Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 232, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1931 — Page 4

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Keep the Primary Once again the politicians are endeavoring to take away the primary from the people and to throw control of political parties into the hands of the few. For the most part, the sponsors of these movements in the legislature come from those whose records have so little to com. mend them that they are afraid to again übmit their fate to the people, Instead of repealing the primary law, the legislature would do better if it restored the right of nominating the Governor and senators by direct vote. It is true that there are faults in the l'rimary method of nomination, but they do not compare to the evils of a convention system. The convention permits the easy manipulation of government by the bosses who are usually paid, in some form, by the utilities and other privileged interests. The convention system is designed to take away from the people any voice in their own government. If there were any real desire to have real representative government, the legislators would turn their thoughts toward shortening the ballot and strengthening of the primary. Reform might come in this manner. Only autocracy, graft and corruption can come from limitations upon the people’s power. About the only argument against the primary is that it could produce legislators who recognize in their own unfitness evidence of lack of ability on the part of the people to make wise choices. Veterans and Veterans We oppose the reported plan of the politicians to block the cash bonus bills until the end of the congressional session, and then to pass a compromise which in turn can be pocket-vetoed by the President. That is a grand plan for political face saving all round, but it is grossly unfair to the veterans. They have a right to a clean-cut decision, one way or the other. We see no reason why the administration or any member of congress or any newspaper should need to save face in opposing to the end a bond issue o f $3,400,000,000 for immediate cash payment to all veterans of double the amount of the present value of the bonus certificates. As we, together with many business leaders and government experts, have pointed out, such bond issue would shake the federal financial system and prolong business depression. The veterans would suffer in the end, because they are dependent on a return of national prosperity. But, of course, we agree that the veteran in need should be helped. And we believe that a way can be found. In the first place, most of the veterans are not in need; most of them have jobs and thus have no incentive to sacrifice the maturing insurance value of their bonus certificates, as proposed by the blanket $3,400,000,000 plan. That brings us down to the unemployed veterans. On the basis of general unemployment figures, that means from 10 to 15 per cent of the veterans. We have seen no good reason advanced against the proposal to increase for this group—to double or more—the loan value of the bonus certificates and perhaps to lower the interest rate on such loans. In addition we have urged the necessity of a direct federal apropriation for unemployment relief in cases where local and private relief funds are proved inadequate. In other words, the unemployed veteran today is in dire need not because he is a veteran, but because he is unemployed. , Because it is essentially an unemployment problem it can not be met fairly or effectively by handling it as a special veterans’ problem, covering the majority of veterans who are employed. Immediately after the war, when hundreds of thousands of men returned from the army to civilian life, there was specific soldiers’ unemployment. The bulk of them got S3O a month in wages, with part deducted for war risk insurance. All were given e "bonus” of S6O when discharged, which at that time wouldn't buy a good suit of civilian clothes. Most cf them came out of the army broke. Unemployment in the days immediately following the war was due to this surplus of man-power dumped on a market which rapidly was needing less man-power anyhow, because of machinery and women workers. Unemployment directly after the war affected, almost entirely, the former soldier. Unemployment today has nothing to do with the war. It affects men who were too young for war service as well as men who were too old for war service. The former soldier has lost his identity in this unemployment crisis. It is not an unemployment of war veterans, but a universal unemployment, affecting all ages and types of men and women. The blanket cash bonus proposal is bad from the veterans’ own point of view because most of the money would go to men with jobs who do not need it Certainly no person can object to any reasonable relief for unemployed veterans. Power Trust Neckties The Clarion River Power Company s attempt to string up the federal water power act on a couple of dozen $3 neckties has failed. Even though the neckties were from one of Fifth avenue’s best stores, even though they were souvenirs .of the famous Plney project’s completion, the federal power commission has a right to say they do not" look well in the power company's net investment accounts upon which the public is going to pay and pay for the next fifty years, so the District of Columbia supreme court decided this week. This, after all. is ijot a frivolous matter, but an extremely important one. The $144 item for neckties was only one of many the power commission’s accounting department challenged as improper when it examined the Clarion River Power Company's net investments accounts. The company claims the Piney project cost $11,032,000. The accountants of the government say its legitimate cost was only $4,645,000, and that the restmore than six million dollars—was padding and should not be Included !n the sum on which the public must pay rates. r*. And if the public wants to buy back thefplant in

The Indianapolis Times (A SCBIPPH-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) Owned and published dally (except Sunday) by The Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 West Maryland Street, Indianapolis. Ind. Price in Marion Cotinty, 2 cents a copy: elsewhere. 3 cents—dellrered by carrier, 12 cents a week. BOYD GURLEY. BOY W. HOWARD, FRANK G. MORRISON. Editor President Business Manager PHONE— Riley .Vfil THURSDAY. FEB. 5. 1931, Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance. Newspaper Enterprise Association. Newspaper Information Service and Audit Bureau of Circulations. “Give Light and the Peoole Will Find Their Own Way.”

fifty years it should hot pay eleven millions, but four and a half millions, the accountants contend. When the power commission set a date for hearing what the company had to say about this matter, the company's answer was an injunction suit to prevent any hearing and a challenge of the validity of the power act. The court has sustained the power act. The court even has pointed out the importance of making immediate determination of the actual costs of projects, a matter which already has been delayed ten years by power commissioners none too zealous In enforcing provisions of the law. Now the law may be enforced at last if we can speure a power commission willing to enforce it. Unfortunately, three of the five men in the power commission at the present time discharged Charles A. Russell, power commission solicitor who argued and won this case. All five of the commissioners refused to reinstate this man, whose only offense had been zealous enforcement of the power act. The Human Approach The proposed consolidation of all eastern railroads into four big systems may be sound economically and still be laden with grave social dangers in throwing upon the streets thousands more jobless men. One of the heads of the four systems, Daniel Willard, president of the Baltimore & Ohio, sees this threat. “It is my thought,” wrote Willard in the executives’ service bulletin, “that in the consummation of any plan of consolidation involving the B, & O. which the interstate commerce commission may approve, the B. & O. should undertake to safeguard the interests of all its employes. “More specifically this means that, every man employed by the B. & O. should be retained in the service of the company in the same work and at the same compensation so far as possible and justifiable, and that the same treatment should be extended to the employes of other companies which may be unified with this company.” Willard said that in cases where actual services are terminated, the company should provide similar or equivalent jobs at other places for the men affected. England, he pointed out, has written this obligation into an act of parliament. “To do less than this,” he added, “would be unjust to a large group of deserving men and women, now looked upon as semi-public servants. The public interest does not require benefits derived from unjust treatment of those who now man the railroads.” Finland’s Wickersham Finland now has its Wickersham committee, just as it has its prohibition, and its bootleggers and congested prisons. The government has appointed a board to investigate social conditions created by prohibition and to make recommendations. Apparently Jthere is a rather good prospect that this board’s report will be more helpful than that wet report with a dry. summary recently transmitted by President Hoover to the congress of the United States. The Finnish committee, unlike the Wickersham committee, has been directed to make recommendations looking to the furtherance of temperance. Temperance is something we are inclined to overlook in our discussions of prohibition in this country. It should be the objective of those whe support the eighteenth amendment, but, if it is, this fact is not always clear. The Wickershrm report on prohibition, says a dispatch from Washington, promises to be one of the best sellers of the winter book season. Which is not bad for dry literature. "I thought I’d have a fit,” as the customer said to his tailor. "A man may be down but not' out” is a saying which seems to apply most everywhere but in the ring. € The Harvard student who threw a grapefruit at Rudy Vallee and missed, has been dismissed. The college seems justified in dealing thus severely with a man with no better aim in life. i_ Chambers of Commerce seeking publicity for their cities might take a lesson from Bostonians. They used their bean.

