TrWO Wk IIN WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1 TW~1 AVEDNESDAY, N(WEMI~ETh 20, Sharman Talks Over WJR On State's Camps speaker Describes, Lists Various Types Of Camps In Michigan Declaring that summer camps af- ford greater onportunities for indi- vidual and group learning than the regular echool work in a given period of time. Profesor Jackon R. Shar- man f the Shol of Education, spoke on "Mrhigrn And Its Camps For Yon People" yesterday over the univerity broadcast. Professor Sharman's lecture con- tinued the Michigan, My Michigan series of talks, whose aim is to in- form Michigan students and citizens of the natural resources, industries, educational facilities, and history of their state. The educational value of camps, Professor Sharman declared, is a re- sult of their unique qualities. The children's activity, their voluntary attendance, the continuous supervi- sion over them, the lack of social and economic barriers, and the require- ment that the campers be "on their own," make camp life, he continued. impelling and educationally whole- some. Cites More Leisure Time Pointing out that current social changes have brought about an in- creased amount of leisure time, Pro- fessor Sharman declared, "All of the activities that enter into camping are such as we turn to in our leisure mo- ments. The camp is a way of escape from civilization. To go back to the woods and streams is like going home to the human spirit. At all times and places the jaded civilized man has gone back to the forest and shore for rest. "The facilities for camping have in- creased greatly during the past few decades," Professor Sharman de- clared. "An increased interest in camping has developed along with greater popular interests and more widespread participation in all forms of outdoor recreation. "The indica- tions are that there will be much more camping of all types during the next decade than there has ever been before, and that Michigan will con- tinue near the head of the list of states that place much emphasis on tamping and other forms of outdoor recreation." Lists Types Of Camps Professor Sharman listed and de- scribed the various types of camps existent in the state: the private camps, which are predominantly rec- reational in nature; day camps; in- stitutional camps, school camps, study camps, travel camps, municipal rec- reational camps, philanthropic camps, which include the so-called fresh-air camps and a few experi- mental camps which emphasize re- search. "It may be seen," Professor Shar- man concluded, "that in Michigan there are camps of nearly every kind. That is made possible by the many excellent camp sites that are avail- able in this state. The private camps and the camps operated by insti- tutions such as the Y.M.C.A. and the Boy Scouts are most numerous at the present time. There is a rapidly in- creasing interest, however, in camps conducted by schools, and in study and travel camps." Grid Smoker -tickets To Go On Sale Today Tickets for the annual Football Smoker which will be held November 26 in the Union Ballroom will go on sale today at convenient places on the campus it was announced by Union officials last night. Mickey Cochrane, manager of the World's champion Detroit Tigers and Walter Okeson, Commissioner of the Eastern Intercollegiate Athletic As- sociation will speak at the annual affair. The smoker is being held in honor of the 1935 football team, the Varsity- R.O.T.C. Band and the cheerleaders, headed by Robert Burns, '36. Okeson is a member of the athletic department of Lehigh University and, for the past few years has been head of the Eastern Interiollegiate Assoiia- tion. His position is similar to that held by the chairman of the Big Ten Committee on eligibility. The juris- diction of this association extends to all the large universities and colleges in the East. Union officials stated last night that plans were also under way to get Goose Goslin, and Charlie Gehr- inger, both members of the Tigers, to speak at the annual Smoker. Tickets for the Smoker may also be bought from members of the Un- ion executive council and at the Union desk in the main lobby of the Union. They are priced at 25 cents. China Clipper To Inaugurate First Trans-Pacific Service &4 1 -z j+ f -Associated Press Photo. A new era in aerial transportation will open when the China Clipper inaugurates the Jfirst trans-Pacific mail and passenger service No- vember 22. Above is the giant clipper in flight and a map showing the pa th it will follow. Upper left is a view of the control room and at right is an interior picture of the luxuriously furnished ship. Classified Dfreetory LOST AND FOUND CLASSIFIED LOST: Between Pretzel Bell and ADVERTISING corner ef nalls and Huron, class pin, letters B.M.H. $5 reward. Place advertisements with Classified Phone 9597. Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214 _- The classified columns close at five LOST: Grey Waterman pen on Fri- Vclock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at ne day. About campus of West Huron. extra charge. Reward - Phone 3467. 