SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY .. . . ... . ............................. Dr. Dice Asks Laboratory For Heredity Work Study Of Family Histories Would Aid Improvement: Of Race,_Expert Says Creation of a State laboratory to give Michigan a leading place in the study of just how human traits, good and bad, are inherited, was urged recently by Dr. Lee R. Dice, director of the laboratory of vertebrate gen- etics. A few facts of human heredity are known, but mostly in the undesirable fields of feeblemindedness, or mental and physical defects among persons now a public burden or menace, Dr. Dice declared. If the human race is to be improved, it must be done through an extensive centralized and continued study of family histories, he pointed out.j "Enough is now known about the heredity of human defects so that a geneticist, if he wished and if he could control the matings, could pro- duce strains of people who would be color blind, have hemophilia or bleeding, deformed hands or feet, be toothless, be feebleminded, or have other physical, or mental defects," stated Dr. Dice. Many of the factors making for mental and physical well being are also probably partly or wholly hered- itary, he pointed out, but less study has been made in these directions.I A human genetics laboratory, through cooperation between all State institutions caring for people, or dealing with studies in heredity, would bring together a vast amount of information, now largely unrelat- ed. Out of this statistically reliable mass of data, important facts about the complicated heredity of good as well as bad characteristics might well be discovered within a generation or less of study. Dr. Dice suggested. A race of supermen, or the breeding of definite castes of "brain-trusters, artists, mathematicians, brawny lab- orers, or highbrow intellectuals with spindly legs and chronic indigestion," wouldbe in no sense the objective of genetics study, he emphasized. The aim would be entirely to find what possible rulescould be found to raise the physical and mental level of the whole population. Human heredity, Dr. Dice declared. is, the most important of all natural resources in the world, but little has been done to conserve and improve ita scientifically. It is difficult to attack because of its complications and be- cause of the length of time between' generations. The proposed labora-' tcrv would be a necessary and val- uable beginning, he suggested. Graham To Lecture On Student Religion Troop Skirmish Brings Threats Of War In Far East MLES SOVIET oc KHABAROVS MANC® Ut . SHAIL AR .Y 6L. KUL- UN JAPANESE L. BAP CLAIM L.BOR MONGOLIJAN 6& S ULAN BATOR. BOMBING aHARBIN TA 0'°HERE HA+I SOVET VLADIVOSTOK CHARGES .lSJNKING 28-MILE \a JAPANESE INVASION HERE MAUKDEN- 0+ .A PORT ART HUR C H IN A , Sociology Trip Plans Ratified, By Department, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Cont-nued from Page 4) ~ U day night services will be held at the Hillel Foundation at 8 p.m. Dr. Itinerary Includes Museum Ifeller will speak on "The Fate of the fAr N r SJew in Poland." This will conclude Of Art, egro Sections his series on Poland. His speech will Of Detroit . be followed by a discussion of the stu- dents. All are welcome. Ine University sociology depart- ment yesterday put its stamp of approval on the itinerary outlined by the Student Christian Association for its sociological trip to Detroit April 4. Planned with the cooperation of the department of sociology the itin- erary includes the Detroit Museum of Art, police headquarters, Negro residential sections, and soup lines, the sociological trip will start from Lane Hall at 1 p.m. Saturday, ac- cording to an announcement late yesterday by Richard Skrede Clark, secretary of the S.C.A., who urged all those interested in making the trip to register at once with Dorothy Shapland of the psychology office, Room 2125, Natural Science Bldg., or at Lane Hall. Registration fee is 50 cents; he said, and the only other cost for the trip is $1 to cover cost of transportation. The Detroit Art Museum will be' visited first, Clark said. There the Ann Arbor group will be joined by' smaller groups from the University of Toledo and Wayne University. Professor Bushnell, head of the Uni- versity of Toledo sociology depart- ment is expected to be present. At the museum, the de Riviera murals will be explained. Police headquarters will be visited next, where arrangements haverbeen made for the students to be shown through the cell blocks, the rogues gallery, and other parts of the build- ing, where police inspectors will ex- plain general police problems. In- cluded in the plans are examinations of the fingerprint and arms identifi- cation departments. A talk regard- ing the work of the narcotic squad will complete the visit. a. w -Associated Press Map This map shows the frontiers of Japanese-advi ed Manchoukuo and Soviet-influenced Mongolia where a 24-hour battle between soldiers of the two countries was reported to have ended with the retreat of the Man- choukuans. Each side claimed the engagement was fought in its own territory. Concert Faculty Concert: The University Symphony Orchestra, Earl V. Moore, and Thor Johnson, conductors, will provide an interesting program in Hill Auditorium, at 4:15 o'clock, to which the general public with the exception of small children is invit- ed without admission charge, as fol- lows: Overture, "Merry Wives of Windsor" ........... Nicolai Symphony in D Minor ......Franck Lento-Allegro non troppo Allegretto Allegro non troppo