Fr1yi~ MTCHTi7AN ~AIIX TUESDAY, MAY 19, 1936 r . . m .J -- View Of Annual Tulip Festival field At Holland, Mich. Classilied Directory LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox Careful work at low price. darned lx ENGLISH house party, limited to twelve guests. Cambridge (three weeks' university summer courses optional). London and nearby points of interest -Oxford, Shake- speare country, Canterbury, etc. FOR SALE FOR SALE: Apartment upright piano. Moderate cost. About seven weeks. Will sell at low price. Reasonable July, August. Address Daily Box ter ms oftered. 502 123. 463 FOR RENT LOST AND FOUND FOR RENT: Four or five room fur- LOST: pair glasses, white gold frame nished apartment for summer or in light brown leather case. Please year. 209 N. Ingalls. Phone 3403. telephone Mrs. Howard Jones, 8550. 501 Reward. 503 Rare Chinese Art Will Be In Exhibit An exhibit of ancient Chinese art is to be put on display today at Harris Hall, under the auspices of Mr. and Mrs. De Vere Bailey. The exhibit will be open from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m.. and at 3:30 and 8:30 p.m. Mr. Bailey will give lectures in connection with the exhibition. The afternoon talk will deal with symbolism in Chinese art, while in the evening Mr. Bailey will discuss Chinese jade. The origin of symbolism in the art of China, according to Mr. Bailey, is lost beyond the horizon of .recorded time, Symbols have been used by the Chinese since the days of nature wor- ship, and played an important part in the old forms of ritual and cere- monial usage. --Associated PreSS Phoo. Young men and women of Holland, Mich., particijftd in picturesque mitch folk dances after housewives had scrubbed city streets clean in clebration of the opening; rf the annual tulip festival. 11cre is a. general view of the festival, witnessed by nearly 190,000{ persons, wh do saw the millions of tulips in full bloom. :1 Dr. Carl Guthe To Make Study Of Navajo Land o University Museum Head To Accompany Scientists y To Arizona And Utah Dr. Carl E. Guthe, director of the University Museums, has been ap- p pointed a member of the qualifica- d tions committee of the Rainbow I Bridge-Monuuent Valley Expedition, y which will work during the summer h in the northern Navajo country in Arizona and Utah. The expedition, which will include leading scientists in the United States, will explore, map and study an area of some 3,000 square miles. Region Far From Railroad The region to be explored, Dr. Guthe said, "is probably farther from f a railroad than any point in the e United States." The party will pen- etrate as far as possible by motor and will then move equipment by pack train up winding canyons into the I Rainbow Plateau. A base camp will be established and scouting parties l and scientific workers will push on afoot. Canyons will be mapped and cliff dwellings and other evidence of pre- historic peoples will be reported by the archaeological field parties. The richly forested summit of Navajo Mountain will be studied with hopes of finding a unique fauna and flora "marooned" there through countless ages. To Excavate In Prolific Cave Biologists will seek rare mammals, birds, reptiles and fish in the can- yons of the Can Juan and Colorado Rivers, while geologists will excavate in a fossil-bearing cave that has al- ready yielded more than 100,000 specimens, and will make field studies that may shed light on the origin of the Navajo sandstone. The expedition operates under a board of trustees as a cooperative project, each man sharing in the work, the field expenses and the bene- fits. It will be possible for two men from the University of Michigan to join the expedition, Dr. Guthe said. They may be students or instructors and must be interested in some phase of a scientific expedition. Daily News Prints et ennial Edition One hundred and one years of iour- nalistic progress are commenorated in the "Centennial Progress Edition" of today's Ann Arbor Daily News which will contain 136 pages and sell for the customary price. This special edition of the paper will contain histories of Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, and the Ann Arbor Daily News which will go back to the early beginnings of cacli and will be accompanied by numerous il- lustrations. The paper also contains two sections describing the papers new building on S. Diviion and E. Huron Sts. into which the paper moved on April 25. Formal open house for visitors who wish to inspect the building will be held Thursday, according to officials. Personalt Leads To Success In Acting, Says Miss Winwood Player Behind Foollighis Cannot Conceal Real Self' 1 eDeclares "Acting is one of the leat im- portant attributes for success in the theatre. The great thing is per- sonality -- the ability to put yourself across." In this way, Estelle Win- wood, petite star of last season's New York success "I Want a Policeman," explained her impressions of the Iheitre to a group of interested stu- dents gathered in Laboratory Theatre. Introduced by Robert Henderson, manager of the Dramatic Season, as one of the wisest women in the theatre, Miss Winwood gave out *"pointers" to the collected would-be stars. She explained that beauty is not nearly as important a feature as SEVE G RADIO PRO(.RAM~s 6:00 -WJR Ste venson Sports. WWJ Ty Tyson. WXYZ Easy Aces. CKLW Omnar the Mystic. 6:15---WJR Jimmy Alien. WWJ Edwin C. Hill. WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW Joe Gentile. 6:30--WJR Kate Smith. WWJ Bulletins. WXYZ Rhythm 'rime. CKLW Rhythm Moments. 6:45--WJR Boake Carter. WWJ Dinner Music. WXYZ Alice Sheldon. CKLW Time Turns Back. 7:00-WJR Lazy Dan, Minstrel Man. WXYZ Crime Clues. CKLW Phil Marley's Music. 7:30--WJR Laugh with Ken Murray. WWJ Wayne King's Music. WXYZ Edgar Guest in Welcome Val- ley. CKLW Jazz Nocturne. 8:00- -WJR Walter O'Kcefe: Glen Gray's Music. WWJ Vox Pop. WXYZ Baen Bernie's Music. CKLW Wallenstein's striw: ;