115 cash in advance 11c per reading line> (on basis of five average words to -_ _ line) for one or two insertions. GOLD RING, letter W, class of '34. 10c per reading line for three or more Initialed R.S.H. Reward. Phone Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Telephone rate -15c per reading line 6226. Hadley. 114 for two or more insertions. 10% discount if paid within ten days LAUNDRY Minimum three lines per insertion. from the date of last insertion. By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Prices month ....................sc reasonable. Free delivery. Phone 2 lines daily, college year.......7c 3006. 6x 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months...........8c 100 lines used as desired ..........9c LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. 300 lines used as desired.........Be, 1,000 linesused asdesired.........7c Careful work at low price. lx 2,000 lines used as desired ........6c The above rates are per reading line, A dbsdyegtraiglnspric.I'ik .7. a pn based on eghtreadi~ng linesmper' KIncAh.T tonic type, upper and lower case. Add AT Sc per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for To Attend Smoker bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10c per line torabove rates for bold face capital ietters. The above rates are for 712 point Coach Harry G. Kipke and T. Haw- Itype. ley Tapping, general alumni secre- tary, will attend a Michigan-Ohio FOR SALE State smoker tonight in the Waldorf Hotel in Toledo. This is an annual FOR SALE: Man's new tan riding event that precedes the Michigan- boots. Size 9. Cost $11.50. Will Ohio State game and will be attend- sell for $5. 503 E. Liberty. ed by more than 300 alumni. Be- sides Kipke and Tapping, Professor- Debate Is Emeritus Thomas C. Trueblood and Robert O. Morgan, '81, of the Alumni By Sigma Phi Tan Association, will be present at the smoker, having been in Toledo yester- day to attend an "Old Timers' Meet- The first in a series of inter-chapter ing" of the Michigan Alumni Club of conferences will be held by Sigma Toledo. Rho Tau, honorary engineering speech society, in the Union tonight Lyle Reading, '36E, George Malone, at 8:45. '37E, Robert Cousins, '37E, Bruce During the course of the conference Rohn, '38E, and Leon Highouse, '38E. the Wayne University chapter will propose the question: "Resolved, That the Federal Government Continue To 0 Build Rigid Dirigibles,' and the oppos- ing arguments will be presented by by our the University speakers, who will be CH R ISTMAS LAY-A-WAY P LAN PRINTING LOWEST PRICES PROGRAMS, BIDS, STATIONERY The TIME SHOP THE ATHENS PRESS 1121 So. University Ave Downtown, North of Postoffice Contrast Between Old And New Radio Studio Is Shown First Broadcasting Studio In University - Hall, But Now In Morris Hall (Continued from Page 1) all types of audiences, and that a bal- anced program must contain not only popular dance music and songs but also semi-educational features. Thus arrangements were made to broadcast a series of programs from the University, a plan which the Re- gents supported by appropriating suf- ficient funds for incidental expenses. These remote-control broadcasts were financed by WJR and WCX of De- troit, who sent the necessary equip- ment, operators and announcers to Ann Arbor for each program. Station WJR has furnished its fa- cilities free to the University, Profes- sor Abbot continued. It also installs, furnishes ,and maintains all pick-up equipment for the programs. If the periods granted by the station to the University were sold under existing commercial rates, they would have a value in the neighborhood of $28,- 000. Programs originating here are carried by a leased wire to the Fish- er Building in Detroit,and thence to the transmitter at Trenton where they go into the air from the 720-foot vertical antenna. "In the adjoining room of the studio used years back in University Hall, Dr. Ruthven had his collection of some 1,200 mice gathered from all over the world, which he used for his research work," Professor Abbot re- called. "While they were well caged up, they had many uncaged friends who delighted in visiting them during broadcasts, which proved exceedingly annoying to the speakers. Conditions were remedied when in 1928 Morris Hall was remodelled as a broadcasting studio and band practice hall. Celotex was used for the ac- oustical treatment. The large studio will accomodate the 125-piece band, symphony orchestra, or glee club. The ensemble studio is arranged for small- er musical groups, and there is an announcer's and speaker's booth and a control room. In 1934rcourses in broadcasting were included in the speech depart- ment, and since then students have taken an active part in the broad- casts. This year the studio has begun the recordings of music and speeches for the alumni association. Professor Abbot pointed out that since 1925 approximately 1300 talks have been given over the air from the University's station. "However," he concluded, "the sup- ply of engrossing speakers upon the campus has been merely tapped. There are so many subjects of in- terest available that it is hoped that these programs may continue to in- form the radio public concerning re- search, politics, science, athletics, ad- ministrative problems, education, his- tory and the innumerable topics in other educational fields." Verse heor Discussed In N ew Volumes "Three Centuries of French Poetic Theory," a critical history of the chief arts and poetry of France between 1328 and 1630 written by Prof. War- ner Forrest Patterson of the Romance Language department, has just been issued by the University Press in the Language and Literature Series. In two volumes, of 950 and 500 pages, Professor Patterson surveys briefly the works on the theory of verse written in medieval Latin and in Old Provencal, before coming to the fourteenth century movement and the twelve principal "Arts of Second -Rhetoric" (1370-1539). The first volume deals largely with 'the "Arts of Poetry" 'which both led and followed the rich poetic move- ment of the French Renaissance. In this volume, Professor Patterson ex- amines in detail, with copious illus- trative citations, the formal treatises of the poets, their prefaces, and their manifestos. He closed his study at the date of the last edition, before the nineteenth century, of the works of Ronsard and the first collected edi- tion of his severest critic, Malherhe. The first volume is concluded with a consideration of the significance of "Arts of Poetry' and a survey of the adaptation made in France of the Greek aesthetic tradition. The second volume contains a series of chronological tables and an an- thology of Middle French and Renais- sance French poetry, selected to illus- trate the evolution of literary crit- icism and theoretical discussion. It contains a choice of poems by all of the important and many of the sec- ondary poets of the three countries studied. Selfridge Flyer Forced To Jump As Motor Fails Plane Crashes Near Romeo Farm, Does Not Burn; Parachutes 1,200 Feet SELFRIDGE FIELD, Mt. Clemens, Nov. 19.- (P)- Capt. N. D. Frost, of Selfridge Field, inventor of the safety belt now in use by the army air corps, saved his life at dawn today with a parachute leap when he motor stalled in the plane in which he was making weather observations. The plane crashed on a farm near Romeo, but did not burn. Capt. Frost floated to earth a mile from where his ship struck. He went back, inspected the wreckage, and then returned to Selfridge Field. The flyer said he was up about 17,000 feet when he smelled smoke. He said he came down to an altitude of about 1,200 feet, just below the clouds, and suddenly noticed the oil pressure go down. The motor stalled, he said, and he immediately headed his ship toward the field. When he saw he had no chance of getting the motor started or of making a forced landing, be- cause it was too late to light a flare, he went over the side. Capt. Frost said the weather in- struments in his plane were total losses. It was Capt. Frost's second "life jump" from a plane. In 1928 he saw he could not bring his plane out of a spin while flying at Wheeling Field Hawaii, and went over the side at an altitude of 5,000 feet. On that occasion Capt. Frost caught a finger in his parachute ring and literally tore part of it off be- fore he could get his parachute to open at 800 feet. This experience led him to perfect a belt now in gen- eral use. Capt. Frost, who is 39, has been in the army air corps for 13 years and has been flying since 1923. His home is in Riverside, Calif. Judge Believes Fishing Land Is Michigan's MENOMINEE, Mich., Nov. 1.-(R) -Special Master in Chancery F. F. Faville recommended to the United States Supreme Court Tuesday that highly-prized fishing grounds in Green Bay, claimed by both Wiscon- sin and Michigan, be awarded to Michigan.. Counsel for the contesting states were given 10 days in which to file exceptions. The boundary dispute has been the subject of sporadic litigation for years. The Supreme Court sought to settle it by 'a division of the con- tested area and appointed Judge Faville, of Des Moines, Ia., special master in chancery. He inspected the territory last summer. In his report he recomnends that Michigan be given all of the slough property and that the boundary be moved closer to Marinette, Wis. He also denies Wisconsin possession o a triangular area off the mouth of the Menominee River, much sought b3 fishermen, and recommends that Michigan be given the territory ir the vicinity of Whaleback Shoal west of the Cedar River. t 1 t 1 f e Y t 1 , r I . .d SHOES REPAI RE D WE MAKE SHOES NEW Our Specialty is and Blocking OLD AGAIN Cleaning Hats. All Work Guaranteed! 0 AMERICAN HAT AND SHOE SHOP 110 E. Washington ONE DAY ONLY TODAY "11 -11 WA MICHIGAN I AL I Daily 1:30 -11 P.M. WvH ITNEY 15c to 6P.M., 25c After 6 Last Day "FORBIDDEN HEAVEN" And "FRONT PAGE" Tomorrow FIRST SHOWING ! I IS' LI'MMOMAN Mai% --- Today and Thursday "CONFIDENT IA L" DONALD COOK I I I J I I I E FilU W;W- ne >. k A 1UKU C I AILL 1 11 I Ni TV