nAT1.V MTrAV IVAT!MV td 160111: w .aa. afa . tas.. ~ i - l./[-. t L 1V 1bYItI .AtP fAKCY 4 , IWV4fUUL ,_ , f WILLYS IS NAMED ITSAR RANGELDASPOLISH ENVOY SCIENCE !3FEIOU { S Ji I G !N se NA :10 Y v o i 1IlI FIiF PIANkSHEPARD WILL EXPERIMENT WITH ;II RATS ON TRIAL AND ERROR TESTS E[Al CHI FBR P110T Problem Is Mastery of Mazes As the rat finds his way through Recently Set up for, the maze, his pathway is observed irs. J. E. Burns, Who Located Experimental work.and recorded by students who are .Lost Wesrn A Expre Ealxtkdixng Professor Shepard in the LsWestern Air Express, work. All possibility of visual clues to Hunt for Graham. Faced with a series of experi- from the observer is removed by I___ments which will probably last till the use of a fine screen which coy- IISSING SINCE JAN. 11 some time next summer, Prof. John ers the entire maze. --F. Shepard, of the psychology de- Three different types of patterns -- I are used In one, the wrong path- LOS AsoiaedELE Mar 13- partment, is attempting to deter- way leads to a blind end. This is uanita Eloise Burns, 24-year-old mine some of the factors that en-- ,known as the blind end maze. An- viatrix, made ready to take off ter into trial and error learning.I other is the circle blind maze, io ere today for the wastelands of j White rats are the subjects of which the wrong option eventually evada, where she will conduct a these tests and the problem is. the leads to the starting point. One arch for Maurice Graham, mail mastery of a series of mazes. of the most difficult is the unit- lot, missing since Jan. 11. Mrs. The maze, itself,'is located in the alike type which is laid out geom- urns last week located the West- basement of the Natural Science etrically. n Air Express transport plane ! building. It is built on a barge To learn a maze, the animal must hat crashed and killed three men platform and is so constructed that make five trips out of six without the mountain area near-Lake the pathways may be changed and ! error. This year, thirteen rats are rrowhead, Calif. the maze enlarged. Two weeks being used in the tests. Graham, according to residents of *, t ' rat w ,e started on a very he district, last was seen as he + simple maze which is being made ALE UNIVERSITY - On the rcled the Bristol mines northeast increasingly difficult. Soon they jerge of taking drastic measure. Las Vegas, Nev. He had taken will be started on a series of stand- n the matter, President Rowland f from Las Vegas with a cargo of ard imazes. of Yale university ahs at last de- all. Since then thousands of, Siilar tests were conducted cided to. put a stop to Eli's tradi- iles have been flown by searching Ilast year.. But its has been recent- 'tional week-ends by forcing stu- lots, but no trace of Graham or ly determined that the hard floor, dents to remain on the camput s ship has been found. .used in the maze in the previous over Sunday. Whether the move Mrs. Burns said she would use experiments, was giving some. clue comes as a result of complaints as Vegas as a base and would to the animals. As a result, the from the women's schools at which stematically comb the entire ter- tests must be repeated, this ti {ie students have been in the habit of dory for the missing pilot. using a felt floor. week-ending is uncertain. nization of a Forest Service. The iiversity granted him leave of sence for the first semester of e current year. Leaving for Bra- last August, Professor Matthews ent the autumn and winter onths inspecting forest condi- ins in the eight southern statesj the Brazilian Union. According the faculty man's official report, ,apid agricultural development these states has created a condi- n almost amounting to a local- d timber famine, and has called e attention of the government to e necessity of control of further est destruction." [n comparing the forestry as- cts of Brazil with those now and in this country, the forester ited, "Although the 'Estados Uni- s do Brazil' are, in theory, a un- a similar in organization to the ited States, the fact is that the therhi Union is much less close- knit together under federal con-, >l than is the case here. Most the undeveloped land, whether ested or not, is the property of e states; and the several states ve the right to access their own port and export duties with re- rd to all products whether of the 1 or