TUESDAY, APRIL l7,1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pi Alter Program Of Courses For Summer School Prof. Robert Hall Will Not Give Geography Field Work In Japan Changes and corrections in courses appearing in the complete announce- ment of the 43rd Summer Session,. which is now available at all depart- ments and the office of the Summer Session in Angell Hall, were an- nounced yesterday. In the geography department divi- sion, course 251s will not be given this summer. The course is entitled "Field Course in Japan" and was to be under the direction of Prof. Rob- ert B. Hall of the geography de- partment. This course was to in- clude a period of intensive field work in the Yamato Basin of Japan as well as a reconnaissance survey of critical areas in the Japanese Em- pire. Will Not Conduct Course This course was given last summer but Professor Hall has announced that he will not be able to conduct the course this summer. In the sociology department divi- sion, a correction was explained ap- pearing in the opening paragraph announcing the introductory courses. "Course 54s (for undergraduates) . "should read Course 51s (for un- dergraduates)." Course 54s entitled "Modern Social Probems" conduct- ed by Richard C. Fuller was explained as being Course 154s and is -open to graduates and undergraduates. Change Sociology Course The course appearing in the an- nouncement as 154s, "Principles of Sociology," conducted by assistant Prof. Roy H. Holmes and Mr. Fuller, is.in reality Course 51s and is the in- troductory course meant in the state- ment preceding the description of the courses in the department. An error appearing in the chemis- try department division of the an- nouncemep1t concerns Course 145 en- titled "Advanced Quantitative An- alysis." Prof. Hobart H. Willard of the chemistrydepartment willcon- duct this course instead of assistant Prof. C. C. Meloche, as announced, who will not be on the faculty of the department this summer. 'The Magistrate' W ill e Offered On Wednesday Nell Gwyn's Company Will Present Pinero Farce To Invited Audience The spring production of the Nell Gwyn's Company, directed by Prof. Valentine D. Windt of Play Produc- tion, will present "The Magistrate," a farce in three acts written by Arthur Wing Pinero, before an invited audi- ence Wednesday night in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. This will be the thirteenth and closing offering ofthe local company this season, and invitation cards have been issued to the list of Nell Gwyn patrons and subscribers. Reservations for Wednesday's performance can be made now at the theatre. The Nell Gwyn Company started six years ago under the guidance of Prof. Howard Jones of the English department, who gathered together a small group of people interested in the revival of little-known plays of the English and American theatre. Since its inception, the Company has been composed of Ann Arbor residents, faculty members and grad- uate students. The performances are sponsored by a board of honorary wardens, also representative both of faculty and of townspeople. "The Magistrate" was first pro- duced in London at the Court Theatre in 1885 when it made a sensational run of over a year and made the fortunes of the management. After being acted all over England by three companies, the play was introduced to American audiences the following year in New York at Daly's Theatre, with a cast which included Ada Re- han and John Drew. It was played in several foreign languages in the years following, and was revived at the Court in 1892. It is a brilliant farce, written in the best English theatrical tradition in a witty and satirical manner compar- able in its time to some of the plays of Noel Coward today. IH OH ARHLL Launch Yorktown, Nation's New Floating Air port Siberia-Bound ToStudy Chromosphere CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. April 6.-IP) Sea. The eclpse wi not be s n t 15-foot movable case -A party of 20 scientists, bound for in the western hemisphe by means of a dark-glass Siberia, hurried final tests today of The expdiion's hug iterisary case for the battery of giant spectrographs madeofmt e ary caes with which they plan to study the by the Dow Chemical Cop wh a movng mnirror which chemical composition of the sun's designed to cord tei ch( o a compnsates for the outer atmosphere, or chromosphere, sphere's spectrum autommi t r during a solar eclipse June 16. both motion pictures on im 0 iche T leer si t he expedition The expedition, arranged by Har- wide and in hundreds of still phmb- hoes to obtain new information graph taken at one-seconi int\ervals. ut cerinm visible around the vard University and the Massachu- Dr. Menel