no con- spicuous success.I The anti-semitic faction of the Fas- cist party has been demanding that Jews be excluded fro:n teaching, journalism, the arts and other occu- pations influencing national thought. It also has demanded that positions of command in the army and of lead- ership in the Fascist regime be closed The Rev. Gerald B. Winrod[ (above), Wichita Evangelist, lec- turer and pamphleteer, who has been accused of Nazi sympathies, is campaigning for the Republi- can senatorial nomination in Ka'nsas. National Chairman John Hamilton has called for his de- feat. to Italy's 47,000 Jews, and that Italo- Jewish marriages be forbidden. Whether such regulations, strong-' ly suggestive of Nazi Jewish policy, are adopted may depend on two fac-' tors: 1. The reaction to the doctrine of race among the mass of Italians who. are cool to anti-semitism. 2. The future status of relations be- tween Italy and what Premier Mus- solini likes to term the "demo-pluto- cracies"-the world's democracies. Newspapers took up yesterday's declaration by Party Secretary Achille Starace that the formula considering Italians as of Aryan origin must be followed by 'ulterior political action." A group of scholars, which had published a report on Italian racial- ism, under the auspices of the popular culture ministry, heard Starace's an- nouncement that "elaboration and discussion of Fascist race principles" would be the popular culture minis- try's main task next year. The report, released July 14, as- serted Italians were of Aryan origin and Jews did "not belong to the Italian race." There were thrills and laughs aplenty yesterday afternoon at Ferry Field in the I-M softball league. Probably the funniest incident of the year occurred when Sun- ny Bauer, a funmaker of the Nick Altrock school, marched his P.K.S. squad into Ferry Field to + the accompaniment of a four- piece band. Led by a baton-wielder who con- fined his activities to very rudimen- tary stick waving, Bauers had his clarinet, trumpet, French horn and brass horn parade around the bases to the tune of "Ach Du Lieber Augus- tine" and some other piece which was undistinguishable although it sound- ed faintly familiar at spots. After the cruise of the bases (on each of which the unsup- pressable Sunny pivoted) the team and the band marched solemnly to its dugout which, for economical purposes, was beneath a tree. The pieces which the band 'played sounded like a distortion of Stra- Yinsky's Rite of Spring but it must be admitted that the flesh and spirit were "both very willing. In spite of being raised to such a fever pitch by the blowing and tooting, the P.K.S. team went down to defeat, 4-3. Maybe a five- piece band next time might do it, Sunny. * * * scoring four runs and pushing his team out in front, 11-10. With the blow, Mason became the hero instead of the goat. * * * Went down to see Franklin C. Cap- pon yesterday. Cappy, a coach of the football squad and head coach of the basketball team, is now backfield coach at Princeton and their head basketball coach. During the summer Cappon teaches basketball to teachers who come here for expert in- struction-and get it. He went to Princeton for six weeks for their spring practice but because of the paucity of men out for other activities it was difficult to discover much. As an example, on one Sat- urday there were 19 different teams competing. There are only about 2,- 200 students at Princeton so the 19 teams cut pretty much of a chunk out of the football men available for spring training. Theatrical Notables To Present Alumnus' Play "Tree of Heaven" a three-act play by John 1 .Caldwell, '37, TerradHaute Ind., will be given a tryout produc- tion by the Duchess County Players at Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Thursday through Saturday. A group of New York theatrical no- tables including Orsen. Welles are sponsoring the presentation of Cald- well's play which is being considered for production by the Mercury thea- ter next fall. Caldwell, who won more than $1,000 in writing competitions while in the University was the recipient of a Cecila B. DeMille rhetoric scho- larship. He has been writing for radio since graduation. PROF MITCHELL TO SPEAK Prof. Elmer D. Mitch ll, director of the physical education department, will speak at 4:05 p.m. today in the University High School auditorium on "Present Trends in School Sports." On The Nose.. . Bill Mason, shortstop for the Pat- tocks, redeemed himself in Frank Merriwellian fashionmafter making several bad bobbles of ground balls in their game against the Analysts The Pattocks came to bat in the last half of the sixth trailing 10-5. By dint of some errors, walks and hits, they pushed two runs across and had three men on base with Mason up. With a one and one count on him, Mason caught one on the nose and sent it way out to deep right center for a home run, Liberty's loss of spikes, so that supports can be replaced, will alter the looks of the famous landmark.-AP-Paramount News Photo ---------- - - - - - - - - -- - - - 7- Public Health Dinner Aug. 1 Summer Students, Faculty Members Are Invited Invitations have been extended to members of the faculty and their wives as well as to all students for the dinner which will be given at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 1, in the gar- den of the League under the sponsor- ship of the Public Health Depart- ment. The dinner is to be an informal affair, according to Elizabeth Vanden Bossche, '38E, general chairman, which is being given so that students and the faculty of the public health department from the various parts of the country may become better ac- quainted. Michigan songs wlil be sung after the dinner. All those planning to attend the af- fair are asked to make reservations in the office of Dr. John Sundwall, director of the Division of Hygiene and Public Health, in Room 2, Wa- terman Gymnasium, before noon, lAug. 1. what similar lapse is found in the contamination of two words as when one says 'evoid' for either 'evade' or 'avoid.' " In concluding, Dr. Sturtevant sug- gested the importance of the study of lapses to problems of infelctional change in language. The child who1 used 'bate' as thep ast tense of 'beat' in the same sentence with 'ate' was producing an inflectional form by analogy, he said. Such lapses are of great importance in the history of language. But all linguistic lapses, he asserted, offer a wide field for re- search not only to the linguist but also to the psychologist and the psy- chiatrist. O.D.MORRILL 314 S. State St. Typewriters, Stationery, Student and Office Supplies Since 1908 Phone 6615 Read The Daily Classifieds NARROW WIDTH SHOE SALE LADIES DO YOU WEAR AAAA or AAA ALL $7.50 and $8.50 HUGE OUT-OF-DOOR CONCERT 215 MUSICIANS University Summer Session Band High School Clinic Band Conductors: before it should be, as when I heard someone say 'as a matter of flact, Flemish,' instead of 'fact, Flemish.' But sometimes a sound is substituted for another, as in 'Spring ticken for 10 cents a pound., It is not impos- sible that we say 'four' instead of something like 'whour' because in early Germanic times people in count- ing moved the f' of 'five' up to the preceding word. "Sometimes," Professor Sturtevant; continued, "an omission of a word occurs, as when a woman said, 'Put my coat in your pocket,' when what3 she meant to say was 'Put my cup in your coat pocket.' Again, the last of a word or syllable occurs along; with anticipation, as in my boy's 'posties' for 'post toasties,' or in 'naviator' for 'naval aviator.' The re- verse process to anticipation is found metathesis of sounds in actual con- tact within a word are very rare, a' fact which raises the question whether such lapses have not already been incorporated within the language, having occurred long ago so often that they were finally adopted. I "Another general division of lapses is composed of those due t mixed selection of words in a sentence. A speaker sometimes has several choices to make. If he combines choices, he will say something like 'That will be less informal,' when he started out to say either 'less formal' or 'more informal.' Such contaminations sometimes actually get into the liter- ary language and persis as figures of speech or set expressions. This is the source of ° the Greek and Latin figure called 'anacoluthon.' A some- WILLIAM D. REVELLIUniversity of Michigan GERALD R. PRESCOTT, University of Minnesota lear Sousa's Stars and Stripes Forever" played by this great musical aggregation. Friday, July G GDDIY 19,7PN iiii n' 4 . .. I