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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

May 01, 1928 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1928-05-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THDE MICHIGAN JDAILY

rIIRT IflTLLUI RAHU'
)[VonE TOiaiiberlanids, Are S$4 Aside
For Growing Of Lumiber And
Strewn IRegulationl
TATE HIAS NEW LOCATIONI

PRESENT LIST Of10NMSIFH N R
(Continued from Page One,)
Ujren, Ned E. Mellonm, Henry R. Silber-
mhan,. Carl J. RihJeriing, Frederick W.
Seitz, Ray Alexander, Roger W.
}Rogers, l4ton, D. Green, Morton W.
Newman, Leon R. Jones, Nathan P.
Feinsing~er, Lowell M. Birrell, Leslie
Henry, Julius Jackson, Kenneth E.
Midgely.
IThe Colege of. Pharmacy honors
were as follows-Richard G. Bye,

News From Other College

Rican tca a n]~ s araygiela v
t ory from the Yale vrsit deating
team On the, sanke subject.

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National forests are lands which
have been set aside for the growi ng
of timber and the ])reservation of
forest cover which regulates~ the' flow
of streams. They contain approxi-
mately 159,000,000 acres, and are dis-
tributed in 33 states, with two,..in
Alaska and one in Porto Rico.
~In. addittion to timber and related
resources, such areas afford. ideal con.-
ditions Ifor camping, Ifiing, 'and out-
of-door 'recreation. The organizationj
which administers these resources
throug-hout the country is the federal
forest service. Its aims are to secure
the greatest perpetual, use of all the .
forest' resources consistent with the
primary purposes of growing_ timber
andi preserving. the forest cover.
The Michiigan National Forest, at.
Last Tawas, Michigan, eomp~ises.17Q-_
1~72 -acres and covers sections of five
counties. It is divided into three rang
er districts with five ranger stations
located within 1!;e tract. WTour. steel
lokout towers are situated at stra-
tcgis points and are connected with
over 35 m-ies of fire lines. Within the
reservation five free iublit camp
~rounds a?-*,.Maintained. Tihe, hist~rc
A, Sable river borders the Tawas dis-
trict.
Since 1908 the lands comprisiug the
Mihigan National Forest. haave been
undegr the supervision of the fede~ral
foriest service. Protection from TIres
was the~ first duty of the rangers~ when
[le gvernmient assumed control,: andi
during the twenty years ofmnational
for~est administratilon this activity Ia~s
remained in' first place amnug the.
task~s of- th~e officials.
Reforestatiou has been unde~rtaken
with consid4erable success. Much. of
the land was originally destroyed~ by
fire so that, complete natural repro-
duction could not be depended1 on. t
regenerate the forest. As the result
of expeniments Norway pine was Chio-
sen as a valuable species, to, propagate
andi much of the reforestation has
been with that species.
All the planting stock, for this work
is raised in the. Beal Nursery at East
Tawas. Over 4,00Q,090 trees are
grown there each year, about a third
of which are transplanted to the forest
on attaining the age of two years.
Thus far over 9,000 acres have been
planted with Norway pine with grati-
fying results. 85 per cent of these
trees su rvive, figures show. Now young
trees stretch in long rows across the
land which once was barren and idle,
Promising; to Michigan;a, future re-
source in both timber and outdoor
recreation.

