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NEW 3YEAR TERM FOR MSGR. RYAN Decree Issued by Pope Pius Confirms Previous Action of Trustees. Right Rev. Msgr. James H. Ryan has been reappointed to the rectorship of the Catholic University for a second five-year term by a decree issued by Pope Pius XI, which was reccived here yesterday. The decree confirmed the previous action of the trustees. Msgr. Ryan's first term as rector began in 1928. Since then the student body has in- creased from 892 to 1,450 and the fac- ulty from 115 to 145 members. The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences - has shown the greatest development, six new departments having been added. It now has more than 600 students. Last Summer Msgr. Ryan went to Rome and laid before Pope Pius a plan for the establishment of a national or- ganization to be known as the “Soclety of Friends of the Catholic University of America.” The plan met with pontifical approval and the society has since been established, with local chair- ! men in nearly every diocese. In transmitting the decree, Cardinal Bisleti, prefect of the Sacred Congre- gation for Seminaries and Universities, stated: “We are glad that the authori- ties who govern that important center of studies have given this new proof of confidence in you, a confidence so fully deserved, for we know how the Cath- olic University of America during the five years of your administration has progressed along scientific and discip- linary lines and how its financial status has improved. We, therefore, congrat- ulate you heartily, and while informing you that this Sacred Congregation is highly pleased to confirm your reap- pointment, we express our feeling of assurance that, with the help of God, you will be able to develop your work more and more perfectly with increas- lngl advantage to Catholic higher edu- cation.” LAETARE MEDAL GIVEN TO JOHN M’CORMACK THE EV. [MOLEY OF “BRAIN TRUST" KEEPS IN CLOSE TOUCH Hull Aide Informs Executive of Public Reaction to His Policies. Mind Set on Becoming Prac- tical Political Expert Since College Days. Note: This is the first of three articles on the original three members of the mow famdus “brain trust.” BY GRACE HENDRICK EUSTIS. “There is not really a brain trust.” This comes emphatically from the caustic Assistant Secretary of State, Raymond Moley, who has been credited | with membership in that now famous organization. 'rhz term, “brain trust,” crept into ress pariance during President Roose- velt'’s campaign last Summer, when Prof. Moley, Prof. Adolph Berle, jr., and Prof. Rexford Tugwell, all of Columbia University, helped, with others, to col- lect the data for the President-elect’s campaign speeches. At that time they worked together, collaborating, if their felds overlapped, and actually repre- sented the meaning of the phrase. Activities Separated. Now the grouping is different. The three professors are distributed in vari- ous Government departments, but they do not work together. It is not, as is generally supposed, a network closely woven and interrelated whose focal point is the President. In the State Departmental Register the Assistant Secretary of State is “charged with such duties as may be to him by the Secretary of State.” In addition, Mr. Moley is act- ing as the contact man who is bring- ing to the necessarily secluded ears of the President the national temper and the reactions to the policies of the administration. His extraordinary ac- cess to the President, which is fear- fully regarded by many public officials, is said to be causing undue nervous- ness, because Prof. Moley goes to Mr. Roosevelt, not with opinions, but with WITH PRESIDENT RAYMOND MOLEY. | dence, that the fodder he brings to the White House grist mill will turn out the best bread. Shies at Social Functions. Since the professor took up his official duties, a fog of mystery has been blown up around him out of which have ap- peared phantom shapes. He gets up at 7 o'clock and all day he migrates on a well trodden path, between his airy office on the second floor of the State Department and the White House. Occasionally he dines out socially, but it is not his idea of pleasure. When asked whether he enjoyed going out, his reply was clear and brief, “I do not.” He is not the type of man who would find relaxation in making sprightly conversation. His logical, fact- finding mind is tinctured with a spicy and sometimes bitter wit. The professor is & strongly built, medium sized man of 46. In his pic- tures his face looks pallid, but actually he has a ruddy complexion. Perhaps one of the things that confuse people about him is his manner. He moves and talks with deliberation. He uses facts. Besides the bond of a long, mu- tual