Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1939 — Page 6

SIX NAMED TO . U. FACULTY; ~ 8 GET LEAVES

Austrian Scholar Who Left Vienna After Putsch to Teach German.

Times Special

BLOOMINGTON, Ind, June 13.—| | President Herman B Wells today] announced the appointment of Dr.|:

Franz Mautner, Austrian scholar,

who left Vienna after the Nazi invasion last year, as assistant professor of German at Indiana University. Prof. Mautner was graduated from the University of Heidelberg and the University of Besancon, France. He came to the United States late last vear and has been teaching and lecturing at Johns Hopkins University and in the University of Delaware. He has been working on a book on Lichtenberg, German philosopher. Before coming States. he achieved international reputation as an authority on the works znd philosophy of Frederick Guendolf, outstanding literary leader of Germany in the early 20th Century.

Five Others Named

to the United |

umbrellas.

GIVEN DEGREES

President Wells also announced | appointment of five others to the] faculty for the 1939-40 scademic year. They are: Dr. Jerome Hall, former Chicago, attorney, assistant state's attorney of Cook County, Illinois, and since 1935 professor of law at Louisiana State University, to be professor of law. Dr. Fred Stitt, National Research Fellow at Harvard University, to be instructor in chemistry. Dr. Gerald J. Matchett, member of economics department of Cornell University, to be instructor in economics. Dr. Louis O. Quam, member of geology department of the University of Colorado, to be instructor in department of geology and geography. Paul H. Wagner, journalism instructor at Stanford University, forner member of Milwaukee (Wis. Journal staff, and former managing editor of Wisconsin Dairymen’s News, to be instructor in journalism.

HULL GRITICIZES

NAZI ECONOMICS

Liberties Lost and People lll-Fed, He Says on Pact Anniversary.

WASHINGTON, June 13 (U. P.).| —Secretary of State Hull today ob- | served the fifth anniversary of the | reciprocal trade treaty program by |

denouncing “discriminatory” for- |

eign trade methods such as those! used by Germany and Italy. In a formal statement com-| memorating enactment of the trade program five years ago, Secretary | Hull said “excessive and arbitrary checks on economic activity” lead to chaos and destruction. He did not mention Germany nor Italy by name, but he has; criticized their foreign trade policies specifically in similar words.

Loss of Freedom Cited

“Discriminatory arrangements not only necessitate an increasing | regimentation of economic life, but!

an increasing regimentation of i

human beings and their ultimate;

loss of political freedom,” Hull said. “It is not possible to stifie normal economic processes without diminishing human freedom, and na-! tional security and independence.” | small nations which enter into such | arrangements with a larger nation | become increasingly dependent upon | the large nation for economic ex- | istence and inevitably become po- | litical vassals of the large nation.

Predicts General Collapse | | | {

“Likewise, if two larger nations enter into a discriminatory agreement between themselves, with an! agreement to divide their spheres of | influence, other nations inevitably |

will take defensive economic meas- |

|+ealiforntal

ures and, instead of establishing peace and economic rehabilitation and progress, the result is bound to] be a general economic collapse.” | He said that several nations which have not joined in the American trade program are “finding at length that their people are

ili-fed; that their ancient liberties;

are gone.”

“Those who have joined with us:

to keep open the main highways of peace have benefited materially,” he said.

600 REQUEST SEATS ON ATLANTIC FLIGHTS

NEW YORK, June 13 (U. P).— Bix hundred persons have requested reservations on commercial airplane flights across the Atlantic, American Airways officials said. More than 300 have asked to make the first regular flight between the United States and Europe, scheduled to start June 28. The company advised all applicants that their names were being listed in the order in which they were received. Passenger rates will be $375 for one way, or $675 round trip. The name at the top of the passenger list was Will Rogers, who made his reservation in 1931.

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Five Undergraduates Are Honored at Annual Commencement.

Times Special FRANKLIN, Ind, June 13.—Degrees were conferred on 47 at the annual Franklin College commencement yesterday. Five undergraduates received special honor.

Miss Rubylea Chambers, Princeton, received her A. B. degree with distinction. The Misses Virginia Patterson of Franklin and Margaret Sparling, Ft. Wayne, were graduated with magna cum laude

honors. Others awarded A. B. degrees Joseph W. Esping, Mary Rebecca Hosier, Jeanette Lucile McElroy, Robert T. Purves, Betty Ellen Reed and William Thomas Walton, all of Indianapolis.

Graduates Are Listed

Mark D. Deming, Finch Duffey, Ruth Hicks, Mrs. FElizabsth Ferrara, Robert Irwin Foist, Philv F. McQuinn, Hugh Burn Spencer, Helen Josephine Means and Mary A. White, all of Franklin. Martha Elien Carlock, Washington, D C.; Mary Warner Cox. Crothersville; Marforv Dickson, Hammond; Rupert T. Ferrell, Pzoli: Stafford Freemond Green, Greenwood; Iris Lucille Grimes, Milan: Eleancy Haymaker. New Albany; John F. Henry, New Albany: Charlotte Catherine Hyde. Edinburg; Rex Brainard norr, Ft. Wavne, Maurice Alvin Lusk, Needham; Francis Theron McCarty. Waveiand: tto Homer McCracken, ashing2 Albert McLean, Milan, enn.

