Final Speeches Of Session Today -Associated Press Photo Clarence Chamberlin (left), transatlantic flier, is shown with Secretary Dern (center) of the war depart- ment, and Major General H. A. Drum, at one of the numerous Washington conferences concerning army flying of the airmail. Drum, assistant chief of staff of the Army, is chairman of the special investigating committee on which Col. Charles A. Lindbergh declined to serve. Drama Is Discussed On Radio Program Featuring a representative scene from the current Play Production offering, "Elizabeth, the Queen," Val- entine B. Windt, director. of the group, presented a discussion of the actor's profession, on the vocational guidance program broadcast from the campus studios yesterday. Mr. Windt discussed the prepara- tion for the actor at the University, as well as the courses in stage pro- duction. Sarah Pierce, '35, in the role of the queen, and Frederick Crandall, as Sir Frances Bacon, were featured in the sketch from "Elizabeth, the Queen." ----- ---- case histories of problem children who were studied by the Psycho-Edu- cational Clinic. "The Common Endocrine Disturb- ances in Adolescent Children and Their Effects Upon Schools Progress" was the title of the paper delivered by Dr. C. J. Marinus of the Detroit School system. Dr. Marinus discussed several types of abnormal character- istics of the male and female adoles- cents, caused by disturbances chiefly in the thyroid gland and the several months of remedy that his organiza- tion has utilized to cure these abnor- malities. Prof. J. F. Shepard of the psychol- ogy department of the University de- livered a paper on "Individual Dif- ferences in the Behavior of Rats." The chief manner in which psy- chologists can determine differences in rats is by running them through mazes. Some, stated Professor Shep- ard, will be able to run through a difficult maze the first time while others will never succeed in running it. On the other hand some rats run to the mazes according to floor cues, while others run it according to their kinaesthetic sense organs. Still others use vision as a means of conquer- ing the maze, Professor Shepard said. Professor Shepard disagrees with the practice of some psychologists who, on the basis of the rats first per- formances in running the mazes, sep- Academy Secretary PROF. LEIGH J. YOUNG Famous Canadian Aviator Is Killed In Plane Crash LONDON, Ont., March 16-(/P)- One of Canada's best-known avia- tors, Capt. F. G. M. Sparks, former instructor at Windsor and Montreal airports, was killed today when his plane fell in a field from a moderate height. Capt. Sparks had been in the air only a few minutes in a London Fly- ing Club plane when his machine went into a sideslip after circling at 400 feet and crashed. arate them into good and poor learn- ers and breed them accordingly. Little can be told from the first maze, he said, but it is an established fact that the performances of a group of rats is fairly consistent after the first maze. "Therefore," he concluded, "I do not believe that studies being made by these psychologists are psy- chological as they are not dealing with learning and cues but rather with the vitality of the rats." R. E. Sayles Tells His Views On Immortality Baptist Minister Stresses A Survival Of Essential Personality (Continued from Page 1) and not survival of the essential per- sonality. It is beautiful but comes short of the real hope. This assurance of the survival of the essential personality appears to me to have been weakening with the growth of modern secularism since the Great War. It may be that the moral and the religious let down since the Great War have been factors in this situation. The great development of modern science may be a factor in this situation. The words quoted by Professor E. C. Case with sympathy in his article in the March number of the "Michigan Alumnus" show a questioning attitude toward the full success of science: "The full secret of life will always elude a purely sci- entific treatment, it may be experi- enced, imagined and felt, but never completely pinned down and ex- plained." The conviction of reality of the life everlasting is a faith, a hope, a surmise, and not knowledge. Because this is so those who hold it are for- ever seeking grounds to support their conviction. This conviction is an integral part of a philosophy of life and those who hold certain philosophies of life will not hold to this conviction. It is not just one item of conviction; it is rather a faith which dovetails in with a world view. As a Christian I hold this assur- ance because of: first faith in god; second, a conviction of the worth- fulness of human personality; third, the insight and intuition of Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus said, "Because I live ye shall live also." "In my Fath- er's house are many mansions, if it were not so I would have told you." After the death of Alice Freeman Palmer, her husband, Professor George Palmer of Harvard wrote, "But though no regrets are proper for the mianner of her death, who can contemplate the fact of it and not call the world irrational if out of deference to a few particles of dis- ordered matter it excludes so fair a spirit." When Professor Simpson laid down his work in the University of Edin- burgh as a professor and dean, and presented the graduating class for their degrees, he concluded his words to them this way: that the great les- son he had learned in life was the same that the disciple of Jesus taught the men and women and children of his day: "The world passeth away and the lust thereof, but he that doeth the will of God abideth for- ever." 11 This hope challenges one to live worthily here and now. This hope with its sense of value in human per- sonality ought to challenge social maladjustments. It brings comfort to those who have loved and lost awhile. ST. PATRICK'S at HI-HAT INN on ANN ARBOR TRAIL Half Mile East of Wayne Road 40 Tugwell Bill Is A Step In Right Direction, Say Glover, Edmunds By MELVIN C. OATHOUT That the Tugwell Bill is a step in the right direction toward proper government regulation of drugs and their advertising was agreed upon by two leading authorities on the sub- ject. Both Prof. Clifford C. Glover, of the College of Pharmacy, and Dr. Charles W. Edmunds, of the Medical School stated that, in their opinion, new legislation is needed in the field of drugs and patent medicines. Professor Glover emphasized par- ticularly that the individual should be protected, and public health in- terests be safeguarded. "Even in the present crop of bills being forwarded, there is a great deal of lobbying. The compromises effect- ed by the bills succeeding the Tug- well Bill are merely the result of mil- lion dollar lobbying by representa- tives of "the proprietary association of America," stated Professor Glover. "Some workable plan surely needs to be crystallized, and this can be done fairly, only when the public is safeguarded," he said. "A charge made against the bill. was that it would deny to the private citizen the right of self-medication. Certainly the requirement that drugs be sold only under labels and adver- tising which shall actually be truth- ful as to their accurate value, can- not be construed as preventing self- medication, but would seem rather to encourage more intelligent self- medication," he added. According to Doctor. Edmunds, the necessity of truthfulness in advertis- ing is the main feature of the orig- inal Tugwell Bill. Many serious consequences have developed from false representation, he said, and the public has suffered not only in a pecuniary way, but health interests have also been vio- lated. The Tugwell Bill is the outcome of intensive campaigns to eliminate the "quack" medicines from the field of pharmacy. The standing law, which went into effect in 1907, is known as the Food and Drug Act. In June, 1933, Senator Royal S. Copeland of New York presented the Tugwell Bill to the Senate, and since that time, four successive measures have been written. These include the Copeland, Stephens, Dunn, and Boland Bills, which are essentially modifications of the Tugwell Bill. k ii LAST DAY Broken-Lot Sale em cnairman wiet F. Ramsdell next I Non-Agricultural Land Uses" pro- Both of these papers dealt with the AT $ 9$4'* 59 0 Your Last Chance To Save $2.00 to $3.00 a Pair. Many Styles Just Right For Spring Wear I -7,%.J *.J U I I I LJ I %-J I I I *-% 1 I M V t1