THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1D31 PAGE THREE NEWS Of The DAY (By The Associated Press) U.S. Arctic Expedition Prepares For Take-Off NEW YORK, June 30.-(P)-An American Arctic expedition which plans to parallel work of the Rus- cians at the North Pole and pay them a visit in an autogyro rushed final preparations today for its north- ward journey. An ice cream freezer, an electric washing machine, deck quoits, an electric air purifier and even prac- tice driving mats for golfers with "captive" balls were among oddities i being loaded aboard the three-mast-1 ed schooner General A. W. Greeley, scheduled to sail tomorrow for the far North from Port Newark, N. J. Eleven Americans headed by C. J. McGregor, on leave from his job as government meterologist at Newark airport, will live through two sum- mers of continuous daylight and a winter of darkness at Fort 'Conger, on Lady Franklin Bay. That's just about as far North as they can get on the straits between Greenland and Ellesmere Island and still be sure they are on land and not an ice floe. Stuart Chase Urges 'New Equilibrium' In NEA Talk DETROIT, June 30.-RP)-A "new equilibrium" which will "meet na-{ ture's demands and at the same time will allow us the benefits of the ma- chine" was urged by Stuart Chase,, author and lecturer, tonight as the only manner of conserving natural resources of the United States. Chase spoke at the 75th annual convention of the National Educa- tion Association, which will close its sessions here Thursday. He warned that "what is taken from the land must be replaced" and told the teachers that "we must cease living on our capital." Guardsman Destroys Explosives Women's Rules Are Discussed At House Tea Contract Bridge Lessons To Be Given Wednesday! Esperanto Classes Being Held Daily; Instruction Is Free Casses in the international lan- guage, Esperanto, are in session at 9 a.m. daily in Room B3 of the Ann Arbor High School. Instruction is SPORTS ENTRY BLANK Intramural Sports Department All men students are eligible for competition in the following sports. Check on the list below the sports in which you wish to participate. No Entry Fee Is Required The Intramural Sports Department will make drawings and sched- ules, furnish equipment needed for team sports, and provide officials for the contests where necessary. Notification of opponent and time of play will be mailed to each participant. Evening Each Week without charge. Those enrolling may do so either today or Friday and are Hope Hartwig, '38, president of requested to equip themselves only the League, explained the League with pencils and notebooks. No text social activities for the Summer Ses- will be used. The course will be1 sion and Janet Allington talked about completed during the Summer Ses- women's hours at a tea held at 4 sion. p.m. Thirty-five graduate houses The international language first were represented. appeared almost 50 years ago and Contract bridge lessons will be giv- was initiated by a Jewish physician; Softball. Swimming Golf Tennis Singles Tennis Doubles Handball Singles ( ) ( ) ( ) Archery Horseshoe Singles Horseshoe Doubles ( (C ( 4I ) ) ( ) Squash Table Tennis Badminton Codeball Sigma Delta Psi ( (C ( (C ( ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) en at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday eve- } nings with Ana Thornton, '38, inl charge. At 8 p.m. on Tuesday nights1 a duplicate bridge group will be held.+ There will be weekly and monthly prizes and a tournament at the end xx% of the season. Weekly dancing classes have also been planned., The beginning class nwillbe held from 7:30 until 8:30 p.m. on Monday and Wednesday evenings1 in the League Ballroom, and the in- -Associated Press Photo termediate class will be held from Licpt. Larkin, of the 112th Engineers, Ohio National Guards, is shown 7:30 until 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday and here at Warren, O., adjusting the fuse on a nitro-glycerine bomb prep- Thursday. The fox-trot, waltz and tango will be taught. Barbara Nel- aratory to destroying illegal explosives seized in a raid at Warren. son, '35, is assisting Miss Ethel A. iPolice said they had uncovered a plot for systematic bombings in War- McCormick, director, with the classes. ren, one of the many cities hit by the strike called by the.Steel Workers The dances started last Saturday Organizing Committee. night will be continued this Saturday 3333_night and will be held every Friday and Saturday for the remainder of Students Durin Sum er Need the Summer Session. There will be Tea Dances every Wednesday fror a ( 3:30 until 5:30 p.m. There will be Wardrobe Which Is Extenswe no charge for these dances. On July 13 there will be a Faculty Wives Tea in the League Garden andl Raincoats, Bathing Suits purse and linen sandals. on July 16 the Michigan Dames will Will Perhaps Get Most For the few formal occasions, Women interested in acting as nothing is so fresh and crisp as the hostesses for the dances on Friday Use In Local Climate organdies, and these reign in the and Saturday nights may call Jean By LORTENSE W. GILMORE summer. Very good in organdies are Geyer at 7117 for Friday night or By HRTENE W.GILMR.E the princess styles in white worn over Phyllis Miner at 2-3281 for Saturday, Now that you're safely settled after h night. a variety of colors ranging from bur- Women's hours will be 11 p.m. on isat necessa trbme tiingf yr gundy through yellow to delphinium week days, 1:30 p.m. on Friday nights, is necessary to be thinking of your blue. One organdy dress worn over 12:30 p.m. on Saturday and 11 p.m. wardrobe for the summer and the different colors can serve any smart on Sunday nights, according to Miss clothes and what-not that will be Allington. Mrs. Byrl F. Bacher, act- necessary for your stay in Ann Arbor. student throughout the summer. 