4 T'HURSDAY, AUG. 10, 1939 THE WlI(,HTG AN TiATT'Y P .® TL AL " MTJLi.UTUL1N. 1 N 1l 11:T1Y fP d . 1 Thru The Looking Qiass f .... Year At University Of Algiers Is Described By Miss Duesel Ran (1 LP~jde " Student From Worcester Tells Of Arabian Feasts And Trips Into Desert By ALICE nai rir r rirmr ire a Plaids are- deluging the fall fashion marts. Genuine Scotch clan pat- terns are the thing, but American- ized versions in gay color schemes are very attractive too. Skirts, suits and tailored dresses all * stress plaids. And the, pleated-all-around plaid skirt has become a classic part of the coed's ward- robe. This season it has added a jacket, usually [.cardigan style, and be- come a suit. It's new to match a pullover to the plaid color and a cardigan to the background, wear- ing all three at the same time. Some of the more prominent clan plaids are Stewart (red and green), McDuff, (brown, green and blue) and Gordon (Navy and green). These same plaids are also being used for one side of reversible raincoats. In addition to the matching skirts and sweaters of last season, sports manufacturers are offering suede jackets, cardigan style, also dyed to match. Most popular colors are moss green, blue and wine, and the suede is unusually soft and supple. If too much swimming has played havoc with your curls and the sun has changed the texture of your hair to a state resembling rope, now is the time to ' s t a r t reconditioning treatments before a fall permanent. -Brush" your hair faithfully. and have hot oil treat- ments to bring it back / N ,d to a softer, more man- ageable state so that your fall frocks will be topped by a crowning glory instead of an unruly mop. * * * : Wool gabardine is a new pet fabric for fall. It makes smooth tailored clothes, and the dull sheen and fine wale are most flattering to all fig- ures. It's particularly smart in a neat, button-down-the-front model: which helps you dress in firemen's time if you have an eight o'clock. Padded shoulders and a convertible neckline (button it up high or leave it open) are other highlights of this model. * .* * One of the smartest new arrivals in shops here is a greyed blue tailored dress of soft material made by a fa- mous manufacturer of camel's hair coats. This dress features the new three-quarters sleeves and the latest pet of the college girl-a zipped on, detachable hood. The skirt is ex- tremely full and the bodice fastens with round, silver wagon wheel but- tons. A most flattering "first" fall find to start your wardrobe off with. i Mary had a little lamb-so she used it for a coat. A hardy and non- chalant fur for campus S- ~--wear is fleece in a natural shade line in a bright woolen or plaid, some- times even reversible. It's smartest made with that popular cardigan neck- line and built on simple, straight lines ' that you never grow tire t of. By all means, when you choose a fur for college wear, get a tough one that can take the wear and tear of dormitory life. Muskrat, skunk and raccoon (clipped shorter and made new again) are some more of the hardier skins to consider. S I 1 1 L L l i M Dining with Arabian shieks, long camel trips into the Sahara Desert, nights in palm-dotted oases are only a few of the many adventures of her year in Algeria related by Christine Duesel, Summer Session student from Worcester, Mass. Following graduation from Wor- cester State Teachers College and a year of study at Middlebury College, in Vermont, famous language school, Miss Duesel was granted a fellowship by the Institute of International Edu- ca'tion. It was arranged by the French Minister of Education for Miss Duesel to spend her year at the University of Algiers. This is the only one of the 17 national French universities which is located outside of France itself. Part of Miss Deu- sel's work consisted in teaching Eng- lish at the Lycee de Jeune Filles d' Algiers. Despite an active interest in the United States and despite their pur- chases of automobiles, cigarette light- ers and lipsticks, the 'Arabs remain a people apart, Miss Duesel says. She illustrated this by telling of a holy man whom their party met in the desert. He was a very intelligent man who asked innumerable ques- tions about this country and said that he would liked to have visited here. "However, I don't believe he would have cared for it very long," Miss Duesel continued, "for the stream of autos would have disconcerted him and the noise would have invaded his prayers and soliloquies." Although there is squalor outside, the Arab's home is filled with beauty. He is a lover of gardens, good things to eat and the pleasures of life. How- ever not centuries of contact with Western civilization have made him other than an Arab. Awareness of the inevitability of progress was one of her chief impres- sions, Miss Duesel reports. France went into Algeria a little over 100 years ago to colonize it. "Your sense of fairness and justice may suffer as you see the hand of France and Great Britain heavy on these primitive peoples; but