THE MICHIGAN DAILY TI Hignway erts Meet DAILYOFF ICIALB LEI Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30 P.M; 11:00 A.M. on Saturday. For Discussion Road Financing Is Topic Of 25th Conference At Union Tomorrow More than 700 State, county and local highway administrators arWd highway engineers are expected to at- tend the 25th annual Michigan High- way Conference which will begin at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Union. The three-day meeting is being sponsored by the engineering college in cooperation with the State High- way Department and the Michigan Association of Road Commissioners and Engineers. Financing Is Theme The financial problems involved in highway construction will be the principal theme of the eight sessions into which the conference will be divided, Prof. Roger L. Morrison of the highway engineering department, said -yesterday. The State' finances will be discussed by Deputy Com- missioner G. Donald Kennedy at to- morrow's morning meeting and -R. H. Harrison,rassistant district engi- neer of the U. S. Bureau of Public Roads, will talk on federal partici- pation in State and County 'Highway finance. Professor Morrison will pre- side. An address by Governor Fitzgerald at the conference, which. was an- nounced previously, remains doubtful since he has not indicated definitely whether he will attend. Illustrated Talk Wednesday j .V. B. Steinbaugh, consulting engi- neer of the State Highway. Depart- ment, will present an illustrated talk on the Blue Water Bridge at Wednes- day afternoon's session, in addition to studies of the Secondary Federal Aid Prograrm by Charles E.. Hayes, of the State Highway Department, and Allan Williams of Ionia County. Other features of the conference will be a discussion of Modern Syn- thetics Thursday by Ernest L. Foss, of General Motors, and a talk on "Black Top" surfaces for roads by E. L. Roettiger, of the Wisconsin Highway Department. Canadian Scientist, Ex-Professor, Dies According to word received here last week Dr. J. Playfair McMurrich, one of Canada's most distinguished scientists and a former member of the University Medical School, died at Toronto after a brief illness. He Bahai Speaker Lectures Here On Thursday Barbara Tinker Praises Chines After Recent Trip In War Z (Continued from Page 4) .he Existence and Nature of God will :e held at Lane Hall, eight o'clock onight. Mr. Kenneth Morgan will ead a discussion on "The Problem of ..xod. The Hiawatha Club will hold an important business meeting tonight at 8 o'clock in the Union. All mem- bers are urged to be present. Scandinavian Club to hold a Valen- tine's Party tonight at 8 in Lane Hall (downstairs). Spanish Play'Tryouts: La Sociedad Hispanica will present Martinez Sier- ra's "Sueno de una noche de Agosto" on April 4. Any student may try for a part. Tryouts will be held at 3 p.m. in Room 302 R.L. on Tuesday, Feb. 14, and on Wednesday, Feb. 15. Faculty Women's Club: The play reading section will meet this after- noon, Feb. 14, at 2:15 p.m. in the Mary B. Henderson Room of the Michigan League. Newman Club Executive Council will meet at 4 p.m. today at St. Mary's Student Chapel. Attendance is com- pulsory. Coming Events International Center: 1. Special attention is called to the two classes in spoken English un- der the direction of the Speech Clinic to be held Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 7 to 8 o'clock. Foreign students who have found themselves handicapped in their work by their difficulties with English or students who wish to improve their pronunci- ation are urged to take advantage of this opportunity provided f r e e through the generous cooperation of Dr. Muyskens and his staff. The first class meets tonight, Tuesday, Feb. 14. 2. The usual tea Thursday after- noon at 4, and Recreation Night Fri-, day evening from eight to twelve, was 79 years old. The bridge tournament is to start Dr. McMurrich was professor of this Friday evening, and a class is anatomy in theUniversity from 1894 promised for beginners who want to to 1907 and director of the anatomic- learn to play bridge.al laboratory from 1898 to 1907. He 3. Two new features are provided taught anatomy at the University of in the Intramural Sports Night Sat- Tcronto until his retirement in 1930, urday evening at the Intramural and was dean of the graduate school Building and the Music Hour from there for eight years. two to five Saturday afternoon at the He was given the honorary degree Center. of doctor of laws by the University in 4. Next Sunday at 7 o'clock, fol- connection with the diamond jubilee lowing the regular supper, Dr. Clover celebration in 1912, and held other is to give her thrilling account of her degrees from the University of To- trip down the Colorado River, illus- rcnto, Johns Hopkins University and trated by her remarkable moving pic- the University of Cincinnati. tures. The English Journal Club will meet Thursday evening, Feb. 16 at 8 o'clock in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Dr. H. T. PriceI will speak on "The Methods of Tex- tual Criticism. Faculty members and graduate students are invited to at- tend. Women Debaters: All women in- terested in intercollegiate or intra- mural debating during the semester are urged to be present at a meeting in Room 3209 Angell Hall Wednesday, Feb. 15, at 4 p.m. Graduate Luncheon: There will be a graduate luncheon, Wednesday, Feb. 15, in the Russian tea room of the League at 12 noon, cafeteria style. Professor Howard Ehrmann of the History Department will give an in- formal talk on "Colonial Aspirations of Fascist Italy." All graduate stu- dents are cordially invited. Varsity Debate: There will be a meeting of all men interested in sec- ond semester Varsity debate in Room 4203 A.H., 4 o'clock Wednesday, Feb. 15. Tau Beta Pi will have a sleigh ride and party on Friday, Feb. 17. The ride will start from the Union at 8 p.m. and further particulars will be found on the Mechanical Engineering