3 ing dean of women, poured at the tea. For the softer more flowing effect, The complete wardrobe of the mod- you should take a chiffon. One de- ern coed in the Summer Session will lightful gown of this variety is fash- Carillon Opens beof necessity composed of many ioned with unpressed pleats from the things-clothes for classes, bathing waistline. The bodice is cut with a suits, beach robes, a raincoat for the low decolletage and tied with a saucy First Vesp er sometimes unexplainable Ann Arbor bow. They are especially delightful weather sheers for evening dinners. in white. -n-w. T 'CAi and linguist living in Warsaw in Po- Handball Doubles ( )C land. Perhaps half a million people ( )k know and use Esperanto at the pres- ent time. It has a large and con- Please indicate partner's nam stantly growing literature. One hun- dred periodicals appeared regularly Name.....................Addres during the last year and over 1,500 Mail or bring this blank to R. radio broadcasts were given in Es-a i sor rintramurto R. peranto.I and Supervisor of Intramural Spore TheInternational Auxiliary Lan- Field. All entries close at 5 p.m., Tb guage Association with headquarters in New York City has conducted under the supervision of Prof. Edward Many To Come For L. Thorndike of the Department of c Psychology of Teachers' College of High School Cinie Columbia University since 1927 a series of experiments with a view to determining the relative of learning Students, supervisors and teachers for Esperanto and for other lan- from all over the state will gather guages, as well as the value of pre- here for three weeks from July 5 till vious training in Esperanto in the July 24 for the second annual high learning of other languages. I school clinic for band, orchestra and ___nig ____h___nguge._ chorus conducted by the School of Music under the chairmanship of Handball Tournament Prof. William D. Revelli. Will Start Next Week Four well known guest conductors and instructors have been engaged to Play in the intramural handball supplement the regular Summer Ses- tournament will start Tuesday, July sion faculty. They are Harold Bach- 13, it was announced yesterday by mann, director of the University of Randolph W. Webster. All entries Chicago band, Ralph Rush, director must be in by July 8 at 5 p.m. of bands and orchestras at Cleveland Tournaments in both singles and Heights High School, Cleveland, O.,' doubles will be arranged. There are Clifford B. Lillya, director of the 14 courts available for summer ses_- Marshall High School Band, Chicago, sion students who wish to take ad- and Arthur Schwuchow of Louisville, vantage of them, and they will be Ky.h open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily. Last The students will be housed by the year Mr. M. Greenstein won the Unversity, the boys going to the singles tournament and Mr. L. 01- Meal willabe served toMoshe Jordan son was the runner-up. girlsilthesUnion. ____ girls in the Union. e in space below doubles entries. ss.....................Phone..... W. Webster, director of program rts, Intramural Sports Bldg., Ferry 'hursday, July 8. Hoot Gibson Fails To Ride For Circus Hoot Gibson, hero of wild western thrillers, was enjoined yesterday from performing for the Hagenbeck-Wal- lace circus here. Circuit Judge Earl Pugsley granted the temporary injunction on petition of the Macon Circus Equipment Co., which operates the-Wallace Bros. cir- cus. The petitioner contended Gibson, a headliner for its show, had Tuesday walked out at Gary, Ind., and joined the Hagenbeck-Wallace rival circus here. Wallace Bros. Circus was in Elgin, Ill., yesterday. SOCIAL DANCING Toe, tap, acrobatics. Taught daily. Terrace Garden Studio. Wuerth Theatre 1 dg. Ph. 9s95 2nd Floor. Open eves. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) eral Library. Luncheon Conference: Michigan Union, Thursday, July 1 at 12:10 o'clock Round Table Discussion: Topic: "The Problems of the Pho- neme." Leaders: Professors Knott, Bloch and Sapir. German T:-ible: Students of Ger- man and others interested in prac- tice of oral German are invited to take part in a German table organ- ized by the Department of German, meeting in the Lantern Shop, 703 E. University Ave. (opposite University High School). Meals at various price levels are served between 12 and 2 pm., and 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Further information may be obtained at the office of the German Department, 204 U.H. Intramural Department: Building Hours: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., daily except Sundays and holidays. Pool Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 12 noon. 