THURSDAY, JUNK: 27, 1940 TIIE MICHIGAN DAILY I U July 6 Named Entry Deadline For Tourneys Annual Women's Contests To Begin July 8; Sports Include Tennis, Archery All entries in the campus-wide wo- men's tournaments to begin July 8 rust be left at Barbour Gymnasium not later than Saturday, July 6, Dr. Margaret Bell announced yesterday. These tournaments are open to all women, whether or not they are registered in a course given by the athletic department. There is a tradition behind the tournaments, since they are an annual event of long standing. 50 students entered in all the tournaments last year, and the number is expected to show con- siderable increase this summer, Dr. Bell said. Competition Stiff Competition has been exceptional- ly stiff in past years, and all persons who have acquired a degree of skill are urged to enter. Tournaments for novices in all activities will be held in the regular physical educa- tion classes. Tournaments listed include arch- ery, badminton, golf and tennis (wo- men's singles and mixed doubles). Archery will be played in a Colum- bia Round, which, for the uniniti- ated, is composed of three rounds shot at distances of 50, 40 and 30 yards respectively. Badi#qnton Tournament Those above the rank of novice may enter the badminton tourna- ment. There will be a novice tourna- ment later for those in the badmin- ton classes. . Golfers will play the first nine holes on the University golf course m competing for top honors in their tournament. Details m the tennis tournament will be posted July 8, along with the lists of players. Tour- nament lists will be posted in the Wprnen's Athletic Building by Mon- May, July 8, except for the badmin- tpn sphedule, which will be ptft up In harbour Gymnasium. Pre-SchooQl Nursery Is Iljigurated Here A cooperative nursery school for pre-sc o I children, directed by Mrs. F. W. Ouradrick, is being conducted from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. from Mon- dlay to Friday each week at the An- gell School. The children meet out- aside if the weather is fair and in the kintergarten during rainy wea- Lher. All of the sections for children under four years of age are filled, .t ws announced yesterday, but va- cancies are still open in the group for children between four and one- half and five years old. People who are interested are asked to call Mrs. sArthur Smithies at 8449 as soon as possible. Maxwel An erson's Pultizer rtze Winning Comedy I ALL-CAMPUS WOMEN'S TOURNAMENTS Sponsored by the Women's Physical Education Department Check in the squares below those tournaments you wish to enter. ( ( Archery...... Columbia Round Badminton ) Golf......Women's Open Singles ) Tennis......Women's Singles ) Tennis... . Mixed Doubles (partner's name ...>........... ) Mail or bring entries to Barbour Gymnasium not later than Satur- day, July 6. Tournament lists will be posted in the Women's Athletic Building (Badmlinton in Barbour Gymnasium) by Monday, July 8. Name .................... Address ................ Phone....... Art Cniiie iSeason TQ FclturX A'bildhood Of Maxim Crorky' Membership in the Art Cinema League will give the Summer Session student the opportunity to see an outstanding Russian film concern- ing a famous Russian artist in "The Childhood of Maxim Gorky," to be shown at 8:15 p.m. Sunday, July 28. This film will be the third of the Art Cinema's four program series. Preceeding it will be four American documentary films, "The River", "The City," "The Plough That Broke the Plains" and "New Schools for Old", to be presented at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the amphitheatre of the Rackham School and the French film "Grand Illusion" scheduled for Sunday, July 14. The fourth pro- gram, on Sunday, Aug. 11, will fea- ture the German movie "Kamerad- schaft", A limiteq number of memberships are still available at the Union, the League and Wahr's book store, where they may be. obtained at $1 each. A membership admits one to each of the four programs. No tickets for individual programs will be sold. In "The Childhood of Maxim Gor- ky", young Gorky is played by Al- yosha Lyarsky, a Moscow school- boy selected after a long search by director Mark Donskoi. Lyarsky was chosen not only because of his re- semblance to pictures of Gorky at that age, but also because of his possession of the genius' serious at- tentiveness and .sensitivity. Donskoi filmed the scenes of Gorky and his chums by explaining the problem to them and shooting the sequence im- mediately and only once, so as to re- cord the spontaneity of the moment Second Dancing Class, Tea Dance Attract Students This week's scope of League ac- tivities was extended yesterday as two more social events took place in the main ballroom. ;Between 3:30 and 5:30 p.m. over 2,50 students danced to the music of Earl Stevens and his orchestra. Girls acting as hostesses for the tea dance were Jane O'Brien, '4lEd, Doris McGlone, '41, Hazel Jensen, 41, Ida Mae Stitt, '41, Pat Stearns, '43A, Dorothy Walker, Penny Shaw, and Jean Moehlman. At 7:30 the dancing continued, this time in the form of an intermediate dancing class of about 190 people. The class was the first in a series of six to be directed by Miss Ethel McCormick, social advisor of the League, assisted by Elva Pascoe and 1arbara Maclntyre. Extcat=rs To Form club First meeting of the Women's Ed- ucation Club for graduates and un- dergraduate women engaged in edu- cation has been postponed until 7:15 p.m. next Monday in the Henderson Room of the League, Miss Cleo Murt- land of the School of Education, advisor to the organization, an- nounced. MCCusky To Talk Today Dr. F. Dean McClusky, director of Scarborough School, will give the second in the series of education lec- tures, "The Teaching of Human Re- lations in Secondary Schools," at 4:05 p.m. today in the University High School Auditorigmn. There's ONE BEHIND TH BILL IAR I Billiards - PocketI SEVEN - Table Tei tw A 0 itA rather than a false emotion develop- ed by much rehearsal. In the role of Gorky's sympathetic grandomther is People's Artist V.O. Massalitinova, who spent ten years in the preparation of her part. Long before production was started on the film but when cinema people were considering a Gorky biography she had the ambition to do the part and at one time Gorky himself told her that she could well play it. M.K. Troyanovsky plays the part of Gorky's grandfather, a petty tyr- ant who nevertheless possessed rare flashes of warm human feeling. Other well-known Russian actors have the remaining roles. "The Childhood of Maxim Gorky" was based on Gorky's biography "My Childhood", English sub-titles are included in the film. Foreign Student Increase 1NToted B y Prof. Nelson Foreign students attending the Summer Session have been affected in various ways by the European conflict, Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, di- rector of the International Center, reported in an interview yesterday. There has been a marked increase of advanced students from Latin American countries who normally go to Europe, Professor Nelson cited. Many of these students coming from the Pan-American republics and Canada are Rockefeller Fellows en- gaged in graduate work, he pointed out. With the conflict spreading and intensifying in the Mediterranean after Italy's entrance into the war, Near Eastern students have been able to maintain only irregular com- munication with their families and friends at home, Professor Nelson stated. The number of Turkish stu- dents has been augmented by the withdrawal by their government of all Turkish students enrolled in Eu- ropean universities at the outbreak of the hostilities last September. Approximately 700 were sent to the United Staites and about 20 to the University during the past year, he said. Students from Syria, Palestine and Iraq have also increased in numbers here, Professor Nelson emphasized, because of the extension of the ex- change student plan at the American University of Beirut. Miss Crowe Heads Japanese Warships Land At Haiphong: VLADIVOSTOK = ONOLIATOKYO. PEIPING T IEN TSIN r " SINGTAO Y l0NANKING SHANGHAI , CHUNGKING FORMOSA 0 / CANTON ,.. SWATOW ! HONGKONG f/ HILlP'PINE '' " .I 'ISLANDS HANOI: -MANILA S.. : .. - r THAILAND.., - . e RANGOON . .: :. - - . - '.4 ---4. - - p - . - :"OAI N "E AO "P SINGAPORE -', 0 500 Japan sent an undisclosed number of warships to the French Indo- China port of Haiphong amid reports she might attempt to declare a "protectorate" over the Far East territories of conquered France and Holland. This Associated Press map shows the distances from Haiphong to ,Japan, the Phillippines, Saigon and Singapore. French Indo-China is. theprinciple port of entry for American made products into China. .Construction Of Plane Motors Awaits U.S. Appoa,'--Ford By A. P. BLAUSTEIN The 8th annual Linguistic Institute of the Linguistic Society of America is offering five interesting fields of study in language to students dur- ing the 1940 Summer Session. Devoted to the advancement of the scientific study of language in all its aspects, the society itself was founded in 1924. During its history it has sought to promote its aim by bringing students of language to- gether at its annual meetings and by publishing the fruits of linguistic research. The various fields of study which will receive special emphasis during the 1940 session include the renewal and extension of the work in record- ing and analyzing a living language IAnn Arbor Eighth Linguistic Institute Offers Five Fields Of Study To Students Here Is Today's In Summar, News ,y In contrast to rising tax rates of the federal government, Ann Arbor's summer property tax rate will be the lowest since 1921, City Assessor Her- bert W. Crippen announced yester- day. The 1940 tax rate of $8.67 per $1,000 valuation will be 43 cents lower than the rate of $9.10 last year. The assessed valuation of the city, quoted at $39,200,120, is an increase of $589,475 over last year. The in- crease is