manufactured. This right s, in the past, been freely exer- ed and has had a very prejudici- effect on conservation. Inter- 1 1 'C ; * Associated Press Phwo Oliver Wendell Homes, Associate justice of the supreme court, is shown on his way to at- tend agcourt conference on the morning of his eighty-ninth birth- day anniversary. WILLARD ORGANIZES^ CUHEMISTRHY ,GROUP, Analytical Chemistry Symposium Will be Held in Atlanta, at Convention. FACULTY MEN TO SPEAK Professor H. H. Willard, of the chemistry department, who is se- cretary of the division of physical and inorganic chemistry of the American Chemical society, has or- ganized a symposium on analytical chemistry which will be held dur- ing the meeting of- the Society at, Atlanta, Georgia, April 7-11. In this symposium, Professor Willard will give the introductory talk on "Mod- ern Trends in Analytical Chemis- try" which will be followed by talks on different phases of this subject. those of fine arts and history sec- T B ti'ons will be on display Thursday er night during the annual reception th in the Museum building. The his- in tory and political science exhibit Ar will be in the Clements Library and 1 the Fine Arts in Alumni Memorial A assoc ated Presa 1h,9O th2 Hall. John N Will ci The section of anthropology willI Well known former automobileof show Indian implements found ',manu ctrer of New York who was near Anniston, Ala., in 1929, Amer- recently nominated by President m ican basketry types, and Michigan, Hoover, to be ambassador to Po- pi Plains, and Northwest Indian ex- land.{ i hibits. The forestry section has . . hi several conservation exhibits, among them one by the United 1 TL They are white pine blister rust ex- it hibits; a moving picture of logging in Michigan in 1930; distribution of H EIsal important game birds in North HN o America; and the increasing 'in- .e dustrial value of wood. Eminent Marxian Socialist Will st The geography section will dis Talk pn Changing Political Iay maps showing land utilization; nd{ci wrera studies in Michigan, and activities and Sociid Order. of the Michigan and economic sur- vey. The zoology section will show AUTHOR OF MANY BOOKS' biological stations of North Amer- ica, bird photographs by Dr. Wil- j Evidence that American prosper- son and Mr. Hastings, and an edu- ity is not as pervasive as business cational exhibit of parasites. men would like to believe, is found' The history and political science by Morris Hillquit, national secre- section will show in the Clements tary of the Socialist Party, in the Library a fine collection of Amer- violent demonstrations of unem- ican historical documents. The ployed in many cities in recent fine arts section will show 60 paint- weeks. Mr. Hillquit, who will speak ings in Alumni Memorial Hall, and here Monday on the subject, "Our, an exhibit of biological laboratory Changing Social and Political Or-; supplies will be displayed in room der" attacks the preaching of vio- 2111 of the Natural Science build- lence as "poor tactics for a strug- I iug. All these exhibitions are open fgling social movement." to the students. "During the period of organiza- tion and propaganda," he argues, Faculty Men Attend "it is clear tha-t there is no sense 'acuit. or justification in systematically Meeting at Chicago fostering among the masses the Prof. Walter C. Sadler, of the civil view of the necessity of violent rev-I Prof.Wlter C. alern, of the civ olution." Mr. Hillqtpt continues his engineering department, and Prof.! argument with, "the propaganda John .S. Worley, of the transporta- of violence as , present method or tion department, have returnedf even as an ultanate necessity un- from Chicago where they attended der such conditions has always and I a meeting of the American Rail- rightly been rejected by Marxian. froad Engineer's Association. socialists. Violence as a species ofI 'propaganda by deed,' and prema- B. G. Mullaney, president of the ture revolutionary uprising of work- American Gas Association, will open ers are leaves from the book of a two-day conference of the associ- Michael Bakunin, not Karl Marx." ation's accounting section at the Hillquit is the author of a number Hotel Stevens, Chicago, April 3. The of books oil Socialism, including "A meeting is expected to be of unus- History of Socialism in the U. S.," , ual interest to accountants, cus- "Marx to Lenin," and "Socialism in tomer relations men, office mana- { Theory and Practice." He is noted Igers, and general executives from as a careful student of American both natural and manufactured politics and is one of the most bril- gas companies. liant lawyers in this country. "I'll go at it just like I did in oking for the big transport," she id. "First I wvill interview all ersons reported seeing or hearing raham in the storm. Then I will idy weather maps for the day he as lost." ___________________________ "" -- "" p ++.