REASON

IF in an unguarded moment you should feel as if everything is going to pot and that things could not possibly be worse, just turn to the Fifty Years Ago column and read that it was away down below zero. a a a There are a lot of people in this w'orld who never have been introduced, but if you will just glance at the proceedings of the different legislatures now in session, you will see that all of the hills have been introduced. v e a While we are thinking of this Butler-Mussolini episode, it is some comfort to read that the London Times just has been forced to apologize to Lloyd George. tt a e THE latest picture of Mahatma Gandhi represents him as being almost homely enough to win the first prize in an American beauty contest. a a a It must be very aggravating to Nicholas Murray Butler to have this other Butler, General Smedley. rush in and grab off such an enormous portion of the limelight. Germany’s oil lands are said to be passing rapidly into the hands of American operators. a a a Possibly Germany has a second cousin of exSecretary Fall in charge, of her interior department. tt ft tt SPEAKING of Fall, the papers say he has had a sudden relapse and is too sick to go to Washington and face the guns in that old criminal prosecution that’s been hanging fire these many years. a o a If this government hasn’t enough gumption to call Fall's ancient bluff and haul him into court and give him what's coming to him, it ought to go into the hands of a receiver. a a a It seems able to hand it to General Butler, who twice has been honored by congress for gallantry in action, but it seems unable to hand it to Fall, who has been branded for infamy, branded by the supreme court of the United States. a a a COMMANDER GHATTI, Italian explorer, states that recently he was charged by five gorillas. This is nothing; we used to know a man who was pursued by pink elephants twice a week a a a We are not a bit disappointed, that Wilkins, the explorer, didn't invite us to go wjlSi him on his ( submarine expedition to the north pole.

RY FREDERICK LANDIS

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

M. E. Tracy

-SAYS:-

If You Don’t Give the Imagination a Chance to Do Bigger, Better Things It Will Eat Its Heart Out by Doing Smaller, Meaner Things. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. s.—The federal war department at last has approved plans for the Bay bridge, and work will begin on the Golden Gate span about July 1. This insures San Francisco not only more than $100,000,000 worth of construction in the near future, but direct north and east connections with the mainland. The bay bridge will run from the Rincon hill district of the city, 6ix miles east, to Oakland, by way of Goat island. Its cost has been estimated at $72,000,000, and the time necessary to build it at six years. The Golden Gate bridge will have a single span of 4,200 feet and a clearance of 210 feet. Its cost has been estimated at $35,000,000. Both bridges will be financed through public bonds, those for the Golden Gate bridge being issued by a district composed of nine counties, and those for the bay bridge being issued by the state of California. The bonds will be retired by tolls, after which the bridges will be made free. Restore Faith SUCH enterprises restore one’s faith in the future. We ought to have more of them, not only in this great country, but throughout the world. If we had, fewer people would be out of work. Asa matter of fact, civilization has not been doing what it could, or ought, during the last twentyfive years. Too much of its ability, equipment, and resources has been wasted in useless fighting or equally useless frivolity. From a purely mechanical standpoint, these San Francisco bridges are quite the biggest projects of their kind ever undertaken, but m proportion to the tools at our command, they are not. Egyptians built the pyramids without so much as a steam hoist, while the Suez canal was dug by women carrying the dirt out in baskets on their heads. If you don’t give the imagination a chance to do bigger, better things, it will eat its heart out by doing smaller meaner things. ft tt ft Marks to Shoot At WHY not a second canal through Nicaragua? Why not a dam across Baffin straits to change the climate of New England and eastern Canada? Why not a tunnel under the English channel? Why not a great inland sea to kill the scorching effect of Sahara, or a dozen other enterprises that really would challenge the strength of this age and give folks something really worth while to brag about? Cost, you say? Well, just think over this for a month. Thirteen years ago, the civilized world burned up $300,000,000,000, slaughtered 10,000,000 of its best men, and crippled 20,000,000 more, for the sake of war. It could dig a ditch from New York to San Francisco, or bridge the Atlantic for less money, not to mention the human misery involved. Don’t you realize that the battle of the Marne, the siege of Verdun, or any other major action on the western front represented a bigger outlay in dollars and cents than the Panama canal? tt tt tt Vision Lacking PEOPLE constantly are saying that the machine age is killing work, and it is, if work includes no more than meat, drink and pleasure. But if work means the larger schenfe of making such experiments and improvements as our ability, training, and resources permit, the machine age is creating so many opportunities that we couldn’t take advantage of them If every man, woman and child were to toil sixteen hours a day for the next thousand years. It is not lack cf opportunity, but lack of vision that ails society. tt n tt Great Field Open WHAT we really are trying to do is make work, without taking chances, keep ourselves busy eating the pie and cake left by the last generation. That wasn’t the way the last generation did it, or or several generations before. They took chances, built railroads right across the map, strung wires half around the world, when the 5 per cent boys said it couldn’t be done, or wouldn't pay if it could. To a great extent the engineers has supplanted the warrior and politician when it comes to leadership, but that doesn’t mean that the world can make full use of his ability, without laying bets now and then. Engineering may not demand the blood that war and politics have ; called for, but it does demand the money, the mass co-operation, the moral support. We have permitted engineers to 1 do some very wonderful things here and there, but we have yet to give ; them an equal chance with generals | and statesmen. When civilization mobilizes behind j seme engineer as it once mobilized behind Julius Caesar, or Napoleon, it will realize not only what it can do that never was done before, but that machinery has made more room for adventure and romance, instead ! ofless.