largely the result of build- ing expansion about the city. * * * Rev. G. Warren Peek, pastor of the St. Thomas Catholic Church, has been appointed dean of the Ann Arbor territory of the Detroit arch- diocese. He will succeed the late Rev. Thomas R. Carey to the deanship of a territory including Washtenaw, Monroe and Lenawee counties and five parishes in Wayne County. Max Aupperle, violinist, was awarded two season tickets to the Choral Union concerts for. outstand- ing work on the Ann Arbor 4civic orchestra. Others presented with awards by Prof. David Mattern of the School of Music were Mrs. Pauline Crocker, violinist, Jane - Rollman, violinist, and Priscilla Stockwell, flutist. Each received a set of symphonic records. .r- (By The Associated Press) DETROIT, June 26.-Henry Ford said today that his plans have not been altered in any way by the deci- sion of the National Defense Com- mission to discontinue negotiations with his company for the mass pro- duction of Rolls-Royce aviatian en- gines. "In other words," he said in an interview, "the preliminary work we have done to be prepared to swing into volume output of the motors for the United States Government, when and if it desires them, will go on without interruption. We will be ready to go any time the United States Government says the word." Commission Announces The Defense Commission an- nounced in Washington last night that Ford's refusal to manufacture the engines for the British Govern- ment had forced cancellation of plans to have the Ford Company make the power plants. "To undertake to make aviation engines or any other form of war munitions for any foreign govern- ment," Ford said today, "would be a step toward getting this country into war. I want to keep this country out of war. ]Planes Only For Defense "When I offered four weeks ago to make airplanes on a volume pro- duction basis I distinctly said I would do so for the United States Govern- ment for defensive purposes only. You will recall that I said at that time that great care would have to be taken to see that a gigantic'de- fensive armament did not become an 'offensive' one; I said also that great pressure would be brought to force us into war. Pursuit Planes Needed "I was advised that our greatest defensive need was for pursuit air- planes and I became convinced that we could provide these in huge num- bers any foreign nation with bellig- erent designs would think twice be- fore attempting any attack upon this country." Ford indicated that the discus- sions during the last four weeks re- garding his proposal to put airplane manufacture on a volume basis had been confined solely to the idea of making engines rather than the com- pleted plane. Miss Van Tuyle Marries Doctor Marian Elizabeth Van Tuyle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Van Tuyle, was married Thursday, June 20, to Dr. Douglas Gordon Campbell of Berkeley, Calif. The ceremony took place at Tahoe, Calif. Mrs. Campbell is a Michigan alum- na, and her interpretive dancing is well-known across the country on the professional stage. She is a mem- ber of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Dr. Campbell received his degrees at the University of Toronto. The couple will live in Oakland, Calif., where both Dr. and Mrs. Campbell will be teaching at the summer session of Mills College. I BLT of the 2 Li UluIsie... (one for going one for cong to work... homel Happy Wonderful Husband 'ife COST: $20 Per Week! Swimming Glasses Two classes in swimming offered during the Summer Session will be headed by Barbara Crowe, of the physical education department for women. One of the classes will be a casual, free swimming period, su- pervised by Joan Bevington, Miss Crowe's assistant. This class will meet at 11 a.m. Tuesdays and Thurs- days at the Michigan Union swim- ming pool. There is also a class for beginning and intermediate swimmers. Stu- dents may register for these classes at the Barbour Gymnasium between 8 and 12 a.m. or from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. A physical re-check examination is required for participation in any sport, not only as a precaution but also as an entree for finding physical disorders of any sort. place you:have fun IE EIGHT ALL.. . "il" The Greeks had a word, we are sure, For a belt that's as handsome as this is.. . Such styling - such verve - such contour Flattering to each Miss or Mrs. Americans have an expression When they wish to convey fashion's peak. It's "By Schaffer" - and gives the impression Of belts that are brilliantly chic. HAND]KEIICIIEF of the NQNTII*. as seen in Vogue Gala holidays joyous vacation dayst Keyed to Americas summer, r spirit is Flowerama . . . rampant lowers * for festivity "."glorious K 'I ONLY ANNE SHIRLEY Tit'L Show YOU Mow to Do It in MAXWELL ANDERSON S Pl tzeur Prize-Winning Play . . t ; ) ROQM Silliards - Snooker nis Tables - Seven If {2 - - N " -- - The BIGGEST and the SMALLEST SUMMER HATs ALL FRESH AND NEW.. . big flatterin~g brims .. i I