FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY Linguistic Group Will Hear Fries Talk On Hebrew The News Of The World As Illustrated In Associated Press Pictures Y 2 Professors Hebrew as a modern language will provide material for two of the four lectures announced by Prof. CharlesI C. Fries, the director, for the coming, week's program of the Linguistic In- stitute. Dr. Zellig Harris of the University of Pennsylvania will discuss Wednes- day evening "The Revival of Hebrew" and will continue Friday evening with Linguistic Changes and Tendencies in the New Hebrew." He has spoken previously on the institute series, hav-' ing talked on "The Origin of the Al- phabet" earlier in the summer. For the Tuesday luncheon confer- ence Dr. Fries has secured the serv- ices of Prof. George Kennedy of Yale University. Professor Kennedy, a member of the summer faculty of the Institute, will tell about "An Experi- ment in Chinese Language Teaching." Thursday noon the topic, "Inves- tigating Vowel Length in French," will be presented by Dr. Pierre De- lattre of Wayne University, Detroit. New Exhibit Of Feature Next Faculty Concert Prof. Wassily Besekirsky, violinist, and Prof. Joseph Brinkman, pianist will present a sonata recital at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, in Hill Auditorium, as the next concert in the Faculty Con- cert series. They will open their program with the Brahms "Sonata in A Major, Opus 100," one of the three sonatas which Brahms wrote for violin and piano. Its three movements are "Al- legro amabile," "Andante tranquillo," and "Allegretto grazioso." This will be followed by the "Se- guida Espanola," by Joachim Nin, a modern Spanish composer This suite was originally written as a soprano solo, and the arrangement which Pro- fessors Besekirsky and Brinkman will play, done by the composer, has just recently been published. The per- formance Tuesday night will be its first in Ann Arbor. The suite is writ- ten in the traditionally Spanish rhythms. In the first movement, "Vieja Castilla," the composer in- troduces a sixteenth century folk tune. The other movements are "Murciana," "Catalana," and "An- daluza." Professors Besekirsky and Brink- man will play the Schubert "Fan- taisie, Opus 159," to close the pro- gram. This piece is considered one of the greatest in ensemble literature. Although it is not written strictly in form, it consists of an introduction,, followed by an allegro movement, with a set of variations as a second section, and a lively finale movement. Iu Eastern Art Is Put OnDisplay Chinese Rubbings, Chien Tea Bowls And Textiles Are Featured (Continued from Page 1) pects of Chinese culture," Professor Plumer said. "First, for philosophical and religious aspects; second, for daily life and material culture, and third, for a demonstration of the art of the stone cutter, developed here to a remarkable degree. "The sites of the original monu- ments from which the rubbings were made are scattered all over China, mostly in the north, but stretching from the easterly tip of Korea to Ch'eng-tu in the west. The prints were made by hand, by means of damp paper pressed on the monu- ment, deriving a. very accurate ink impression." Four Rubbings Groups There are four chronological groups of the rubbings, Professor Plumer pointed out; the Wu family tombs of the Han dynasty, from 206 B.C. to 220 A.D.; the Buddhist sculp- tures from single monuments or re- liefs from cave temple walls and ste- lae of the Six Dynasty period, 386 to 589 A.D., which includes rubbings from the famous female donors of Lungmen, in recent years completely destroyed; the T'ang designs from the Great Wild Goose Pagoda of Sian, 618 to 906 A.D.; and the Sixteen Iohan disciples of Buddha, copies of paint- ings long since lost, of about the 16th century. The Chien, or Temmoku tea bowls, together with' a number of kiln-site fragments, will be on exhibit in the North Gallery. They form the largest exhibit of Temmoku work ever pre- sented in America. "The Chinese are the best potters in the world," Profes- sor Plumer said, and the Temmoku bowls are among their finest work." . Proves Common, Source The purposes of this exhibit, he said, are to present as art the whole range of Temmoku tea bowls, to prove the common source for the giant bowls, to differentiate between the genuine Temmoku and contemporary imitations, and to end an argument which has long existed among schol- ars as to the place the bowls came from. Professor Plumer has collected actual kiln site material to effectually settle the dispute. The bowls are all from the Sung age, 960 to 1280 A.D. They are ex- tremely popular in Japan, according to Professor Plumer, where tea-drink- ing amounts almost to a fetish, con- tests being held in the sport, and where the Temmoku bowls are re- garded with reverence. The textiles from the East Indies which form the third major part of the exhibit, include colorful blankets from Burma, examples of tie-dyeing from Cambodia and of the batik pro- cess of Java. The latter is a method by which desigs are blocked out in wax. Ceremonial skirts from Bali and other islands and Buddhist priest robes from Japan are also included, as well as cloths of various kinds1 from Siam, and Sumatra, of which two particular groups, the Abors and Mishmis are represented. Probably the most outstanding ar- ticle in the entire exhibit is a great Han rubbing of a giant embracing a bear cub, Professor Plumer remarked. It is very large, and remarkably clear and accurate. The hours of the exhibit have been extended because of numerous re- quests, and it will now be open to the public until 6 pim. instead of only till 4:30 p.m. as previously, every day except Sunday. DROWNS IN DETROIT RIVER DETROIT, July 31.-(,P)-Walter Kwiatkowski, 28, of Wyandotte, drowned today in the Detroit River, American forces are standing by with full war packs in Peiping, ready to defend the American concession if the Sino-Japanese fighting carried into that city. At the request of the American consulate, American business men started drilling as a volunteer company. Here are U.S. Marines under the shadow of Peiping's ancient walls in a dress parade at the barracks. Where To Go ll Harold E. Dahl (top), of Cham- paign, Ill., one of the American "four flying aces" with Spanish Loyalists, was captured by Insur- gents. His wife, Edith Rogers, (be- low), at Cannes, France, was said to be getting his weekly $1,500 sal- ary. She once sa'ng with Rudy Val- lee's orchestra. Detroit Gets First Theatre: Michigan: "Parnell," with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy; Majes- tic: "Wee Willie Winkle," with Shir- ley Temple and Victor McLaglen; Wuerth: "A Star Is Born," with Janet Gaynor and Frodric March; Or- pheum: "Top of the Town," with Hugh Herbert and Doris Nolan and "Roaring Timber," with Jack Holt. Concert: Carillon Concert at 8:30 p.m. Dancing: Bartlett's aft Pleasant Lake and The Blue Lantern at Island Lake. Archbishop Son DETROIT, July 31.-UP)-Two hun- dred and thirty-six years after An- toine De La Mothe Cadillac planted the Catholic cross on the north bank of the Detroit River, Detroit will be proclaimed Tuesday as the seat of a new ecclesiastical province, uniting MIichigan's Catholics under a single jurisdiction. Impressive services in the Church of the Blessed Sacrament will mark the elevation of Detroit as the sev- enteenth Archdiocese in the United States, and the installation of Arch- bishop Edward Mooney as its first metropolitan. IN Deserted by its passengers and crew, the smouldering hulk of the li ity of Baltimore is shown off Bodkin Point, Md., with police and fire boats attempting to put out the flames. The ship was gutted by fire during an overnight trip from Baltimore to Norfolk, Va. New Type Of Wheat Withstands Ravages Of Black Stem Rust, ST. PAUL, July 28.-(P)-Farmers of the agriculture department, and of the northwest are hailing a new Dr. E. C. Stakman, university plant wheat that has proved itself able to pathologist. withstand the dreaded black stem With hypodermic needles, they in- rust. It is Thatcher spring wheat. jected spores of 150 known strains Fighting the disastrous parasite of rust into wheat stalks. Some 2,- side by side with stalks of Ceres and 364 varieties of wheat were used. I Marquis, Thatcher has come through , Not only has Thatcher withstood almost unscathed while the two old the rust much better than other standbys shriveled and whitened. grains, but it also has passed other Thatcher is a product of 25 years equally important tests, tests for of experimentation by the Minnesota yield, protein content, bread-making Agricultural experiment station and qualities and stalk properties. the United States Department of Ag- Studying representative plantings riculture at University Farm here. on the same farms, experimenters It was made available to farmers in found Thatcher gave an average yield 1934 in widely scattered sections in- of 24-1 bushels an acre where Ceres cluding the rich Red River valley, yielded only 9.1.nBecause Ceres was bread basket of the world, and has hit 70 per cent by rust and Thatcher proved its rust-resisting properties but six per cent, the grains weighed all around. 46.0 and 53.5 pounds a bushel re- Subjected to Epidemics spectively. Thatcher had to be able to take . An All-Around Plant it plenty before it won its spurs. With Thatcher outdid Marquis wheat, hundreds of varieties of susceptible a variety of Red River valley planters wheats, it was put through artificial were reluctant to abandon. Where epidemics of rust. the average Marquis yield in 1935 was Principals in the study were Dr. H. 6.5 bushels an acre, Thatcher's was K. Hayes, of the university's division 27.3. But five per cent of Thatcher of agronomy and plant genetics; Dr. was affected by stem rust, while 86 E. R. Ausemus, associate agronomist per cent of the Marquis, under the same conditions,. fell before the dis- ease. Some other new wheats are better rust-resisters than Thatcher, but they have been found deficient in other qualities. GENE RAYMONDS SAIL HONOLULU, July 31. - (P) - Jeanette MacDonald and Gene Ray- mond of the films sailed today for San Francisco aboard the liner Lur- line after a honeymoon here. White Clothes Cleaned H ighest Quality Always It Pays To Buy the Best That's the Reason Nearly Everybody Says To... anOS* cisANERS 3 SUITS COATS DR ESSES BLOUSES The very fashions every one is asking for, for campus, for va- cation, for sports, for afternoon, for dancing. Misses sizes from 12. Women's sizes, 182 to 262 Tub Frocks Cottons - Linens $2.95 $3.95 $5.00 Values to $10.95 SUITS COATS DRESSES DINNER and EVENING GOWNS $5.00$70 $10.95 $12.95 BIouses $1950 $2.50 One group of CLOSE-OUTS 79c . . . IVA CI " SPECIAL'F Shoe Sale Starts Monday Because we are so badly overstocked on Men's and Women's fine shoes, including Brown's and Black's for Fall wear, our ENTIRE STOCK goes on sale Monday at 1 p.m. at most unusual low prices. Hundreds of pairs must be turned into cash at once. Come and see what can be bought at- SENSATIONS speak a Youth fl Language Young, gay, exciting, Sensations are made for you who are trim in figure and daring in spirit. Although well-nigh weightless, they gently mould and coax youthful curves into rhythmic lines of beauty - yet leave you free as the wind. "PEEKS" - Senation step-in girdle of open-work, two-way stretch material that firmly holds. High waistline and dou- ble-knit back insures a trim sil- houette. Simple to launder - no annoying hooks or bones. $5.00 $2*88 - $3.88 $5.88 - $4*88 I All FLORSHEIM SHOES at SALE PRICES! 1 I