said seven speett- sun only during an eclipse, and to setts Institute of Technology, will graphs, covering the range from x- neasuic the eict of the eclipse on leave Wednesday to establish a camp treme infra-red to the far ultra- he s heaviside layer," which is near Ak-Bulak, in the Ural Moun- violet, are to be used. lhe have n important bear- tains 150 miles north of the Caspian The battery of still spec ph n on rao eception. _ _. _ _ -Associated Press Photo. A moment after she was christened by Mrs. Franklin D. Roisevelt, the Ycrkiewn, Uncle Sam's aircraft carrier, was photographed frcm the air as she slid down the ways it Newport News, Va, i Art Museum To Soup Line In' 'epertoire' Sociological Field Trip Shows Students Detroit At Best And Worst Returning at 12:30 a.m. Sunday from a sociological field trip to De- troit sponsored by the S.C.A., more than 20 University students had ex- amined the motor .city from the Mu- seum of Art to the soup line down at the water front "in order to get a good picture of the actual living conditions in the city," according to William Wilsnack, '37, president of the S.C.A. The Ann Arbor group left Lane Hall at 1 p.m. Saturday in private auto- mobiles, meeting at the Museum of Art in Detroit groups from Wayne University and the University of To- ledo. After a trip through the mu- seum, during which a staff member explained the de Riviera murals, they made their way to police headquarters where Inspector C. E. Broom showed them through the cell blocks and the arms identification department. A member of the narcotics squad ex- plained his work. Perhaps the most interesting fea- ture of the entire itinerary, according )f S. 10.A. rip so e A -i to Wilsnack, was the soup line, a project of the Mariners Church down near the water front - a soup line where each day at 7 p.m. a pitiful crowd of derelicts gather to silently await the dishing out of the evening soup and coffee. Claire Backhurst, in charge of the project, was on hand to discuss his work, pointing out that the men fed in this fashion were hope- less as far as work was concerned. No matter how much work they are offered, they prefer to bask in the sun of the river front, sleeping out at night under the docks or in theI downtown parks, begging for nickels, this being the greatest work they un- dertake. The Mariners Church maintains an- c# her establishnent for the benefit f the uimlvd- men who want o k bu can tini none. They can buy a diiner for 10 cents, breakfast) csna lni of cole and doughnuts for two ec a bed at niht for 15 cents, ahs old the group. The group t'4urined to Ann Arbor after the evening had been given over to various entertainments T~ypEWRITER S New and Used, C) lieceand por'- table models. Bougaht, sold, Rented, Ex- changed, cleaned, repaired. Also Supplies. Special Rental Rates to students. Rent may apply in event of purchase. 0. D. TMORIILL 314 S. State St. Since 1908 Phone 6615 C LEA N --- PAIN -- E N SVA T Dial 8575- and you will find we are courteously at your service SCHLENKER HAR WARE COMPANY Roofing - Sheet Metal - Roofing 213 - 215 West Lberty Street __ RECOGNIZE THIS INSTRUMENT ...?0 IT'S THE NEWEST of modern conveniences anid you'll find it will be a great belp to you in ALIGi OF RICHRE DIOAC trying to locate aXyding you may have lost; to rent Or lto find a convenient roon; to sell some- thing; or to locate opportunity for buying values and for em. ployment. Over a period of years, certain basic advances have been made in the selection and treatment of cigarette tobaccos for Lucky Strike Cigarettes, They include preliminary analy- ses of the tobacco selected; use of center leaves; the higher heat treatment of tobacco ("Toasting"); consideration of acid-alkaline bal- ance, with consequent definite improvement in flavor; and con- trolled uniformity in the finished pro duct. All these combine to produce a superior cigarette-a modern ciga- rette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe- bodied tobaccos-A Light Smoke. Copy'right 1936, R The American Tobacco Company Luckies a less .. - Exes ofcdta 0r cu--LcyStieCgrte FOUNDED 1899 AN ACCREDITED LAW SCHOOL TEXT and CASE SYSTEM Note: Becinni-ng September, 1936, the afteroon course con- CLLA W S SCHGILL. CLASSES Afternoons - 4:30 Evenings . . 6:30 Lead to L L ..and J.D. degrees. Is a stall pr ice to pavforP ON recovery of articles you prize h igily. I. PRe ent:c hemt rI tests show* that other popuilr brand, have an excess of acidity ove :Lucky Strike of frorn BALANCE r 4 t y L UC KY ST R I K E s s B R A N DC 8 R A N D0 c 7/417 //// 77/////// a I II ;' it1 - 1 :rrrs=. ; 'r . IIrr~i:rir~f .. / 2 6'ttiESUPLeS VERIFIED BY INDEPE-NDENT ClEMCALLA80ORATORIES AND RESEAR.CH RI ROMPS