PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ _ Talks Feature4 Spring Meeting Of Soeiologists Dr. Landecker To Appear On Morning Program Of Conference Friday A panel of seven speakers will comprise the program of the spring meeting of the Michigan Sociologyl Society Friday, March 14, in conjunc- tion with the Mic igan Academy of Science, Arts and ;Letters, which will convene here. Dr. Werner S. Landecker of the so- ciology department, the first speaker, will address the group on "The War and Some of its Implications for So- ciological Research" at 9:30 a.m. Fri- day in the East Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. The remainder of the morning ses- sion will hear C. 1. Hoffer and D. L. Gibson of the faculty of Michigan State College discuss "The Commun- ity Situation as it Affects Adult Ed- acation." Nat T. Frame, of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, will speak on "Rural Sociological Research and Land Use Planning." The morning session will end with an address by Norman Humphrey of Wayne Uni- versity on "Acculturation of Mexican Peons in Detroit." The group will hear an address' by Luther Lee Bernard of the University of Washington on "Some Latin- American Sociologists" at a luncheon in the Union at 12:15 p.m. H. Warren Dunham of Wayne Uni- versity will speak on "War and Men- tal Disorder: Some Sociological-Con- Oiderations" at 2:15 p.m. Friday in the East Lecture Hall of the Rtack- ham Buildling. The final speech byE Edward A. Jandy of Wayne Univer- sity will follow. He will discuss "Cool- ey and American Democracy." Hillel To Sponsor Oratorical Contest Oratorical skill is in demand at the Hillel Foundation where a con- test will be held 8 p.m. Sunday to se- lect a representative to the National Hillel Oratorical Contest. The winner will receive a en dol]- lar prize and go on to comfete with the winners from other foundations in the locality for the chance to ap- pear in the district finals in Chi- cago. Those planning to enter the con- test should get in touch with Martin Dworkis, Grad., chairman of the for- ensics committee, or call the Foun- dation. The only limitations are that the speaker talk for eight min- utes on a topic of Jewish interest using original material. Leads In Annual Spanish Play Claude Ilulet, '42, Norma Bennett, '41, and June Larson, '41, talk over a few last problems in the prodhetion of 'Puebla de las Mumeres,' annual Spanish play to be presented at 8:30 p.m. today in Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Fisheries Experiment Station Aids In Stream Improvement Simpson Sees MAcin Germian Attack Loosed By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Associated Press Staff Writer) Whatever the real design of Ger- man strategy in the Balkans, or the actual meaning of forthcoming Ger- man-Italian-Japanese .conversations, Herr Hitler has definitely loosed his promised main attack on Britain in the Atlantic. His other moves on any front, diplomatic or military, must necessarily conform to that fact. A grim admission in London of tripled tonnage losses at sea in the week ending March 2 headlines the war news. Developments elsewhere still are of secondary consequence. It is in the Atlantic that Germany must make good her boast of stalling the American Aid-For-Britain pro- gram. An admitted British loss of more than 140,000 tons of cargo shipping in seven days is serious but not criti- cal. What does matter is Nazi ability to maintain any such rate "of sea destruction over a period of weeks or months. That would gravely jeopardize the flow of American aid aqross the Atlantic. Unquestionably the stepped-up Nazi sea and air attack on England is due for intensification as weather conditions in the Atlantic improve. By the same token, the opportunity for mass ferrying of American-made and Canadian-made long range planes to England for participation in the Atlantic battle also will im- prove with the weather. It can be reasoned, however, that the heavy ship loss rate reflected in the London statement is a prime factor for Washington in shaping final details of the Aid-For-Britain program. It illustrates graphically why administration leaders, dur- ing Congressional debate on the Lend-Lease Bill, opposed hard-and- fast restrictions on presidential au- thority to readjust execution of the program in the light of day-to-day war developments. The Admiralty statement again reflects the British charge that Ber- lin has exaggerated the sea victories she has scored. 11 4 4 4 f f news of the dorms, 1. 9' . _ ___ N! By GLORIA NISIION There's anoiner round of dorm dinners in the offing this week . . . The East Quad will have as its guest today Dean Harris of the Business Adminstration School of Ha!rvard University . . . Wenley house and Allen-Rumsey of the West Quad is going to vary the procedure a little by holding a Stag faculty dinner today .. . well, that's one way of doing it ... Stockwell Hall will carry on the tradition of the usual faculty dinner with another one tomorrow at six p.m. The informal supper will be attended by the following guests: Prof. and Mrs. Mischa Titiev, Prof. and Mrs. Daniel L. Rich, Prof. and Mrs. Clarence D. Thorpe, Prof. and Mrs. Donal H. Haines and Prof. Margaret Mann. The list runs on with Dr. O. L. I. Brown, Mr. Peter Ostaf in,Prof. and Mrs. Frank 0. Copley, Prof. Ernest H. Barnes, Prof. and Mrs. DeWitt H. Parker, Mr. Edward P. Calver, Prof. and Mrs. Roy W. Cowden, Prof. and Mrs. Wilbur Humphries and Dr. and Mrs. Robert Hall. Toooooo continue-Dr Margaret Bell, Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Green, Prof. and Mrs.. Richard D. Hollis- ter, Mrs. Woolsey Hunt and Mrs. Laura Niles will also make their appearances at Stockwell's dinner. By the way, Allen-Rumsey House in the W. Quad is fighting hard in defense of that beautiful gold cup, they won last year in the intramural debates sponsored by the Union . . Only time will tell whether the Rum- sey boys can still talk their weight in gold . . . Ah, the nurses come to the fore again! Yesterday they played hostesses to all girls on campus interested in nursing. The guests met Miss Rhoda Reddig, director of the School of Nursing, and were conducted on a guided tour through Ann arbor the University Hospital. freshmen in the house are a sports dance at the WAR day from 9-12. The giving Satur- 'Montmorency County has the honor of having one of the first trout fisheries research stations in the country," Dr. Albert S. Mazzard, Director of the Institute For Fish- eries Research, said in a recent in- terview. This station was established by the State Conservation Department, to improve existing stream conditions and better trout fishing in Michigan. Now under the care of Dr. J. "W. Leonard, biologist, the station is sit- uated on the headwaters of Hunt Creek, about ten miles south of At- lanta. Fishing Conditions Prior to 1937, Dr. Hazzard wrote in a pamphlet describing the work of the Hunt Creek-Station, fishing cone- ditions in Michigan showed a defin- ite room for improvement; the catch was relatively small despite heavy stocking, many of the trout seemed to have died during. the winter, or fallen victims to predators, in gen- eral, "fisherman's luck" was poor. Re- Concert Band To Appear At Grosse Pointe Today The University Concert Band will appear at eight o'clock this evening at the Pierce Junior High School in' Grosse Pointe under the auspices of the local Michigan Alumni Club. Soloists for the evening will be Betty Correll, '44SM, trombonist, and Raymond Crisara, '42SM, cornetist., ll search by the Fish Division of the Department of Conservation gave the answers to some of these confronting problems, but not enough to be sure of the right answer even for one stream. At its July meeting in 1937,1 the Division was instructed by the Conservation Commission to examine all the trout waters then under state ownership to see if a suitable location for an experiment station was avail- able. After considerable search for land with the best trout stream frontage, the present location wast i chosen in 1938. The purchase includ- dd about two miles of Hunt Creek' proper, seven tributary-streams and four lakes, all within a radius of one mile from the building site. No work was carried on that fall, as it was necessary to study the stream under winter conditions. The following January, a crew of fisheries biologists tramped the entire head- waters of Hunt Creek on snowshoes and found most of the streams free. of ice. This meant that screens and fish traps could be operated without clogging and that trout could be ob- served even in mid-winter. "After the spot for work was selected," ex- plained Dr. Hazzard, "the main stream was examined carefully and was divided into four sections by types of water: a lowet, sand-bot-' tomed, open meadow, sluggish. por- tion; next upstream a more rapid, gravelly part running through tama- rack and cedar swamp; then a nar- row, swift stretch with gravel and rock bottom partly shaded by aspen and other upland second growth; fin- ally the source which flows through old beaver ponds and dense cedar swamp. At least one tributary enters each section and the whole system seems typical of a