PAGE SIX, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JAN. 16, 1937 PAGE SIX SATURDAY, JAN. 10, 1937 THE MICIIIGAN DAILY First Biological Station Springs IntoVillage Rapid Growth From Log Cabin Stage Described By Professor LaRue The development of the University Biological Station at Douglas Lak from a single log cabin to a complete community with modern equipment was described yesterday by Prof George R. LaRue of the department of zoology, director of the station as officials of the University Summe; Session issued first bulletins an- nouncing the station as a regular feature of this year's Summer Ses- sion. "The Station was created in 1909," Professor LaRue said, "after a report requesting it had been presented by Prof. Jacob Reighard of the depart- ment of zoology, and Prof. George P. Burns of the department of bot- any. These men, it was explained, were interested in getting a place for summer work in the biological sci- ences away from the campus, and especially a place where field work could be done. At the same time the department of surveying in the Col- lege of Engineering - had negotiated with Colonel Bogardus of Pellston for the purchase of the Bogardus tract, of 1,700 acres, in northern Michigan for a summer surveying camp. Part of this land was given over for the Biological. Station." Camp First Was Cabin The original faculty of the sta- tion included Professors Reighard and Burns and two assistants. The enrollment was 13. The only physical plant of the camp consisted of a single log cabin, to which doors, windows, and a roof had to be added, and this building served as a lab- oratory and general headquarters. Tents were set up for living quarters, and the biologists took their meals at the dining tent operated by the surveying camp. "Now," Professor LaRue continued, "the Station has about 130 buildings and an average enrollment of about 100. Last summer there were 56 men and 49 women, of whom 79 were students in the Graduate School. The Station has completely equipped cab- ins for living quarters, all of them having concrete floors, screens, stoves, beds and mattresses. Besides this, in the commisary there is an electric range and bake oven, electric refrig- erators, an electric . dish-washer, a mixer, and a potato-parer. Living conditions at the camp are not a hardship." Location Called Ideal The camp is especialiy suited for field work in the natural sciences, it was explained. It has an. ideal lo- cation, Professor LaRue stated, be- cause its situation is in the northern hardwood and coniferous regions, thus providing a variety of habitats for species to be studied. Numerous surrounding lakes each have their own characteristics, and beside this, he said, the camp is situated close to other areas of interest to biologists, such as the Sleeping Bear dunes and Wilderness Park. "The fact that the students at the camp are always in some sort of contact with what they are studying gives the camp perhaps some ad- antage over studies on the campus," Professor LaRue added, "for students and professors are not separated im- mediately after classes are over. Al- so the climate at Douglas Lake is generally fair and mild, very fa- vorable to field work." Courses Interest Biologists The faculty of the camp consists of 15 members, seven professors from the University and six visiting pro- fessors who have been on the staff for several years and are acquainted with the Station and its curriculum of courses, he said. Besides these, there are also a physician and dean of women to help carry on the pro- giam. Courses at the Station are of main interest to students who are majoring in biology or who are in- terested in biological research. Most of these students are candidates for degrees. First copies of the Biological Sta- tion announcement describing its program of studies were published yesterday and are ready for distribu- tion this week by the administration of the Summer Session. Application for admission to the courses should be made to the director of the Station before April 15. Student Is Slightly Hurt As Car Skids Peter Johnson, '38E, 20 years old, Canal Zone, suffered minor facial in- juries when he was struck at noon yesterday near the home of President Alexander G. Ruthven on South Uni- versity Ave. by a car driven by How- ard Efner, 618 Spring St. Johnson was hit and knocked to the curb as he was crossing from the North side of the street to the South side. Efner was driving about 20 miles per hour and slid into the stu- Huge Fascist Demonstration Salutes hitler Emissary Ba ibcock Receives Honorary Degree, - Associate: ?ress Photo This was the scene at the railroad station in Rome when Merman Wilhelm Goering, Nazi air minister,j arrived to be greeted by Premier Mussolini of Italy, during a huge Fascist demonstration of Italo-German friendship. Left to right: Goering; Mussolini's daughter, wife of Count Ciano; Mussolini; Count Ciano, and Goering's wife. While Gocring's visit was hailed as "unofficial" it was said in political circles he was expecting to seek an explanation concerning the effect of the Italo-British Mediterranean agreement on the Italo-German accord. The Rev. Allen J. Babcock, for the past eight years assistant pastor of St. Thomas Catholic Church in. charge of St. Mary's chapel for Cath- cnic students of the University, left' yesterday to assume his new duties ' as vice rector of the North American College in Rome. At the farewell reception held rhursday night in St. Thomas school auditorium for Father Babcock, the honorary degree of doctor of laws was :onferred on him by the University of Detroit. he eye in surrealism. Demons for the modern man, are no less real han electrons; we see the shadow ;f both flitting across the screen of visible reality. Surrealism makes us conscious of this fact; it arranges the necessary apparatus. Before we can become sane again we must remove the greatest of all hallucinations- the belief that we are sane now." Critic Defends Surrealism Surrealism has several places of origin. "It is an international move- ment," Professor Slusser said, "with adherents in France, Germany, Italy, Holland and even America. One of the most important painters associat- ed with the movement is the German, Paul Klee, whose work, from a fan- tasy all his own, has real aesthetic significance. Both he and the Ital- ian, Giorgio de Chirico, had achieved prominence before the surrealist movement was formally recognized, The works of Pierre Roy and Salvador Dali show very astonishing crafts- manship. "What the future of surrealism is to be, nobody knows," he concluded. "Post-impressionism is not yet finished, and there are rumhbles of various proletarian art movements on the horizon. The odd part about surrealism is that many or most of adherents profess themselves to be communists. The work which they produce is doubtless subversive enough, but it is intelligible only to the extreme aesthetes. It probably performs the function of puncturing some of the high-flying pretensions of post-impressionism, but with no really first-rate talents at its disposal, its contribution seems destined to be a negative rather than positive one." WEEK-END "'A 4<020 Council Hears Of New plant's operations held last night in City Water Softenerla special meeting of the Council. I It is expected that work on the Processes of the local water soften- plant will begin in the early spring. ing plant soon to be constructed that Advertising for bids for the construc- will remove the iron from city water tion of the plant will be held in a were explained last night to the City short time so that work may be start- Council by Louis Ayres, consulting ed without delay when the weather engineer, at the discussion of the permits it. -= DRUGS KDAKS Surrealism-- What Is It Doing? Only Protesting, Slusser Says Surrealism-the art movement that is causing discussion among critics at present as the result of its exhibit in the Museum of Modern' Art this month-is probably only a natural protest against established conventions in art and not the open- ing of a new art era, Prof. Jean P. Slusser of the College of Architecture said yesterday. "Surrealism is more an 'art po- litical' movement than a strictly aes- thetic one," Professor Slusser stated. "It follows a period of unsual aes- theticism and seems to represent a reaction against the assumptions and conventions of the latter. There was the post-impressionist period of the early part of the century, which largely ruled out content in art and laid principal stress on design. Post- impressionist paintings had a com- plex and closely reasoned formal structure, with almost no human sub- ject-matter or content." This was followed by the Dada movement, during the war and post- war periods. This was chiefly a lit- erary movement and attempt to dis- credit excessive rationality in art. It brought back into the arts qualities of fantasy, humor, and, in general, irrationality and spontaneity. These had been almost totally lacking in the works of the post-impressionist school. "Surrealism," Professor Slusser continued, "though it has been on the scene for several years, has achieved its main value as a protest; it has produced little of genuine ar- have joined hands with the newer psychologists in exploring the con- tents of dreams. Their pictures, often based on dream material, or freely: associated imagery, proclaim the im- portance of the sub-conscious." Origin Is International Most of the objections to surreaiism are based on the sudden emphasis given it in the New York show, it! was explained. It is thought by many critics trivial, and lacking in design, without sufficient universality of' meaning. On the other hand, Lewis Mumford, prominent critic for the New Yorker, has taken an attitude of defense for it during the transitory period when it is making its first im- pressions. He says: "It would be absurd to dismiss surrealism as crazy. It may be our civilization that is crazy. Has it notI used all the powers of rational in- tellect, all the hard discipline of the practical world to universalize an empire of meaningless war, and to turn whole states into Fascist mad- THIS WEEK-END WE OFFER: FRESH STRAWBERRY SUNDAE lOC 4 FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY Calkins - Fletcher Drug Co. 324 South State CAN DY 818 South State Sc DAS" tistic significance. The surrealistshouses? There is more than meets 4 N /r C ;G~ l w*. ... and rolled in CI-^4rr.,! *%A rt 9%--& -% ^o- Ce47 Ln k ,natnpagne k.tgarette paper or the