friendship, he is one of the men in whom the President has this confi- Notre Dame Confers Homor on Irish Tenor on Golden Anniversary. By the Assoclated Press. SOUTH BEND, Ind, June 5—In w triple ceremonies yesterday the Uni- yersity of Notre Dame graduated the hrgen class in its 89-year history and celebrated the golden anniversary of the Laetare Medal by conterrlnl it upon John McCormack, tenor. The day’s prugrun attracted to the campus nationally prominent Catholic laymen upon whom the medal had been bestowed by the university. They in- cluded Dr. James J. Walsh, 1915 New York; Joseph Scott, 1918, Los Angeles ln.omey Charles P. Hill, 1922, Wash- l’wn Charles D. McGinnis, 1924, Bos- Albert Francis Zahm, 1925, Wash- ington: Edward W. Hurley, 1926, Chica- gvo Miss Margaret Anglin, 1926, New ork actress; Jack J. Spaulding, 1828, # Atlanta, Ga.; Alfred E. Smith, 1929, New York: James J. Thelan, 1931 Bos- ton, and Dr. Stephen J. Maher, 1932, Boston. The baccalaureate sermon was given iesterdly morning by the Rev. Charles Coughlin, pastor of the Shrine of the Little Flower, Royal Oak. Mich., at a pontifical high mass celebrated before more than 6,000 persons in the flag- draped gymnasium. CAMELS ARE CERTAINLY POPULAR ON THIS CAMPUS! The university graduated 523 stu- dents. _ FERRY DOGCKED SAFELY WITH PILOT HOUSE AFIRE By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Junes 5.—Fire was dis- covered aboard the inbound Staten Is- land ferry boat Richmond shortly before 3}9 EaCh';dc“f M.,Inl;x;naln slip late yes- rday, but few of the 1,160 passengers knew about it. The blaze started in the forward pilot hnuse Capt. Arthur F. 'Bowmm w void possible panic, refrained smmdlrg an alarm and ran to the reu' 80: house, from where he guided the t safely into its slip. The passengers went ashore and only the few who had noticed smoke curling Irom the pilot house remained to watch remen extinguish the blaze. Capt. Bowman, who said he first no- ticed the smoke about 100 feet from lhare shore, was unable to trace its cause. ElSEMAN S SEVENTH AND F —_— Cool, Comfortable SUMMER SUITS §13.50 NOTHING DOWN Just Pay $4.50IN JULY $4.50IN AUG. $4.50 INSEPT. Fine Tropical Worsted Suits of the better grade. Cool, stylish and very reasonable at $13.50. Pay $4.50 monthly. Linen Suits, $10.50 Pay $3.50 Monthly Starting in July Sport Coats, $10.50 i Pay $3.50 Monthly Starting in, July silences effectively. If “Sherlock Holmes” were to be produced again, G__STAR, WASHINGTO It is not that he is physically built for that lean fictional hero nor does he whip around the office saying “Quick, rtment. Due to the reputation he mnderorh.\mld!inmmn‘wt started ‘Watson, the needle!” but he has a con- | crime in trolled sharpness and a mental potency that comes from a vast accumulation of specifically assorted data. Sensitive to Criticism. At the same time he is & naive man and one who is sensitive to criticism. During the interview of which this article is the result he was shown a story about himself, which had come out in a weekly magazine. It described | him as habitually wearing an unpressed suit. Mr. Moley looked startled. Then he carefully examined the suit he had on. A puzzled expression came over his face and he said in a small voice, “This is so unkind because I spend money and time trying to keep myself well groomed.” Another thing he dis- likes are the allocations that he is a “bearded pedant” and a ‘“closet acad- emician.” uated from Baldwin-Wallace College in | Berea, Ohio, he becoming a practi~al political expert. Mr. Moley believes that a man does not have to apr:vach this aim, that of being a practical politician, armed with a silvery vocabulary, an homeric voice and a back-cracking hand. He has come to eminence riding a differ- ent horse and consequently his per- sonality is unlike that of the man who has gone through the usual political education that culminates in Washing- ton. His grandfather, Hippolyte Moley, was a Frenchman, who married an Irish lady. On his mother’s side there is New England blood. He seems to have inherited from this acute blend- ing a culture and an agreeable hard- ness that smacks of the continental statesman. Mayor of Olmstead Falls. At the age of 21 Mr. Moley was elected mayor of Olmstead Falls, Ohio, near his birthplace, Berea. Previous to this he had served as superintendent of schools there. Then he fell ill of tuberculosis ond went to Denver. Colo. After two years of assiduous self-care he came back to the Buckeye State, a cured man. For a while he taught his- tory in the West High School in Cleve- land and then became assistant pro- fessor of political science in the West- ern Reserve University, having obtained during this time a Ph. B. from Bald- win-Wallace College and an