Michigan brook trout stream." Major Project "A major project at the Hunt Creek station this season will be the development of a satisfactory meth- od of determining the fish popula- tion in any type of stream," said Dr. Hazzard. Stream census by block- ing and seining has been carried on in Michigan since 1930 and has gen- erally shown more trout to be present than was thought possible, but the method is slow and difficult in most streams. Hillel Will Hold Annual There have been some changes in the officers in the East Quad. Greene House has elected a new judiciary chairman in the person of Robert Cahow, '44 . . . Prescott has a new president, vice-president and secre- tary-treasurer-Nat Fowler, '44, Rob- ert Russell, '43, and Charles Gilbert, '44E, respectively . . . Tyler's athletic committee is now headed by John Lacey, '41E. To come back to Mosher and Jordan, Mosher will play hostess to Jordan gals at a tea dance from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today. They, in turn, will welcome the leading half of the dance twosome (clever way of saying "the boys'"-you get kinda sick of repeating the same words over and over again), says Chairman Jean Mieras, '43. Finals To Start In Case Club Trial. Contest, Final trials in the 1941 Freshmen' Case Club competition will begin at 4 p.m. tomorrow and continue through next Wednesday, it was an- nounced yesterday by Philip Buchen, '41L, a member of the board of Case Club advisers. All trials will be held in the Prac- tice Court Room located on the sec- ond floor of Hutchins Hall. The trials are open to the public, and all stu- dents who intend to enter the Law. School have been extended a special invitation to view the proceedings. The bench for each trial will be comprised of the four senior Case Club Advisors, Robert Kneeland, Charles Johnson, Kenneth Lau, and Philip Buchen, together with a fifth judge chosen from the Board of Edi- tors of the Michigan Law Review. Law School freshmen, R. Arnold Kramer, Emerson W. Smith, John T. Ryan and James M. Sullivan will contest in the Kent Club competition at 4 p.m. tomorrow. Two trials are scheduled to be held Saturday: in the Story Club competi- tion Samuel R. Searing and Joseph R. Brookshire will contest against Leslie W. Lum and Samuel D. Estep, at 1:30 p.m.; Marshall Club con- testants, Forrest A. Hainline, Jr., Joseph Hession, Roland F. Rhead and Neil McKay will compete at 4 p.m. Next Monday at 4 p.m. Charles A. Dean, George T. Schilling, Owen P. Lillie and William R. Newcomb will contest in the Cooley Club finals. Wednesday, the final day of the trials, Hamilton T. Hoyt, Rodman N. I Myers, Jack Conn and Jack Red- wine will compete in the Holmes Club finals at 4 p.m. Faculty Military Service Of the 1,644 members of the North- western University faculty, almost 200 had military experience in the World War. Music Faculty Plans Concert Tomorrow Professors And Symphony Players Will Present Mozart Compositions Compositions by Mozart, Brahms and Vaughn Williams will be played and sung by four members of the School of Music faculty and five members of the Little Symphony Orchestra in a concert at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, The program will open with Mo- zart's "Quintet in A major for Clar- inet and Strings" which' will be per- formed by William Stubbins of the School of Music, clarinetist; Italo Frajola, Spec.Grad., first violin; Valdimer Lukashuk, '42SM, second violin; Edward Ormond, '42SM, vio- la, and William Golz, '41E, violon- cello. Brahms' "Trio for Piano and French Horn" will be offered by Prof. Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist; Prof. Wassily Besekirsky, violinist, and Joseph White, GradSM, French horn. -Taking part in "On Wenlock Edge" by Williams will be Prof. Arthur Hackett, tenor; Professor Rhead; Frajola, Lukashuk, Ormond and Golz. "On Wenlock Edge" is a song- cycle for tenor, piano and string quartet whose texts are taken from some of A. E. Housman's poems in "A Shropshire Lad." Prof. Christian To Give Reital Organist To Play Program Of Religious Music Prof. Palmer Christian of the School of Music, will offer the fourth in a series of organ recitals at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium play- ing a collection of six Gregorian compositions. The six selections, comprising a type of ritual music associated with the litturgy of the Roman Catholic Church. are all well-known of me- dieval music. Scheduled to be heard on the pro- gram are Grabner's "Fantasie on the Pater Noster," Adagio and Choral varie on "Veni Creator" by Durufle and "Prelude on Iam sol recedit