'F'RIDAY, APRIL 10, 1925 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINE Original Campus Tree Avenues1 sFollow Architectural Scheme, ;Surveys of the location of the camJ spruce, catalpa, cedar, birch, ash, and pus trees which are charted by the locust. Most of these are compara- Building and Grounds department ( tively young trees, although near the sho wih wat eglarty he ree jwest end of the Library is an oak showwit wht rgulaitythetres Imeasuring thirty inches in diameter, of the early campus were placed as whose age can be estimated at three contrasted with the manner employed hundred years. The largest elm is in later years. The original walks, located near the walk at the rear of including the diagonal, State street Angell hall, between University hall and the walk from South University and the Law building. past Tappan hall to North University The constructon of new buildings are planted upon a definite system, a on and about the campus has neces. characteristic unlike the walkstof sitated the moving or cutting down of more recent time which lead to the many of the older trees. Plans are newer buildings. under way, however, for the planting The diagonal from State street to l of new trees and shrubbery in the a point opposite the east end of the vicinity of the new structures. Natural Science building is lined with f ___________ elms which range from ten to twenty inches in diameter. From this point NWIII up to the engineering arch atre LUIVI maples whose low hanging branche. have an architecture which corre- isponds to the Roman style of the CITY CO0S0 ,00G arch. The whole avenue is a com-I bination of Gothic and Roman archi- London, April 9.--Recent unofficial tecture, since the elms are so con- estimates of the population of Great- strucied that the point where thej er London have put the figures at branches of the opposite trees meet about 8,000,000. The London tele- above the walk is similar to the spire phone area covers 735 square miles, of the Gothic arch. and the metropolitan police district The elms along State street are of 691 square miles, and both are said two sizes, large on the campus side of to be growing rapidly. The dis- the walk and smaller on the side tances across London, from various towards the road. The difference in sections of the greater city, vary from size is due to the age of th trees,120 to 30 miles. the larger ones having been planted: n jirKingsley Wood, M P., speaking at a time corresponding to the plac- recently on the housing question, an- iug of the diagonal trees, while the nounced that the total number of smaller are of a more recent date. houses authorized at the beginning of These are not solid rows of elm, 1924 aggregated 198,808, and of these however, but are interspersed with 52,109 had already bep completed. young maples. Elms also lead up to Many Londoners were confirmed the Law building from the diagonalI town-dwellers, the speaker said, and The walk from South University past a certain percentage of them always Tappan hall is bordered with maples. would be. Trhey preferred the cinema as far as University hall. On the i to, the country, and they disliked a other side of the building there art, long journey which cut into their maples also, but other species are i leisure. present. Theret f hecampus is planted I without system, with many different Wil Isue Three kinds of trees: oak, maple, elm, pine. Summer Bulletins FirstU.S- .sPlane Carrier LargehAnd Fast English Explorers Will Probe Mysteries O"Head Squeezers London, April 9.-Efforts to solvebe of future use to scientists through athe mystery of the human head out the world t ~..:::.:Am.squeezers a tribe of which almost j rI shall be particularly interested ""r< " ....,:nohig sknwnan wih l in anthropological research work in ........: {.........:.. ...."::.::..... '. r., ntEngnd snownoandarhnwholwarspinrinnttheesildsthf tdgemountaensnbxpwern .. . . .1::.. +.;;:i;;i:;... ax f {...:.:::te:w lds of t erm unt ins bet een the Am azon basin where interesting B the main Amazon basin and the north- remains, such as great rock temples en Andes is to be one of the aims of prehistoric tribes, are supposed to ofandd exporn trexpeditiontoSouth exist but to this day have never been f a n exsplrisng th nrl byt e n m t he w hindte mn Thsid t e e oy America to be made next summer by seen by the man," ai the ex- r. William M.MGovern, one of plorer. "Diamonds and old nuggets England's most daring anthropolo- have been bought from some of the dWQN t eeatoswihal esns ht yists. Dr. McGovern, who was born natives on the edge of the unexplored inrooklyis N. Y., visited Lhasa, the country, and there Is a beif that " '"'.,:>"forbidden city of Tibet, disguised as the natives have discovered mines a Buddhist monk, last year, and has within their native haunts from which headed numerous other expeditions in they extract the precious stones and various parts of the world in the in-metal now and then. These natives tret oanthropological rerche of the interior have not even been dorky.a ad.t t seen by white man, so far as I know, rsTthe "huanhad sueeer s whos s and have been carrying on feuds for ". I have a way of reducingtheheads of generations with all persons, white Btherzictimo thesiz E o a per- o black, who have attempted to in- t a.t.a.ma..-.h...ga....t.............a s ..a sons fist, according to Dr. McGov- vade their territory." ads srhymhLx- Dr. alsorer supposed t the p essn The expdion wih utenatea jet f riiis fr an onhs V ttep.ne. arynga let f'orsgtn.asofobelgold and eeiin st damorsnd ie ther Li- afa Persuin pehp ealynect ye, a hC , . native hauntsi just to the north of the pwhich lace Dr. McGovern w .rk.:.h n ac n aa:r tgr: ....i r..d-...T::::::::::::::.. ':A m azo:::hn u g e Tge o d o n er l n s D n the U n ited s be fo rehe d A mer a a a and a .. n r.g...: r s..... {::.. .. s:.::k: 8 to s d h seento t e mn h in t r n toLond on. Amrc ?i'ter hv :tteA:teSr: iy ii+f1 ::Yn s a r midst, sin their habits and cus- , ,. : .: . . : : " . . " . . . . t o m s.., N o w h i t e m a n h a s e v e r s o l v e d ._,:_:::..: ".:.:.:.:. ? :::r.S.. .;P ic t u r e s q u. e' B a r k .." ::::.. :: :. .,, s;;... / .. :.... ..the >?':process of how heads are reduced gskys,.g in size' without so much as disfiurings "sltarwhas " Trf wnd .-.y .ag prop:r..ton.iss .z..ss.s ,n r anyoftevyctim's feture and in r Daysmb Isn Mdes .......the...;.,interest of:< science: Dr. Mcy: ........ ?; .:.. :::" ,, r.overnven C .'F............. .. . .::?:.: :... :;. .... "s:'{..; ,:?;::w .;,.: hopes to be able to overcome this .. ;y.,r::::