you cannot help seeing that civilization has bettered the lot of these peoples," she says. Algerian tribesmen may fling de- fiance to French troops but where the French reign has penetrated, there is science and education. "Perhaps you remember Sidi-Bel- Abbes in Percival Wren's romantic 'Beau Geste'-with its gleaming ram- parts in the desert and behind whose walls a handful of Legionnaires did battle with a horde of savage tribes- men?" Miss Duesel aked. Coming on it one day in North Algeria, she found its outlines as stark and grim in reality as they were in the stirring drama. Mounted troops of the Foreign Legion passed under the windows of her room every morning, dark men in red capes riding on white horses, this is indicative of the color of this Orien- tal city so near to the Occident. Only' 24 hours by boat from Mar- seilles, a few hours by plane from Paris and only a day and a half from the United States on the new clipper airliners, Africa is now brought to our backyard as well as to Europe's. Lawyers' Guild TO Hear Talk Meaning Of Bill Of Rights Is Lockwood's Topic Detroit Attorney Charles C. Lock- wood, former Board of Regents can- didate, will speak at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 323 of the Union before a gathering of the National Lawyers' Guild. An active member of the Guild, Mr. Lockwood will lecture on the sig- nificance of the Bill of Rights and what it means to the lawyer, com- memorating the sesquicentennial an- niversary of the adoption of the amendments as a part of the Consti- tution. The Guild was established here during the spring semester and has become the center of interest to those law students concerned with the pro- gressive development of their pro- fession. In the fall, the Guild hopes to bring such speakers to Ann Arbor as Dean Lloyd Garrison of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin and Judge John Gutnecht of Chicago, president of the Guild. State Can't Meet School Payment, Brown Says LANSING, Aug. 9.-(IP)-Auditor General Vernon J. Brown said today the state would be unable to meet in full a $10,417,781 payment due schools Sept. 15 from' the primary interest fund. "We'll have to send it out in drib- lets as it accumulates," he said. Brown said $2,300,000 remained in the state treasury after payments of $1,600,000 to municipalities as their share fo liquor license fees. Of this sum, $1,750,000 is due counties for gas tax collections. "We keep getting a little poorer," was his comment. The full school aid payment would represent $7.45 for each school child. - TCeddings ". and , Engagemen ts The marriage ceremony of Jane Edmonson, daughter of Dean and Mrs. James B. Edmonson of Cam!- bridge Rd. and Donald King Lewis, son of Mrs. C. K. Lewis of Mt. Pleas- ant, will take place Sept. 9 in the First Presbyterian church in Ann Ar- bor. Miss Edmonson attended the Uni- versity and is affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Lewis will be a senior in the medical school next fall and is a member of Phi Delta Theta and Nu Sigma Nu fra- ternities. Miss Sara Gladys Weir of Calumet and Dr. Carl B. DeForest of New Or- leans were married at a quiet cere- mony on July 5 in Mt. Olivet Episco- pal church at Algiers, New Orleans. Mrs. DeForest, daughter of the late Capt. and Mrs. William Weir of Calu- met, graduated from the University in 1917, and studied later at Columbia University where she received her master of arts degree in 1937. Dr. DeForest, a former Ann Arbor man, received his bachelor of arts de- gree from the University in 1911 and his doctor's degree from the medical school in 1915. Summer Formal To Feature Stevens Earl Stevens and his orchestra Will provide the music for the Summer Session Formal which will be held in the Union ballroom from 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday.' Harriet Thom, chairman of the dance,,revealed that this is the first time in several years that one of the regular social evenings has been changed into a formal dance for the Summer Session students. The dance is open to both stags and couples. Tickets for couples are priced at 70 cents while single tickets cost 35 cents. Dames Hold Bridge Party The Michigan Dames held one of their weekly bridge parties at 2 p.m. yesterday in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Mrs. L. J. Powers won the high score at contract, with Mrs. Thomas L. Broadbent winning at auction. Your films deserve the Best of care - Bring them to GACH'S CAMERA SHOP Nickels Arcade Chinese Political Unity Valuable, Linebarger Says Resistance To Invasion Is Necessity In Conquered And Independent Areas (Conminued from Page 1) the Chinese society itself, according to Dr. Linebarger. If some sort of resistance by the Chinese people tes the Japanese in the occupied areas can be maintained, the Japanese may be driven out, he affirmed. The lec- turer observed that the very weak- nesses of the people that hindered the government of Sun Yat-Sen at the outset in 1911-12 may be the same that will now work to drive the Jap- anese out, an unwillingess to accept a modern government at that time leading to an enormous distribution of arms so that many in the occupied districts know how to handle firearms and are equipped. Also, he told, the puppet states of the Japanese have been badly organ- ized, and, through the policies of Japan, have been misgoverned. If Japan should negotiate a peace and leave China, the United Front government, because of its composi- tion, might very well'help to break up the pattern of the balance of power, Dr. Linebarger declared, as in'its make-up it has the possibilities of re- maining friendly with both democra- cies and totalitarian states; thus, the conflict between the Axis and the de- mocrabies, 'o6ice Japan's power was broken in the East, would be localized to Europe. Dr. Linebarger traced the develop- ment of the present government in China, speaking of the nationalistic movement and the opposition it re- ceived, and of the San Min Chu I, the three principles of the people. Bond Sale Boosts Profit LANSING, Aug. 9. -(P)-- State Treasurer Miller Dunckel said today that his third sale of state-held bond1s yesterday had boosted the profit from the liquidating program to approxi- mately $620,000. TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES. Office and Portable mod- els, bought, sold rented, exchanged, cleaned, and re- paired. Used typewriters. of all makes bought, sold, rented, exchanged, r cleaned, repaired. FOUNTAIN PENS, STATIONERY STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 South state Street Since 1908 Phone 6615 * * * If you're looking for a new suit id try a fly-front jacket instead oft conventional single breasted button style. It is becoming with either small Peter Pan collar or none atE lea, the ned r a all. Canadian-born Frances Carroll, clarinetist, is one of five top-rank girls directing dance orchestras in the United States, and making a big hit, too, if you ask us. Fanny Aronson To Give Dance Acts For BallZ Dance selections from the reper- toire of Fanny Aronson of the New Dance Group and the Bennington School of the Dance will be featured at the Surrealist Ball tomorrow night. Miss Aronson has studied under numerous outstanding dancers in- cluding Martha Graham, Doris Hum- phreys and Charles Weidmann, and is a talented artist in her own right. Two dances of widely differing character will be presented tomorrow night. The first, called Psychopathic Symptom, is a study of the eccen- tricities of psychopathic anomalies as seen through the three short pre- ludes of Scriabine's opus 49. The second, Exile, is an attempt to present the heartbreak and present hopeless outlook of the people of war- torn Spain. Costuming for Miss Ar- onson will be created by James Doll of Play Production. Results Of Language Recordings Are Told' Last Russian Tea To Be Held Today (Continued from Page 1) outline briefly the history of the modern scientific approach to the study of unwritten tongues, pointing out that the first planned experiment with a whole class studying an in- formant's speech over a definite period occurred last summer in the Linguistic Institute. This summer, Dr. . Voegelin ex- plained, the group workirg with Willie Long Bone, the Oklahoma Del- aware Indian, has been content chief- ly to attempt the broad structural analysis of the language, leaving de- tails for future observation. Even so, the present work has shown that, contrary to the imperfect reports made by early missionaries, Delaware is closely linked to its sister langtiages" in the great Algonkian family. The class analysis revealed new informa- tion concerning the Delaware system of speech sounds and the names and degrees of kinship. Particularly im- portant, concluded Dr. Voegelin, has The Russian Language Circle will complete its Summer Session series of Thursday teas at 5 p.m. today with a gathering at the International Center, 603 E. Madison St. The hour has been postponed from the usual 4:15 p.m. because of Dr. Hu Shih's lecture which is to take place at 4 p.m. The object of the Circle is to give the students of Russian practice in the language in addition to the regu- lar studies, and to thus facilitate their task of acquiring the richest possible vocabulary within the limited , time of the Summer Session period. Russian songs will be sung and gaoes will be played. Tea will be served. Students and faculty mem- bers speaking Russian are cordially invited to attend. i I been the use of Mr. Long Bone's lo for singing Indian songs in order study vocabulary and grammatic differences that distinguish so style and speech style. If a For Quick Clearance ve to cal ng HOW TO GET RESERVATIONS 0 Use A Daily Classified FOR 4 In The Special Freshman Issue YOUR STUDENT ROOMS NOW! THURSDAY ONLY Prints, Pastels, Better Cottons Spun Rayons and Bembergs in one grand group. Saturday, August 12. M 95 Mailed To Every Student Entering The University This Fall All former values to $8.75 Many $12.95 Sizes for misses, women 'IL I I E 3'