+ awa vcuaaa. L .."~,. .4 ah STARTING TODAY SHOWS AT 2:00--3:30 7:00-9:00 i S V S 7l Y B e e s 1 s e s a f 4 Y t d_ ZANE,-GREY is -I RaeTheatre, STARTING TUESDAY, MARCH 18th "The Sensation of two Continents" STAGE PRESENTATION "MARRIED LOVE" With a Cast of Beautiful "LIVING GIRL MODELS" Women Only! ADMITTED 12 Weeks at Schubert Detroit Six Months in New York Four Months in Chicago NOT A MOTION PICTURE! A Stage Attractiont, Under 16 years not admitted first Gtalking picture SUE GEORGE CAROL TheO'BRIAN LONE STAR The roaring border towns where every man was his own law the fierce, merciless struggle of the Texas Rangers and the outlaw hordes . . . the gripping _action drama of a daring fighter and a true blue girl. ilIII II l 1111111;1 l 111111111 III ii1111i11111H11 1111111 Ii111111111111tIU 111111 ,11111 iiII1 COMING MONDAY For An Extended Engagement The = Myrtyl Ross Players FIRST OFFERING LYNN STARTING'S COMEDY "eet The Wife" New York and London Success EVENING 75c-50c MATINEES WED. &' SAT. 5.0e - if-illl Nil . . . e duties have limited the mar- for timber products and depres- the value of stand timber to vanishing point. Tnder such' umstances, it is not surprising b forest 'destruction instead of ization has been the =rule inl zil." given by a number of men who have specialized in certain lines of analytical chemistry. Five members of the staff of the chemistry department are attend- ing the meeting of the chemical so- ciety in Atlanta and two will read papers before the meeting. Prof. .rr r r # 1 IIIIIIIDIh --- --------------------- - ---.. - - - - - - - - - ~~ Provides Uniform- Policy. Professor Matthews' plan of for- try organization, which is now be put into effect under the ad- inistration of Mr. W. T. Cox, for- er Associate Forester of the Un- d States, is designed to effect a -operation between the States id thae federal government in the tablishment of state and national rest Reserves; the plan further ovides for eventual management the state and national forests r F. E. Bartell will give a paper on "Application of the Gibbs absorp- tion, theorem to solid-liquid inter- RAE T1 EA'A faces," and Professor Willard will present a paper on "the micro de- NOW S1 termination of halogens in organic An All Talki compounds." Dr. M. Gomberg, chairman of the.aAT chemistry department, Dr. R. K. " OA McAlpine, and Dr. J. 0. Halford' are the other members of the che,-- ar h ohrmebrIoIh cen BETTY COMPSON- istry department who will go to At- E AND JLIET Ianta. AN1ULE Direct from sh Positively first tin I El U a rRE HHIOWING TWO DAYS ONLY ing Production '0 WOMAN B-GEORGE ARRAUD TE COMPTON owing in Detroit me in Apn Arbor. - i ier one uniform policy. 11 -7-- trolt Theatres i CASS THEATER Presents "NAUGHTY MARIETTA" with Halford Young & Co. Nights: 50c to $2.50 Sat. Mat.: SOc to $2.00 opular Mat. Wed.: 50c to $1.50 I FILLET OF SOLE OR SALMON SALAD OR ROAST BEEF WITH POTATOES AU GRATIN AND BUTTERED PEAS 35c FOLLOW TIHE C ROW DS ONLY TWO MORE DAYS II F i STARTING SATURDAY WORLD CONTROL OR OBLIVION? n ~Ir aI y 1 n -,-"ovum They haye their "nose in the wind" for "~'fresh style ,. Un1rusual in its treat- , Degree. , - : '.._ -A , / F There's no organization on the face of this earth that we know of that is so widely and closely in pursuit of new -style for mhen as Hart Schaffner & Marx London, Paris, Palm Beach, St Morita, Oxford and leading col- leges-wherever there's a "style scent" in any corner of the earth you'll find a Hart Schaffner & Marx style observei'on the job. Naturally we lead 1 r t 4 ..1 I a.-! "° 'yam ° r , G x ° - : . i ' ,, , ,, ' ,. a (; Ie matched his wit and enias a. aizxst the .axtscrupnlotxs for eg of l Qa _ fl'1Zti ?f#fL } 4Tt'k:lgtl tOi# Eat°6o T s rt * ' ecre !gcz x , f'ema le c ie a , s er nin+ s , f +aiatical intsi i E ®EYI : IWA..