30, THE MTCHIC AN DAILYA ( SOCE (E H AI T I ARGUMENTT |(T ( YOUNG RECOUNTS His EXPERIENCES STIRS GEN. BUTLERT| dLLTO LL ON FORESTERS' APPALACHIAN TOUR CR E NUT H Ten Seniors of School Visited more estate, where forestry prac- C T {°Stations, Parks, Camps Itices were inaugurated 40 years ago, 3fl n S t a t i o n s , P a r k s ' C a m p st h e s e a t o f t h e n o w d i s c o n t i n u e d . _ _ _ *1' 1# flIRl~hl I*IU on Ten Day Trip. j Supervisor ot School Staff Says! [VI HIIIUfL VIII f Success Would Pay Salary Forestry experiment stations, na- of Added Instructo. tional parks, and logging camps Fresh Air Camp Committee Gets were visited by ten seniors in the Help From 17 Organizations 1fWork of the King's Daughters through school in a ten-day tour in Drive for Funds. Iisociety, for the patients of the Uni- theoledershipp alachanLei nder versity hospital, and for the hos- Young and forest technician Nor- QUOTA SET AT $3,000 pital school, was cited yesterday by man L. Munster, of the school's Mrs. Geraldine Notley, supervisor of faculty. Gathe school teaching staff, in a dis- Thegrp experiences during Gifts From Campus Groups . cussion of the tag day sale to be e group's exe1 ecsuig Should be in Monday held Saturday by the society. the trip were recounted last night h S dyIf td by tae sociey. at the meeting of the Forestry club, Chairman Says. .wif te ale i success, 'by Professor Young and the stu- _____ will be able to finance an additional C r nth n sfull-time teacher, which will great- dents he accompanied. Contributions to the annual Fresh A seilN .teAaa ly facilitate our work. At Asheville, N. C., the Appala- Air camp drive have been received "In the past eight years, more chian Forest experiment station of f r o m 17 campus organizations, i than 7,000 patients, with ages from the United States Forest service George Hofmeister, '31, chairman, 4 to 56 have received instruction. was examined. Their host there announcedrlat night. a C m-We now have a regular academic was A. H. Frothingham, '04F&C, at They are Beta Theta Pi, Chi Ome- curriculum for both junior and the University. They camped at ga, Chi Phi, Delta Sigma Pi, Delta,1 senior high school students" Bent creek, at Asheville, at the sta- Zeta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Phi Mmin Dantes Bellegrade of In telling of the work of the hos- tion's field laboratory. Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Psi Hai (aboLe ) aoDused the ire of ( pital staff, Mrs. Notley said that1 An arrangement which helped re- Upsilon, Sigma Kappa, Collegiate Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler with re- "at the present time we have a boy lieve unemployment was reviewed Sorosis, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta marks about Fort Riviere, Haiti, in of 14 years of age, who has been at the Asheville station. A 1,100- a Ah, ,Zeta Beta Tau, Zeta a recent address, here for the last two years and sev- acre experimental tract is run there, Mosher-Jordon Hall. en months. and men were put to work thin- Mourir-JDudon Hall. I if lrF "During his stay in the hospital ning and improving it. The cuttings Contributions Due Monday. he has had four major operations were sold in the city and provided Contributions of other societies q f' ~L and two blood transfusions, yet he payment for the workers. must be in by Monday, Hofmeister has finished two and one-half years One day was spent at the Bilt- stated, so that tags may be deliver- a of school work in that time. In June ed to their members before campus , .I~ he will be promoted into the ninth tag day, May 6. grade." Prof. Ferdinand Menefee, of the Sn all proba-i engineering school, is chairman of Alhrenberg Ready to Take off bility, the opportunity of continu- the camp committee, which in- on Search. for Courtald, ing his work has saved him three cludies Dr. W. E. Forsythe, Prof. Britihiyeas of choollife. Laurence M.WGould, Theodore R. British Scientist. years of school life." Hoxnberger, Prof. E.d H STOCKHOLM, April 29.-(AP)- White Chosen to Head to .Weiman, and Marshall H. Capt. Albin Alhrj-°nbegSwds Levy. . ,Swedis Business Administration School President Alexander G. Ruthven crack civilian flyer, was prepared HonoraryFraternity Will Teach Fundamentals heads the board of trustees, which today for a quick take-off from in Summer Session. includes M. A. Ives, and Richard Malmoe, southern Sweden, to search New o:'icers to preside over the Earhart. Frank E. Royce is treas- for Augustine Courtauld, British organization for the next two years Numerous courses will be offered urer of the drive, and Homer H. scientist lost in northern Green- were selected by Sigma Xi, nation- during the Summer Session by the Grafton heads the committee on land. al honorary scientific society at its School of Business Administration finance. With him is Capt. Ralph Rayner last meeting. Prof. A. H. White of w $8,000 Must be Raised. of the British royal signal corps, the chemical engineering depart- fundamenal aim o stuent More than $8,000 must be raised who, engaged to Courtauld's sister, ment was chosen president; E. H. who expect to obtain throughout the state to finance the Miss B3~tty Courtauld, is making a Kraus, Dean of the College of Phar- t positions of Biltmore forestry school. Planta- Go _rnor' ranklin D. Roosevelt, tions of various species of wood in-- of Nw York, will be heard ,at 9 terested the students here. Virgin o'clock tonight over WJZ when he hardwood stands were seen on Mt. Mitchell. addresses the New , York - Young Mitchellemocratic club. :-le will give "A They inspected hardwood logging Dc operations in Pisgah National for- Review of 1924 and 1928 Platforms, est, and saw a fine stand of tulip and Prospects for 1932." trees, covering 200 acres, with a to- tal of 2,000,000 board feet. A program of Victor Herbert se- lections from "Mlle. Modiste," "The R 7 ," "Naughty Marietta," and S eeheND rED ts" will be heard over WJ and an NBC-WEAF network at 8:30 o'clock. Prof. Howard Mumford Jones, of the English depar tment, will discuss Former Coal-Miner Takes Place "The Last Industrial Frontier" on Vacated by 'Big Bill' the University program at 2 o'clock this afternoon. He will base his re- Thompson. - marks on the book, "I'll Take My CHICAGO, April 29.-()-AntonStand,"by Twelve Southerners. J. Cermak, native son of Bohemia, 5:00 ilin - 1;-,,n : 1 .1 kStar}inal," in- who once mined coal in the pits of !:45 ,.AEA Braidwood, Ill., occupied his desk 6:00 - n ' h z BUSiOBS 1r yesterday for the first time as Chi- "'- '' cago's formally inducted mayor. 6:15 . z oin-'ni--\', (1l n.:'1 Jisti'is - \ L. Ii!)l