Three Dances, "Nell Gwyn"...... . ................Edward German Country Dance Pastoral Dance Merrymakers' Dance Coming Events Student Christian Association: The S.C.A. is sponsoring a Sociology Field Trip to Detroit for all those students interested, on Saturday, April 4. The group will leave from Lane Hall at 1 p.m. sharp and will return late Sat- urday evening. Registration will be 50c. Transportation will be $1.00 and dinner will be 40c. Persons interest- ed may register with Miss Dorothy Shapland in the Psychology Office, Room 2125 Natural Science, or with Mrs. Alber at Lane Hall. The itin- ei ary will include visits to the de- Riviera murals, the police depart- rnent, the jail, the Negro YMCA, the Hastings Street rehousing area, the Negro residential areas, the Marin- ers' Church and the Hungarian Kitchen. The Student Christian Association is sponsoring a luncheon for Dean Thomas Wesley Graham at noon on Saturday, April 4, in the Russian 'h Construction Of Tower Delayed Until Steel Shipment Arrives Pardon Plans Schedule; One Story To Be Built Every 11 Days By RICHARD G. HERSHEY EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of articles on the construc- tion of the Burton Memorial Tower and the Rackham School of Garduate studies. Work on the $69,000 Burton Mem- orial Tower, which will be 193 feet in height, will begin just as soon as a shipment of steel to be used in the concrete for the foundation arrives. Tests conducted by the Highway Engineering Department taken dur- ing the course of the last 10 days have proved that the earth immedi- ately under the Tower is completely satisfactory as a basis for the build- ing. Edward C. Pardon, superintendent of the buildings and grounds, is in charge of the work and has drawn up a complete schedule for the construc- tion work. It is planned, roughly, he said, to have one story of the Tower completed every eleven days, and the structure will be entirely built by the middle of the summer and will be ready for the instalaltion of the bells at that time. The tests conducted by the high- way engineering department show, Mr. Pardon said, that the soil bear- ing is completely satisfactory-that is, it can bear the.weight of the Tow- er without causing it to settle too much. It was found by the depart- ment that the sand-gravel bed is cap- able of bearing 6000 pounds per square foot-the "soil bearing" nec- essary if the building is not to settle too much or too unevenly. deep the foundation of either the Graduate School or the Burton Tow- er depends solely on how far down it is necessary to find a proper basis for the building. In the case of the Burton Tower, for instance, the foun- dation, as can be observed by looking at the excavations made there now, will be but about 15 feet down in the ground. The Burton Tower, he pointed out, has already been planned so as to be stable against the wind pressure, and this stability was not realized by! planning the building to set deeply in the ground. The "Footings" of the building are so planned to take care of any pres- sure from the wind. suAt its base the Tower will be about 41 feet, 7 inches square and it does not taper very much at the top. For instance, at the 10th floor the Tower will be 39 feet, 7 inches square and at the eleventh floor will be 38 feet, 7 inches. Practice rooms will be included in the first 10 floors and immediately above them will be the bell cham- ber, 44 feet high and 38 feet square. The bells, when they arrive this sum- mer, will be hoisted into the chamber by a great derrick stationed on the tenth floor. They will be brought up the outside of the building. The clock will not be installed by SPRING PLANTS and Westerner Crowned King Of Cigarette Rollers On Campus Expert cigarette rollers on the cam- pus gathered around the renowned bell at the Pretzel Bell Tavern re- cently and with its peal was startedj off in the Gargoyle's "Roll Your Own Contest" which offered prizes for the fastest roller, the neatest roller and the man who combined both in mak- ing his cigarettes, After nimble fingers had skittishly awaited the bell, the speed contest was run-off and traditions of the old West were upheld by James Hor- iskey, '39L, of Cheyenne, Wyo., who' won the contest and a pipe for his agility. William C. Hutton, '39A, of Ham- mond, Ind., won the pipe for the best-rolled cigarette. The judges for this and the other contests were John Neelands, proprietor, Donald Miller, '36, editor of the Gargoyle, and Nor- man Williamson, '36, business man- ager of the Gargoyle. Neatness and speed were combined in the judging of the next contest which was won by William Hutton,, who had previously taken the prize for the'best rolled cigarette. Case In Identifies Reptile Triassic Rock Strata 1 III A reptile dating from ancient times when Wyoming was covered by a sea, and an exceptional discovery be- cause it shows the half-way stage in the evolution of an animal from a land to a water dwelling form, has been identified by Dr. E. C. Case, di- rector of the Museum of Paleontol- ogy. The fossil, found in 120,000,000- year old Triassic rocks near Alcona, Wyo., is one of the Plesiosaur group of marine reptiles of the time, and is approximately three feet in length. MICHIGAN WOLVERINE L! a 0 ammm """" 11 low 0 I- or If you lose something, let people know about it. Blow your horn! No one will blow it for you. The best place to sound off for the return of Lost Articles is the Michigan Daily Classified Section. 30c is a small price to recover arti. cles you prize highly. 11 _... . I 11