,FACE FOUR TSHE SUMMER MICHIGN=..UY29DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 28, 1929 tm _ _______________________________________________________________________________________ I DAILY OFiCIAL BULLETIN Publicaton in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Copy received at the office of the Dean of the Summer Session until 3:30, excepting Sundays. (11:30 a. m. Saturday). VOL. IX SUNDAY, JULY 28, 1929 No. 30 Educational Conference of the School of Education: Professor .C. C. Crawford will speak on "Teaching Study Habits" at the afternoon conference on Monday, July 29, at 4 o'clock in the auditorium of the University High School. CONTRACTS ARE GIVEN N OR AIR MAIL BEACONS Contracts have been awarded for the erection of 14 additional bea- cons on airmail routes in Michigan. FIRE ENDANGERS PLC AESCA NATIONAL PARK (By Associated Press) ELECT IN "RED"RAID i l 3E : J Thomas Diamond Notice to all Candidates in any School or College, Expecting Degrees or Certificates at the Close of the Summer Session: All diploma and certificate fees must be paid before the Faculty votes recommendations for the conferring of such' degrees or certificates. Such fees may be paid at any time and will be refunded if the degree is not conferred or the certificate voted. Proper blanks are to be filled out at the office of the school or college in which the candidate is studying! during the Summer Session. Shirley W. Smith, Secretary of the University The Women's Golf Classes Will meet at the Municipal Golf course on Fuller Street, commenc- ing Monday, July 29. Anna Zauer Tatterman Marionettes: The Tatterman Marionettes will be presented Monday matinee and evening, July 29, in the Lydia Mendelssohn theater. The program will include a dramatization of Ruskin's "The King of the Golden River," by Catherine Reighard, a former student of the University; a Japanese lyric drama "The Melon Thief," and two other short numbers. The marionettes are highly recommended by educators and artists wherever they are presented. General admission, 50 cnts. Children at the matinee performance, 35 cents. These performances are sponsored by the Ann Arbor Alumnae. Amy Loomis Hindu-Chinese Student Dinner: Hindu-Chinese Student Dinner will be given at Fletcher Hall on Sunday, July 28, at 7 p. m. Mr. J. B. Lillard, President of Sacramento Junior College, California, will speak. Charge 50c.7 S. A. Rahman, A. Chang Excursion to Put-in-Bay: The Put-in Bay excursion party will leave for Detroit by special interurban from' the corner of Packard and State Streets at 6:30 a. n., gaturday, August 3. At Detroit the group will take the boat for Put-in- Bay-a thre hour trip down the Detroit River and out into Lake Erie. Four hours on the island will allow ample time for luncheon, a visit to the caves, to Perry's monument, and to other points of interest. The party will be back in Ann Arbor' at 10:30 p. m. Expenses, including luncheon and dinner, will total about $4.00. Reservations should be made in room 2051, Natural Science Building, with Miss Wilson. J. P. Rowe Exhibition of Water Color Paintings: A collection of water colors is now on exhibition in the ground floor gallery of the Architectural Building. Among the exhibitors are some of the leading American painters. The exhibition is open daily from 9:00 to 6:00, excepting Sundays. The public is cordially invited. Emil Lorch Faculty Concert: The sixth concert in the faculty series for the Summer Session will be given at Hill Auditorium on Tuesday evening, July 30 at 8:15 o'clock. Mrs. Margaret MacGregor of the organ faculty and Mr. Stanley Fletch- er, a student of Guy Maier of the organ facut lillyw,ETAOINUNU er, a student of Guy Maier of the organ faculty, will participate in a very interesting program. The general public is cordially invited to attend. For obvious reasois, small children are not allowed. The pro- gram is as follows: Widor; First movement from fifth Symphony: Gluck, Lento and Air from Orpheus; Bach, Prelude and Fugue in E minor (Mrs. MacGregor): Schumann, Scenes from Childhood (a) About strange lands and people (b) Curious story (c) Catch me if you can .d) Entreating child (e) Contentedness (f) Important event (g) Dream- ing (h) By the fireside (i) The knight of the hobbyhorse (j) Almost too serious (k) Frightening (1) Child falling asleep (m) The poet speaks Ibert, The little white donkey; Scott, At the donnybrook fair (Mr. Fletcher) Kinder, In springtime; Debussy-Christian, Reverie; Bonnet, Rhapsodie Catalene (Mrs. MacGregor). Charles A. Sink lltlli l l lll1111111 It I l 111111NlIIIIHlIllIII Ilil l11111l IIIII III IlIlIIt I111 PERMANENT WAVING FINGER WAVING HAIR CUTTING Specialities Miladies Beauty Shop 209 S. State D3p ' Dial 83 3 for Appointment e . pro rr ° .r ar ° ° 'X1111"11111111111111111NIIIIIIUI1111lllllilll111111111111111 1IIit1i111111111U1IU11 111lIIIN111111;" i -..".r" r'r.r'rmmrnRRRFNrNr5raramram rarararararnra M rararsraFSrar=rarS This will bring the number of bea- cons guiding the airmail pilots in this state to more than 30 and will complete the lighting for night flying of thea irmail routes between Chicago, Kalamazoo, Jackson and Detroit, and Bay City, Detroit anid Toledo. Airmail beacons now in opera-. tion in Michigan arel ocated at. Battle Creek, Jackson, Dearborn and Wayne on the Kalamazoo-De troit leg of the Michigan air lines; at Edwardsburg, Marcellus, Penn and Schoolcraft on the Kalamazoo Chicago line, and at Bay City, Sag- inaw, Flint, Holly and Birch Run on the DetroitBay City section. There also are revolving beacons at Grand Rapids and Lansing and on the first' lighted route in the state, between GRAND MARIAS, Minn., July 28. -Nearly 500 men had been re- cruited today to fight threatening fires in Superior national forest. The fires broke out of control of 350 men late Friday and burned over 1,000 acres in the Brule and- Cascade lake districts. High winds and excessive heat combined to de- feat the efforts of the forest rang- ers crews. The flames headed toward Brule lake. The camp of the Cloquet Lumber Co., the largest in this sec- tion, was in the path of the fire, .which started Monday and is esti- mated to have burned over 4,0001 acres. (By Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA, July 28.-Miss Anna Pennypacker, daughter of the late Samuel W. Pennypacker, who was governor of Pennsylvania, passed the night in a police cell. She was one of 55 persons arrested Friday night when police raided a radical meeting in Grand Frater- pity hall. The prisoners were charged with holding a meeting without a per- mit, and some of them with dis- orderly conduct and d1tributing seditious literature. - -- I L-VI NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES II 1 BUTLER.-In answer to the question, "What has become of' Chinas' immemorial sleep?" Dx. Charles T. Paul, president of the College of Missions, claims, "China is not now asleep, she is awake even in the classroom. During all the troublesome time since 1905, this country has gone ahead with her schooling."l Detroit and TFoledto. xLAccording to Dr. Paul there has Eight new beacons will be install- been a silent revolution of trans-{ ed on the Detroit-Kalamazoo air- lations of the popular novelist{ This young lady pictured above mail route-one between Battle books like Dickens, Victor Hugo,, is out to put some life and romance Creek and Kalamazoo, two between I Shas and Ibsen. These transla-; into the pigskin game. She says Battle Creek and Jackson, two be- tiorls into the Chinese language! she can do a coaching job as well ' tween Jackson and Ann Arbor and as any man and is now looking for two between Ann Arbor and De- a position at one of the countrylslegeA toitRE ER colleges. tot E E V have been made by many of the American instructors in the col- leges of China. INDIANA.-"Will the "Missing Link" ever be found?" Dr. Austin H. Clark of the Smithsonian Insti- tute says no. The: gap that separ- ates man from the monkeys is an honest one that never was bridged, he believes, in further explanation of his recent theory of evolution. Man and the other primates form a tree all their own and their rela- tion is not a descent of one from the other, but that of a common and unknown ancestor, he believes. A SEAT IN HALLERS.. STATE STREET JEWELERS At Liberty Street Repairing Watches Jewelry SPECIAL ORDER WORK Irreeman s titng CIR0m ~ 200 CHAIRS i If .':o a: The Trial of The great stage mystery play is now an even greater all-talking pic- ture! Directed by the famous author with a superb cast, it makes each seat a front-row seat to the Trial of the Cenutry! A M'etrqodwyn-Mayer PiCT1i1 RE NORMA SHEARER H. B. WARNER It -i SS SS S S S SS SS S S .~ ~ r~i~ S SS SS S S S I trj =U' JJ-J r ~r~JJ ~JJ . I J. J 't'' w ' 'i ci ci ci cracz a i j .aEIrI4JJJ Ej ., . .. r IL =1 ,_ _T -- . Monday Matinee and Evening Tatermo none es BOX OFFICE OPEN 10-9 Dial 6300 Adults 50 Cents ( Matinee) Children 35 Cents MONDAY, JULY 29 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE