THE MICHIA Ni D ity FRIDAY,' JULY 22, 1932 -- ---- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to allmembers ofe University. Copy re~eived1 at the offlee of the Dean of the 'Sumnmer Session intli 3:30, excepting Sundays. ]1:30 a. m. Saturday. VOLUME XII FRIDAY, JULY 22 1932 NUMBER 22 Lecture on Manchuria: Mr. George A. Finch, of the Carnegie Endow- ment for Internaional Peace, will show four reels of motion pictures and will lecture tonig& on Manchuria in Natural Science Auditorium at 8:00 p, m. The public is invited. Summer Plays: John Balderston's "Berkeley Square," recent Broad- way success, will be presented this evening and Saturday evening at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Reservation's may be made by telephoning 6300. Excursion No. 8: Schools of the Cranbrook Foundation. Three notable private schools-the Cranbrook for boys, the Kingswood School for girls, and the Brookside School for younger boys and girls below the seventh grade-will be visited Saturday morning, July 123. The party will leave from' Angell Hall at 7:45 a. in., returning to Ann Arbor shortly after 12:00 noon. Reservations, $1.00, must be made before Friday, July 22, 5:00 p. m. Commander Donald B. MacMillan Lecture: Motion pictures of the Arctic and the progress in exploration will be shown in Hill auditorium next Monday evening. The pictures will b'e accompanied by a vivid word- picture by the dean of arctic explorers--Commaner Donald B.'MacMil- lan. This is the second special feature to be presented in Hill auditorium this summer. The tickets are priced to cover the actual cost of bringing these attractions to Ann Arbor. Tickets may be secured at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre box-office. Graduate School: Students enrolled in the Graduate School will not be permitted to drop courses after Saturday, July 23. A course is not offi- cially dropped until it is reported in the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall. i Students who have changed their elections since submitting election cards should call this week at the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall. This involves the dropping and adding of courses, the substitution of one course for another, as well as the change of instructors. G. Carl Huber, Dean College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and School of Music.: The time limit for dropping courses without record exxpires this week. Begin- ning Monday morning, July 25, courses dropped will be recorded with E grade. Simmer Session Dance: University men and women are invited to attend the next .regular Summer Session dance in the ballroom of the Michigan League Friday night, July 22, dancing from 9:00 until 1:00. Hosts and hostesses will see to ik that men and women coming witlout partners have the opportunity to become acquainted. Cashier's receipts for Sum- mer Session or identification cards for 1931-32 are necessary. Admission 25 cents for each person. Men's and Women's Educational Clubs: A dance will be given Satur- day evening at 8:30, July 23, in the University High School gymnasium under the auspices of the Men's and Women's Education Clubs. All men and women on the campus are invited. Admission 25 cents. J. W. Kelder "at home" tea on Friday of this week and each Friday for the rest of the Summer Session from 4:00 until 5:30. Socialist Club Lecture: Al Renner, candidate for governor on the Prole- tarian Party ticket and Presidcnt tof the Marxian Labor College iii De troit, will speak on "The World Cri- sis and the Proletarian Party" in the Natural Science Auditorium today at 5:00, under the auspices of the Mich- igan Socialist Club. Everyone is cor- dially invited. Liberal Students Union: Robert C. Angell, of the Department of Socio- logy, will speak on "Marriage and Its Problems in Modern Life" to the Liberal Students Union, -Unitarian Church corner State and Huron Sts., at 7:30 Sunday evening. There will be refreshments and a social hour' after the discussion. The Southern Club: Its annual Summer School picnic will be held. on Wdnesday, July 27th, at Portage Lake, price fifty cents. The group' will leave from in front of Angell Hall at 5:00 p. m. Transportation will be furnished. A committee will attempt to telephone all Soui,herners whose names are listed in the direc- tory.sWe hope, however, that anyone who, plans to attend will take the ini- tiative to call University Extension 371 and notify the committee if he can furnish an automobile or wants transportation with someone else. Jammy J. Darby, Mrs. B. L. Smith, Mrs. W. G. Manson, Conrad Temple- ton, and Jackson Sharman, Chair- man. Unitarian Service: "What's On Our Young People's, Minds" will be the last of three addresses by the Reverend W. H. Gysan, Unitarianr Minister to students in Greater Bos- ton, at the Unitarian Church atf 10:45 Sunday morning.t Reformed Students: Church serv- ice will be conducted Sunday morn- ing by Mr. B. Kruithof at the PhiI Alpha Kappa fraternity on 1000 East Ann St. The Service will egin at 10 o'clock.1 Progress in Ridding Air Of Sulphur Dioxide Seeii URBANA, Ill., July 26.