THE MICHIGAN DAILY Summer School Speech Bulletin Now Available Many Sp e i a1 Activities And Courses Planned For 1934 Session A wide range of: courses and a variety of special activities will be offered by the Department of Speech and General Linguistics in the Sum- mer Session of 1934, according to an official announcement issued recent- ly and now available at the office of the Director of the Summer Session. This department, which was cre- ated when the Department of Speech and the Department of General Lin- guistics were merged in 1932, provides instruction in all types of speaking, reading, and dramatic courses, re- search and experimental laboratory work in many pases of the subject, and for training of especially quali- fled students to become teachers in one or more of the divisions of the field. Among the special activities which the department will have available for its summer work in 1934 will be a modern laboratory and a large seminar room for the use of gradu- ate groups. The Lydia Mendelssohn Theater will be ready for all of its classes in dramatic art and for its major public productions and the Laboratory Theater for its private laboratory presentations. All summer activities in dramatics, tboth in courses and in the theater, will be under the direction of Prof. Thomas W. Stevens and Valentine B. Windt, who has been in charge of Play Production activities on. the campus during the past six years. Alexander Wyckoff will conduct ad- vanced work in stagecraft, and Miss Evelyn Cohen will give a special cos- tume course. The Laboratory of General Lin- guistics and Speech is equipped with apparatus for the experimental in- vestigation of problems in phonetics, and with charts and models for the study of the anatomy of the speech organs. Emphasis is laid on both the physical and physiological processes. Union Opera Groups taking part in the Union Opera will report as follows: Groups I and II, 4 p.m. Groups III, 4:30 p.m. Group IV, 7:30 p.m. slides. She will sing one song, wear- ing her Norwegian student cap, a black cap with a very long tassel. Foreign as well as American students are invited to come, Luncheen for Graduate Students on Wednesday, March 14, at twelve o'clock in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League Building. Pro- fessor John S. Worley, of the School of Engineering, will talk on the St. Lawrence Waterway project. To the Members of the University Faculty and Students: On Tuesday night, March 27, an "All-Campus" entertainment is being held at Hill Auditorium, the proceeds of which will go to send Detroit and Ann Ar- bor delinquent, adolescent boys to the University Fresh Air Camp free. In behalf of all major campus organiza- tions, who are sponsors for the pro- gram, you are asked to keep this date free in order to help sponsor this im- portant sociological undertaking. This is being held in preference to the usual tag day, in order to entertain you in return for your contribution. Your support is needed! Spring Parley Continuation Group: Everyone interested in discussing "Sex and the Family" in conjunction. with the continuation group of the Spring Parley and Mrs. Mallory of the Psychiatry Department is invited to attend a meeting at 4:00 p.m. at the Union on Sunday, March 18. Garden Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Wednesday, March 14, 3:00 p.m., in the parlors of the Y:W.C.A. building. Members are requested to bring their catalogues and books on gardening. Discussions on various phases of gardening will be led by several members of the club. Underprivileged Learn. To Sin cA,,t (ll University Fresh Air Camp as Taugrht Many Children To Swim One of the many invaluable serv- ices that the University Fresh Air Camp has rendered to the thousands of underprivileged children of Detroit and Ann Arbor who attend the sum- mer camp has been in teaching them to swim. Over the period of 13 years since the camp was begun in 1919 it is estimated that nearly 2,000 boys have been taught swimming, or close to one-half of the 4,500 who have been at the camp. Swimming is one of the principal sports that is carried on at the camp, the daily schedule call- ing for a short dip before breakfast, optional for the braver ones, a 45- minute swim before lunch, and a third long plunge in the lake late in the afternoon. It has been shown numerous times that swimming is one of the most healthy sports for general bodily de- velopment and camp officials stress it in this manner as they aim toward developing children at the camp as completely as possible in the short time they are there. Many of them come to the Patterson Lake location without ever having been out of the city, and the advantages which it offers them are felt to be of greater importance in the determination of their future careers. Careful supervision of the children while they are in the water is exer- cised. There are five life guards and four instructors on duty at all times. Camp leaders have explained that learning to swim not only gives these hundreds of boys protection in case of emergency but also gives them a= feeling of achievement "so necessary to character development." In addi- tion they are taught many facts of boating, such as how to get into and: out of a boat, the maximum number allowed in safety, how to use the oars, First Graduation Recital In April The first of the annual graduation organ recitals under Prof. Palmer Christian of the School of Music will be presented by Katherine Funk- hotser at 4:15 p. in. April 4, in Hill Auditorium.. Miss Funkhouser's program will consist of seven numbers. She will open the recital with a Bach "Toc- cata," followed by Caesar Franck's "Fantasie in A Major," Weitz's "Ma- ter Dolorosa," and the "Prelude" of Maleingreau. The three final numbers will be Karg-Elert's "Landscape In Mist," "Intercession" by Bingham, and the finale of "Symphony VIII" of Widor. Later graduation recitals will be given by Everett Jay Hilty, Thane McDonald, and Mary Ann Mathew- son on April 17, 19, and 24, respec-I tively. and further details. There are 12 steel o l "Ghost boats at the camp which are available at stated periods for individual rec- reation. French Swindler Br in g Occasionally the entire group in A ibi A the camp goes for a boat ride to- Jail.TO iMany; AIlibis, gether, utilizing the two big sea-going In Line For Others life boats which were given the camp by Henry Ford. Their enjoyment is PARIS, March 12-(-)-Stavi added to through group sings on the ky's ghost haunts political France water and other co-operative activ- The shade of ."Handsome Alex ities. fantastically audacious peddler Even greater plans for the aiding of nearly $40,000,000 in worthless bond these underprivileged children are refuses to stay buried. being made this year. It is felt that Rioting which cost 25 lives ar there will be additional calls to give overturned cabinets followed belat children of this area a week or two charges that, despite a 20-year-lo: at camp and consequently an ambi- police record, this notorious Russia tious program to gain support is to born adventurer had "been able be held. It will be an all-campus en- grab a city's pawnshop and use it tertainment March 27 in Hill Audi- mulct thrifty Frevchmen of million torium and talent for the show is being signed up daily. Women, wine and song, figuri: literally in his supposed operation only heightened the public indign Old-Time Captain Of tion. He even imported a Hung :ian operetta, with a blond sta Whaler Doesn't Know simply as "atmosphere" for his fir -and unsuccessful - flight in hii When Whales Sleepfinance. A bullet through his brain, officia SEATTLE, March 12.---W)-Capt. ly recorded as self-fired, spared St Fred Peterson knows all the answers visky the final accounting to the la about whales - except one. Political big-wigs, journalists a; He cannot tell how or when a underlings, who are charged wi whale sleeps and he's been in the having helped him build his flim whaling business 20 years. financial houses, were left to face t. The skipper, who has captured music. Several are in jail and othe housands of the largest beasts of have alibis ready. the world, believes a whale sleeps Long Podicc Record the same as every other living thing, Stavisky, too, knew the feel but whether they doze on top or un- handcuffs. On a midsummer ev der water, and how long he doesn't ning in 1926, when he was entertai: know. ing a gay party in his villa at Marl "I have never seen any of my old ie-Roi, a suburb of Paris, poli friends out late at night so they broke into the dining room and a must cat-nap under water," said rested him on charges of swindlir Capt. Peterson today while he was receiving stolen goods and issuir painting one of the steel ships of the worthless checks. Mlle. Arlette S American-Pacific Co. mon, now his widow, was arreste "W.e know that a whale must have with him, but later exonerated. "We nowtha a halemus hae SchaAlexandre Stavisky then w air about every 45 minutes so I have Sachaaxold, h avisybeenr a hunch they doze just under the 40 years old, having been born surface and stick their snoots out Sobodka, near Kiev, Russia, in 188 when necessary." He was a naturalized Frenchma like his father, a dentist, who broug: him to France in 1900. Will Give Examinations His police record began in 19 For Architects Of State with a sentence of 16 days for abu of confidence, a charge on which h State examinations for architects again received a six months' sex will be given here April 12, 13, and tence in 1915. 14, according to an announcement The charges in 1926 grew out issued by the Michigan State Board the disappearance of nearly $1,00( of Examiners for the Registration of 000 worth of securities from vario Architects, Engineers and Surveyors. brokers' offices. Stavisky spent Application blanks and full infor- months in jail awaiting trial. The mation may be obtained by writing he was released under bond. Tri to the office of the board, 1205 Gris- was postponed 20 times, the last tin wold Bldg., Detroit. after his suicide. ADRIAN ALUMNI TO MEET CORRECT SMART Prof. H. C. Anderson of the engi- BALLROOM neering college and T. Hawley Tap- ping, general secretary of the Alumni DANCING TAUGHT Association, will attend the annual ROY HOYER STUDIO banquet of the University of Mich- 3 Nickels Arcade igan Club of Adrian Thursday night. 1i' , ll "EIabeth The Queen" March 14, 15, 16, 17 LYDIA MENDE LSSOHN T HEAT RE Tickets 35c - 50c-75c lii--"- -. --.-. --~'-- ---'I He'd take your pants in a horse trade. But he had a mellow heart under his hard head. o[ CONT~hI NUOUS IZ LAIL V *"-10Tn ~I I PM _ %AiM I 1fVkAVU-') LIM LT I-3V I U I I JI.M, I Il'> t2J~~ZdiII~'I fl I i -, .r r r________ i' I1 111111 in !3 11