'tHEiii A, N v f~y COLLEG PRIZE ESSAY GERMAN SEA RAIDER WILL BE SOLD HAZARD MA C( L( ( ( B|L i( FOR PASSENGER SERVICE ON COAST |ZAPUMAYl6VS TST IS: E PL 911'FABLED FR[ENCH TRIP~ Will Probably Comment On Trip Of Chateaubriand To North c y Amnerica "COLLEGE AS IT MIGHT BE" ____ IS ANNOUNCED AS Comments + of Chateaubriand's i SSUBJECTfabled trip to North America will probably constitute a large portion of the address to be delivered at; TA U E4:15 o'clock this afternoon in room Ann Love, 103 Romance Language building, by iohn MeConn, ll', Prof. Paul Hazard, of the College With Magazine Staff, Will of France, exchange professor at Compose Judges' Committee ! Harvard university this semester, it was suggested yesterday by Prot. Timely announcement has been -.Hugo P. Thieme, of the Romance made by The New Republic maga- languages department. zine, New York City, that an essay .'Chateaubriand came to America contest on the subject "College As kin 1791 on the pretext of discover- It Might Be," will be conducted by ing a passage of the Northwest and them among certain classes of the visited Philadelphia. When he re-i colleges and universities of the ceived news of the arrest and im- country. ,::'_ _ _ _ _prisonment of Louis XVI he hur- The purpose of the contest, ac- ~ - -- red back to France and wrote his cording to the directors of thepub- At one time called "the arrogant flying the English flag and looking well-known books, "Atala" and lication, is to "find out first hand ship" and a sea raider of world- for this wolf of the sea "Rene, purporting to be records o wide amehis American trip. Whether the in-; what kind of college students like wide fame, the Prinz Eitel Fried- Now she bobs innocently and cidents recorded are in fact true! to go to, and to encouragte think- rich, captured during the Worldi forlornly in Baltimore drydocks, ing and writing about standards of War, is to go into service again. stripped of her guns and imperial or mere images of his imagination academic life." - The ship is to be sold to the high- eagles, and deserted except for oc- has long been a subject open to The essay judged best by the est bidder for service off the Pa- casional visits from technical ir- debate, according to Professor committee who will read them will cific Coast. vestigators. She is called the Thieme. win the first prize of $100; the The Prinz Eitel Friedrich first steamer Mount Clay now, and will Professor Hazard will be enter- second prize for the next best essay came into the world's news when I be sold to the highest bidder to go taned by the Romance languages will receive $75. The judges com- she sank an old Windjamimer be- I back into service on the west department at a departmental din- mittee is comprised of Alexander fore America entered the war. coast. ner to be held at 6 o'clock this eve- Meikeljohn, of the 'University of President Woodrow Wilson' imme-; ning in the Union. Wisconsin, Max McConn, of Lehigh diately started an inquiry, sent PHILADELPHIA.-Battling Lev--1 Professor Hazard will leave Ann university, and Robert Morss Lovett, warships scurrying across the seas, inksy thinks that heavyweight Arbor tonight and speak tomorrow of University of Chicago, and the { and a flotilla of destroyers protect- I in Toronto. He will deliver one ew Reu c Staff. ed New York harbor. Germany oo big purses and more lecture in America before A few simple and very brief rules offered reperation of nearly $500,- are ruining themselves. i sailing for France. have been outlined for contestants. 000 to make up for the accident. - -- Those eligible for competition must While the United States still was! be from the class of 1930-the neutral, five allied warships lay in present juniors-or any class older wait for this raider. On a tour ofj than that, back to 1926. The essay destruction, she sank 13 shipsrgo- i We make up Dance and Banquet Programs must not exceed 2,000 words and ing from China, across the Pacific, o every description must be in the office of the New to the Vight Capes. Republic before April 1, 1929. The At thehegtohrglyse name, class, college, home address, was equipped with three 8-inch ry Us for Party Decorations and, in the case of alumni whogs ad ene 5-nch n peces. Theen -- Binding -- Engrving compete, the present occupation were covered with canvas. When 1>iXg gg must appear with each submittedI she bore down on her prey, theNatTsyAtcie manuscript. Articles should be guns were uncovered as she drew Neat-Tasty-Attractive adrssedpt. tCleeEssy Editor, alongside and obtained surrender. Place Cards-Tally Cards-Store Pads addhe d eolee412 West 21st Enemy crews were taken :oard I Fine Stationery and Leather Goods The. N ew Requblic,. 