. SND)AY, JULY 6, 1941 T H'E -ICHIGAN DAILY SE-~. I - English Movie To Be Shown ByArtLeague "Peg of Old Drury," an English filming of the life of Peg Woffington. will be the first of four foreign movies to be offered this summer by the Art Cinema League, and will be shown at 8:15 p.m. next Sunday in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham School. Tickets for the series of four, which will also include the two French films "The Baker's Wife" and "Crime and Punishment" and the German film "The Cobbler of Koepenick" will be on sale all this week for $1 at the Union, the League and Wahr's Book Store. No tickets will be sold for individual programs. Starring Anna Neagle as Peg Wof- fington and Cir Cedric Hardwicke as David Garrick, "Peg of Old Drury" was acclaimed by the New York Times as "one of the finest cinema produc- tions ever to come out of England, or of anywhere else, for that mat- ter." It was produced by the British and Dominions Film Corporation, Ltd., and directed by Herbert Wil- cox, one of England's foremost film producers. With its middle 18th century set- ting, the movie brings to life not only Peg and the immortal Davy Garrick, but also such other out- standing figures of the time as Dr. Samuel Johnson, James Boswell, Al- exander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith, Wil- liam Pitt and Lord Sandwich, after whom the luncheon tidbit is named. The scene portraying the naming of the sandwich is included in the film. League Offers Big Program During Week Dancing, Record Concerts, Teas To Be Included In Social Activities Many varied activities will center in the League through the coming wbek. Students will have their last chance to sign up for the beginning and in- termediate classes in social dancing at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Wednes- day, respectively, of this week, for the roster will be closed thereafter. Price of the series of six lessons' is $1.50, and students are reminded that they need not attend with part- ners. Tea dancing, starting at 3: 0 p.m. Wednesday in the ballroom, is free to all students. From 6 to 8 p.m. every day except Tuesday and Thursday, through the summer, record concerts will be held on the second floor of the League. Three departments of the Univer- sity will give teas open to the re- spective faculty and student mem- bers. The speech department will meet from 4 to 6 p.m. tomorrow in the garden of the League, and the Latin department will serve tea at 7:30 p.m. the same day, also in the garden. Mathematics teachers and students will gather from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday. Michigan Dames has invited all wives of University students to a tea at 3:30 p.m. Friday in the garden. New Education Fellowship To Open. International Conclave Here Today ^- 6 p.m. in the Rackham Building, will be held tomorrow. Clarence K. Streis, chairman of the Federal Union, and Waldo Frank will be the speakers in the evening session Monday, at which Governor Murray D. Va Wagoner will preside. Mr. Streit will talk on "United De- mocracies" and Mr.Frank on "Life Problems of the Two Americas." Tuesday To Be Parents' Day Tuesday has been designated as Parents' Day at the conference, and on that day the foreign delegates and any others interested will tour Green- field Village. A luncheon meeting will be held at 12 noon in the League, devoted to "Parents and Education in the West- ern Hemisphere." Miss Giselle Shaw, Senorita Noemy da Silveir Rudolfer, both of South America, and William Blatz of the University of Toronto, will give talks at the luncheon. Watson To Lead Discussion At 2:30 p.m. in the Rackham Building Goodwin Watson of Colum- bia University will lead a discussion on "How Can the Home Strengthen Democracy." The evening session will be devoted to "America: Its Land and Its People." Jonathan Daaniels, Paul Engle and Carl Sandburg will give talks at this session. Wednesday at 11 a.m. the Honor- Tble Hu Shih and Count Carlo Sforza will feature a panel of four speakers ply. The 'Chinese ambassador will discuss "America and the Far East," rnd Count Sforza will speak on "The Situation in Italy." The School of Air of the Americas wvill demonstrate a broadcast Wed- nesday at 3:30 p.m., and Luis San- chez Ponton will discuss the forth- coming Latin-American conference of the School of the Air of the Amer- icas. The evening session Wednesday will feature talks by Carlos Davila, forme Chilean ambassador to the United States, and Maurice Bonn of the University of Pennsylvania. Mexican Educator Will Lecture Mr. Ponton will agein address the conference at 11 a.m. Thursday on "Mexican Education: Objectives and Practices." Revers Opie of the Bri- tish Embassy will speak at the same session on "Education and Changes in England." The afternoon session Thursday will give talks at the generaly assem- on "The Application of the Psychol- ogy of Progressive Education to the Field of Health and the Contribu- tion of Health Education to Progres- sive Education." At 7:45 p.m. Thursday B. K. Sand- well, editor of The Toronto Saturday Night, and Gustavo Adolfo Otero, Bolivian Minister of Education, will address the conference. Spencer Miller To Talk The general session Friday morn- ing will highlight talks by Spencer Miller of the Workers Education Bu- reau of America, and Eduard C. Lin- deman, New School for Social Re- search. "We Face Tomorrow" is the title of the discussion at 3 p.m. Friday. Par- ticipants will be nine students from the Dalton School, New York City, and five students from Pickering Col- lege, Ontario. A dinner meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Friday in the Union for members of the Fellowship and the Progres- sive Education Association. Boyd Bode of Ohio State University will preside, and Laurin Zilliacus, Fin- land, will speak. Group Will Report Saturday at 9 a.m. the special group studying "Education in Eu- rope after Peace Comes" will make its report. From 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday a summary meeting will be held, at which time a summary of reports and suggestions for the fu- ture of education in a world of na- tions will be given. Five exhibitions will be held here during the week. An exhibition of children's art of the Western Hemis- phere will be shown in the Rackham Galleries from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. One on Indian arts and crafts will be on display in Ann Arbor High School during the same hours. A book exhibit will be shown in the Rackham Building, as well as a health exhibit arranged by the University. An exhibit arranged by the Institute for Human Adjustment will also be on display in the Rackham Building. Every day at 9 p.m. a folk festival will be presented, featuring native dance groups antli orchestras. An information booth will be maintained in the lobby of the Rack- ham Building during the entire con- ference. Second Square Dancing Class Is Tomorrow Weekly Instruction Given Free To All Students ThroughHenry Ford Ai No previous knowledge or practice cu is necessary for students who are to interested in attending the second fe class in square and country dancing to be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. tomor- w row in the League Ballroom. These courses are offered free each C year to Summer Session students, 01 through the generosity of Henry Ford of Dearborn; this year's series Is is the third. R Teacher of the group is Benjamin se B. Lovett of the social activities de- se partment of Edison Institute, Green- field Village, who comes to Ann ti Arbor every Monday with his six- tc piece square dance orchestra and o 14 assistant instructors. M Indicated as especially valuable to ei teachers, the dance provides much of it the social training needed in the w schools system today. M More than 220 students were pres- ent at the first class, with a larger B group expected this week. Men and ti women may come with or without tc patrners, as Mary Neafie, '42, who st is in charge of arrangements for the class, and her assistant, Alice - Cramer, '42, have secured hostesses to introduce students. Elsie Court- ney, Betty Johnson, Doris Allen, Jean Johnson, Linda Gail George, Jane Baits, Caroline Sigrist, Belva Barnes, Mary Herbert, Regina Flanigan and Barbara Jenswold will be in the ball- room in this capacity. Men who have desired to learn to dance are urged to attend these classes, for the square dance is the foundation of all dance steps. Yankees Trim Athletics As DiMaggio Hits Again NEW YORK, July 5. -(RP)- The New York Yankees were the bombers of old again today as they blasted out a 10 to 5 decision over the Athletics for their seventh straight victory and Joe DiMaggio ran his hitting streak to 46 successive games. The league leaders peppered Phil Marchildon, rookie right-hander, for 11 hits, five of which were homers. DiMaggio set the tempo when he connected with his 19th four-master in the first inning 'New York Is Not America': Student From Brazil Discusses North, South American Customs Ar ~ e1CRlS~S All-Campus Women's Tournaments Sponsored by the Women's Physical Education Department Cheek in the square below those tournaments you wish to enter: [~ Archery - Columbia Round ~] Badminton - Women's Singles Golf - Women's Open Singles [] Tennis - Women's Singles [E Tennis - Mixed Doubles* (*Partner's Name:) Mail or bring entries to Barbour Gymnasium not later than Monday, July 7. Tournaments will be posted in the Women's Athletic Building (Bad- minton in Barbour Gymnasiudm), by Tuesday, July 8. Name Telephone Number (Continued from Page 3) ¢r r . . . r-: asseni GLAMOUR r for - ul ture, law and medicine doing cafe- teria work." Sra. Rudolpher is a happy combi- nation of liking things intellectual and also being very sociable. She has had-a distinguished career in edu- cational work in Brazil both for the government and at the university. She is the author of many articles on vocational guidance and primary education. She also has been spon- sor of the graduating class several times in the School of Philosophy, Sciences, Letters and Education at the University of Sao Paulo. She has been invited to the present confer- nce because of "distinguished lead- ership in the educational program of Brazil." Would Like To Return "I want to live in Brazil because that is my country but I should like to be able to afford to return to the United States every five or six years so as to get new ideas, ways of im- proving myself, to see things more objectively; to find new ways of solv- ing problems of child and adolescent psychology and to observe new meth- ods," she said. "When do you get time to dream?" she asked when, we turned to the subject of the Americans' quick tem- po of life. "New York is not America and so I think people from Brazil should see New York at last. Admires Americans "You are a wonderful people," she went on in her frank, open and en- thusiastic manner that is' so char- acteristic of the Brazilians but which cannot be said of all peoples from the South American Republics. "Only serious minded women go to the university in Brazil; they are always very bright girls and they study very hard and they do not think about having any social life," she said in answer to my question on women in the universities of Brazil. "We are beginning to see the value of co-education; it is providing for better relationships and now boys and girls are starting to be good friends," she said. "But it is only in an embryo state but it is being patterned after the American way.' On the emancipation of women she was also enthusaistic. "Now we have many career girls. Women hav- ing jobs is getting to be more com- mon and it is working out very weli for their better relationship with men. That was not true 30 years ago." Approves Of Girls'' Freedom She approved the freedom of the American girl. "American girls know how to use their freedom as far as my observation is concerned," she said. "Your social organizations provide good relationships between men and women." I asked her how much they were hearing about the Good Neighbor Policy and' she said, "We are just 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 Required The Intramural Sports Department will make drawings and sche- dules, 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. 3 ! LACK; Softball Swimming Golf (Average Score) Tennis Singles Tennis Doubles ( Handball Singles ( ) Handball DcUbles c ( ( ) H Horseshoe Singles Horseshoe Doubles ( ( ( ) Squash ( ) Table Tennis ) Badminton ( ) Codeball beginning to feel it. This war is helping very much. Fashions are very American. And our better re- 4-tions have activated yours, and yours ours. And so everyone is get- ting along better." Coming back to the subject of uni- versity life in Sao Paulo she said: "Your studies in some respects are more profound than ours; sometimes we go more deeply." ( ( ( ( ) ) ) ) ) ) Please indicate partner's name in space below doubles entries. Name .................. Address..................Phone ....... Mail or bring this blank to A. A. James, Supervisor of Intramural Sports, Intramural Sports Bldg., Ferry Field. All entries close at 5 p.m., Monday, July 7. 11 Ill 5p sr? ..2.R 4: .. r.{.? : v? _ " Ul r 4.95 WHITES! COMBINATIONS! .' ' VMME I ''...t N.' i 11 See them in the current Glamour mag- azine, crisp and shining white in slippery cool sno-sheen sharkskin. Two styles trimly stitched with a tailor's thread in red, navy or brown. One with fly-front, Brownies Take Twin Bill From Hapless Bengals ST. LOUIS, July 5. -(Y)- Stock- holders of the St. Louis Browns had their annual "day" at Sportman's Park today and finally got something to cheer about. The Browns swept _, 'I' qJ Just the shoes you need for the rest of the summer...at SAVINGS YOU WANTI A thrilling selection... PUMPSI SANDALS! SPECTATORSI CASUALS! LO-HEELERS! All heel heights and sizes includedl EVER CHIC BLACK is definitely in the fashion picture this summer! Cool, beautiful blacks such as we have here . .. the kind you'll see on the best dressed women at the smartest places. Seat-sleek black rayon jersey. } 'With lovely low necklines, slim or swirling skirts . blacks destined to keep you mint-julep cool through summer. We might add they look twice their low price. 6.95. I 11