- (AP)-The problem of ridding city air of its most noxious element-sulphur diox- ide, from coal smoke--is one for which the Illinois State Academy of Sciences foresees a not too remote solution. ' "The principal pollution of city1 air," says Prof. D. B. Yeyes Un,iver- Aity of illniois chemist, "is sulphurl dioxide, which irritates the mucous1 membranes and stunts plant growth. Roosevelt, Homeward Bound, Visits Col. House / Ten to Form, St. Lawrene Seaway Body WASHINGTON, July 21.-(AP)- The great St. Lawrence seaway is to be constructed under the supervision of a sort of super-government com- mission and on strictly business bases. The -ponderous name of the or- ganization, specified in the treaty signed Monday between the United States ;and Canada, is the St. Law- rence International Rapids Section commission. Its work on the $543,000,000 proj- ect will be just as ponderous as its name but the plan is to let it be as free from governmental red tape as the ordinary contractor. Five members are to be appointed by each country as soon as the treaty is ratified by the United States Sen- ate, which meets in December, and the Canadian parliament, which con- venes early next year. Because of subsequent necessary delay in obtaining appropriations, )work of course, cannot begin until some time after that. But the 10 men named to the commission will have ample authority to push the project for a 27-foot channel from Montreal to Lake Ontario. They will/lave authority to make contracts, sue and be sued, and em- ploy all the help they need. They will see that wages paid workers equal those prevalent in the comnu- nity. They will not, however, have the right to direct ; construction of the power plants to develop 2,200,000 horsepower although they can co- ordinate these with the seaway. They can order deferred any works. When their job is done, they cease to exist as a commission. To show that they mean these commissioners to do business, the two governments have agreed: To waive immigration laws so far as they otherwise would affect those in the employ of the commission. To exempt from all, tariffs and dtstoms and taxes supplies bought by the commission in either country. To make the commission subject to the federal courts of the countries in which suits originate with the proviso that if any claim exceeds $50,000 eithe government may ap- peal it to arbitration. (Associated Press Photo). Gov. Franklin D. Rooseveit, homeward bound after a vacation cruise along the New England coast, stopped at Beverly Farms, Mass., to visit Col. Edward M. House (rifht), former adviser to Woodrow Wil- son. The Democratic' presidential nominee described the talk as "just a chat." --- -All Freeman's Dining Room Otte block north from Hill Auditorium Excellent Quality - Reasonable Prices 2,000 Bolivian Women Ready to Enter Army LA PAZ, Bolivia, July 21.-(AP)- Two thousand Bolivian women had pledged their lives today to the gov- ernment if war is declared on Par- aguay, and a troop train loaded with reinforcements from the army was on its way''to the Bolivian interior." The troolP train was sent out fol- lowing reports of a battle in the dran Chaco region. The army of women paraded to the presidential palace, urging the fatherland. to defend itself. All the political parties and vari- ous commercial interests pledged their help to the government. The Central bank made a spontaneous offer of a large loan. ASUNCION, Paraguay, July 21.-- (AP)-President Guggiari of Para- guay said today the government would not abandon "its defensive at- titude (against Bolivia) unless pro- voked" but that the government and people were determined to maintain their rights. Patriotic demonstrations contin- ued in the capital Wednesday night, but there was no disorder. SANTIAGO, Chile, July 21.-(AP) -The government announced today it had crushed a plot to restore for- mer President Carlos Ibanez to power and arrested three of Ibanez' friends for "activities contrary to law." A heavy guard was thrown around the ranch home of the former dic- tator, who recently returned from exile in Argentina. Credit sales total 34 per cent of the U. S. retail trade. Lunch and Dinner . . . . 0 Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner , Breakfast 30c . . . Lunch 30c . $4.50 per week .$6.00 per week .. . Dinner 50c Sunday Dinner, . . . . . . . , " f60c Women's Education Club Meeting Michigan League. The feature of the e' ous readings given by Professor Eich o General Linguistics. All students of the' Summer Session and wives of men students are invited. The meet-' ing will be at 7:15 instead of 7:30 as formerly announced. Physiological Chemistry 120: The lecture's in tlhs course will begin to- night at 7:00 a. in., in the West Am- phitheatre of the West Medical Building. Exhibition of Paintings, Architec- ture Building: A collection of oil and water color paintings by Professor Barnes, Slusser, Chapin, Valerio, and Mr. Aldrich is on view in the ground floor corridor of the Architecture Building. Open dail until further notice from 9 a. m. t66 p. m. except- ing Sundays. Jordan' Hall 1'At Home": The res- idents of Jordan Hall will have their BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard Street Today 11:30 to 1:30 Salmon Salad - Potato Chips Banana Nut Salad - P-Nut Sandwich Potato Saad - Cold Meats. Roast Beef ftoast Pork - Potatoes- Cold Saw Tce Cream - Ca~ke Punch - Coffee - Milk 30c-_ 5:30 to 7:30 soup Sh~lmp Salad Tomato Stuffed with Tuna Fish Salad Baked Ham - Raisin Sauce Pork Chops Lamb Chops ( Roast Veal Baked Fillet of Haddock with Butter Sauce Mashed or French Fried Potatoes Sliced Cucumbers, Head Lettuce, Scallped Corn Pie - Cake - Ice Cream - Melon Coffee Tea Milk 40c 1928Isaac, Walton Goes Poetic Now Bingham, Maine Jan. 31, 1928 When you've planned a trip for fishing, And you've spent a lot of kale, Bet the whole of your vacation On some advertiser's tale And you fish a lake of 'eauty Hidden in a land of dreams, Where the air is clean as sunshine Haunted by songs of crystalstreams. Comes the moment when you're casting Ax~a a smasher hits your line, Tken you play him like agamester With the battle going fine, Till a snag, a yank, and silence And the line is hanging slack, While you grit your teeth and whistle A ... 1,- ', vl.. ..Ls.....nn~L Monday, July 25, at 7:15 at the vening will be a selection of humor- f the Department of Speech and .I MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS present U / TONIGHT AND SATURDAY AN UNUSUAL PLAY A SUPERB CAST A twentieth century Aier ican walks into the past-lie sees . eighteenth century England through the eyes of the present - he knows the future- a strange situation-novel and in- genius. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Single Admissions 75c Phone 6300 Our Two Stores are Packed with ExcitingVa1l ii 11 I L- fingerle's ,friday,,.specials! church chicken dinner mondaYr wednesdayf rida Yh0c --featured fish dinners fried filet of sole - tartar sauce..............40c broiled fresh lake erie trout- drawn butter .....50c baked lake superior white fish - lemon sauce .....60c fried hompton bay sea scallops--figaro sauce.. .60c fried live soft shell crabs on toast.............60c broiled live chicker lobster-drawn butter. . .;..1.00 choice of julienne potatoes . . brown potatoes . . . mashed potatoes choice-'of five fresh vegetables or salad home baked rolls' ice tea . coffee... milk ' dessert always a great yanety of fresh fish foods featured dinners this week grilled sirloin steak-mushroom gravy.... ....... 50c grilled pork chops-fried tomato.............50e grilled genuine lamb chops,-jam . ...........55c with all the accessories a large variety of cold plate luncheons at 40c -featured salads today fresh shrimp salad-mayonnaise ............. ..40c fresh crabmeat salad-hard boiled egg ... .....:.40c fruit salad supreme-a special ......... .......35c combination salad - choice of dressing .......... 30c "pineapple and cottage cheese salad .. .........25c -the fresh shrimp and fresh crabmeat are expressed from maryland and are not from a can . . . Modern Library, regular price 95c........ .. .now 57c Everyman's Library, regular price 75c ... ..... nw 35c Ebony Library reduced to..............One Half Off The beautiful Black & Gold Library. . now One-Third Off Non-fiction and fiction, -hundreds of fine selections.. . . ........-.-now One-third and One-Half Off A $5000.00 stock of FINE BINDINGS-tIe highest art in book- making-is offered for a short time at one-third off. Hundreds of fine selctions of reference books (two large tables; now priced at 35c each or 3 volunes for $100. A superior grade of stationery at arhazin-g reduction of 40 per cent off. You are sure to find something you require at real savings 1 I F i