k 'TI-yrAMNIF9x16XXTVVF FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 281 rear _, e _ _,..__ . .., _.,.... 300 St. Louis Alumni Present For Breakfast Ballroom Is Pressed Into Use To Accommodate Crowd; 90_Expected Prof. George E. Carrothers, director of the Bureau of Cooperation with Educational Institutions, just re- turned from the convention of the department of superintendence of the National Education Association in St. Louis, yesterday gave the particu- 1ars of the Michigan Breakfast held in the Hotel Jefferson Tuesday morn- ing. "I was prepared for about ninety graduates, but at 8 a.m. over three hundred alumni showed up," said Professor Carrothers, who was in charge of the arrangements. "We had engaged a private dining room, but the large attendance necessitated the removal of the breakfast to the main ballroom, and even then some of the graduates had to hold their conversations in the smoking rooms." For two hours, old classmates met each other for the first time in years, Professor Carrothers said, with al- most every state being represented. Dean J. B. Edmonson of the School of Education, was toastmaster, and talks were given by William Mac- Andrew, '86, now on the editorial board of "School and Society" at 75 years of age after an active life in the field of education, by A. J. Stoddard, president of the superintendence de- partment of the N.E.A., and a grad- uate of Michigan; and by E. C. War- riner, president of Central State Teachers College at Mt. Pleasant. Speeches were also given by E. L. Bowsher, '13, state superintendent of Ohio schools, and by Eugene B. Eliot, superintendent of Michigan schools, both University graduates. "Copies of Michigan songs were handed out, "Professor Carrothers said, "and the ballroom rang with 'The Maize and Blue,' and 'The Vic- tors'." A telegram from President Ruth- yen was read at the opening of the breakfast: "Most cordial greetings from the University of Michigan to its alumni and others from this state. We are proud of Michigan's large and ef- ficient representation among Ameri- can educators and we hope the Na- tional Education Association meet- ings this year again prove an inspira- tion toward freshened and broadened ideals in the teaching profession." ' Pavioff, Reflex Action Theorist, Dies In Russia. Thousands Visit In New Orleans For Bright Climax To Mardi Gras Carnival (Special to The Daily) NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 26. - Thou- sands of persons from all over the nation made their way homeward from this holiday-decorated city to- day as the colorful bedlam of gaiety of the Mardi Gras, which ended at midnight, died away. Weather for the pageantry of this famed carnival, which has lost much of its former religious significance, was perfect, and the Mardi Gras kings and queens, regaled in their gro- tesque dress, paraded and danced in the sunny streets. They were wit- nessed by the largest Mardi Gras crowd in history, according to those in charge, a crowd which lost itself when all New Orleans was trans- formed into a riot of color as the carnival reached its climax at the crowning of the Grand Monarch - Rex. Season Began Saturday The Mardi Gras season was official- ly inaugurated at noon Saturday by King Nor, tiniest, yet mightiest of the carnival monarchs, while thou- sands of persons jammed the streets for a glimpse of him and his red, gold, green, purple and blue retinue of more than 60 floats. The first' pageant was made up only of gram- mar and high school students, the theme of their parade being "His- toric Places of the Vieux Carre" (French Quarter). One of the clev- erest and most impressive of the many floats included an iron gate ajar, disclosing a courtyard of the ever-present yucca palms in an old cream-colored water jar. Pink and yellow costumes clustered at the rear and an old lamp jutted out from a balcony. Floats Described "All the world's a stage," and so was a float by that name. The first theatre in New Orleans, "Le Spectacle de la Rue St. Pierre," was called later Tabary's Theatre from the name of a favorite performer residing in New Orleans. Scores of other beautiful floats por- trayed many different scenes of this old city's famous quarter" showing it as it was 150 years ago. Yet to go through the section today you wonder if it has changed so very much since the days of