pTCOAy'IMTHCH tl! m - SB

PIKE’S BIRTH Feb. 5

ON Feb. 5, 1779, Zebulon Pike, an American soldier and explorer after whom Pike's Peak is named, was born in Lamberton, N. J., the son of an army officer. At the age of 15 he was a cadet in his father's regiment and was made a first lieutenant six years later. On Aug. 9, 1805. he started from St. Louis on an expedition to reach the source of the Mississippi and was successful, returning a year later. He then immediately began the exploration of the Arkansas river, which he ascended to Pueblo, Col. After discovering Pike's Peak, he visited the site of the present town of Leadviile. He was promoted to the rank of ma jor in 1808, colonel In 1812, and brigadier general in 1813. He died of wounds received in the expedition in Canada.

Co-Eds of Today Taller, Heavier

BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN, Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hyxeia, the Health Mazarine. THE point has been made repeatedly that the application of modern rules of hygiene and helpful living ought to produce a better type of human being physically than existed in the past. In 1915, E. E. Jacobs began a study of the available data regarding freshman girls in colleges. He selected this type because accurate data were available concerning them, since they are examined at the time of their entrance into school. * They are of an age, in most instances, when they have not yet begun to use tobacco and alcohol. The only physical training they have had is such as they get in high school and they do not show the effects of venereal disease or childbirth.

IT SEEMS TO ME

ALTHOUGH I am on the other side, it seems to me extremely likely that we are headed for theatrical censorship. This will be a tragic misfortune, and yet the playwrights and to a much greater extent the producers are to blame. Please don’t assume that I am about to say they should have cleaned house without any compulsion from outside. I think nothing of the sort. The error of the theater has been in assuming a defensive attitude—in going one-third of the way to admit that the stage is in a parlous condition and that something ought to be done about it. The truth of the matter, as I see it, is that the theater never was in a more live and vigorous state as far as its artistic achievements and potentialities go. The growth in frank, colorful and faithful native drama is almost wholly coincidental with the develop ment of the so-called licentious stage. A clean theater and a dead theater are synonymous. tt n tt Here Are Four NOT three or four of the best plays of the last few years would have escaped the censor’s pencil, "Rain,” "What Price Glory?” and “The Green Pastures,” to name some of the outstanding dramas of our day, would all have been turned back under any form of censorship which a law could create. And I cite “The Green Pastures” particularly because it is precisely the type of fine play which must be sacrificed to a licensing system. The law which Senator Mastick is sponsoring jn New York is not content to bar obscenity. It also contains a clause forbidding the sacrilegious. “Obscenity” a word difficult of definition, but it is easier by far than "sacrilegious.” That is a word w’hich will be used and alw’ays has been used to ban anything. In other words, the dogmatic churches, which have been fast losing ground because modern thought , has obliged them to stans up and j | fight for the validity of their creeds, i are doing the cry baby act. They will insist that the authenticity of orthodoxy is not a fit subject for public and dramatic debate. Sex is to be taken out of the theater, and also religion, which leaves the budding playwright very little but the musical glasses. tt u tt Has Happened IT is not fantastic to assert that a play such as “The Green Pastures” would be the first victim of i any form of legal censorship. The ] fact is on record that it has been banned in Britain, where the licensing rules are by all testimony, mod- ! erate and liberal. If there was such a thing as intelligent censorship, England would j come as close as any nation ever has to possessing it. And do not believe for a moment that any stipulation concerning sacrilege will stop at mere examinaj tion of the mood of any dramatic ; transcript from the Bible. It \till go farther than that. It will be used as a weapon to compel (every play’Sight to treat the cloth, ! both Catholic and Protestant, as if

Playing Horse With It!

DAILY HEALTH SERVICE

He took the records of five colleges, drawing students from all over the country. In some of the colleges the available records go back as far as 1881. The total number of girls studied was 5,050, and the years covered W’ere from 1882 to 1915. In 1930 another study was made of the freshman girls from the same five institutions. The points particularly noted were age, weight, height, lung capacity, girth of the patient and vital index. The figures show definite progress in the physical quality of the material concerned. If the 49 years of investigations are divided into three periods of little more than fifteen years each, the figures show that freshman girls in the first period were on the average 19.2 years of age, in the second period 18.6, and in the third period 18.5.

it were in every case hallowed fabric. tt a a The Clergy ALREADY the churches by custom and common consent have pretty nearly gained their point in this respect. Write a masterpiece in which a rabbi or a Catholic priest appears as something less than an uncrowned saint and see how far you will get in the matter of securing a production. As far as New’ York goes, it is safer to snipe at the Protestant clergy. “Rain” did get by here in spite of grumbling, but once it hit the road there were many towns which would not permit a missionary to be held up to tragic scorn. And what is all the shooting about? If one gets down to cases with any advocate of censorship, he

Views of Times Readers

Editor Times—l am densely ignorant concerning banking laws and greatly would appreciate a little information. Since our life savings, as well as many others, were in the State Trust and Savings Company, my question is. Why do the depositors have to pay the loans, mortgages, etc., of the institution? Are these firms not as liable to loss by trusting their savings to said institution as mere depositors of have? Yes, I am densely ignorant. Another thing: Are the directors and stockholders and those responsible living in luxury, while the mere life savings of so many are being disposed of? I am not questioning the receiver and his ability to deal justly. r Won’t someone who knows please answer this truthfully in the same spirit in which it is wTitten? MRS. H. E. Ohio. Editor Times—Few people seem to realize that our state legislature is more concerned with our welfare than is congress. Both congress and_ the general assembly are now in' session. Usually when the paper is picked up the comic page is read first, then the front page sensations, the news of congress, then, perhaps, the new’s of the general assembly. We leave what concerns us most to be read last, in our idle moments, or, not at all. Our legislature is vastly more im- ; portant to our daily life than we ! give credit. Congress acts on sub- • jects that are so large in scope that we are concerned only remotely in ! comparison with the state legisla- ! ture and the bills it enacts or fails i to enact. The general assembly acts upon bills that affect our criminal laws, school laws, marriage and divorce ; laws, civil laws, and many other laws that in general affect us more than laws made by congress. Criminals are judged, sentenced, and imprisoned according to our state statutes. If they escape sentence, then they do so through the laxity of our law organization. If there are any loopholes by which a law may be evaded, then a way of evasion is furnished by the law itself, or, in the laxity of its enforce-

The weight of the girls on the average in the first period was 113.8 pounds, the second period 118.9, and the third 123.2 pounds. Tht.ir height for the first period was 159.5 centimeters, the second period 160.6, and the third period 161.6. The lung capacity increased from 150.6 to 160.7 and to 165.6. The girth of the patient from 78.1 to 80.7 and the third group has also a girth of 80.7. Finally, the vital index increased from 13.2 to 13.8. These studies indicate that the girla entering colleges today are taller, heavier, somewhat younger, and, in general, of better physical vigor than the girls of 30 and of 45 years ago. This probably Is due to better health conditions in homes and to the application of better n ethods of hygiene and more healthful living.

uv HEYWOOD BROUN

will find that the turmoil has been created because some of our current revues have gone in more liberally for rowdy jokes than was customary a few seasons ago. “What of it?” I ask leave to inquire. It doesn’t make a nickel’s worth of difference in your life or that of anybody else. A big revue is a mere luxury, and its type of taste seems to me a matter of singular unimportance. All those who love honest and searching dranja, should quit doiQg nothing, but guard against the attack which is being made against the American theater. Clean up nothing! I would not give the blue noses an inch of encouragement. If the theater is going down under the feet of inrushing fools, at least let it go down fighting. (Copyright, 1931. by The Times)

ment. Sych is the importance of our law’s. \ We should be more concerned with the happenings in the general assembly and see ourselves that w’e do nothing that is unlawful. For every privilege, we have a duty. Every law that is passed must be enforced if it is to be successful. HAROLD TUTTERROW 26th and Arlington avenue. Has Mexico a coin equivalent in value to the United States quarter dollar? The 50 centavo silver piece is equivalent to 25 cents in United States money when the silver peso is at par.