A. M. from Oberlin. In 1919 came his first chance to ap- ply the theories he had developed. He | g was made the director of the Cleveland Foundation, which was organized to dig the entrenched criminal influence out of Cleveland municipal affairs. This was meat to the bone for him. In spite of local howls and jibberings, he n.ade 8 striking survey. ‘This was the start which has led him he would be an ideal cuv. for the lead. | eventually to the big, gray State De- YES, 87% OF OUR CLASS VOTED THEM THEIR FAVORITE CIGARETTE ! ] From the time he was grad- | has set his mind on | came an associate professor of govern- | ment at Columbia, where he had pre- lously his Ph. D, and in 1928 Froluoor of public law. At Barnard College he taught enthusi- astic girls politics and government, and his expertness in the administration of criminal us‘uce won him a seat on the | faculty o Ffl' l" and Order. Both outside and inside his curricu- |lum he has concentrated on the appli- cation of law and order. He has been research director for the New York State Crime Commission and is research director for the New York State Com- | mission on Administration and Justice. He has_written several books, among thes ‘Politics and Criminal Prosecu- tion” and “Our Criminal Courts.” He first came to the President’s ken when sharp-eyed Louis Howe discovered him on the New York State Crime Com- mission, in the days when Al Smith was Governor. He brought the young professor to Mr. Roosevelt’s attention. The latter tucked this find in his pocket and has kept him there ever since. Mr. Moley lives at the Carlton Hotel with Arthur Mullen, jr., of Nebraska, who acts as his legal adviser and helper even getting him the oranges he loves to eat and will insist on peeling him- self. In his office are four women who manage the secretarial work. Two of them, Miss Celeste Jedel and Miss An- nette Pomeranz, he had with him in New York. One, Mrs. Helen W. Cook, has worked in the State Depart- ment for some time, having been a sec- retary for Mr. James Grafton Rogers, Mr. Moley's predecessor. The fourth, Miss K. C. Blackburn, was librarian for Cannas—The King of All Bedding Plants. Hardy Perennial Plants for Beds & Rock Gardens 9c ea., 3 for 25¢ Coreopsis, Canterbury Bells, Del- phiniums, Hardy Pinks, Sweet Wlllunu. Hardy Carnations, Sedums, Columbine, Hardy Lark- spur, Bachelor’s Button, Fox Glove, Galllardia. EXTRA SPECIAL 0ld English Boxwood 10c Each Beautiful_Plants—8 to 10 Inches. Fine for Boxes, Walks, Edgings, ete. Prices Reduced TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY OLD GARDENER Fertilizer—for Lawns and Gardens Safe and Efficient—5 lbs., 30c; 10 lbs., 50c; 25 lbs., $1.00. Poultry Manure, 100 lbs., $2.00 F.W.Bolgiano & Co. 607 ESt.N.W. WE DELIVER TO CITY AND SUBURBS is, at the moment, with the twin Moley sons in Santa Barbara, Calif. It is Mr. Moley’s idea that the children should g0 to school, make their friendships and form their habits of thought as far as possible away from the political at- mosphere in which he lives. They must make their own way, and live their own lives, he says, independent of the advantages or disadvantages they would have from the public life in which he lives. He is very proud of them, however, and maintains a con- stant correspondence with them. Mr. Moley says that the articles he is going to write and syndicate will not contain any news, but will be purely editorial opinion. “If I could have a vacation,” he con- cluded, “I would get a shack in the mountains, somewhere in the South- western part of this country, and there I would sleep and watch the sun rise.” His assistants chuckled at this utopia and prophesied that it would not be long before he had a telephone tnstalled. FLYING ANTS ( Termites) Cause Vacating Unnecessary—Free Inspection '_l'ennmn Co. of Washington 1102 National Press Bldg. Phone Natfonal 3703 Beautiful Bedding, Window and Porch Box Plants 7c Ea., 3 for 20c 80c Per Dozen Great Big Plants Out of 3-inch Pots—Mostly All in Full Bloom. Blue Ageratum, Begonias, Red- leaf Cannas, red flowers; Green- leat Cannas, yellow flowers; Green- leaf Cannas, red flowers; Chrysan- themums, Coleus, Lantanas, Mari- Stocks, _Verbenas, Vinca Vines, Wandering Jew, Hardy Ivy, Moun- tain Pinks, Large Gera: Fuchsias ms, 19¢ each in Bloom, 19¢ each Small Annual Plants for Transplanting, 40c Box 1 Doz. Plants to Box Cannot Break VEGETABLE PLANTS Tomato and Pepper, 19¢ doz. Eggplants, 25¢ do: Sweet Potatoes, 50c—100 Gladioli Bulbs, 19¢ doz. Exhibition Mixed NAthnu 0091 HOW CAN THEY BUILD A CAR 50 RUGGED...FOR ONLY :5957? No Wonder Dodge Sales Doubled in 8 Dramatic Weeks . ....... Thousands Buy After Other Cars . . . ing “Show-Down” plan. 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