THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Niagara Falls Heads Session Excursion List Put-In Bay And Greenfield Village Also Included On Program For Summer (Continued from Page 1) in Dearborn will be visited. The schools of the Cranbrook Foundation in. Bloomfield Hils will be the scene of the fourth Zxcursion, Saturday, July 9. The buildings at Cranbrook are noted for their architectural dis- unction, and the teaching methods used are unique. The Ford plant tour will be repeat- ed the following Wednesday, July 13, for those students who missed the original trip. Friday, July 15, a group will leave for a four-day expedition to Niagara Falls by bus and lake boat. The trip will be conducted by Prof. Irving D. Scott of the geology department, who will lecture on the geologic features of the Niagara re- gion. The group will return to Ann Arbor at 10 am. Monday. Greenfield Village, Henry Ford's museum of early Americana and his typical Michigan town of four score years ago, will be visited Wednesday, July 20, and on the following Satur- day a group will Journey to Milford to inspect the General Motors prov- ing grounds, a 1268-acre laboratory for the carrying out of tests on all makes of automobiles The tour of Greenfield Village will be repeated July 27, and on Wednes- day, Aug. 3, chartered buses will take a group to the Put-In-Bay dock on the Detroit River, where the steamer will leave for Put-In-Bay Island, with its caves, amusement park, and other interesting features. This excursion will also be conducted by Professor Scott. Students interested in these excur-, sions should not fail to make reser- vations at 1213 Angell Hall not later than 5 p.m. of the day before the trip, is to be held. Further information on the trips will be found on campus bulletin boards and in subsequent is- sues of the Daily. Auto Ban On StartingToday- Three Classes Of Students Exempt From Rules (Continued from Page 1) 150 Michigan Students At Work In University Summer Camps preceding year and to the license of the car which will be driven. If this procedure is neglected for any reason, students in the exempted group are required to report the make, type and license number of the car at Room 2, University Hall. All students who are not exempt under the above classifications must obtain driving permits at the Office of the Dean of Students, Room 2, University Hall, and it is especially emphasized that the filling out of the registration card devoted to auto- mobiles does not constitute a per- mit to drive. As in the regular year, permits are issued for family, business, commut- ing, chauffeuring, and health pur- poses, and in addition, recreational permits are available for the summer term. This latter type of permit does not grant complete personal use of a car, 'but is limited to transportation for outdoor athletic recreation, for example, golf, tennis, and swimming. Passengers may be carried in con- nection with these activities but mixed company in a car will not be permitted after 9 p.m. in the evening. After that hour, any driving which includes mixed company will be con- sidered as social rather than recrea- tional and will be interpreted as a violation. With the exception of the recreational feature, the social and personal use of a car will not be al- lowed. The regulation governs the use of a car as well as the operation of one; consequently, it is not per- missible for a student to use his car or a family-owned car for social, personal or any other purpose when the car is driven by any person who is not a member of his immediate family. Detailed and specific information regarding individual permits will be given by officials in charge of the administration of this regulation, and consequently, violations will not be excused on the basis of misunder- standing. Wyoming, Colorado And Upper Peninsula Scenes Of Outdoor Schoolwork Four camps, two in the forests of northern Michigan and two in the mountains of Wyoming and Colorado, will provide "campus" atmosphere for more than 150 students in biology, forestry, geology and surveying this summer. The University was a pioneer in the establishment and maintenance of camps for summer field work, organ- izing Camp Davis in 1874, now located in Jackson's Hole, Wyo. Camp Davis will this year continue to serve as a summer instruction camp for sur- veying students and will provide one. base from which geology students may study the surrounding forma- tions. Geology students will spend the first three weeks of the session at the camp at State Bridge, Colorado where the permanent camp was held last year, and will then travel to Camp Davis, visiting the Teton Moun- tains and Great sSalt Lake in the course of the trip. Detailed geologic examination and mapping of selected areas will occupy most of their time during the session. The purpose of the field course in surveying is to give students of civil engineering or of geodesy and survey- ing a thorough training in field prac- tice. Every effort is made to make the field conditions similar to those which the engineer is likely to en- counter in the practice of his pro- fession. Field practice in the territory surrounding Camp Davis will occupy the entire session. The largest camp maintained by the University is the biological sta- tion on the shores of Douglas Lake in Cheboygan County, in the north- ern part of Michigan's Lower Penin- sula. Here the niversity owns and maintains the Bogardus Tract, a for- ested area of more than 3,900 'acres, with a combined lake frontage on Douglas and Burt Lakes of more than six miles. The station lies in the so- called transition zone between the evergreen coniferous region to the north and the deciduous hardwood forest region to the south, present- ing types of vegetation common to both sections. A sizeable tract of pine, all virgin timber, located about 70 miles to the south, gives the students an opportunity to study the pine for- est in its original condition. The School of Forestry and Con- servation maintains Camp Filibert Roth, located in Iron CouW y in the Northern Peninsula. Here practical field instruction is given in mapping of timbered lands, measurement of forest products, fire prevention and control, and construction and main- tenance of forest improvements. Visits are made to nearby logging operations and various kinds of wood- using industries. Since the camp is located within the Ottawa National Forest, excellent opportunities are offered to observe and study Federal administration of forests, parks, and game refuges. Dr. Bell Leaves For N.Y. Meet Mitchell Alo Will Attend j Education Parley Dr. Margaret Bell. dircor of phy- sical Education for Women and head Medical Adviser for women at the Health Service, left here Saturday for New York; City, where she will attend th e annual convention of the Nation- al Education Association to be held there throughout next week. As president-elect of the American Association for Health, Physical Ed- ucation and Recreation, and repre- senting Dr. Neils Neilson of Stanford University, present president and new executive secretary of the organiza- tion, she will address the N.E.A. at a luncheon meeting tomorrow. Prof. Elmer Mitchell, director of REDEMPTION' ABANDONED MEXICO CITY, June 26-OP)-The Mexican Government tonight de- cided to abandon its plan for a "na- tional redemption" bond issue of $22,- 000,000 for partial reimbursement of foreign oil companies Intramural activities at the Univer- sity and several members of the faculty of the School of Education will also attend the meeting. Mr. Mitchell is secretary-editor of the American Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation. Dr. Bell just returned to the campus after spending her sabbatical year doing medical and educational work in New York City and vicinity.. Ypsi Man Dies YPSILANTI, June 26.-(R)-Frank G. Helle, 53, was found dead with a Droken neck in his home here today. 1oroner Bradley M. Harris said a sash cord was tied around Helle's neck and that the other end was fast in a vise on his work bench. He said Helle apparently had fallen over back- wards. I Keep COOL g by Taking a Dip Slip into a swim suit and seek a calm beach by Taking a Tip Slip into a clean suit be it White or Palm Beach I UA i Typewriters Sales (new and used) Rentals Repairing Fountain Pens Sales Repairing (by penmQkers) Supplies Notebooks Paper Ink "Quality and Service" Iii Cloth pores must be clean for utmost coolness . the superior cleaning and care we give summer clothes is exemplified in the approval given us by the Goodall Co., sole makers of Palm Beach. RIDER'S 302 South State Street Phone 23m23-Il GREE NE'S, MICROCLEANEtS 510.516 asAt Liberty I ® #~l.l V .J 1' V .i 6.lsi i i-IR IG 4x Ii' IA HEY UST DoN'T TEA SOME THINGS IN SCHOC TAKE LAUNDERING, for instance. We learned what___ we know, right here in Ann Arbor, from experience. Our Price perib. . years of business in Ann Arbor have taught us that an S A M P L E Minimum Bundle 50c increasingly larger number of students are taking ad- B U N D L E vantage of the convenience and money saving principles shirts Extra . . involved in having their laundry done in Ann Arbor. As 2 Suits of Underwear (Full Dress Shirts are not included in this Special 3 Shirts a result we are prepared to give you the optimum in 6 Handkerchiefs laundry service, convenient call for and delivery service, 3 Pairs of Socks Sox Extra, per pair . guaronteed careful and efficient work, and prices de-2BahTwl signed for the students' budget. Why bother with ship- ping a laundry box home and risking an uncertain return Cost.... 99CH andkerchiefs, Extra . date when you may have clean, white, unruffled laundry returned to you every week? Service to families is one of our specialties. Phone for our representative today for com- KYER LAUNDRY HpAeteinformation, VARSITY LAUNDI Phonie 4185 Phone 23-1-23 ~H )L iOc 12c Price) c4 tY N" i 11 I I