THE MICHIGAN DAILY AssociatW Press Photo Sultana, queen of the polar bears at Milwaukee's zoo and the only member of her species to raise cubs to maturity in captivity, is shown leading her eleventh baby into the open for the first time. Death Takes 'Topsy,' Famous Old Actress WATERTOWN, S. D., March 14 - (A) - Death has removed one of the last notables of the "golden age" of the American stage, Mrs. Fannie Osborn Porteous, who played the original role of Topsy+ in "Uncle Tom's Cabin." She was 85 years old. Although associated with most great figures in the theatre in this country during the latter part of the nineteenth century, so quietly had she lived in retirement here for 28 years that comparatively few of her neighbors knew the story of her picturesque life. See ilinger Hand In Hine Bank Robbery Believe He Led An Assault On Iowa Bank; Similar Tactics At Sioux Falls CHICAGO, March 14.- AP)- The sinister hand of "Whittling" John Dillinger, Indiana desperado, was seen today in a $52,000 robbery of First National bank of Mason City, Ia. The loot of the raid, staged Tues- day by seven machine gun bandits, marked a new high in a recent series of assaults on midwest banks. Wit- nesses said they believed the leader was Dillinger. Tactics employed by the gunmen were similar to those used by the bandits who stole between $10,000 and $20,000 March 6 from a bank at Sioux Falls. They were also like the methods of robbers who made away with $21,000 at Atchison, Kan., on Monday. In each instance they took host- ages with them as shields. Arriving at the Mason City bank, the bandits scattered a rain of ma- chine gun bullets, injured two per- sons, scooped up the cash and escaped under the protection of a dozen hostages. Vigilantes and police withheld their fire as the robbers' car, its running board lined with bystanders and bank employes, roared out of town. The hostages were released unharmed a short time later. James Buchanan, city policeman, was the first to connect Dillinger with the raid when he said, after viewing photos, "I'd stand on a statement, that the leader of the bank bandits had the appearance of Dillinger." G Sheriff Jack Robertson later de- clared, "I'm convinced now that the leader was Dillinger." The wounded are R. L. H. James, secretary of the Mason City school1 board, shot in the leg by a stray' bullet, and Clarence McGowan, whoi attempted to pursue the bandit car. i Soviet Fliers Questioned By JapanOfficials Tokio Foreign Office Is To Determine Why Bomber Was Over Manchukuo TOKYO, March 14. -(0P) -The foreign office announced today that two Soviet aviators who made a forced landing in Manchukuo will be questioned regarding why their plane - a light bomber - was flying over territory of the Japanese pro- tected empire. The flyers, who a war office an- nouncement said had been held by authorities in Manchukuo since their landing March 11, will be taken to Hsinking (Changchun) the capital, to be questioned at Japanese general headquarters. Japanese officials said the Russian airmen came down in the Mishan district, north of Lake Hanka, a dis- trict near the border of Soviet Rus- sia's maritime provinces, north of Vladivostok. A foreign office spokesman asserted the prisoners had Manchukuan troops to thank for their safety. He said the soldiers captured them from ban- dits who seized the pair as they left their plane. Discloses 503 Years Are Necessary To Complete A Liberal College Education It takes exactly 503 years to get a "college education," a University of Minnesota reporter has discovered. He' finds that the average man, working at the rate of 17 credits per semester, would spend 183,595 days, or 503 years, in college taking each course. In other words a four year session in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts is a mere apprentice- ship to the 191 years of concentrated. study requisite to a thorough under-' standing of all subjects offered in that school. Eighty-six years after his matricu- lation, the student in the College of Engineering and Architecture should know enough of the craft to start bridge-building, inasmuch as more than half a century of credits are re- quired for graduation. 75 Alumni Attend Spring Smoker Of Owosso Club More than 75 alumni were present at the annual spring smoker of the University of Michigan Club of Owos- so Tuesday night at the Owosso Hotel. T. Hawley Tapping and Fred S. Randall of the Alumni. Association addressed the alumni on "The Uni- versity," while John B. Martin, '36L, talked on Oxford College in England. Thomas Roberts, '34, entertained the members with a tap-dancing exhibi- tion and banjo solo. -Associated Press Photo Martin Conboy (above) new United States attorney for the south- ern district of New York, was be- lieved likely to handle some of the tax evasion suits to be brought by the department of justice against promi- nent persons. Normal College To Present Two Choirs Two choirs, with a total of 506 voices, will be heard in a program, composed entirely of the works of Johann Sebastian Bach, to be pre- sented by the Michigan Normal Col- lege Conservatory of a Music, tomor- row evening at the Conservatory in Ypsilanti. Frederick Alexander is the director. The choirs include the . Normal College Choir of 150 voices and a guest choir assembled from Michi- gan high schools. Among these schools are Detroit Northwestern, Fordson of Detroit, Mt. Clemens, Port Huron, Royal Oak, Birmingham, and. Howell. The guest choir has been coached by alumni of the Nor- mal College Choir. The program includes the num- bers, "O Sacred Heart Now Wound- Mellon Prosecutor? Sees Need For Hunt Control To Save Game O'Roke Declares F o r e s t Zoology To Be Scientific hI Radio Broadcast In a University radio talk over station WJR yesterday, Prof. Earl C. O'Roke, of the School of Forestry and Conservation discussed forest zoology as a science and as a part of forestry. "The student gets his forest zoology largely from studies made directly in the field and from contacts with his professors who, themselves, are doing productive work in the science," the speaker stated. Although other uses of the forest are well regulated and orderly, wild life management has not yet reached this stage, Professor O'Roke declared. The reason assigned for this situation was that we have not yet delegated to trained men the authority to man- age such resources. Predicting a new deal for wild life management, the speaker outlined a plan for controlled hunting devised so as to better distribute the hunters as to time and place, and at the same time to harvest the crop of animals in a scientific manner. In addition to the use of wild ani- mals as a game crop, Professor O'Roke calledgattention to other tangible and intangible values that may be assigned to our forest wild life. DIZZY DEAN IS TALLEST CARD Jerome (Dizzy) Dean is still the tallest player with the St. Louis Car- dinals. He is now 6 feet 3 3-4 inches. ed," "Welt, ade!" incorporated by Bach in his cantata, "O Teach Me Lord," "Jesus In The Garden," "Cho- rales from the St. Mathew Passion," "Song of Death," and "When Life Begins to Fail Thee." The main number will include eight excerpts from the "Mass In B Minor." Student Attitude On PneumoniaI Only a Step Farther For Better Food at Lower Prices Ann Arbor's Largest Restaurant - Established 1899 THURS._FRI. SAT. 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