bulle- Deutscher Verein Meets To Plan Spring Activity The Deutscher Verein will hold its first meeting of the semester at 8 p.m. today in the League. The eve- ning's entertainment will feature German folk songs and dancing and the program for the coming months will be outlined with special emphasis on the play which is an annual spring activity of the Verein. tin board. Members are asked to sign there by Wednesday. The first class in beginning social dancing will meet in the League Ball- room at 7:30 on Feb. 21. There will be further notice about the inter- mediateclass. The Interior Decoration Group of the Faculty Women's Club will meet at three o'clock on Thursday after- noon in the Michigan League Build- ing. Professor Harlow 0. Whitte- more, Chairman of the Landscape Design Department, will give an il- lustrated lecture regarding "Land- scape Gardening on the Home Grounds." Grand Illusion: Tickets for this prize film will go on sale Wednesday at the Mendelssohn box office. Call 6300. Saturday matinee at 2:30 p.m. Mrs. Moffett To Show' Pictures Of 'Universal House Of Worship' Mrs. Robert Lee Moffett of Chicago, Ill., Baha'i lecturer and teacher, will talk on "A Universal Hous, of Wor- ship; Its Beauty and Meaning" at 8 p.m. Thursday at the League. Pictures of the Baha'i House of Worship now being finished at Wil- mette, Ill., will be shown for the first time in Ann Arbor. The beauty and symbolism of this buildingehas at- tracted attention of architects and artists throughout the country. Mrs. Moffett has travelled exten- sively in Europe and the Near East and now devotes her time to lecturing on international relations, universal religion and world unity. For four years she was secretary of the Inter- national Relations Department of the Illinois Federation of Woman's Clubs and for some time field secretary of the World Unity Foundation of New York. She has also studied world affairs at the League of Nations School in Geneva, Switzerland. READ THE WANT ADS By SYLVIA MOORE If Barbara Tinker, Grad., of the anthropology museum, had suspected that two years of air raid alarms, planic-stricken refugees and over- bearing Japanese soldiers awaited her in China, she would never have cho- sen to go there in November, 1936. At least that is what she says now. Miss Tinker went to stay one yearI in China 'collecting antique pottery and textiles but two years passed before she was able to complete her work. Before the war broke out, in July, 1937, Miss Tinker lived with a Chin- ese family who had adopted none of the western customs, so she had to learn to speak Chinese in order to make her wants known, On the event of the war, she de- cided to accept an offer to do research at a museum in Chentu, Ssu-Chuan, some 1500 miles into the interior. She 3 hurried out of Peiping two hours be- fore the railroad was wombed, cut- ting the city off from the rest of the world. She was told that the first lap of her trip would take two weeks by bus, but with the outbreak of the war it actually took two and one half months. Part of the way she walked; 1 part she traveled by ox-cart, junk and huakan, a kind of sedan chair. Aftertstanding forty eight hours on the platform of a train srowded with war refugees, she arrived in Sianfu, capital of Shensi, the town where Gen Chiang Kai-Shek was ikdnap- ped. Miss Tinker discovered that she had walked into a hotbed of trouble and intrigue, and she had committed the dangerous error of having an unused Japanese visa in her pass- port. In those troublous times this alone was enough to cause her arrest on suspicion of espionage. Five days, in a Chinese jail ensued before the and she was released to continue her journey. She harbors no grudge against the Chinese, however, say- ing that it was merely a natural re- sult of venturing into the war-zone. The delay she termed, mildly enough, a "nuisance." A new difficulty presented itself then; high in the mountains, 100niles away from any English or Americ she ran out of money. Since Pei was cut off by the army, she was able to send for more. Only by assistance of a friendly Chinese men and a peddler who loaned he month's wages of three dollars, she able to go on. Finally she arr at her destination. For five mo she remained at the universit: Chengtu. At first the war seemec away, but when Nanking fell, people began making feverish pr rations to escape farther up the r Miss Tinker decided she had enough. Since the regular railroad had boombed, she was forced to go o land by bus through Kwechov province against which foreig are warned because of the dar from bandits. The buses wer( crowded with refugees that no sc ules were kept, and Miss Tinker forced to wait at each station v twelve suitcases filled with mat she had collected arrived one by In Chungking, the present ca of China, she had her first tast an air-raid. At the time the fun procession of the governor of the vince streched for more thar mile through the street. No air shelters had been constructed cause the city is built on rock. T was nothing for the people to do await their fate. The courage of Chinese, Miss 'Tinker says, was hibited then as itehas been n times; not one members of the cession ran for shelter, but, aft moment's hesitation, they resu their slow progress down the st a perfect target for enemy pla Fortunately, the Chinese planes back the invader§, and the city spared from the bombs. On the way to Hongkong, Tinker was again impressed with courage of the Chinese fisher. who continued to ply their trade though they knew that detectior the enemy meant that th".ey woulc machine-gunned by the warships After two years In the war 2 Miss Tinker was "quite relieved return to the United States. At : sent she is engagedin the Univer 1 I For Second Semester We Have Acquired Great Quantities o f 'I. 1 and they are priced in your favor I' 11 TEXT and REFERENCE BOOKS I' 1;I For All Departments DRAWING MATERIALS for ENGINEERS and ARCHITECTS I I I Everything for the Student. . at I 11