THE MICHIGAN 1,L V,, WALES READY FOR ELEPHANT HUNT SONEXPEDITION INTO UGANDA ,WILDS' REPORT FAVORABLY O N MENTORSYSTEM Series of Assemblies Are Held Each Semester to Assemble Valuable Information. 4.-f SYSTEM AIDS FRESHMEN1 _ -/ TRUCKS BARRED flDAPORT 9IAIIPON NEW STREET: News From Other Acting on a communication from Coleges TShirley W. Smith, Secretary ofthe NOTRE DAMEUNIVERSITY- University, calling to the attention Having lost his prom ticket, a Site'Dsgs of city officials that an agreement Sixteen Designs, Representing has been made between the Uni- senior tried the age-old fire escape Contest Prize Winners, versity and the city to the effect method of crashing, was caught Are Included. that the south side of North Uni- and jailed. Upon being released, versity avenue was to be barred he sought out the director of No- HOOD HEADS JURYMEN from all heavy traffic, the Board of tre Dame campus affairs, who was _____!Public Works declared Wednesdayt that the agreement would be main- responsible for his arrest, and Originals of sixteen designs for tained. From now on trucks and I horse-whipped him. He was re- modern airports, submnitted in the other heavy traffic are prohibited jailed and for a longer period of S recent Lehigh Airports competi- from using the south drive of the time. tion, have been hung in the third boulevard. Signs will be erected to L floor exhibition room of the archi- that effect. HOLLINS COLLEGE, Va.mStati s tectural building, and may be seen tics compiled to determine th e Idaily through March 11. I' preference of Hollins' girls for out-' The winning design, those that Experience improve; side activities show athletics to took second, third, and fourth World's Knowledge, rubictiosandYamatics, music, places respectively, and twelve that pica tiond. were accorded honorable mention, Asserts Henry Ford i he order mentioned. are on exhibit. They represent the STANFORD UNIVERSITY.-Ac- i best of the 257 designs that were cordNFORaDsUVERaeaSITAcf submitted to the Jury of Awards byi(By Associated Press) cording to a survey made by a staff prominent architects throuxghout FORT MYERS, Fla., March 7.- member of the Stanford Daily, the United States. The world is becoming more intel- Stanford students bought 190,000 Outside Duties *of System Are to Give Out Interviews to College Classes. Commendation of the mentor system in the engineering college, was voiced recently by the faculty 1 at a meeting called by Dean Her- bert C. Sadler of the college. The report on existing conditions be- twen sudet ad fculy was giv- C' rt *1 a Assocwted Press Photo The Prince of Wales, who recently recovered from an attack of ma- laria fever, will leave shortly for an elephant .hunt in Uganda. The expedition's base will be at Entebbe in the southeastern part of Africa. Representing the Lehigh Port-, en by Prof. A. D. Moore, head men-1 land Cement Co., sponsors of the tor. HIS report was compiled just IcoptinheJrofAad before the close of the first semes- INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN PACIFIC coptitioend te uRy of Awards ter. py-IS UNDER WA Y. CONDLIFFFSTATES Chicago, who is one of the best The purpose of the mentor s- -- 1--- known architects in this country. tem is to provide a friendly con-1 ' put more than 500,000 persons out The Jury included three groups, an tact between students and faculty, Predicts Orient Will be Center Iof employmentt Drm Ifemlyet aeronautics group, an engineering and to give advice and instructions of Great Political Drama "During the next century," Cond- and city planning group, and an that will be helpful to each stu- Within One Century. 1iffe declared, "the Pacific will be architectural gropp. Composed of dent. In reaching this end the en- ____she center of a great political three men each, these groups in- gineering college has named a "New 'worlds have been called drama which will be enacted in an cluded men promment in these number of professors, known as endeavor to adjust the countries of three fields. mentors, who advise students in xndthe Orient to the demands of big The four prizes and twelve hon- scholastic and personal problems. just the economic balance .bofilusiness. The chief problem for orable mentions made by the Jury The mentors are goVerned by a Europe," said J. B. Condliffe, di- ( these newly found industries is to of Awards totalled $12,500. First head mentor who makes sugges- rector of research for the Institute find adequate ,.markets for their place went to two Los Angeles ar-: tions and reports. of Pacific relations, yesterday, in products." chitects, A. C. Zimmerman and Assemblies HelpfuL his lecture on the "Industrial Rev- Condliffe was formerly professor William H. Harrison. In their de- A series of assemblies are held olution in the Pacific Area." of economics in Canterbury Col sign for the airport, all of the each semester by the college for Condliffe stressed particularly- lege, New Zealand. In 1926, he was buildings are concentrated at one the purpose of bringing before the the rapid development and the I appointed director of research for I corner of a rectangular field, leav- student accurate and well ordered present unsettlement in the coun- the Institute of Pacific Relations ing a quadrant-shaped flying area information concerning the sever- tries of the far West and stated , and since that time he has twice with appropriate runways and taxil al fields of engineering represented that, "The recent Chinese disturb- toured the countries that border on strips. by the college's curricula. They al- ances can be directly traced to the the Pacific. Last November, he The design submitted by C. Git- so serve to show the fundamental Industrial Revolution." He