ig- neus" by Simond. Professor Christian will also play Widor's *"Finale (Symphony Goth- ique)," Weitz's "Symphony for Or- gan" and three hymns by Danied- Lesur, "Ad regias agui dapes," "Adoro te devoto" and "Audi benigne." Former municipal organist of Den- ver, Professor Christian has served as organist of the Fourth Presbyter- ian Church in Chicago and as soloist with such orchestras as the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia and Ro- chester Symphonies. Students Earn Way Sixty per cent of the 11,000 Uni- versity of Texas students earn all or part of their way through school. Here Is In Today's Summary News i Harvard Dean To Talk Here Dr. Birkhoff Will Speak Bef ore Academy Four candidates running for State offices in the coming April election on the Democratic ticket will be in Ann Arbor tomorrow for a few hours. The candidates are G. Donald Kennedy for state highway comis- sioner; Edward ° W. McFarland for superintendent of public instruction; Charles F. Hemans, for regent of the University and Dr. Charles F. Klump for State Board of Agriculture. A reception will be held for the' candidates at the Allenel hotel from 9 to 11 a.m. by the county and city committees. William L. Walz, Demo- cratic chairman, announced. Dr. George D. Birkhoff, Perkinsj Professor of Mathematics of Har- vard, will discuss "Aesthetic Mea- sure" in a University lecture at 4:15 p.m. Friday, in the Natural ScienceI Auditorium, under the auspices of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING REAL. ESTATE BEAUTIFUL, 20-acre building site, 4 miles out, $2000. Call evenings, 6196. 3051 TYPING-18 TYPING-Experienced. .Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave, Phone 2-2935 or 2,141 14c TYPIST. Experienced. L. M. Hey- wood, 414 Maynard St. Pahone 5689. 27c JIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. TYPING hnd duplicating service. Dorothy Testa, M.A., 625 East Lib- erty (at State), Rm. 1. 2-1835. Re- ports, theses, dissertations, briefs. 22c TAILORING & PRESSING-12l PRESSMAKING and alterations. Coats relined. Also sewing of all kinds. Call Mrs. Ream, 8653. 23c TAILORED suits 4nd coats, custori made. Day time, evening gowns made and remodeled. Phone 3468. 24c FOR RENT' SHARE front suite with graduate man. 1010 Monroe St., Phone 5033. 303 FOR SALE 1939 PLYMOUTH DELUXE, 2-door, radio, heater, air horns, excellent care. Very reasonable. Call 6252, days; evenings 3175. 302 LAUNDERING LAUNDRY-2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low, price. 3c STUDENT LAUNDRY-Special stu- dent rates. Moe Laundry, 226 South First St. Phone 3916. 10c LOST and FOUND Less property was r ,rted stolen Receiving his PhD at Chicago, Dr. in Ann Arbor during the last month Birkhoff was given honorary do c- ndpolice recovered 88 per cent of torates by the University of Poitiersha ountp t in 1933, the University of Paris in amun. 1936, and the Unversity of Athens Thefts for February amounted 1 1937 to $6,640.41, as compared to $8,015.73. in .1937. Now Perkins Professor and dean t of the faculty ofearts and sciences The Swing Tavern Barn, a. soft- at Harvard, he was awarded the drink and dance hall, the Swing Querin-Stampalai prize in 1919, the Barn east of Jackson Road on Stad- Bocher prize in 1923 and the A.A.A.S. ium Blvd., was destroyed early yes- pr n29 ize6il.b"st,Nfetaoinshrdlumb terday by an explosion of an oil prize in 1926. He was, an officer of heater. The loss was estimated at the Legion d'Honor in 1936. $7,000. 1i111C.1 fV A IA. 1..l Vil1 .43L1i11 1 %A Kl i LOST-Set of Keuffel & Esser "Key"I drawing instruments, on Friday, February 28. $10 reward. Call, 2-2366. 3041 MISCELLANEOUS-20 FHESIS BINDING-Mimeographing. Brumfield & Brumfield, 308 S. State. 19c WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL-- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 5C Purim Party Saturday Hillel's annual Purim Party will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at Lane Hall. In commemoration of the Biblical story of Esther and Hamen, the holi- day of Purim is celebrated every year. This year the Purim Party will be an occasion for novel entertainment, dancing and refreshments which in- clude the traditional Hamentaschen. All members of the Foundation presenting affiliate cards will be ad- mitted free. The admission price to non-members is $.25. EIBLE S $ There are FAI as well qLADIES' Bracelets - Lockets SBrooches\ Necklaces May m K K" '>'. NN ~N' ,'7'K'\K >.. \N 'K' :or better JEWELRY SHIONS in JEWELRY I as "in clothing! 7/, ' ,./%% MEN'S Formal Sets ' Key Chains - Cuff Links - Tie Sets we kindly show you