Bienville, Iberville and Jean LaFitte, the glamorous pirate who aided General Jackson in the de- fense of New Orleans against the English. The Vieux Carre is filled with ar- chitecturally unique structures rang- ing in age from 100 to more than 200 years, within whose walls have been written the thrilling chapters EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS of the rise of the civilization of that vast area originally known as the Louisiana Territory. Orleamans and the thousands of out-of-town visitors who were swarm- ing all over New Orleans for the an- nual festival of Carnival jammed both banks of the Mississippi to wit- ness the arrival to the city of the Sea God Proteus. Hold River Display A bedlam of screaming sirens, hoot- ing hug-boats and deep voiced steam- ers brdke loose when King Alla steamed up the river aboard the U.S. Destroyer Schenck. Accompanying the King and his royal party were scores of gaily decorated yachts and smaller boats, all in full regatta flags, adding a colorful scene to the New Orleans waterfront where many are docked during the festivities. Yet the river bedlam was just an echo when the Mardi Gras reached its climax and all New Orleans went mad with color, masking from dawn to dusk, dancing in the streets, to the honor and glory of Rex, the mon- arch of Mardi Gras. With trains, bus-lines, planes, auto- mobiles and boats bringing additional thousands to New Orleans, the city was crowded with the largest Carnival crowd in history, according to Car- nival statistics. Waterfront Colorful Sunday's high temperature and brilliant sunshine started thousands of early arrivals off on a round of sight-seeing. During the day the docks were crowded with visitors from every section of the country who hur- ried to the waterfront for an in- spection of the visiting battleships and ocean liners. The fishing villages near' New Or- leans with their boat-crowded bay- ous; the coastal i4rairies covered with swamp grass, waist high, and broken with placid pools and winding bayous and the cypress swamps with gnarled old trees festooned with gray moss-all this proved intensely in- teresting to visitors who sought the typical and unusual outside the city proper. But one does not have to venture outside New Orleans in seeking the romantic and unusual, for this old. city constitutes a visit to the Old SCA Group Will Leave Saturday On Toledod rip' Twenty Students Compose Sociology Tour Party; Toledo U. Cooperates About 20 students will leave for Toledo tomorrow noon on the so- ciology field trip being sponsored by the Student Christian Association. The purpose of the trip, according to Miriam Hall, Grad., is to provide the student non-academic opportuni- ties to deepen his insight into modern society and its problems, and is not designed primarily for the students concentrating in sociology. Prof. Charles J. Bushnell of the University of Toledo's sociology department has, upon the request of Prof. Roderick D. McKenzie of the University's so- ciology department, arranged the it- inerary for the group while in Toledo. Saturday the group will visit the University of Toledo, and then pro- ceed to the Belmont Avenue district of Toledo, where they will see the- program of housing and slum clear- ing being carried out. Verne Pfaen- der, Federal director of housing in the Toledo area, will address the group. A meeting with labor leaders has also been planned in the Toledo Y.M.C.A. Sunday the students will meet with the relief and employment workers and will hear a talk by J. Branch Donelson, director of the Ohio State employment service. Later in the afternoon, the students will visit the Toledo Art Museum and the Bay View Park Colony. They are expected to return to Ann Arbor early Sunday night. Those interested in making the trip should get in touch with Dorothy Shapland immediately. Miss Shap- land will be in Room 2125 Natural Science building from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, and from 2 to 4 p.m. today. NEXT WED. EVE. "FUNNIEST STAGE COMEDY WE HAVE EVER SEEN" --Say George Burns and Grade Al i America's Prize-Winning Stage Comedy World, particularly throughout 15 square blocks makn up the Vieux Carre, the French Quarter. To the Carnival visitors the French Quarter is the most interesting sec- tion of all New Orleans. Its early mixture of French and Spanish