showed attended a general convention of the $2,500 second prize, calls for a dependence of sound engineering, how cheap cotton imports have de- the Institute in Kyoko, Japan. rectangular flying field with all upon science, the increasing im- stroyed the winter work of these Condliffe is in this country at buildings grouped along one side portance of human relationships in people and how a stamship on a sent to edit and publish a re- in a triangular area formed by two engineering, the value of linguistic river such as the Yangste might port of this conference. adjacent boulevards. training, and the importance of ability to think in extra-engineer- ing matters. In speaking of the value of the assemblies Professor Moore's report sy,"It is in the assemblies that MP the class is knitted together, andID e v n r achieves a sense of group-interestr "and group-loyalty; much that goes on in the assemblies amounts to an introduction of the freshman to the college and University. The' class meetings held in assembly time, taken together with the ............. d" ample set by the manner and bear- I ing of the student leaders and fac- ulty members who appear in as- semblies, cannot help but have an . ., influence on the students in re- moving certain crudities, and in:. developing the types of personali- ties we like to graduate from this U college. I:,. ligent through the agency of con- canay oars last yearfrom one tact and the practice of educational store. Chewing gum ranked next conformity, Henry Ford said in an with 219,500 sticks sold. interview, at his winter home here. Further, the automobile manu- CORNELL UNIVERSITY-Engi- I facturer believes: neering students comprised almost 1. That theory and practice go half of the 169 students who were hand in hand in education, but dropped here last semester. This that in the majority of cases, there is a notable increase over the num- It too much theory and too little ber of engineering students drop- practice. , ped in previous years. 2 That the utomyV bile hn.s been } a greater agency for increased P Uiveri. r- w~orld, intelligence than the , air- W. Pence of DePauv University re- w or ntegenceth an eer cently advocated the abolition of plane or other -agencies can ever the grade system for juniors and be. T g seniors. Such a system, he, be- 3.That girls who marry at the Ileesrse rdstomc n close of their school years gener- ieves, stresses grades too much and ally do exactly what they should efficiency too little. do.' PURDUE UNIVERSITY- With Mr. Ford elaborated upon his PUthe roUEhUNI"ellITY- th conviction that contact of peoples approach of "Hell Week" the is the greatest factor of world in- numerous houses are preparing var- stegetes ft ied entertainment for their pledg- "Fc e pl,"he d,"t es. Last year's ruling made by the "Fra exampe," haid, g ter University sets aside three days general conception that govern - for the enjoyment of such banali-I mhent of the nation should be left'tey th to politicians is all wrong-the government should not be oper dted by any one group, schooled in any one walk of life." NOW UIUI T V hestra Series Aids Freshmen Week. The mentor system is completely integrated with freshman week, according to Professor Moore. Men- tors for the coming year are ap- pointed in the spring, a require- ment being that the mentor act as adviser for his group during fresh- man week. The system is used as a means of gathering studenture- actions to freshman week func- tions, in order that the week may be improved. This year, opinions collected from 250 freshmen on four phases of the week's program, indicated several ways in which the general part of the week's func- tions may be changed for the bet- ter, and still other changes that should be made in the engineering end of the program. Other duties of the system in-, elude the study of student applica- tion blanks, sending of warnings to those low in their studies, inter-} views with students, personal let- ters to parents, and a general study of the student during his years at' the University. The New York Giants ushered in the 1930 baseball exhibition season Thursday with a 4 to 1 victory overj the University of Texas nine. Ossip Gabrilowitsch and his Orchestra Auditorium, ON. MAR.1s5 p.m. A Limited Number of Tickets Still available at $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 at Office of School of Music. 4 DE MILLE'S greatest picture i 1' 0 | . Detroit Theatres -I ' CASSTHEATER W. P. Tanner Presents "THE ROYAL VIRGIN" * Nights: 50c'to $2.50 Sat., Mat.: 50c to $2.00 Popular Mat. Wed.: 50c to $1.50 The Confidence of Policy Today 1:50 3:50 35c l~c 7:00 9:00 50c 25c 11 A Great School 1 G A ~q ttttllltl --a NMARILYN MILLER ~SALLY" Get over here this afternoon or this evening and say good- = bye to 'Sally." She's leaving town tonight and taking with her those snappy songs, beautiful colors, radiant girls and clever comedy-but she's leaving the Magna Screen for your - future enjoyment! .llIIlllttl illIf1il lf~llt ll tilli l For sixty-one years The Ann Arbor Savings Bank has cooperated with the faculty and students through sound financial policies. With care, vision and udg- ment; without deviation from safety; always in step with progressive plans. Building confidence in the minds of the school by the completeness and helpful- ness of banking facilities. In today's era of progress the service of this, based on experience and judgment in money matters, is of value to you and is at your disposal. There's DYNAMITE in the lax moral code of the idle rich! DYNAMITE in the scenes of daring love-making! DYNAMITE in the clash between upper and under worlds! /:. '* --,--- k {, -J ,v 'F .. s . ' . . ; / :- ~{ t SEMAILEEMW AL Lb.- :. '