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Daily except Sunday and holidays. Advanced Russian: All Summer Session students who wish to pursue a course in advanced Russian should consult immediately with Professor Meader or leave word at his office, 2022 Angell Hall. C. L. Meader. Excursion No. 2, Saturday, July 3:1 A day in Detroit. The group will visit the Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit Public Library, Belle Isle, Fisher Building and Radio Broad- casting Station WJR, and Detroit Zoological Garden. Round trip will be by bus. Reservations must be made in the office of the Summer Session, Room 1213 Angell Hall, by 5 p.m. Friday afternoon, July 2. The trip ends at about 5:30 p.m. at Ann Arbor.t Rotarians Registered in the Sum- er Session: Attention is called to the Conference of the International Service Committees of the Rotary Clubs of the State to be held in Ann Arbor, next Wednesday and Thurs-l' . WAL, i ZIVub l , A 11 GVG11r A11G.., and not to forget, formal apparel for the few occassions this summer. Woolen Suits Reign Perhaps one of the most used parts of your wardrobe and one that is absolutely indispensable is the bath- ing suit. Every student will have op- portunity to go swimming many times, and so should have the proper dress for those delightful moments in the, water. The rubber bathing suit is becoming, taboo, and it is outmoded by the re-, turn of woolen suits. The best wool- en suits are the two piece ones with a halter neck. The color can be any- thing you like, the gayer the better. Plum and salmon are especially at- tractive. For campus wear, probably the best things available are the searsuckers and the cottons. The searsucker is especially good for that always rushed college student, for they need no iron- ing, are rinsed out in a hurry as well as being cool. Cottons For Campus However, if you wish to take more care of your clothes, there is always the dressier feminine cottons and dot- ted swiss. They give that fresh ap- pearance that makes up for the great- er time and increased amount of f care that must be given them. The sheers, which are the correct things for evening dinners, are us- ually worn 14 or 15 inches from the floor. They are especially popular in navy and black with a large picture hat. Completing this ensemble arek matching fabric - gauntlet gloves, see J. Raleigh Nelson, Room 9,, day, July 7 and 8. The program in-, cludes beside the conferences, a talk; by Prof. Y. Z. Chang at the luncheon of the Ann Arbor Club, Wednesday, noon, on the topic "Whither China," and a Symposium on "Some Aspects' of Modern China," in the Ball Room of the Michigan League at 8:15 Wednesday evening. All Rotarians in the Summer Session are cordially invited to attend. For details of the two-day program, they are asked to Qho fiorth on the Raincoats Necessary A raincoat of some kind is an ab- solute necessity because of the chang- 'ing climate of Ann Arbor. The most convenient type comes in a celophane package which opens into a rain cape. These capes offer an excellent pro- tection for books, and can be easily worn over suit and coat. Some of them have a hood for protection of the hair and hat. For campus wear, strictly sport shoes are the only thing permissible, while for dressier occasions, toeless, heeless, printed linen shoes are the thing. Also, plain linen shoes may be worn. The best shoes for the beach have wooden heels and rubber crepe soles, and are kept on by multicolored straps, while the most practical beach robes are made of towelling. They can be any color to match the suit and should be three quarters or full length. University Hall. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. Esperanto classes will meet daily at 9 a.m. in Room B3, Ann Arbor High School. Anyone may feel free to enroll during the first few days. Instruction without charge. No text. Bring pencils and note books. The area in which The Michigan Daily is delivered by carrier service comprises all streets between Main1 St., east to the city limits. In case you are living outside of this zone, either west of Main St., or outside of Ann Arbor, please call at the Daily offices and give an address within the above zone at which your copy can be delivered. In case this absolutely cannot be arranged, a mailing charge must be paid at the Daily offices be- fore your Daily will be delivered. The Michigan Daily, Circula- tion Dept., J. C. Hall. - - h m, ,® IV ( 1 'I 'tt in/ WHITE 'aI Stand out from the crowd- ook cool and fresh as a daisy for the glorious 4th ... wear WHITE! Our White fash- ons are SPARKLERS . . Come see them! WH ITE COATS Jigger length Sharkskins at $3.95 and $5.00. Linen, Flannel and Shark- skin, three-fourths length at $10.95 upward. LINEN r 1-31 , I '"--Nw-w I Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre TONIGHT at 8:30 'PATH of FLOWERS' TODAY - SATURDAY "HER HUSBAND'S SECRETARY" Jean Muir Bheverly Roberts Warren Hull WHITE SUITS C-O-O-L - smart looking - beautifully tailored Shark- skin - Vita-cool - Non- MODEL (Above)' $10-95 A/ (4 1 1 crushable Linentand.Gabar- dine. Sizes 12 to 20. $7.95 upward. WHITE DRESSES Washable Salynas at $4.95 "?' 5Ii II II I '1 i