Mary Lucile Manning, Anderson: James D. Pierce, Frankfort; William T. Platt, Greensburg: John T. Pritchard, Madison: Evelyn Elizabeth Richardson. Shelbyville; Mary Evelyn Richardson, Greenwood.

Others Get Degrees

William Schafenacker, Ft. Wayne; George Schilling, Gladwin, Mich.: Herta Marie Schrom, Baden, Germany; Elda Marion Smith, Madison; Margarat Anne Sparling, Ft. Wayne: Robert O. Waldorf, uncie: Rubert Wilson Wilbourn, Sco‘tsburg, Va.; Edwin Threlkeld, Whiteland; Gertrude Burton Brown, East Gary, and Minnie Hemphill, Edinburg. Undergraduate awards included Ruth Audria Miller, Lebanon, Baldwin language rize; Marybella Durigg, Bucyrus, O., rodehurst Elsey freshman scholarship ard; Delores Keith, Franklin, BrodeElsev sophomore scholarship award; t Johnson, Dubuque, Ia., and Charles Rice, Waynetown, honorariums of the Almanack, college yearbook.

2 WOMEN WINNERS OF LITERARY PRIZES

BOSTON, June 13 (U. P.) —Miss Mary King of New Orleans, La., and Miss Helen Todd of St. Louis, Mo., have been awarded literary fellowships of $1000 each by Houghton Miffiin Co., publishers. The awards were based on projects already under way. Miss King is writing a novel based on a Texas oil town, while Miss Todd is preparing a biographical study of Ulysses S. Grant.

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| Sander, 401 E. “calling signals”

Opening a series of meetings here to plan an intense organization campaign, Mr. Lewis set the C. L O.’s membership goal as the 20,000,000 unorganized wage earners. He warned the rival American Federation of Labor against organization “raids” in C. I. O. fields, and hinted at possible reprisais.

Outlines His Program

“We have only begun the job of organizing,” he said. “We are a vital labor movement and there is no stopping or no rest until all who work for their living in this country have a union for their protection.” He said the meeting will “determine new fields of organization and new directions in which to emplov our resources.” He named specifically the aircraft and shipbuilding industries which are booming as a result of world-wide rearmament programs. He accused the A. F. of L. of attempting to “reorganize the or-| ganized” and of “stealing” what | C. I. O. organizers had won. He said that the C. I. Os aim was to ‘‘organize the unorganized.” “The C. I. O. will not tolerate that policy. . . The day will come when its patience and tolerance in the face of the vile and lying attacks

upon its integrity and its policies

E. P. FISHER, Gen, Agent 811 Merchants Bank Bldg. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Phone: Riley 3077

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Addrece WOEN GATE EXE

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ee HEY One Group the Rain Didn't B

other

Times Photo.

Because skies were clouded yesterday many per- | swimmers wore were their swimsuits. Miss Madeline sons went to work wearing raincoats and carrying But all that these first-day-of-the-season

Orange St. supervisor, is shown for these bathers at Garfield Park.

47 AT FRANKLIN Lewis Warns of Fascism As CLO. Charts Course

WASHINGTON, June 13 (U. P.).—President John L. Lewis told the executive board of the C. I. O. today that the nation faces fascism unless it solves its problems courageously and unhesitatingly.

“... We stand in danger of being engulfed by a wave of despair and black reaction,” he told the 43 heads of the C. I. O.-affiliated international unions. “Fascism is built upon such despair and such reaction.”

and its organizations will end. Then let those who attack us beware.” Mr. Lewis criticized Congress bitterly, and charged that only “the thunderous voice of the C. I. O. united with the rank and file of the A. F. of L.” prevented Congress from “destroying the National Labor Relations Act.” The inability of 11,000,000 workers to obtain employment, he said, is

slowly “undermining their faith in the government” and constitutes a “menace to the stability of our form of government.”

FLEE ISLAND PRISON NEW YORK, June 13 (U. P.).— Two prisoners escaped from Castle William, the military prison on

Governor's Island, today apparently in a small boat in which they managed to make the Brooklyn shore.

NAPOLIS TIMES __

FLIERS TO MAP 18 | COUNTIES IN STATE

Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 13— Aerial mapping of 18 Indiana counties for the Agricultural Adjustment Administration was to be started this week by the Kargl Aerial Surveys Co, San Antonio, Tex. Two planes, stationed at Indianapolis, will be used in the mapping, according to L. M. Vogler, chairman of the Indiana Agricultural Conservation Committee, with headquarters at Purdue University. The counties to be mapped this

summer include Clinton, Tipton, Madison, Hancock, Warren, Foun-

tain, Vermillion and Parke.

TWO FACE HABITUAL CRIMINAL CHARGES

Trial of Donald Nye and Roscoe Pierson, former convicts, charged with being habitual criminals, wii} open in Criminal Court June 26. The two men, who also will face charges of robbery and auto banditry, were arrested in, connection with the holdup of a tavern at 1717 Kentucky Ave. last September. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Temple, who lived above the tavern, were tortured during the robbery. Criminal Court Judge Dewey E.

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