THE MICHIGAN IAILY Summer Session activities are nearing the end of the well-known rope---in fact, the tea dance tomor- : row is to be the last one of the summer. Well, things may near the end, but they don't slow up. . The ,Union was the scene of a Barn Dance Friday and same was well attended, to say the least. Romeo Vance and Dot Vogel seemed to be all of a ) twitch about the square dancing that was going on spasmodically. and Lucile Cool and John Sobesky were truckin' on down in the best campus manner. Frank Kern, Alberta Stein, Evelyn Harv and Edwin Shake were all there bustling around, as was Dierdre McMullen. Nancy Gossard, now the proud owner of a fish bowl, was out doing Ann Arbor the other night with a Purdue man, of all things, named Stan. Tsk, tsk. Jim Boozer, Mary Bell, Marion Daily and Dick Dick, (were they discussing Baden-Baden or Bali-Bali? Or was it Walla Walla?) were also seen in various promi- nent spots about the city. Liz Patton, that exotic little number from Detroit, was with Ed Drury. Al Conrath was dancing with Joan Savage, and as for the stags-Bob Christy, Bob Benford, Paul Cameron and Stan Birleson. A big swimming fray came off Friday night at Barton with people like Jack Meohlman, Bill Wood, Jane Wilson, John Dice, Helen Culley, Art Hopkins, Ed Perkins, Foss Terry, Jean Moehlman, Ted Guthe, Mary Anderson and Marty Graham 'doing the wallowing around. Among the many at the mellerdrammer at the League Friday was Bill White, so they say. Saturday was a good night, too. A crowd at a downtown restaurant that night included Mary Ellen Wheeler, Dwight Adams, Al Lee, Cy Bernhard, Morlye Baer, (ssh, it's an actor!) Carl Kessler, Margaret Neafie, Joe Karpinski and Bobby Grif- fin., .a ± , Rose Marie and Bud Dawe were at Walled Lake Satur- day, and so were Jack Pedigo and Dorothy Houlle, the litt'le gal with the big eyes, Seems that the roller-coaster out there is a killer, and strikes terror to the hearts of the bravest. Jenny Petersen and Bob Weeks flounced into another downtown restaurant Saturday after a strenuous canoeing session on the nrighty Huron. Trudy Dole and Austin Beebe went to Loch Alpine Tuesday afternoon for a slight swim. The tea dance Wednesday, the next to the last, brought out Mark Cheever, Marie McElroy, Betty Dickens, Jo-Clark Kimball, Elsie Jensen, who spent last year on the Continent, by the way, Bart Myers, Al Conrath, Don Lanby, Juanita Pardon and Mary Jean O'Donnell. Esther Lapointe gave an elegant splash party Saturday afternoon in the Lapointe pool for the benefit of 10 of her pals from Ann Arbor and its Proposed Bridge Over Straits Of Mackinac Showun By Diagram - - '4Z, A X AMACKINAW 4 VT*WL ~enth 5.17 Miles Main Span 1700 Feet Cleorrnce ISO fcee Proyide for two tane hiqhway gri siglfroick. roilway E~timoted costS*52, 400,000. PROPOSEiD MACKINAC STR.A ITS bPD~. Prof. Cressey Tells Of Travels Over 16,000 Miles Of Siberia TODAY AT 2:00 and 3:45 P.M. NOW PLAYING THE YEAR'S MOST EXCITING ROMANCE! environs. Fee Menefee, Madalyn Cad- agan, Mary Ervin, Bettl Bonisteel, Mary Jane Lutz, Evelyn DeBorde, Joe Chapin and Alice Wagner were the beauties that swam and stuffed them- selves with the "light" lunch that fol- lowed the pool activities. More stunning athletes (the real McCoy, too) turn out for these fran- tic intramural baseball games. John E. McCoy, Bob Mueller, Bob Angley, and Ham Morris all lend their bit to the cause. Westwood is still a good spot in the summer time, and last night Dick Shroth, Margaret Beck- ham, Doug Miller, went out to hear Horace Heidt. Clayton Hepler went to Coloma over the week end to visit his friend Francesse Selter. i 1 (Continued from Page 1) hitherto unsuspected mineral re- serves. The complex mountains south of the Angara shield are also tremen- dous reservoirs of mineral wealth, hex said.t In all, at least a trillion tons ofi coal probably exist within the boundsi of the Soviet, one eighth of the en-z tire world's supply. The Kuznetz Basin on the upper Ob is known to- contain upwards of 450 billion tons, and the, partially-explored Tunguskat area between Lake Baikal and thet Pacific Ocean is suspected to con- tain as much. With oil, the Soviet is not so wellr supplied, and yet estimates show thatl it ranks second to the United States and possibly first in the world in oil potentialities. The Russo-Japanese Island of Saghalin, the Baku area on. the western shores of the Caspian Sea, and the partially-tapped Emba. area to the north and northeast of the7 Caspian Sea tare the chief sources. "The Soviet," said Professor Cres- sey, "has all the natural resources" needed for the development of a great material and industrial nation." Another great untapped Siberian resource is "white coal"-water pow- er-to be found in .abundance in its great north-flowing rivers. On the Angara River, which flows out of Lake Baikal, one of the largest inland lakes in the world and a gigantic natural reservoir, the Soviet government is building a power settlement which may eventually prove of greater size and capacity than the Grand Coulee project on the Columbia River. Climate, he said, is one of the most forbidding factors in the colonization of Siberia, which is being extensively attempted by the Soviet Government, with partial success, and is due main- ly to "continentality"-the fact that Siberia is situated in the northern- most portion of the greatest land- mass on earth. At the small vil- lage of Oimekon a January tempera- ture of -104 degrees fahrenheit, has been recorded. The entire country suffers from inadequate rainfall, all of which comes from the Atlantic Ocean. When the rain-bearing winds strike elevated lands, however, they quickly divest themselves of their moisture. For instance, on the wind- ward side of the Sian Mountains, which rise to a height of 8,000 or 9,- 000 feet, around 50 inches of rain falls per year. The arctid nature of the country is also manifested in anotherunpleas- ant mariner. Three and one half- million square miles of Siberia--an area larger than the continental Unit- ed States-is frozen ground the en- tire year around. Borings, which the Russians are fond of taking, have revealed in one place at least, that the ground was frozen to a depth of 980 feet. Divided into vegetative regions, Si- beria consists of three regions, the arctic tundra, the Taiga, or great northern forest, over which Prof es-f sor Cressey flew 3,000 miles, and the Steppes which lie just north of the great Turkestan deserts. Although most ofmthe Taiga consists of material too small for commercial purpo'ses, it is so vast that the small part which is of a usable size constitutes a tre- mendous timber reserve. The soils of Siberia are of cwo kinds -the podsols, or acid soils, of the forests and the black chernozen soils to the south of the forests. The lat- ter are the finest soils in the world and are found in Siberia to about four times the extent to which they are found in the wheat regions of North America. The. first migrations from Czarist Russia to Siberia began in 1581, but it was not until 1913 that the largest wave of migration began. ' In 1913, the population of Siberia was ap- proximately ten million. Today it is; twent'-five million. Dr. Cressey will speak again at 4:30 p.m. today on "Man Transforms Siberia," concerning political and so- cial forces at work in the Soviet. Dr. Imlay Maps Sonora Desert With the aid of a Mexican helper cal survey of those islands fort who has accompanied him on pre- purpose of ascertaining the exte vious expeditions, Dr. Ralph W. Im- of petroleum deposits. lay of the University Museums is en- gaged this summer in the making of I geological maps of the dry hot So- Give Supper Dance nora Desert of western Mexico. He A is searching for an old ocean shore- Tonigh At Leag line, which he hopes, to identify by_____ means of marine fossils. Study of The second annual. Cabaret Su the results will be carried on next year in the paleontology department per Dance sponsored by the Wome of the museums. Education Club will be given fr Dr. Imlay's Mexican helper serves 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. today int him -as chauffeur, guide, and inter- Ballroom of the League. Mary-E preter. This trip he has not been Shannon is the general chairman able to serve him as a guide, but the affair. rather has had to be guided, for the Tickets for 300 guests have b two have always worked hitherto in sold, and guests plan to reserve tab eastern Mexico, separated from the to accommodate parties or to atte western part by the impassible Sierra the function alone and be seated w Nevada Range. It was necessary for a group. A floor show including Dr. Imlay to secure the man a pass- play entitled "A Jury Panel to E port into the United States before All Jury Panels," written by Dr. W he could conduct him to this year's 'Trow, specialty numbers by memb scene of operations, by way of El of Zwick's orchestra, and an exh Paso, Texas, and Douglas; Ariz. tion square dance directed by I Prof. Lewis B. Kellum, who is on Parker have been planned. leave of absence from the Geology The Women's Education Club, Department, is in the employ of the organization of the Summer Sess Vacuum Oil Company of New Zea- plans to make the affair an ann land this summer, making a' geologi- I event. they ent ue Lup- en's on the liza of een bles end rith tg a End . C. bers ibi- van an ion, nual 1 - f .1 I Here's Your Ticket! I', CWeddingS N, and LA I KATHARINE HEPBURN CARY GRANT Cngagements Thomson-Almand Lucy Dorn Almand, '38, of Buffalo, N.Y., and Frederic Arthur Thomson, Jr., '39, of Detroit, were married in a simple ceremony performed here yesterday before a few relations and friends in the First Baptist Church, the Rev. Howard Chapman officiat- ing. Mrs. Thomson is the daughter of Mrs. Lucy Dorn Almand of Buffalo, Thomson is the Frederic A. Thom- son of the Ford Motor Car Co. Mrs. Almand attended her daugh- ter, while Albert P. Mayio, '39, edi- torial director of the Daily, attended Thomson, who is affiliated with Tri- gon fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Thomson will make their home in Dearborn. DANCING Toe, tap, acrobatics. Taught daily. Terrace Garden Studio. Wuerth Theatre Bldg. Ph. 9695 v 2nd Floor. Open eves. tote Y vr~d s gye~A :t ,agtC a Nr i Read Daily Classified Ads lce Cream Social Receipts Total $227 Receipts from the Ice Cream Social given at Palmer Field July 22 to aid needy Chinese students amounting to $227 were paid to the Chinese group, according to Miss Ethel McCormick, social director of the Summer Ses- sion. Of that amount $14 came from the sale of brooches sponsored by Mr. Yee and Mr. Chong. Gifts netted the committee $13.10, and $66.15 was Turned in from the cabaret dancing that was given on the tennis courts. The bulk of the amount was received from the sale of gingerale, ice cream and cake, however, as $133.15 was turned in from that source. If rain hadn't put a stop to the activities at 11 p. m. the Social would have netted approximately twice that amount, Miss McCormick stated. Last Times Today. -- WALLACE BERRY FRANK MORGAN "PORT OF SEVEN SEAS" N11 Style Show Today and Every Day in the Pages Of the Michigan Daily TODAY, in Ann Arbor you can wear the same dresses that are being shown in the smart Fifth Ave- nue shops! Today, in the Daily ads of Ann Arbor's merchants you can attend the greatest style show on earth . . . a style show that features the finest creations of the outstanding designers. Don't miss a single issue of the Daily . . . don't miss a single ad 4- rr-- Ii WEDNESDAY LLOYD NOLAN I HALLER'S because if you do you'll miss style news that is I r wm u IIIII i3I 11 P 1I E