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Ideals and opinions expressed in this column are those of one of America’* most Interestinz writers and are presented without rezard to their azreement or disazreement with the editorial attitude of this naper.—The Editor.

.FEB. 5, 1931

SCIENCE

-BY DAVID DIETZ-

Dr. Phoebus A. Levene Wins Willard Gibbs Medal by Outstanding Work in Chemistry. THE Willard Gibbs medal, awarded in the past to such distinguished scientists as Mme. Curie of France and Svante Arrhenius of Sweden, has been given for the last year to Dr. Phoebus A. Levene of the Rockefeller institute. The medal, awarded annually by a jury of eminent scientists representing the Chicago section of the American Chemical Society, is one of the most important prizes in the world of chemistry. It was given to Dr. Levene "as the most outstanding worker in the application of organic chemistry to biological problems.” The citation eulogizes Dr. Levene for his research work into the nature and behavior of many complex substances which occur in living tissue. These substances, the names of which will appear as so much Greek to the non-chemical reader, are substances at the very basis of life. They include nucleic acids, amino sugars, lecithins, cephalins, fatty acids, cerebrosldes, inorganic esters of sugar, hydroxy acids and amino acids. Living tissues are composed of cells. Cells are complex organizations of many complex chemical substances, such as those named above. Many authorities feel that in the last analysis all the physical facts of the behavior of living things must be explained in terms of such studies as Dr. Levene is engaged in. tt a Born in Russia DR. LEVENE was born in Russia, Feb. 25, 1869. He received his secondary education in the classical gymnasium of St. Petersburg, and received the degree of , doctor of medicine from the Imperial Military academy in 1891. Dr. Levene came to America in 1893. For a short time he practiced medicine, and then entered the school of mines of Columbia university as a special student, pursuing at the same time research in biological chemistry m the laboratory of Professor J. J. Curtis of the Columbia Medical school. Later he worked with E. Dreclisel m Berne, with A. Kossel in Marburg, with Professor Hofer in Munich, and with E. Fischer in Berlin. From 1896 to 1905 he was associate in chemistry in the State Pathological institute of New York. In 1905-08 he was Herter lecturer in New York university. In 1905 he entered the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research as research chemist, and in 1907 was made a member of the institute. Dr. Levene is a member of che American Chemical Society, National Academy of Sciences, American Philosophical Society, American Physiological Society.’ Society of Biological Chemists, American Society of Naturalists, Society of Experimental Medicine and Biology, Royal Society of Science of Upsala, Sweden, Deutsche Chemische Gesellscharft, Societe Chimie Biologique and Societe Chimique De France. 8 tt tt Josiah Gibbs THE Gibbs medal, founded by William A. Converse, was named by Josiah Willard Gibbs, one of the most brilliant scientists of the present age. He riTade contributions of fundamental importance to mathematics, physics and chemistry. From 1871 until his death in 1903, he was professor of mathematical physics in Yale university. A large number of the most brilliant scientists now alive received much of their training from Gibbs. “By accomplishments of a superior order,” Charles A. Beard and Mary A. Beard point out in their “Rise of American Civilization." “Gibbs won for himself a position cf commanding importance in the international republic of science.” Henry Adams put Gibbs on the “same plane with the three or four greatest minds of his century.” Dr. Levene will become the twentieth recipient of the medal at a formal ceremony to be held later in Chicago. Previous medalists were Svante Arrhenius of Sweden, Mme. Curie of France, Sir James C. Irvine of Scotland and the following Americans: T. W. Richards, L. H. Baekeland, Ira Remson, Arthur A. Noyes, William R. Whitney, E. W. Morleyi W. M. Burton, W. A. Noyes, F G Cottrell, J. Stieglitz, G. IVLewis, M Gofcberg, J. J. Abel, W. D. Harkins, Claude S. Hudson and Irving Langmuir.

Daily Thought

A man’s pride shall bring him low.—Proverbs 29:23. The proud man is forsaken of God.—Plato.