42Wst2sthe Prinz Eitel Friedrich and the Street, New Yorl City vessels were sunk either with The.New Republic, widely known 'charges of dynamite or by gun- as one of the most liberal publica- fire. tions in the country, is sponsoring When America entered the war, C the contest in an effort to deter- she was seized as she lay in New- mine from the students and alumni port News harbor escaping vessels 112 S. Main St., Ann Arbor Phone 4515 of the present generation the best-__ proposed plan to elevate American ar Disc sses education to a higher and more P r_ humane level. Test Made OnRats Among the suggested points for discussion which the directors of Psychological Conference Hears the project suggest are some which Of Cues Used By Them are pertinent to the Michigan T campus, viz, dormitories, fraterni- To Thread Mazes P ties, selection of students, degree A e of specialization. Other suggested Ae tni de y h topics include location of the col- psychology department of the fac- en lege: city or country, best number tors involved in the learning of of students, proportion of electives, 1 maze patterns by rats, it has be- DISCOUNT quizzes, lectures, or seminars, ex- aminations and grades, intellectual life of groups and individuals, ath- were using some cue which had letics and other activities. not been brought under control. In an attempt to find this cue and Peterson Wil Leave For West On Monday Dr. Reuben Peterson. professor.I of obstetrics and gynecology, andS Bates Professor of diseases of wo- men and children, will leave Mon- day, Jan. 28, for a trip to the West coast where he will attend a med- ical association convention in Cal- ifornia and address the University of Michigan clubs of Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, and Se- attle, it was announced yesterday. The program for Dr. Peterson's activities on the coast will be ar- ranged by Dr. N. W. Wood of the C Los Angeles county hospital. His speeches to the alumni will cover all recent developments at the Un- iversity including the Ten Ye,(- program, the Burton MemoriL' Campanile, and most recent of all, President Little's resignation. ./"1.J"1J.JY1JJ' .d"w '. ~. '"' + ./.rrP1J . + "r In.~ ".., J /"J 'rP'" ~ova, , 'thy"Y./.I"'./".I"./1'.I"./Jl11.I".~1. "~. .I'J,./""" ": /J,.I.1. ".. " I ".r ". .yi/..r"J:d". +"../. ++'"J"lr "./ 'r".. U m r, It has won more people to Kellogg's Corn Flakes than to any other ready-to-eat cereal., Just because they taste so good- that's why 12,000,000 people enjoy them every day. On the campus and off-from coast to coast-Kel- logg's get first call for breakfast. C ORN F L A K E S m. 4 - 4s* This I Music And Drama {b F1 v ORGAN CONCERTSf Yesterday afternoon at 4:15E o'clock, in Hill auditorium, Palmerc Christian gave his usual Wednes- day afternoon twilight organ con-j cert. The audience, owing probably tof the nearness of final examinations,, was only a small one, and the con- t cert was rather disappointing.I Certainly, when one considers the j' uninspiring group of attenders, the performance should not altogether be blamed on the organist; but his4 playing was noticeably lacking in{ phrasing, and grasp of the selec- tions. . The opening number, "AllegroF Con Fuoco" by de Boeck, was no- ticeably heavy and dull. The climaxI was mechanical rather than musi- cal, and it was probably with re-: lief that the audience listened to the Karg-Elert number following it which was done with more feel- ing and finesse. The "Scherzo- Pastoral" of Federlein was also done with a certain lightness and artistry which was in keeping with the work, but the playing was not characteristic of the whole pro- gram. Rheinberger's "Pastoral Sonata" was rendered with the same dead- ness which was common in the re- mainder of the program. The musical sentences were blurred by a machine like performance. "In the Church," the Novack number, was additionally disappointing in' the use of chimes for color. 'They are a portion of the organ which can be easily overworked, and were in this selection.' The "Vorspiel" and "Liebestod"' from Wagner's "Tristan and Isolde," numbers which Mr. Christian has played on past concerts, were also, in spite of their fineness in them- selves, played in a manner which was so dead as to send the audience away unimpressed, if not disap-I Dointed witK. the concert. bring it under control, Prof. John F. Shepard discovered that the rats found their way about much bet- I ter on wooden maze floors than on floors of felt. Numerous tests have eliminated the possibility of visual or olfactory cues, and Professor Shepard believes that the solution is an auditory cue. He presented a paper on that subject at the meet- ing of the American Psychological association held last month in New York. The experiments will be con- tinued on the rats, using felt floors, and starting with the most ele- mentary tests again. Dr. Martha Guernsey also of the psychology department presented a paper at the association meeting on "A Quantitative Study in the Eye Reflexes in Infants," the results of study some time ago at the Uni- versity of Vienna. I * . .is now in On our entire eck of footwear. re-f'"E I)LIE l.OO'WIT ,t fPIEINNIXVOEADAND 1KitILEGiORlI CUpsta irs~oQ~zC LKJNS'r FLETCHEJ1Y' Changing World To-day, you can see big buld- ings erected noiselessly-by e ectric welding. The structural steel worker is dropping his clattering ham-' mer for the electric arc. Silently, swiftly, frigidly, economically, buildings are being fabricated t , 1 9. r t -- --- - 1 1 UBJE Ott r If you have a room for rent, put an ad in the y Classified Column - .-andlyo u will certaily obtain resu lts. by electric weldi steel with join the metal 'itself. ng, which knits ts as strong as Building silently! Nothing seems impossible in this elec- trical age. Not only in building construc- tion, but in every human activity, we instinctively turn to electric- Are, you trying to find a room for next semester? ity to add to the comforts of If so, see the Daily Classified Column. Not only inuil equpment, life and to eliminate the wastes but electric refrigerators, MAZDA of production-another evi. lamps, and little motors that add to the comforts of home are dence that the electrical industry manufactured by the General