THE MIC HTCAN DAILY SA TDfAY. MARCR $~14. 1931 1.111 VL LI(yl . lYll1A4V 11 1Z 1w7U8 EULS VERNE, KIN CAM-P IN WYOMING ofWRTR.SAL JULERITER, S AILS WILL AGAIN OFFER SUMMER OURSES EEGAINS IN BUSI tS I Improvement in Building, Fewer Failures Said to Indicate Better Conditions. 4 4 t I Students May Study Surveying Geodesy at Camp Davis, in Jackson Hole Region. PLAN YELLOWSTONE TRIP 1931 Session Will be Third in New Location; University Credit Given. Engineering students interested in geodesy and surveying will aga =n this summer enjoy the advantages offered by Camp Davis, Jack>i,C Wyoming which is being condu-1c1d as part of the University's 19!1 Summer Session. The camp, located in a broad val- ley and surrounded by thickly wooded hills, is an ideal location for engineering surveys and field work. It consists of 120 acres of land along the Hoback river, 20 miles south of Jackson, and 75 miles south of Yellowstone Nation- al park. Go to Yellowstone. Last summer those attending the camp made a three-day trip to Yellowstone. Two members of the party climbed the grand Teton, a feat that few have accomplished. Within a short distance of Camp Davis several "dude" ranches are located where the students may obtain saddle-horses. The camp's equipment consists of student residence buildings, shower baths, offices, store, mess hall, keeper's house, instrument room, shop and power plant, ga- rage,, and residence buildings for the teaching staff and guests. Res- idence buildings have electricity and running water. This year will be the third ses- sion for Camp Davis in its Wyom- ing location. From 1909 to 1929 it was located on the south end of Douglas lake in the northern part of the lower peninsula of Michi- gAn. During that period the adja- cent area was protected from fires, with the result that the vegetation became so dense that the site was no longer desirable for surveying. Come From All Parts. Students at the camp come from engineering colleges in all parts of the country. Many drive west in their own cars taking classmates with them. Those who wish are' permitted to ride on University trucks which transport equipment from Ann Arbor to Wyoming. Dean Sadler Returns From Purdue Lecture Dean Herbert C. Sadler, of the engineering college, returned yes- terday from Lafayette, Ind., where on Tuesday he addressed the senior engineering class of Purdue uni- versity. Further signs of slight improve- ment in building prospects have been reported by Bradstreet's fin- 4ncial journal. The visible improve- ment of January over the preceding month and *thedecrease in the number of failures, cited last month, has become a little more pronounc- ed in the February returns, the re- port shows. Five, groups of cities of the seven groups info which Bradstreets compilation is divided reported gains over January, whereas only three groups in January showed gains over December, and it is not- ed that New York City, which, with the southwestern cities, accounted for the entire gain in January, has maintained in February the per- centage of increase over a year ago shown in January, and while the southwestern group has not shown an increase as it did in January, the southern cities do report a small increase. 4 4 I { i Butcher Shop Raid Reveals Moonsh ne inSasage Sheaths HAMMOND, Ind., Mar. 13.-(A ) -Revenge imaybe sweet for Al- bert Szymoniak. Albert is a butcher. He used to work in the shop of John Briggs, until Briggs discharged him. "I'll get my revenge," said he. Thursday, police said, he did. He led the officers in a raid on the place of his erstwhile em- ployer, pointing to a string of sausages. Inside the sheaths, the rOi;e sald, there was moon- shine. MUS EM BUILDING GATE'S HISTORY SHW TRGL BHN CETO Interesting Use of Wrought Iron In Architecture Exemplified by Pondorous Gates. By Morton Frank, '33. The mighty gates of the Univers- ity Museum building shine bril- liantly-not only in the reflection of a polif~ed metal, but in a his-, tory. As. The Daily pointed out in 1929, "'thereby hangs a tale." Less than a decade ago, Roscoe L. Wood transferred from the Uni- versity to the Massachusetts Insti- tite of Technology to study for the fAgree of bachelor of architecture. There he was recognized not only as an apt architect, but also as a free-thinker, for he believed that architecture'was an art of suecial- ization. He sponsored the doctrine that more care should be given to developing the finer details of de- sign, with experts in particular ines drawing the plans for the most minute specifications. Imbued with the idea of inter- esting architects in wrought iron and sculpture, he began work in Boston, hub of conservatism, with the leading church building archi- tects in the country. Visualizing even greater advance- ments than the field of church architecture could offer, he soon obtained a position with the