WCDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26; 1930 AHF -M rPTrAN n .J V ' A IT£' ' L-4V~~ .- . f THREE' ', B'" 1 1 l ~3O-., fTf 1 G1 1. Ml V HA1VV1J . fl } L I & s &It p CRA" WITH AUTO WRECKS FAST CHICAGo' TRAIN; ELEVEN KILLED, MORE THAN HUNDRED InrUR'i DIPOMAC-Y SCOO' DLMENN1RIE S P90 E TOfficials Lay Catises of Wreck ASl SPR Tt Reckless Driving of Will Give Instruction in Field Milwaukee Autoist. NEWS FROM 01 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS - Plans to build a university gliderj are under way here by the Illinois Flying Club, only the approval of the council of administration be- ing necessary before actual work may be begun. BLOOMINGTON, Ind-The Queen of the 1930 Junior Prom at the Un- iversity of Indiana will be elected March 28, it has been announced by the prom contest chairman. Deadline for the nominations of candidates has been set. at 5 o'- iclock, on the afternoon of 'March HER COLLEGES under the Ontario law, well within the four percent. Incidentally, ac- cording to the article, the dance l was the most successful ever at- tempted at Queen's University. The article stated that the punch bowl "flowed as freely as Tennyson's 1Brook.'" IOWA CITY, Ia.-Recent scares thrown into the citizens of this sec- tion were removed today when Professor J. J. Ijinman, of the Un- iversity of Iowa, stated that the city water had been tested at different I of International Affairs I P and overnuents. FOUR PARTS AN COURSE Will Ipclude Study of Politics] Theory and Practice of' I t ; , ~ ELEVEN MORE MAY DIE (By Associatcd Press) rKENOSHA, Wis., Feb. 25.-The' reckless driving a youth hurrying home from a 'date" was blamed today 'by railroad officials for the North Shore interurban wreck .i : . " G. overnm e n t. " v' u 19 lnterv that killed 11 persons and injured 1 9.__found more than 100 others Sunday odt Providing education in interna- ight hed STANFORD, Cal. - A petition eondt tional affairs and the priciples of Edward R. Egger, Chicago, chief which was recently circulated by testina goernmfnt for hoehowh . .investigator for the railway, placed students at Stanford University for ramp enter law and diplomacy as well the responsibility upon Norman the removal of Coach E, P. I nt's caused as those who merely wish a'good . . pShinners, 21, Milwaukee, who tried administration as basketball men- ydtQ beat the fle-car Chicago-bound tor has been presented to the Board YAL grounding for future life as citi- tain to a highway crossing.. in Control of Athletics and imme- Agell zens, a new school has been found- $bShinners' car was demolished as diate action on the case is expect- urday ed at Princeton University to fill the speeding train} struck it, killing ed. In an editorial in the "Stan- 'Quad the want that has often made itself him and his companion, Frank ford Daily" appearing on the front °d out felt for training in this line. After crashing into an automoibile at a Kenosha, Wisconsin, crossing, a Chicago North Shore Line fast f Toczak. The wreckage of the au- page recently, the passive attitude oint Instructing both graduate .and passenger tram careened down tlhx track and finally caromed in to a passing f reight. The passenger train tomobile, ground under the wheels e or wmsedeaci nd te Frenca was derailed and wrecked, killing eleven people and injuring more than one hundredh.The automobile, which f the passenger train, threw it hope of immediate action express- uadra undergraduate students in the fun- was the cause of the accidcnt was totally demolished and the occupants killed. from the track and shunted it into ed. she Qu damental backgroun for a 'better! the northbound freight. -urnin understarn4iing of new movements . IOWA STATE COLLEGE-Marri- In addition to the North Shore KINGSTON, Ontario-At Queen's stated innlioaiad neTItIala Arts Readg Room age, divorce, and separation is a investigation, Kenosha county and University here recently, the ap- .;untie in national and international af- ne course being introduced at this state authorities today attempted nual Medical dance served punch in -onsid faiys, the new school is to have 1ncreases raciities University to find causes for the wreck. every sense of the word, which was, educati fr uetstapding aspects in its cur- Months in the theoretical side of govern-o -MICWGAN MEN-Drne ment which will be presented in! Opening last fall in connection the form of history, economics, Warthin and Weller Co-Editors ith th politi4e, modern languages and !w thte vwork of students in the literature.l u sof Volume on Research .history of art and architecture, the In addition to the theoretical by Pathologists. new fine arts reading room, on the side, a practical note will be given first floor of Alumni Memorial hall, I to the course by the securing of The latest writings of several of has increased its facilities tenfold men prominent in political affairs the prominent men on the facultyh who will give lectures to the stu- of the medical school appear for the in the short period of its existe. ;:e. dents of the school on modern Ffirst time in print this month. The The 'reading room affords the I trends and actual conditions. The I publications deal not only with student in fine arts an excellent school will, moreover, arrange for special technical information per- i environment to do the reading for exchange professorships with for- taining to medicine, but contain his fine. arts courses, for there are eign schools to the end that a more material of interest to the common 250 volumes on the various phases comprehensive view of foreign af- layman. of the subject available on the fairs and opinions may be obtained, The first work of the month to shelves. an lasatly, sn crryingtlhise appear is "Contributions from the To supplement the reading, Miss tul farther, students will be n -.spathological Laboratory." The book,. Margaret K. Effinger, who is in 40 opuraged to attend foreign scho00s only recently released, is published charge of the reading room, has se- tr paripang seirvis studi by the University Press, and con- cured and mounted photographs of thepics Cdtanigihefllchontwthanulesrf00oatesapitionsIchga.Dl here urnning the catios. stitutes the fifteenth volume of a the principal works of architecture, devote the larger part of its ener- series on similar and correlated, sculpture, ad painting. Starting et the e p t of s topics. Containing the full chron- with a nucleus of 200 of these prints gies to the development of a strong icle of thirty-seven pieces of indi- the collection has grown to 10,000. expected tody, form the nucleus hofm vidual research by members of the For the student who is interest- a graduate school. The expenses of University pathological staff, the ed in modern art and news of a grjechool alre een of main body of research results pub- events in the world of art, the read- derwritten by certain trustees and- lished has been carried on :by two ing room maintains current issues friends of the school for a period of faculty men of the staff. Dr. A. S. of 15 art periodicals, including three years in which time the Uni_ Warthin, director of the pathologi- French, Italian, and English pub- versity will be attempting to raise cal laboratories, and Dr. C. V. Wel- lications. an endowment of $2,000,000. ler, assistant director, have written, In addition, the facilities include - Dewitt Clinton Poole, who is re- respectively twenty and five of the many reproductions of etchings and tiring this spring from the Foreign treatises. The remaining twelve are engravings of the French and Ger- Service in which he has been act- by members of the pathological la- man schools. Several portfolios of ing as Counsellor to the Uni'ted boratories staff. . reproductions of the works of Rem- States Embassy in Berlin will also The second book this month to brandt are also maintained. be an important member of the come from a member of the medi- On exhibition in the reading room executive body, functioning as cal faculty is "The Creed of a Bi- at the present time are two sculp- liaison officer between the school ologist," by Dr. Aldred Scott War- tures by Avard Fairbanks, Prof. of I and the practical world of affairs.: thin; the publishers are Paul B. Sculpture in the University. The Administrative Committee ,Hober and Company. The book, besides Professor Dodds and Mr. i dedicated "to those of my old stu- TYPEWRITER Poole will comprise: President John dents who understood," is a philos- REPAIRING Crier Hibben, Dean Luther P. Eis- ophy of life based on a scientific jAll makes of ma- enhart, Dean of the Faculty; Dean foundation of modern biology, chines. Ourequip- Augustus Trowbridge, Dean of the ment and person- Graduate School; Dean Christian NEW YORK UNIVERSITY-De- nel are considered Causs, Chairman Department of spondent because she weighed 235 among the best in the State. The Modern Languages; Professor pounds and was unable to reduce result of tventy years' carefulD i Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker, Maria Musacca, 19 year old fresh-'j building, Chairman Department of history; , man of this university committed t Q. D. MORRILL - Professor Edward S. Corwiha, Chair- 'suicide. 314 South State St. Phone 6615 man Department of Politics;' Pro- I_____________________04==_______________________ ----_______, fessor David A. McCabe, Chairman n Department of Economics and So-TYPE WlRITING PAPe Us Your Name W Kemmerer,vDirector Bureau of International Finance. Four Pounds for 75c .in- ~and Address aa n: .d f Forestrs+r>". r n. als during the week and was to be in perfectly sanitary ion. It was feared tht "in- il flu" which has been on the ge here recently, has been by the water supply. E DAILY NEWS-President of Yale announced, last.Sat- that details of the new rangle Plan" had been work- , and made public the ap ent of Professor tobert D. zas the first head of a Yale Lngle. Dr. Angell said that uadrangle Plan may marka g point in Yale history. He it would offer more oppor- s for social and domestic erations as well as for larger onal consequences. Lya I 51 r t Praised by Taylor "Although people in general think of forestry merely as the growing of timber, and the forester as something corresponding to a glorified lumberjack, the truth is that the proper study of forestry, because of its wide scope, is one of the most highly cultural subjects offered at Michigan," stated Mr. J. B. Taylor, supervisor of the Deer- lodge Nati'onal Forest, who is con- dlucting a series of lecture~n qn. fqr- estry here throughout the week. This lecture ,series marks Mr. Tay- lor's first return to Ann Arbor sipe his gaduation from the School of. Forestry in 1914. Speaking from actual experience gathered in administration of over ohe million acres of land, Mr. Tay- for proceeded to enumerate the necessary, but little understood, qualifications demanded of the aspiring practical forester. "Men in our profession," declared Mr. Taylor, "must primarily be trained to knowledge of the habits of fish and game; they must likewise know how to handle wild life so as to furnish a good type of nature study and game-hunting to the public." Other types of valuable training mentioned by the national forester TYPEWRITERS FOR RENT ~0 ALSO TYPING SUPPLIES CORNWELL COAL - COKE Scranton, Pocahontas Kentucky and West Virginia Coal Solvay and Gas Coke This bisinesv has been grown~g ever since it wax established. Th uecret giving absolite satisfaction to our customers." We believe it pays to do busincss in a friendly way. If you think so too, let's get together.