PAGE roun THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1935 PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1935 ___________ I Douglas Lake Camp To Hold Visitor's Day Eighth Annual Event To Be Held At 'U' Biological Station Aug. 4 All Facilities Open Site Located On Petoskey- Cheboygan Road; Is 13 Miles FromCheboygan DOUGLAS LAKE, Mich., July 29. - (Special) -The eighth annual vis- itor's day will be held at the Uni- versity Biological Station here from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 4. On this yearly occasion the station opens its principal buildings to the public and puts on display various ex- hibits of plants and animals of north- ern Michigan. Types of class work in which the students are engaged and scientific investigations now in progress are also to be open for in- spection. Send A Kid To The University's Camp For Boys Buy A Tag Thursday Help Needy Children 4 r . , - vie d Give Kids A Chance 75 1 04*4 Near Cheboygan The station is located on the south- east shore of the lake in Cheboygan County, on the old Cheboygan-Pe- toskey trail, 13 miles from Cheboygan. The roads from Cheboygan, Topina- bee, and Pellston will be well posted with signs directing visitors to the Station grounds. There will be plen- ty of room to park, help in parking, guide service, and free admission to all places of interest. The station was founded in 1909 to give instruction and to conduct in- vestigations dealing with plants and animals. This, the 27th session, has the second largest enrollment in the history of the station with 104 reg- istered students, a far cry from the early eras when at times there were as few as 13 students. The 104 stu- dents this summer include 56 men and 48 women, a definite indication that the station is not a girl's camp, as is sometimes believed. Eighty-two students this summer are graduates and 22 are undergraduates. Forty- three are teachers in schools or col- leges during the winter. Michigan Men Attend More students come from Michi- gan than from any other one state, as might be expected. However, Michigan students compose less than one-third of the student body, the others being scattered over 24 states. Besides the 29 students from Michi- gan, there are 13 from Ohio, 9 from 'Illinois, 7 from New York, 5 from In- diana, 4 each from Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, 3 each from Florida, Kan- sas, MassachusettsMinnesota, and Oklahoma, 2 each from Alabama, Iowa, Missouri, New Jersey, and South Dakota, and 1 each from California, Connecticut, Maryland, Nebraska, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia. Although teaching has had an im- portant place in the station's pro- gram, much attention has also been given to the study of special biological problems. These studies result in the publication of 15 to 30 scientific re- ports every year which have a world- wide distribution to libraries and biologists. About 350 such reports on the plants and animals of the Doug- las Lake region have been published since the station was found. Eleven visiting investigators are working on various biological prob- lems this summer. They are Dr. Alma Ackley of Wayne University; Dr. James T. Culbertson, Columbia University; Dr. Henry Allen Gleason, of the New York Botanical Gardens; Dr. S. Benton Talbot, Davis and El- kins College; Dr. George C. Wheeler, University of North Dakota; Dr. W. E. Swales and Dr. Dorothy E. Swales, McGill University; and Dr. Maurice W. Senstius and Dr. Donald M. Mil- ler, University of Michigan. Faculty Returns All of last year's faculty members have returned for this summer. In fact ,the same faculty has worked together for five season, and a few members have given over 20 years of service to the station. Seven of the staff are regular members of the University faculty: George R. LaRue, professor of zoology and Director of the station; Alfred H. Stockard, as- sistant professor of zoology, secretary Paul S. Welch, professor of zoology; John H. Ehlers and Carl D. La Rue, associate professors of botany; Frank N. Blanchard, associate professor of zoology; and Frank E. Eggleston, as- sistant professor of zoology. Six of the staff come from other institutions. They are Frank C. Gates, professor of botany in Kansas State College; George E. Nichols, professor of botany and head of the botany department at Yale Uni- versity; Herbert B. Hungerford, pro- fessor of entomology and head of the department of entomology at the University of Kansas; William W. Court, professor of helminthology and head of the department of helmin- thology at the School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity; Charles W. 'Creaser, profes- sor of zoology and chairman of the department of biology in Wayne Uni- versity; and Lyell J. Thomas, as- U Exhibit Bein'TE Sponsored By By Art Exchange (Associated Press All this furious bidding for Max Students' Drawings Are On Schmeling's services hasn't struck much of a responsive chord in the Display At League For minds of the customers who are going Remainder Of Semester to be asked large sums shortly to see the German ex-champion fight either Members of the Student Art Ex- Max Baer or Joe Louis. change are sponsoring an exhibit The bald fact of the matter is that which is being displayed in the Mich- there is little chance that Schmeling, igan League for students of the Sum- today, can fight any better than he mer Session. Edith Higbee is in could when Jack Sharkey outpointed charge of the arrangements. him for the heavyweight title, or the This exhibit will be on display for night that the now thoroughly de- the remainder of the summer term flated Max Baer punched him silly with many contributions being added in less than a dozen rounds. throughout the session. The dis- Schmeling wants to fight Baer, be- play is opening with selections by cause he thinks Baer would be the Edith Higbee, Dorothy White, and easier foe, but what of it? Nobody Jonathan White. really wants to see him fight Baer again. That fight would prove noth- For the exhibit, Miss Higbee is pre- ing. If Schmeling did manage to senting five of her water colors as turn the tables on Baer he would have well as one deep sea design. All of done nothing startling. If Baer flat- the scenes in her works are taken tened him again, which is exactly from picturesque spots in Ann Arbor. what he would do, it still wouldn't These etchings by Dorothye White prove anything about Baer either. He are also on display as well as one did all that once before. framed water color. Baer vs. Schmeling is a bad match Jonathon Taylor is presenting six from any angle. It wouldn't draw of his etchings. One of his works, $250,000, for one thing, though New "Amiens Cathedral," which is on dis- York's Jewish population would turn play won a prize at the International out somewhat if it were sure it were Etchers Show which was held recent- going to see the man from Naziland ly in Chicago, and is now on a tour of slaughtered again by a man with some all the museums in the country. Jewish blood in him. Among his other selections is a Louis Is The Boy bird's eye view from the tower of the The fighter everyone wants to see Michigan Union of the Law Quad- in action is Joe Louis, and his first rangle as well as the entrance of the- Law Club. One of his most recent works, "The Rigger," depicts a work- Arguments Bob man standing or a steel structure. Up In Trial Of Where To GoWilliam Ferris' 2 p.m. Majestic Theater, Shirley DETROIT, July 29. - (P) - Heated Temple in "Curly Top." arguments between prosecution and 2 p.m. Michigan Theater, Grace defense attorneys featured today's ! Moore in "Love Me Forever." session of the trial of William Lee 2 p.m. Wuerth Theater, James Cag- Ferris and three women for the slay- ney in "G-Men" and "A Night at ing of Howard Carter Dickinson. the Ritz," with Patricia Ellis. The jury of seven men and women 7 p.m. Same features at the three was ushered out of the court room theaters. twice while the lawyers exchanged 8:30 p.m. Hill Auditorium, School words. of Music Faculty concert. Recorder's Judge John A. Boyne of Muic Fcult conert.ave expression of annoyance; "This Canoeing every afternoon and eve- g of nn oyack Ti ning on the Huron River, Saunder's thing of sending the jury back to ninganoehLi urthe jury room every few minutes has C Livery, to be stopped. This is not going to be any marathon." Mullen, Monmouth College; James The defense objected to the intro- Merry, and Dr. Ernest Miner, Uni- duction in evidence of a picture of versity of Michigan; Miss Theodore Dickinson's body and surrounding Nelson, Hunter College; and Milton territory where it was found. George W. Sanderson, University of Kansas. S. Fitzgefald, defense attorney, Research assistants at the station are claimed the picture would "inflame Miss Ethel B. Finster, Asheville the minds of the jury." Prosecutor Teachers College, and Sterling Brack- Duncan C. McCrea said the objec- ett, University of Minnesota. " tion was "frivolous." Visitors coming to the station will Ralph B. Guy, attorney for Ferris, notice the new signs marking the snatched the picture from McCrea. borders of the 4,000 acre Biological "You can't grab things from my Station Forest. Reforestation of this hands," McCrea shouted. tract was begun in May, 1931, and The jury was ushered out of the at the present time more than 800 room then. acres have been replanted, chiefly to Mrs. Emma Schweitzer, mother of white and Norway pines. More than Ferris, was present at the trial today 16 miles of fete lanes and six miles of for the first time. work roads have been consti'ucted The three women, described by Mc- and are being maintained as a pro- Crea as "party girls" who lured Dick- tection to the developing forest and inson to his death in Rouge Park, the buildings. The project has been where his bullet-ridden body was carried out under the direction of found early on June 27, are Loretta Prof. W. F. Ramsdell of the School and Florence Jackson and Jean Mil- of Forestry and Conservation and ler. The state contends Ferris, also +', n-na oc nnn snn -rfy t~~~, -ne- ll m f uwmiter.ht IDELINES ID J. NEIL Sports Reporter) opponent should be Schmeling. Louis will knock Schmeling out easier than he did Camera. After that Louis should fight Baer. The negro might flatten the big loud-speaker, but there'd be plenty of action there. Baer in with a puncher is an en-, tirely different fellow from Baerj against a boxer. It wasn't difficult to pick Braddock to beat Baer because Baer has been a chump for every boxer he ever fought. He hit Ernie Schaaf once in 20 rounds, and he didn't hit Loughranhat all in 10. But against a hitter, where he can stand and slug, Baer is still con- siderable of a prize fighter. That kind of fight doesn't take long to decide. It doesn't call for thenstam- ina that goes into 15 rounds of careful battle. Baer's iron jaw stands him in good stead there. And he can still hit, if he can only get someone to hold still for him long enough. Beware The Kingfish For these reasons, then, the pro- gram should be Louis against Schmel- ing, to give the Negro a little more of the experience he needs, then Louis against Baer. Out of the latter fight should come a natural challenger for Jimmy Braddock. Unless Louis keeps fighting regular- ly, gaining experience, Braddock will beat him next year. I think that Braddock would prove entirely too smart for the Negro right now. Don't forget, that no matter how hard a man can punch, it doesn't do him any good if he isn't hitting anything; Baer found that out with Braddock. And in the meantime, Louis faces the toughest fight of his life with Kingfish Levinsky in Chicago. The Kingfish is a very tough character. He can take a fearful wallop on the chin and keep coming. He deals-out a very respectable belt with his right hand. He throws it in such a wild, unorthodox day that when it lands you think it fell out of the sky, like a lightning bolt. The Kingfish's weakness is down- stairs. He can't take body punish- ment the way he used to. Baer knocked him out with a left hook to the body. The right to the chin that sank the gasping Kingfish was a pure afterthouglt. GRADUATE INJURED Kenneth Skene, Grad., suffered a broken arm and several painful abra- sions while falling from a tandem bicycle yesterday, it was announced. Skene, a graduate of Kansas State College, is working for his doctor's degree in mathematics. U I Kansas Police Hold Slayer Of Saginaw Youth Confessed Murderer Tells Of Firing Six Shots Into MichiganYouth LANSING, Kas., July 29. -(P) - Three men accused of murder, two abductions and scores of robberies were held here today and Major Wint Smith, highway patrol com- mandant, said one of them had con- fessed to the brutal slaying of De- vere Wygeant, 22-year-old Saginaw, Mich., youth early this month. Major Smith said that John Meade, 19, of Sioux City, Ia., had named Howard Vernon, 27, of Fairbury, Neb., as the man who fired eight bullets in- to Wygeant's body because he would not surrender the keys to his auto- mobile. Meade, Vernon and Larry Kruse, of Sioux City, Ia., were arrested yes- terday after a three-weeks pursuit by officers armed with machine guns who suspected that the fugitives were members of the Alvin Karpis gang. They have not, however, been identi- fied as a participant in any of Karpis' maraudings. Refuses Car Keys Major Smith quoted Meade as say- ing that he and Vernon had aban- doned a stolen automobile and were walking along a highway near Sag-. inaw, Mich., in search of another when they came upon two men seated in a parked car. The men were Wygeant and John Jeske, of Saginaw. "We asked for a lift," continued Meade's confession as related by Smith they said 'no.' "Vernon asked them for the keys. The man at the wheel wouldn't give them to him. Then he got out and walked down the road, with the car keys in his hand. Vernon shot him six times in the legs, gee, how that guy could take it. It didn't seem to faze him. "He came back to the car and reached for a tire tool. Vernon's gun was empty. He took mine, Vernon busted another cap and the bullet tore into the guy's chest, but he didn't move. "Even Vernon was amazed. He fired again and the bullet went through the man's stomach. "He said, 'please don't shoot any more, I'm tired. "He handed Vernon the keys and fell beside the pavement." Major Smith and Meade told him the second occupant of the automo- bile ran when the first shot was fired and that after Wygeant had fallen, Meade and Vernon drove away in the automobile. Meade said he and Ver- non drank some whiskey they found in the automobile before departing. Died In Hospital Wygeant died ten days later in a Bay City hospital. The automobile was found the next day in Saginaw. A car stolen that day in Saginaw was found last week in a small Kansas town. Major Smith said the desperadoes robbed at least 90 gasoline stations on their wild flight westward after the slaying. Vernon, he said, had been an inmate of at least three prisons. The three were identified, Smith said, as the kidnapers of W. E. Grog- man, Kansas City grain salesman, who was left bound and gagged near Herkimer, Kas., after his car and $20 were taken from him. Smith said the three were impli-' cated in the abduction last week of Marshal Charles E. Mack at Hooper, Neb., during another auto theft, and said they had robbed a bank Thurs- day at Sergeant Bluff, Iowa. At Fairbury a few days ago Smith said Vernon had confronted the sher- iff, who was seeking him for parole violation, and threatened him. This incident led to a flurry over the re- ported presence in the vicinity of Alvin Karpis, current national "Pub- lic Enemey No. 1." The patrol chief said Meade and Kruse likely will be held in Kansas for trial on charges of highway rob- bery, for which they may receive sentences up to life upon conviction. Bitter Against Mate .-Associated Press Photo. Mrs. Margaret Waley, sentenced to 20 years in prison for her part in the kidnaping of George Weyer- haeuser, Jr., bitterly denounced her husband when she passed through Chicago en route to the Federal women's reformatory at Milan, Mich. She blamed her mate for her predicament and said she was "through with him forever." Lusitania Secrets Sought By Scotch At Bottom Of Sea BELFAST, Ireland, July 29. - (A') -If there is any hope of salvaging the riches believed to rest in the long- sunk Lusitania, the little steamer Or- phir now, searching for the hulk off the southern coast of Ireland should accomplish the task. The Orphir, formerly a lighthouse tender, has been equipped at enor- mous expense with practically every aid and device known to salvage op- erations. In a wireless cabin scarcely large enough to hold four persons, is radio equipment capable of making tele- graphic and telephonic communica- tion with any part of the world. Range Finder Installed In its glass-walled cabin on the bridge has been installed range find- ing and depth-finding apparatus worth more than $10,000. The depth-finding apparatus re- veals the nature of the ocean bottom by means of a continuous sounding graph. It will register any wreck over which the vessel passes. Immediately a wreck is located a diver will descend in a special flex- ible metal suit to see if it is the Lusitania. No one knows exactly where the ill- fated liner lies, but it is somewhere between 10 and 14 miles off of the Old- Head of Kinsale. Promoters of the Orphir expedition, the Argonaut Corporation Ltd., of Glasgow, are pre- pared to spend three.or four months p'trolling until the Lusitania is located. No Bullion In Wreck Once the wreck is found, the civ- ilized world will follow the salvage operations with intense interest to learn whether, as Germany always has claimed, the Lusitania was carry- ing munitions when she was stricken by a torpedo on May 7, 1915. On that German claim rests justification for the loss of 1,198 lives, including 124 Americans. The legend that the vessel carried to the bottom a treasure in gold bul- lion long since has been denied of- ficially, but the backers of the Orphir expect to reap a sufficient reward from the purser's safe and other sources. WHAT, NO DUNCE CAP? Because he put on his hat before leaving the courtroom after being ac- quited of a traffic violation charge, Robert Shelton, Charlotte, N. C., had to sit in the courtroom with head bared for half an hour. Alaskans Want Don Irwin To Remain Head Colonists In Matanuska Threaten To Leave If Change Is Made ANCHORAGE, Alaska, July 29. - (P) - Irate at reports that Don Irwin may be withdrawn as head of the Matanuska colony farm division, a large number of colnists have threat- ened to quit the project, visitors from the Matanuska valley reported here today. The colonists were circulating a round-robin petition that Irwin be retained at Palmer. Irwin was "loaned" to the colony by the Alaska university agricultural extension service when selected mid- westerners were taken off relief rolls and brought north to undertake farm- ing under government supervision in the Matanuska valley. The report that roused the colon- ists was that Irwin would return to his old post this fall as head of the experimental farm of the government and the Alaska university. Not content with conditions in the colony, several families have left for their homes, and the possibility that Irwin will return to his old duties as soon as the colony is settled caused new dissatisfaction over the week- end. Anchorage officials were awaiting word today from project officials on their offer to accommodate the col- onists' 50 high school children in the modern Anchorage high school this winter. Many colony grammar school children will be instructed in the Wa- silla and Matanuska town schools be- cause of the abandonment of plans to finish a large central school at the colony capital, Palmer, this fall. It was found impossible to complete the central school and do the more pressing work of finishing farm houses, a hospital, warehouse and other structures before winter, too. Work on the farm houses is pro- gressing rapidly and foundations are being laid at Palmer for the hospital, warehouse and smaller central build- ings. Nina Pollock Engaged To Illinois U. Student An engagement of interest to Uni- versity students is that of Nina Pol- lock, daughter of Mrs. James B. Pollock and the late Prof. Pollock, to Russell Tinkham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tinkham, Portland, Ore. Miss Pollock is a senior in the Uni- versity and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Tinkham is a senior in the University of Illinois and is affiliated with Alpha Delta Phi. The wedding has been set for some time in September. How To Pronounce Names In The News Senjuro Hayashi, Japan's war min- ister - Sen-joo-ro Hah-yah-shee, stress all syllables evenly. Eritrea, Italian colony in East Af- rica on Red Sea - Eh-ri-tray-ah, ac- cent on third syllable. Thomhas Meighan, screen star - May-an, accent on first syllable. Matamoros, Mexican city across Rio Grande from Brownsville, Texas - Mah-tah-mo-ros, accent third syl- lable. Jaime, Duke of Arcos, a second cou- sin of Ex-King Alfonso of Spain- High-may, accent first syllable. eIc7'onth-6End SALK An Event You Can't Afford To Miss- If you're a miss who wears a size 12 ... a woman 46 ... or her shorter sister from 162 to262. DRESSES for hot days, ...forcooldays... for sports, travel or after- noon and evening... KNITS... WASH CREPES SHEERS . . . 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