'Urban C. Oakdale, Oliver J. Wwin-
kauff, Lewis pU.: Sylvester.
Awards in the School., of Dentistry
were-Kenneth A. Easlick, David H.
Richards, ,JDonald C. Winans, Andrew
Friedman, Plhillips Mr, W nchell,
'Laurence J. Heidenreich., Robert F.
Powers, Ernest E. Miller, Robert W.
Northrup, William A. Gillette.
Awards in the School of Education
were as follows-Mary E. Lister, Mar-I
aore - VvinVivan MrjoieM.Myers, ,
L eQ. A. Aroian, Jean M. DeVries, Ger-
trude Vint,. Gerald. V, Harrison,'
Katherine L. Woodward, Mary J. Mc-
Legse, Gerhard: S. Cook, Elvira A.
IUoogerhy-4e, Grace A. Peters, "Vivian
N. LaJeunes'se; Ruth M. Malcolm,
Pauline: Brown, Marion E. Stevens,
I'1rma. C. Burus, "Adele D. Swell,'
Katherine S. Tatterson, Vida B. Mc-
G~iffini, Sadie J.. Woodruff, Robert. M.,
Wetzel, Cletis J. Fagan, L,.ois A. Parks,
Lasette K. Pickard,"Rose C. Kenna,
Nellie Hoover..
IThe school of Business Administra-
tion award's went to-Robert P.
Briggs, Milton S. Bosley, Walter C.,
Howe, Corliss E. Armstro'ng..
Oue award, in the School of Forestry
and Conservation; was made to-Fred-
grick P. Struhsaker.-
f 'S'iplzoii~ores
Sophomores .to receive the coveted
name on the honor# scroll were:
College ,o4, Literature, Science and
the, Ants--Edward ::C. Curran, Hugh
A. Fulton, Jean A. Gil-man, Virginia
M. Larmee, Wallace H. Magoon, Mary
K. Orr, Jeromne N., Sampson, Alice L.
Sunderland, 'Elizabeth R. Sunderland,
George C. Tilley, Jo'sephine A. Wede-
mneyer, William R .Althans, Ferdin-
and A. J. Fendler, Dorothy A. Grif-
fith, James.W.. McCandless, Frances
S, Sacltett, Philip Stern, Helen. A.
Rudolph, Paul F. Stek~etee Jr., Kath-
erine Chase, Elizabeth Thompson,
Emuory T. Nunneley Jr., Margaret I.
Fead, Marjorie E. Follmer, Charles
R. Kaufman, Otto G. Graf, Donald W.
Boylan, Sophie B. Kimels, Leo Weisel-
berg, Bessie V. Egeland, Edith V.
Egeland, Margaret E. Ohison, Otha
E. Miller, Marjorie R. Bettler, Frances
!E. Rae, Walter B.. Fuighum Jr., Rob-
ert Mcligkey, Frederick EK. Wolf,
James B. lobertz. .

YAEWILL iDISPLAY Si1 EIi)D 14 P lOi O TI l(') iV,-:ItIiTy OR I' RI IN PROFESSOR 1DISPLAYS
ENJIITION OF IIAIMY WORK S ANDIV" 1,iE To 1101,)El)EBATIF WISI)OM)BY NWSU~GGST1ON
YALE-rough the generosity of YALI,- A debate in Spanish hasb OBERLIN COLLEGE-Aprofessor
various art collectors and libraries,, been arranged here between the Porto ;here has suggested that sport road-
the University -library here has 01)- Rican Univers~ity dlebating team and tousanigch-
'a representative team of the Yale jster9 be awarded oottnigshIp and o hr xiiinmnyo pns lbo h ujc:Rsl- nta fPLet a es
late Thomas Hardy. The exhibition 1)rotect with armed force American l to students to makte them strive for
contains the original manuscript of; investments in the Carribean without shlsi oos"h elrd
"Far from the Madding Crowd." Sriholaseclaratiorof"war.dTheaPort
First Run Attractions! YERTN
4I 4411{1L1,1N(r ('ROOK- I)R.A; a specialty for
- SHRLEYtwenty years.
Prompt Servrice, Experienced Opeor-
0. D. MORRIL L
I7 NickelIs Arcade.. Phone 6615.

AA v iyized MEILk is a delightfupl
food and drink containing
all the ri ch-ness and goodll
ncs desired in such a
product.

THE ANN ARBOR DAIRY
.Dial "41.01

Co,.

Subscribe For The Weekly.

