rou THItE Ml H1 IG A N D AILY n Y ---- -- - . . . ...... .... ... .. ... AY, JULY 1, 1932 Students At Field Camps Miss Trickiest Weather In U.S.' Biology, geology and geography students who have elected any of the courses offered at the various field stations at Douglas lake, Mich., and along the Cumberland river in Kentucky will be numbered among the fortunates who will not have to endure what regular session students called the "trickiest" weather in the United States. But then, that was last winter, when snow was a rarity and slush and rain the rule. Per- haps this will be 'a model sum- ner... At any rate, the biology students will be treading the clean sandy beaches, the wooded shortlines and the terraced bluffs of beautiful Douglas lake instead of seeking di- version in the heat of the city. No courses are to be conducted in be- ginning botany and zoology, the work being limited to advanced studies in entomology, ornithology, icthyology, herpetology and limnol- ogy for the zoology students, while the biologists will be occupied with plant anatomy, systematic botany, plant ecology and special work. Board at the biology camp is fur- nished at the dining hall, and the students will be lodged in one-room cottages, each designed for two or three occupants. Excellent oppr- tunities for recreation are offerecd, baseball, swimming, boating and diving being numbered among them. Tennis courts are not yet available. Following the usual custom, stu- dents will be allowed to work for only eight hours of University credit, although they may put in unlimited time on their studies. The geology and geography stu- dents will do their summer work in and about Mill Springs, Ky., a site selected because of its succes- sion of strata ranging from the Or- dovician down through the Pennsyl- vanian periods'. TYPE WRITERS -PORTABLE New Seoond.-and, Rebil t, imitb..-'on, Noiseless, Pnin i boyal, R emingt = *,of . D L.-r " I i.S State St., Ann Ajbor. BRIGHT SPOT 802~ Packnrd Sa. TODA§Y 11:30 to 1:30 saIiinon Salad with Potato Chips Chop Sney wih Riee Fried Pech C.ast Boef and Roast Pork Poao Sliced Cucumbers ruit DsIsert Cake -Ice cream Core Mlk -Punch l~ip B a St.iiec Lake Trout Fried erh.,. VeithEggs or R of ee R:mt !Pork iApple Suee shed or renchi ried Potatoes shrimp Salad t and Lettuce salad - Peas Ice Cream Cake Fresh Strawbe hrry Sndaes (~o1 c, TaMilk, Purnch '10c For a - Glorious Fourth- Political Science 65s: The course number is changed to Political Sci- ence 165s, and graduate credit for the course will be given. The class will meet at one o'clock instead of two o'clock in the Political Science Seminar Room. Howard B. Calderwood Swimming for Women Students: The swimming pool at the Michigan Union will be open to all women students on Tuesday and Thursday eve- nings from 7:30 to 9:30, beginning this evening. A fee of twenty-five cents will be charged. Cotton suits must be worn. Intramural Sports: All men students wishing to intramural activities should call, or sign up, at the Building sometime this week. Telephone 8109. participate in any Intramural Sports Smart, New, Summer Millinery Women's Education Club Picnic. July 4th-5:30. Meeting Place- Michigan League, North University Avenue Entrance. Cars provided. Reservations can be made by telephoning Miss Mahnke at the Delta Zeta House-4918, or at the Vocational Guidance Office, University High School. Wesley Hall. The first social meeting for. the Summer Session will be a hike today. Meet at Wesley Hall at 5 P.M. * ;; * * i - _ __ __ _ _ - ---___---_-------= Freeman's Dining Room One block north from Hill Auditorium Excellent Quality - Reasonable Prices with Velvet Trim Something strikingly new and flattering-that's the descrip- tion so many have given these smart Turbans. And they're just the thing for summer sports wear. White Felts One white felt may not make a siummer but it will help a lot-and your wardrobe isn't complete without one. $1. to $5.00 ". Lunch and Dinner .w, Breakfast, Lunch and Dinn . . . $4.50 per week .$6.00 per week Breakfast 30c . . . . Lunch 30c .. . . Dinner 50c The Roberts Shop Liberty opposito the Michigan THE DAILY C'IASS'IFIED ADS PAY Sunday Dinner S 60c s " s " s s s I p4 Y _ _ . ;__ _. "Run the jitneys off the streets stormed the I "Operate buses yourself; do it better than electric railway operates buses. the wildcat independents," fired back the junction with its street car lines. Editor of Electric R.ilway Journal . . . and announced a new publication, Bus Sg Transportation, to help develop that infant look ahead clearly, courage to tell industry. industry when it is in error-the ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ in con- ability to l a whole se qual - Quickly a powerful association of street railway men rose up in arms... roundly condemned the editor, his new "bus journal" and its publishers. What happened? Bus Transportation swiftly proved the Editor right ... showed the place of the motor bus in modern trans- portation ... until today practically every ties are cnaracteristic of Mcraw-Hiln Editors. That's why industry and business value these publications so highly. That's why the McGraw-Hill paper, which covers the field you expect to enter, will help you get ready for your first job. Copies of all McGraw-Hill publications are ... or should be... in your college library. VA Busines men, industrialists and engineers-600,000 of them- regularly read the McGraw-Hill Publications. More than 3,000,000 use McGraw-Hill books and magazines in their business. I i