ar- chitecture combining the Spanish courtyard and the overhanging bal- conies of the seventeenth century French style of construction gives one the impression that he has been transplanted to the quaintest section of Paris. In every corner of the section are bars and restaurants of every variety appealing to all tastes, where the cui- sine is unequaled. Turci's, Antoine's, and the Patio Royal are crowded nightly with out-of-town diners, and for those particular about their fancy drinks the Old Absinthe Bar is the most popular. Coroner Calls eath Of Local Grocer Suicide A . . Lemble, 55, Dies Fro n Self-In flicted Gun WoundsF rom. Revolver Alphonse B Lemble, 55 years old, was found dead in the back room of the grocery store which he owned at 530 S. Forest Ave. yesterday morn- ing. Coroner Edwin C. Ganzhorn pronounced it a case of suicide. Lemble shot himself through the chest with a..45-caliber Colt revolver. He was found by Alva B. Mettert, a meat cutter, when he came to work at 8 a.m. Business troubles were thought to have been the cause of the act. Born in Germany, March 20. 1880, Lemble came to Ann Arbor at the age of three. He has resided here since that time, being well known because of his many fraternal and business G ;sociat 1011.5 Lemble is survived by the widow, Iva May Healy Lemble; a. daughter. Mrs. George Lucas, Lincoln Park; two sons, Marshall, of Detroit, and Wil- ford, of Ann Arbor; a brother, Frank, of Ann Arbor: two sisters, Mrs. Louise Sachman, of Detroit, and Mrs. Mary Lebic, of Rockford, Ill.; three grand- children and several nephews and nieces. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Muehlig chapel and burial will be in Forest Hill ceme- tery. Friends may call at the chapel. Plan Non-Technical rrIks For IDentists The faculty of the School of Den- tistry has arranged for a series of general assemblies of all undergrad- uate dental students for the purpose of hearing lectures outside the sphere of dentistry by members of the faculties of other schools and colleges of the University. These assemblies, according to Prof. Russell W. Bunting of the den- tal school, will be held bi-weekly in the upper amphitheatre of the dental building. The first lecture will be given by Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, Di- rector of the Summer Session, at 4:15 p.m. Monday. Dr. Hopkins will speak on the subject, "The University Around the World." - 'today and Saturday RONALD COLMAN in "THE TALE OF TWO CITIES" ANN SOTHERN in "YOU MAY BE NEXT" BUCK JONES in "ROARING WEST" Chapter 13 Cyclotron Test Creates Radi Active Material A liorniiai Sceintis s ;ets Results By Bomardig Bismulith Withi Atomis' Using a cyclotron, similar to the one which is now being built by the physics department, Dr. J. J. Livin- good, research associate at the Uni- versity of California, created a radio- active substance which is found in nature, according to a recent release from the Science News Letter, Bombarding bismuth, an element with a large atomic weight, with deutrons in the cyclotron, Dr. Livin- good found that the Radium E which resulted followed the regular series of radioactive elements, the News Letter reported. The Radium E de- cayed with a half-life of five days by emitting electrons, and in the end produced lead. With his 85-ton cyclotron, Prof. E. O. Lawrence, designer of the appara- tus, also of the University of Cali- fornia, has transmuted more than one third of all the elements known to man. Recently he has converted platinum into gold, the News Letter stated. The cyclotron is also useful in making neutrons, neutrally charged atomic particles which are invaluable in bombarding atoms in order to study their construction and consti- tuents. Success with the cyclotron has re- sulted in replicas of it being built in seventeen research centers, includ- ing one by the University, which ma- chine is now nearing completion. Seven of these machines are being constructed in foreign countries, three in Russia, two in England, and one each in Japan and Denmark. The deutron bullets which Dr. Liv- ingood employed in making Radium E are nuclei of double weighted hy- drogen atoms obtained from heavy water costing approximately $600 a pint, the Science News Letter com- mented. They are shot out of the cy- clotron with a velocity of about 12,000 miles per second, about one hundred thousand billion of them being emitted pei second. R~eonsrucetion. ExPert Will Speak Here Today Earl Hanson, Planning Consultant of the Natural Resources Committee assigned to the Puerto Rico Recon- struction Administration, will lecture on the subject "Puerto Rican Recon- struction Problems," at 4:15 p.m., today in the Natural Science Audi- torium. Mr. Hanson, a specialist in land planning, was formerly associated with the Missippi Valley Commission, and he has had a number of articls published on the geography of South America. He will speak at a seminar in graduate geography at 10 a.m, Saturday. The lecture today is open to the public. Classified Directory CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five 'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at on 'xtra charge. Cash in advance Ilc per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Minimum 3 lines per in- sertion. reephone rate -15c per reading line for two or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. 0% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. 6y contract, per line -2 lines daily, one month ...........8c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months.......8c 2 lines daily, college year.......7c 4 lines E.O.D. 2 months.......8c 100 lines used. as desired . .. 9c 300 lines used as desired........ 1,000 lines used as desired.......7 2.000 lines used as desired.......6 The above rates are per reading line based on eight reading lines per inch, ionic type, upper and lower case. Add Sc per line to above rates for all capital fetters. Add 6c per line to above for told face, upper and lower case. Add Oc per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 7% point type. LOST AND FOUND LOST: Black and white laminated Parker Pencil. Name W. B. Wilson on side. Phone 2-3549. Reward. 343 LAUNDRY STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Prices reasonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. 6x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 1x LAUNDRY, carefully washed in soft water and hand ironed. Reason-I able. Telephone 7287. 11x USE MODEL IN CAMPAIGN FLINT, Feb. 27.-(A"))-The re- cently organized traffic safety board here is using a model street inter- section, with minature cars and trucks, in its investigations of auto- mobile accidents. Drivers involved in mishaps are given an opportunity to re-enact the scene of the accidents before the board. NOTICES ARE you interested in knowing the truth about the Townsend Plan? Walter Nelson, Detroit attorney, will speak on its merits. 8 p.m., Friday at Masonic Temple. All welcome. Admission free. 344 MAC'S TAXI-4289. Try our emf- cient service. All new cabs. 3x EYES examined, best glasses made at lowest prices. Oculist, U. of M. graduate, 44 years practice. 549 Packard. Phone 2-1866. 13x SELL YOUR OLD CLOTHES: We'll buy old and newsuits and over- coats for $3 to $20. Also highest prices for saxophones and typewrit- ers. Don't sell before you see Sam. Phone for appointments. 2-3640. lox FOR RENT-ROOMS FOR RENT: Apartment with pri- vate bath and shower for three instructors or students. Also single room, shower bath. Steam heat. Continuous hot water. Phone 8544. 422 E. Washington. 341 FOR RENT: Single rooms for girls, undergraduates or graduates. 912 Forest. Phone 2-1586. 338 DOUBLE ROOM, two boys. One for suite. Warm, clean, comfortable. Two blocks from campus. Ap- proved house. 500 Packard. 342 ESPERANTO CLASS TO MEET Instruction of Esperanto will begin at 4 p.m. today in Room 1020 Angell Hall, Dr. Hirsch Hootkins, who will teach the course in the artificial, in- ternational language. announced yes- terday. Any one interested may join the class, which meets once each week, Dr. Hootkins declared. DIES FROM BURNS LUDINGTON, Feb. 27. -- (/P) - Burns suffered when he tossed an inflamable fluid on a furnace fire caused the death Wednesday night of Edward James Thompson, Jr., 11, son of Ludington's city commissioner. With DUKE ELLINGTON and his WORLD-FAMOUS DANCE ORCHESTRA to "charm" you away from every orbital gee.& haw, Friday the thirteenth of March portends but not to dis- appoint! Youth, Inc.'s Hoodoo Dance at the Naval Armory, De- troit, beckons every campus hero and his lady to five hours of bewitching pleasure at only $1.65 a couple. Better hurry to Swift's pharmacy on State St. for tickets. rII TREAT YOURSELF TO A KOSHER MEAL... Breakfast Specials Luncheon Specials Complete Dinners and A Large Variety of TOASTED SANDWICHES Kruger's DELICATESSEN Restaurait 233 S. State At Head of Liberty i 87-Year Old Scientist Had Won Nobel Prize For Animal Experiments MOSCOW, Feb. 27. - (P) -Russia's great scientist, Ivan Pavloff, noted for his theories of conditioned re- flexes and his experiments with the brain processes of animals, died to- day. He was 87 years old. A form of la grippe was the cause of death.1 Pavloff won the Nobel prize in 1904j for his works on the salivary glands and digestion, and turned in later years to an intriguing mechanical theory of life. It was his contention that all the' acts of life are reflex and just as mechanical as that of the baby who pulls his finger out of the fire. To prove this theory he experi- mented for many years with dogs, monkeys, rabbits and other animals. In addition bto a small menagerie, his Leningrad laboratory contained equipment for measuring the thoughts of animals, the intensity of their brain processes and even their very wishes, hopes and disappointments. Pavloff, however, during 1929 ob- jected strenuously to the inclusion7 of several Communist representatives whom he termed "nobodies" in the academy. His attitude then recalled his ear-1 lier rebuff to Lenin when, in the famine days of 1921, the Bolshevik leader offered to augment Pavloff'sx daily ration of a half pound of black bread and a handful of frozen pota- toes. "Not while my friends and col-z leagues are starving!" the scientist retorted. Before the international congress of physiologists, of which he wasz president, he said he had succeeded in setting up in dogs the same condi- tions of mental derangement as occur in humans and that in many cases, notably by the use of bromide, cured neuroses which had lasted for months. 6:00-WJR Buck Rogers wwJ Ty Tyson. WXYZ Contrast in Music. CKLW Omar. 6:15-WJR Junior Nurse Corps. WWJ Dinner Music. WXYZ Sophisticated Rhythm. CKLW Joe Gentile. 6:30-WJR Duncan Moore. WWJ Bulletins. WXYZ Day insReview. CKLW Melody Lane. 6:45-WJR Hot Dates in History. WWJ Musical Moments. WXYZ Lowell Thomas. CKLW Bill. 7:00--WJR Myrt and Marge. WWJ Amos and Andy. WXYZAHarry Richman. CKLW Shadows on the Clock. 7:15-WJR Jimmie Allen WWJ Speakers: Evening Melodies. WXYZ Capt. Tim CKLW Laugh Parade. 7 :30-WJR Jack Randolph. WWJ Evening Melodies. WXYZ Lane Ranger. CKLW Variety Revue. 7:45-WJR Boake Carter. WW.J America Speaks. 8:00--WJR Freddie Rich's Music. WWJ Jessica Draggonette. WXYZ Irene Rich. CKLW Sweet and Hot. 8:15--WXYZ Wendell Hall. 8:30-WJR Broadway Varieties. WXYZ Red Nichols' Music. CKLW Pop Concert. 9:00-WJR Hollywood.Hotel. WWJ Waltz Time. WXYZ Al Pearce's Gang. CKLW Revellers: Orchestra. 9:30-WWJ Court of Human Relations. WXYZ Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians. CKLW Music Box Review. 10:00-WJR Richard Himber's Champions. WWJ First Nighter. WXYZ Girl Friends. CKLW Wallenstein's Symphonia. 10 :15-WXYZ Musical Moments. 10:30-WJR March of Time. WWJ Music Guild. WXYz Adventures of the Hornet. CKLW Jazz Nocturne. 10 :45-WJR Three Aces, 11 :00-WJR Bulletins. WWJ Troupers. WXYZ Baker TwinS. CKLW Hockey Review. 11:15-WJR Latin-American Music. WW.J Spoi't Celebrities. WXYZ Sport Talk. 1 .:3--WWJ Kavanagh's Music. WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music. CKLW F~reddy Martin's Music. 114 5--CKLw Stan Meyer's Music. 13:00--WVJR Bert Stock's Music. WWJ Russ Lyons' Music. WXYZ Shanior: Ranny Weeks ' Music. CKLW Orville Krapp's Music. 12:30-wJR Guy Lombardo's Music. WXYZ Phil Ohman's Music. CKLW Ted Weems' Music. 1:00---CKLW Jack Hylton's Music. 1:30-CKLW Will Osborne's Music. I IL I I' Trudi Schoop and Her Comic Ballet "--the only absolute require- ments are that you have lived, loved and laughed." --N.Y. Post "-she could have qualified for a place in any silly sym- phony." -N.Y. Sun Lydia MEN DELSSOHN Theatre Tonight and Tomorrow Saturday Matinee, 2:30 p.m. Night, 8:30 p.m. Evenings: 75c - $1.00 - $1.50 Matinee: 50c - 75c - $1.00 Box Office Opens Feb. 24. Telephone 6300 I I I ENDS TONIGHT . V A JFlTI[ Mat. & Bale. Eve. 25c Main Fl. Eve. 35c 'A I I G(UIU Continuous 1:30 - 11 p.m. 15c to 6-25c after 6 -- -Now NOAH BEERY, Jr. REX, the Horse "STORMY" PLUS III HAROlD vN 11I "Hilarious, Funny I I Ott tlheA* I A I I'N~ IldI t, , 1 1111