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I HURRY! LAST TIMES TODAY I

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(O l'(

Sky-High Go the Superlatives!t

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WhenThese Three Get Together-The Beauty!
The Bully! And the Buckaroo Kid!

ri*l A
E l i. ,1 =
9.9
withn
NOAH BEERYand Shi
GILBEJRT ROLAN+D ,
A Roland West
P'E iNtdctiOJ1-W1%.' MadtEx Th
"1THE BAT"

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Sophomore honors in the College of
Pharmacy went to-Donald S. Breisch.
Engineering awards were made to---
Harold C. Reynolds, Alexis P. Buk-
ovsky,. Wilfred A. Bychinsky, George
E. Holbrook, Allen D. Forbes, Basihlo
A. D'Alleva, William C. Reynolds, Ed-
ward F. Yendall, Mat'hew. C. Haddon,
Wilb ur C. Schroeder, Robert L. Smith,
Sigurd H. Nepstead, Paul Meister, Ed-
ward F. Fischer.'
Awards in Architecture went to-
Jack W.. Mills, Percy E. Knudson.

SLPEC1AL EXTRA
"MICH.-IO WA"
BASElBA Ill (AM E
The Jlonorabhe
SIL AS H.
STRAWN
ioted CGladeago 11,11 3er
owilig .Atl zvned 4oIi-
'l struction o cf¢/-.
:actual 1Piclates of
ekliart's Var as It Was
Wrecked Ji,
Ihuytomiaa Beach

ST UDgY'IS SCORE
AMERICAN PQLKCY
Students at two u~niversities, Kan-
sas and Ohio Wesleyan, have adopted
resolutions,,proptesting Anerican hinter 1I
vention in Nicaragua- and demanin~g
cooperation with. Latin-Anmericans in
the supervision of thie. Nicaraguan
elections. Student attitudes on the
Am~erican foreign policy are being de-
tefiined by the Stundent Knaeyrgemce
Committee which tried, to call. onm, Mr.
Coolidge last week to present a reso-
lution of protest. At Ohio- Wesleyan
the case wvas presented b~y the pres- j
dlent of the student body at chapel.
Although the present American. policy
had its defenders, the great majority'
of students joined in. the protest,..
AL CHANEY
(The 31 an i wth 1000)Faces)
LONDON ATE
MIDNI GHT
If You Are :Nervous, Pleasec
Ma'$ty Aiwuay
This "Ad" with 15c
MICHIGAN PINS
FOUNT AI.N PENS
ALAR M CLOCKS I

THAT VARSITYDAG

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ISOL"SI 1BLES Awl'1 AND) 7:. A I. Y PARAflOI .N I 1 N.1YS
MID-WEEK OPENING_

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P,._ture" inr~o t raftieSso

IPOUCy
35C
8:40
50C
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"Down on your heels, up on your toes,
"Is that the way that the 'Good News' goes?
"Maybe not the words, but it certainly feels
"Like the lively rhythm of Wing foot Heels!"

A LLJE R-S

STATE

ST. JEWELRIS,

N OW come the perfect days of the
N colIkge year-1,the sxving-ou~ts,
them meets, the picnhics, the sophomore-
seuuor proms, and then the big parade !
The fresh has almost worn off the
frosh, and from one end of the campus
to th. other you'll hear m ighty
few pairs of the old hard heels.
The world has gone in g- ___

Wingfoot Heels are rubber--new, live,
cushioning rubber--rubber that gives,
and lifts, and helps. They have that
"look'! look !" style, and they wear
like a new gold key.
More people 2valk on Goodyear Win gfoot
Heels than on ny other kind. Get in
line! A minute's huddle with

WITHI
JOVSEI
SCHILDKRA
A.nd it Brliandmt
A Decil B. D4
Production
IT'S ((OlING
CAGO"'
IT'S COMING
SAT.

.Bluer
e-Mille.

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First-Class
Shoe
Repairin

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foot, that's why._
And so it should. Goodyear

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4q s E oC i.

your favorite shoe repair-
man, and you're stepping
out on Goodyear Wiing-
Sfoot Heels. Yes, today.'

7- N

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Of ' benr~r idfrt, ,she Ilove~rj a
'~(r3' fr( te i d 1 deirht l aer rdr ((
(drir kran r(i'i-

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