Amer- ican representative of Edgar Brandt of Paris, leader of the modernistic movement in wrought iron. At the same time, he cooperated with Oscar B. Bach, another leader in the development of wrought iron for architectural use. In a search for simple subjects to inspire him, he returned to his father's farm, where he set up an anvil and forge, on which he exe- cuted, among other models, a pair of crude garden gates. Four years ago, Woo:d exhibited' the gates at the annual Ann Arbor artists' show, and, as The Daily ex- plained, "they attracted the atten- tion of Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, dean of administration and director of the University museums." Pleas- ed by Wood's craft, Dr. Ruthven asked that five pairs of gates be made for the museum, then only an unrealized project, with a free hand given to Wood for their de- signs. The architectural modernist be- gan his task. He investigated na- tural history, to find a motif in- dicative of the natural research of the museum's staff. He sought the advice of his father, Elmer D. Wood, a retired blacksmith who was in partnership with him in the Ard- more Gardens Forge near Packard street. NEW-PARTY TIPI O1F TALKTIISDI Secretary of Political Leag to Discuss Proposed 'Third Party.' "Does the United States Need New Political Party?" will be t topic of the speech Howard Y. W liams, executive secretary of t League for Independent Politic Action, will deliver at 4:15 o'clo next Tuesday in room 231 Ang hall, under the auspices of t Round Table club. The national chairman of t league is John Dewey, of Colmnb university, author of the recent le ter to Senator George Norris, which he said that progressives- over the United States wanted new political party, and urged.thl Norris leave the Republican pai to head the proposed new orga ization. The league states that it w formed "because of a realizati that our existing political parti in the conduct of government a more concerned to serve thesefi and financial interests ,of the i rather than the human needs the many." AssociatedPress rnoto Jean Jules Verne, Grandson of the writer, sailed for New York from France to be a guest at the launching of Sir Hubert Wil- kins' polar submarine, Nautilus. FENULFS__ VILAGE Towns of Berges and Michaud Buried; Residents Escape Without Injury, CHAMBERY, France, Mar. 13.- (P)--Government engineers today attempted to divert an enormous landslide which was bearing down upon the picturesque village of Le Chatelard at the rate of 500 feet an hour after engulfing Berges and Michaud. The landslide, brought on by the excessive rainfall of the past few weeks, broke loose from the hill- side with a loud rumbling and crashing land moved downward with an area of about 100 acres. Its volume was estimated at 200,- 000,000 cubic feet. The engineers ordered the 125 inhabitants to move out of Le Chatelard, which is well known to tourists who 'visit Aix-Les-Bains. There were no casualties in either Berges or Michaud. Another slide, of about 1,000,000 cubic feet block- ed a road near Moutiers-Tarantaise. What's Going On Majestic-Ann Harding in "East Lynne," with Clive Brook and Con- rad Nagel. Michigan-Buster Keaton in"Palr- lor, Bedroom and Bath," with Char- lotte Greenwood, Reginald Denny, and Cliff Edwards. Wuerth-Victor McLaglen in "A Devil with Women." Death Bill Ordered o~Ballots by Court LANSING, Mar. 13.-(R)--The su- preme court today refused to order a capital ,unishment proposal stricken from the April 6 electionf ballots. A petition filed on behalf of the Citizen's Right's club asking a writ to compel Frank D. Fitzgerald, secretary of state, to cancel his certification of the death penalty act was denied by the court with- out comment. The issue is thus as- sured a place on the April ballots.. -'I 'e ELECT * F3 ML : : 34 1,: t', f r i h. ti./ r .,, ,_/ N 4 Have Your CCURATE temperature is half the recipe, and since I began baking with my ELECTROCHEF, I've been having perfect results! My cakes are light and fine-grained, my pastry is delightfully flaky, and roasts cook PHOTO GRAPH Taken in Our New Portrait Studio Of Yourself, Your Children, or Any Member of Your Family Special Offer 11x14 inches Half the Size of This Entire Newspaper Page N::EWEECROCHNEF FEATURE .. , i7 to melting tenderness. Successful baking I 0. ic: is the simplest thing in the world with the accurate ELECTROCHEF automatic oven con- NEW END SHELF A newly designed shelf gives added convenience to the range. SMOKELESS BROILER PAN The new broiler pan makes smokeless broiling a reality. It will surprise and please you. CADMIUM-PLATED GRIDS These sturdy cadmium. plated grids combine beauty and utility. trol. There isn't any guesswork. Now I can-CASH PRICE $105 INSTALLED, Including k o all necessary wiring. $I0 down, $6 a month, make deelous cakes every time without / 0 I I ,mrm cirrincic. a-ut: