THE MICHIGAN DAILY ruetion In They Made Bows To King George And Queen Mary Nine Sports Is Given Women X11 Of Athletic Facilities Thrown Open; Activities Will BeginToday Two ideally equipped athletic build- gs, Barbour Gymnasium and the romen's Athletic Building, together mtaining accommodations for more lan 2,000 women, and the Union vimming pool will be used for the tmer Session women's athletic pro- am commencing today. Instruction ill be given in nine sports and facili- es will be available for supervised tivities in several others. The Women's Athletic Building is colonial brick structure located at orth University and Forest Avenue. n the basement is a four-lane bowl- g alley and facilities for archery, >lf practice and ping pong. On the rst floor are locker and shower ac- >mmodations for more than 1,100 omen and equipment for tennis and lf. A spacious lounge and a kitchen e on the second floor. The lounge obtainable for parties. North of the Women's Athletic uilding and immediately behind the :osher-Jordan dormitories as Palmer ield, containing many tennis courts, >lf grounds, seyeral indoor baseball elds, and three hockey fields. Barbour Gymnasium, on the north- st corner of the campus, has a large imnasium used for volleyball, bad- inton, tennis, and gymnastics. In ie basement are showers and lockers pable of accommodating more than 00 women, and a swimming pool. n thesecond floor is a stage used for truction in rhythm, folk, and tap secing.- Dr. Margaret Bell of the University ;ealth Service urges all women stu- imts to enroll in the athletic pro- am, characterizing it as the most neflcial program a student can par- cipate in -- one that the ordinary hool year provides no time for. To enroll in any of the classes, a st of which was printed in Tuesday's sily, women would register at Bar- ur Gymnasium and report to the ealth Service for a physical exam- ation-. be Lincoln's Boyhood Town To Be Revived ays When Emancipator Was A Poor Clerk Will Be Recalled On July 4 ROCKPORT, Ind., June 26-- (P) - n entire pioneer village of the days Abraham Lincoln more than one indred years ago, will come to life are July 4. Families in the 11 cabins in the ockade-inclosed community will be their daily tasks, the school will in session, there will be services the church, and the store will vait customers. Ox carts, covered wagons, wells om which water is drawn by wind- ss, long sweep and old oaken buck- s will do their pictureskue part to elp turn time back to those days pioneer Indiana when Lincoln lived 3reabouts. Where He Read Law The occasion will be the dedication another national shrine to Lincoln - a reproduction of the village near- i where he clerked as a boy and read *w books lent to him by Lawyer John itcher. Pitcher's law office, a small log cab- , is in the reconstructed village. So the home of Reuben Grigsby, who arried Lincoln's sister Sarah. There the Jones' store, originally situated Jonesboro, not so far from here, here the emancipator was a clerk uring part of the 14 years he lived i this neighborhood. Another cabin is a duplicate of the zel Dorsey home in Rockport where ze first court was held in Spencer )unty. Azel Dorsey taught one of the :hools Lincoln attended. To Include 22 Cabins Four acres of ground. on a sloping illside comprise the village brought ack to life. Twenty-two cabins will rentually be put within the stockade. The village is a dream come true r George H. Honig, Rockport, artist nd sculptor. It was made possible irough expenditure of $6,000 of ERA funds for laborers, through rivate donations of logs, cabins, .oney, original pioneer pieces of fur- iture and much time. The Spencer County Historical So- ety, the Rockport Chamber of Com- .erce, the city council, the Business :en's Association and the Kiwanis 'ub helped. United States Senator Sherman :inton of Indiana will be one of the >eakers at the dedication exercises. AA Is Facing Law Suits After NRA Abandonment In Great Versatility Makes Michigan Star Strong Threat For Record Word from California that Willis Ward, Michigan's all-around track star, has entered the National A.A.U. decathlon event follows his announce- ment three weeks ago that for the next year he will concentrate in that event with an eye to gaining a place on the 1936 American Olympic team. By all odds the most versatile track athlete in Michigan's history, eclips- ing the brilliant records of another Wolverine, Carl Johnson, who was the first man to win four events in a Big Ten track meet, Ward was also an outstanding football star. It was his football competition, many sport fol- lowers believe, that prevented him from becoming the greatest'track ath- lete in the history of the sport. Supremely blessed physically and temperamentally, Ward was heralded as a sensation when he entered school here, but injuries handicapped him after he took 18 points in the Big Ten in his sophomore year. It has often been the claim of track observers -that Ward could have been practically a world's record breaker in any event in which he concentrated. As a freshman Ward all but set a world's standard in the high jump, and his speed made him a consistent threat in every running race in which he competed. In 1933, in the Confer- ence meet, Ward pressed Jack Keller, of Ohio State, to one of the fastest hurdle races ever run. Aside from his speed, however, Ward p o s s e s s e s extraordinary strength, making him a threat in any wig~iht even;in-hw'ihic~h %Qpri and en- --Associated Press Photo. Among American women being presented to the King and Queen of England at Buckingham palace this month are Miss Helen Jacobs (right), tennis star, whom Mrs. Robert W. Bingham, wife of the American am- bassador, presented June 25; Anne Alston (left), of Atlanta; Suzanne Hill (center, above), of Baltimore; and Mrs. Laurence A. Steinhardt, (center, below), of New York. The Careers And Personalities Of Our Senators: J. F. Guffey 2. JOSEPH GUFFEY PITTSBURGH, June 26 - P) - "Jovial Joe" Guffey, Pennsylvania's first democratic U. S. senator in 58 years, is a bachelor, but proud of his matrimonial record: Usher 'or best man at 31 weddings. "My proudest one was the time I ushered for Senator David A. Reed," he confesses. Guffey defeated Reed for the senatorship on November 6. Both live in the same precinct, same Pittsburgh ward. Joseph F. Guffey - "F" stands for no name, but was inserted to fill out the signature - is 59, short and heavy set, has graying hair. Born at Scotch ancestors and a long line of democrats. "I grew up in politics," he says. "There was a time there were 31 Guffeys of voting age. They were all Democrats and all voted in the same precinct." His father was sheriff of Westmoreland county. when "Jovial Joe" was born. Politics is both a hobby and a pro- fession. He also likes to read, hunt ducks and ride horseback. At Prince- ton he captained the freshman base- ball team. Two maiden sisters share his home, where biographies and histories fill the library and a picture of President Roosevelt hangs ove~r the living room fireplace. Guffey's Pennsylvania hold- ings center in the coal and oil lands in the western part of the state. After a former Princeton instruc- Bids To Be Opened For 13_Navy Ships' WASHINGTON. June 26. - (P) Taking swift advantage of the record peace-time naval appropriation ap- proved yesterday by the President, Secretary Swanson announced today that bids would be opened Aug. 7 for the construction of 13 of the 24 war- ships authorized by the measure. At the same time, the secretary said at a press conference that the navy was studying the number of vessels that could be replaced under the Washington naval accord but that no final decision would be reached until it was seen "what will be done" by the other powers. tor, the late Woodrow Wilson, gave up education to enter political life, Guf- fey became seriously interested in government. He has participated in every national Democratic campaign since the World war. Backed Al Smith in 1924 and 1928. Became his state's "original Roosevelt man" in 1932. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE New York ..... Cleveland Chicago..... Detroit.... Boston-...... Washington Philadelphia 38 34 31 33 .+-30 28 24 L 23 25 24 28 31 33 33 39 St. Louis...........18 Yesterday's Results Detroit-Chicago, rain. Only game scheduled. Games Today Detroit at Chicago. Washington at New York. Boston at Philadelphia. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pct. .623 .576 .564. .541 .492 .459 .421 .316 Pet. .707 .585 .581 .550 .475 .419 .379 .300 Radio Operates ordnatonre teamed withspeed. Op ra e As a decathlon threat, Ward riih A rall the qualifications of a re s A r breaker, according to Ken Doh Bipane Michigan's freshman track coac i oA H c himself an Olympic decathalon c ithout A itec1 pion. "He enters the event with greatest superiority any man ever in four events, and consistente Pilotless Craft Responds cannot help but make him a c] Perfectly To Touch Of pion," Doherty has said. The decathalon event compris Operator On Ground track and field events, the 100- 400-meter dashes, 1500-meter, Copyright, 1935, by the Associated Press), pole vault, shot put, javelin, 100-r FARNBOROUGH, Hants, Eng., high hurdles, broad jump, high j June 26.-vWP) -Great Britain's new and discus. air sensation, the pilotless airplane, The A.A.U. event is held over was demonstrated today over the Roy- days in -connection with the j al Air Force airdro-me - but a human and senior A.A.U. meets. Five e pilot sat in the cockpit ready to grab were held yesterdiay. Five mor the controls if anything went wrong. be held today. However, there was no need of this precaution, as the Queen Bee - as the Boy Dead, Three Iniu type is called - responded. perfectly to radio operation from the ground. After Dynamite Explos It was controlled from a small wooden cabinet fitted with seven plain EL PASO, Texas, June 26 - white keys. A boy was killed and three wo The plane's engine roared into life severely injured today by a at the touch of a switch, then the geyser-like funnel of rocks and yellow-winged craft climbed quickly, projected by a premature explosi In quick succession an officer shout- dynamite at a cement quarry he ed: "Left! Dive! Right! Straight! The full dynamite crew was at Level!" believed killed, but all the o The Queen Bee responded perfect- were accounted for several1 ly as a technician pressed the proper later. keys on the control cabinet. A light H. S. Sparks, the superinten on the cabinet flickered on and off knew that his 16-year-old son, S as the apparatus worked. en, was near the dynamite. The big test came when the order was given to land. At the command HISTORIC TOMB FQUND "glide," a button was pressed and, TOKYO, June 26 - P) at 2,000 feet altitude, the Queen Bee TOYO Jne 2 - to came into a smooth glide with the Toyko planned a i hemorial to engine just turning over, an-no Kami, official who acteda The plae seemed to cme down atermediaryforthe government a steeper angle than appeared safe Commodore Perry, his 73-yea but, as the minimum safe height was grandson, Tsurukichi Inouye, wa attained, an automatic device was covered as an inmate of a mun brought into play which started the charity home. Through him engine roaring once more and allowed found the grave of the "go-bet% the airplane to settle in a graceful marked by a Buddhist monumer landing. The Queen Bee type looks like a of Queen Bees are being used for normal airplane, except that it is con- nery practice. Their range of structed of wood instead of metal. The trol, according to the ministry, air ministry revealed that a number miles from their radio station. Ihas cord- herty, h and ham- h the r had* effort ;harpi- es 10 and run, meter ump, r two iurior vents e will red sion UP) - arkers huge shale ion of ire. t first others hours ndent, teph- When Shin- as in- with ar- old is dis- icipal they ween" nt. gun- con- New York . ...... . Pittsburgh......... St. Louis .......... Chicago ......... . Brooklyn .......... Cincinnati ......... Philadelphia ....... Boston............ W .:41 ..38 ..36 . .33 ..28 ..26 ..22 ..18 L 17 27 26 27 31 36 36 42 Yesterday's Results Pittsburgh 4-5, Boston 2-1. Chicago 2, New York 5. St. Louis 5, Brooklyn 7, (10 innings)., Philadelphia 12, Cincinnati 5. Games Today Philadelphia at Boston (2). Only game scheduled. N.S.L. MEETS TONIGHT The first summer meeting of the Michigan chapter of the National Student League will be held at 8 p. m. tonight in Room 304 of the Union. The coming American Youth Con- gress, to be held July 4-7 in Detroit, will be the chief topic for discussion. - -- - -- --- Beliefs That Cancer Is Either Contarious Or Infectious False This is the fourth of the series of shortsarticles, sponsored by the Mich- igan State Medical Society, in which the essential facts of cancer are made clear. There are a number of common misunderstandings about cancer which have contributed largely to human unhappiness in connection with this disease. Cancer is neither contagious nor infectious. In all the world's history there is, no authen- tical example of a physician, nurse or other attendant acquiring cancer from a patient. In experimental can- cer in animals it is found that even when the young suckle a cancerous mother they do not catch the disease. One need have no fear of acquiring cancer by either direct or indirect ous because, of this belief. In some countries they were excluded from general hospitals and forced to shift for themselves. From time to time claims are made that the "germ" of cancer has been discovered. None of these claims have survived critical study and the best opinion is that there is no possibility that cancer is caused by a germ. A cancer is an actual part of the indi- vidual, lawlessly growing within his body. Also, cancer is not a "blood-poison- ing" and has nothing to do with "bad blood." Neither has it anything dis- graceful about it. Many people have the strange notion that cancer is for Every Department are anttes of USED BOOKS that are priced to your advantage! NOTEBOOKS, FOUNTAIN PENS, ART SUPPLIES, Etc., Etc. at - S - - M. - amok, 11 I