six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 2, 1942 Housing Facilities For Women Attending Prom To Be Supplied New Display Will Feature Chinese Art, Ten Sonatas Of Beethoven Today's News On Campus . .. I There need be no regard for the scarcity of women on campus for the weekend of Aug. 21, for Mrs. Beryl Bacher, acting dean of women, has promised that all women brought to Ann Arbor for the Summer Prom will be provided with the best avail- able in rooms. The rooms that the University is offering for out-of-town women in- clude the sororities and dormitories used by women students attending the eight-weeks session who will have left town by that time. They will be rented at extremely reasonable rates for both Friday and Saturday nights. House Parties Not Approved Though house parties were not ap- proved by the Student Affairs Com- mittee, there is a chance to have a real weekend party on the University. Applications for these rooms may be made by calling the Dean of Women's office or calling there in person. Ticket sales for Summer Prom will start Wednesday and extend indef- initely, Herb Heavenrich, ticket com- mitteeman, announced yesterday. An organized system of ticket dis- tribution has been arranged by the committee in charge. Several com- mitteemen will be responsible for can- vassing all fraternities, sororities, dormitories, co-ops and rooming 1. houses beginning Wednesday. There will be tickets on sale on the Diag- onal daily with one campus organi- zation in charge of conducting the sale each day. Tickets, available to students and townspeople alike, may also be purchased at several campus stores or at the Union and League. Only Big Affair Summer Prom, the all-campus-all- city dance, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight, Aug. 21, in the Sports Building. The only big affair of the summer season, proceeds of the dance will go to Russian War Relief, The Bomber Scholarship and United China Relief. Hal McIntyre and his band, coming directly from a week's engagement at Eastwood Symphony Gardens in Detroit, will be on the bandstand. The dance will be formal or semi-formal and open to everyone. Replace The Car? CHICAGO, Aug. 1-(IP)-Sign of the Times: City collector Louis Rixman re- ported today that while license totals for motorcycles, passenger cars and trucks were showing a decline, li- censes for one-horse vehicles in the first seven months of this year amounted to 1,113 compared with 1,097 for all of 1941. Traditional Water-Colored Scrolls Will Re Shown ' At RackhamBuilding An exhibit of Chinese art, featur- ing the work of Prof. Chang Shu-Chi, who taught painting for 11 years at ' the National Central University in Chungking, will be presented from August 4 to August 8 in the Mezza- nine Galleries of the Rackham Build- .. I Taproom ISpecials I HAMBURGERS- Big, juicy, ten- der; choice meat from our own butcher shop. Served with crisp potato chips and dill pickle. Help yourself to the relish. 12c PECAN ROLLS - loaded with pecans and rich with caramel topping. Delicious when toasted, too. From the ing. The medium used by Prof. Shu-Chi is water-color and the paintings are in scroll form, true to the traditional Chinese manner. The colors strike a contemporary note in that they are fresh and rather high in key; birds, flowers and landscapes being used for subject matter. Prof. Shu-Chi will be in Ann Arbor for the exhibition and will spend some time in the galleries giving dem-' ionstrations of his painting, in which he is said to have developed "a special technique with two-color brushes, which enables him to paint with phe- nomenal speed." The showing here is being arranged by Dr. B. A. Liu, visiting instructor in the School of Education this summer and an associate of the China Insti- tute of America, which has charge of Chinese students in this country. The exhibit has been shown in New York and Chicago as a benefit for United China Relief. There will be Chinese students in the galleries, which will be open from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., to assist in the presentation of the exhibition. War Geography: Stalingrad *WHY IS IT IMPORTANT? By powerful but horribly costly steps a gigantic wedge of Nazi motor- ized strength supported by infantry and Stuka dive-bombers has ham- mered its way closer and closer to the Volga river city of Stalingrad. Stalingrad is the last remaining Soviet steel center left in European Russia and an important head for the rail lines which carry Caucasus oil to the embattled north. As such, its defense would deserve a major ef- fort by the Red Army even if it had no strategic military importance. As the situation stands, the Ger- mans seek to cut the northern sup- ply lines of the Soviet Causasus ar- mies as well as northern Russia's life- line of oil by stretching a steel band from Rostov on the Black Sea to the shores of the Caspian. So long as Red soldiers remain in Stalingrad this undertaking can never be as- sured of success. Since to the Russians Stalingrad's fall would mean isolation of the Cau- casus army and loss of the region from which 47 per cent of Soviet oil normally comes, they may be expect ed to defend the city to the death if necessary. Thus the impending bat- tle for Stalingrad promises to be one the bloodiest and most decisive struggles of an extremely sanguinary and important campaign. To Be Played Mabel Rhead, Gilbert Ross To Open Concert Series In Rackham Tomorrow A unique series of concerts, spon- sored by the School of Music and featuring the complete violin and piano sonatas of Beethoven, will be presented tomorrow, Thursday, Au- gust 6, and Thursday. August 13. by Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist and mem- ber of the faculty, and Gilbert Ross, violinist and guest summer professor. The master's ten works, which rep- resent the early-middle portion of his career, will be presented in their entirety for the first time in Ann Arbor, each concert being held at 8:30 p.m. in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The complete program planned for Monday will include three son - atas: "Sonata in Dmajor. Op. 12. No. 1," composed in 1793 and dedi- cated to F. A. Salieri, one time teach- er of Mozart; "Sonata in G major, Op. 06," composed from 1810 to 1811 in honor of Archduke Rudolph; and "Sonata in C minor, Op. 30, No. 2," composed in 1802 and dedicated to Alexander I, Emperor of Russia. Nazis Say Churchill Is Now In Russia NEW YORK, Aug. 1. -(/P)-The German News Agency, Transocean' has issued a story under a Lisbon, Portugal, dateline, of "unconfirmed rumors" there that Prime Minister Churchill has flown to Russia to ex- plain to Stalin the British attitude towards the Soviet demand for es- tablishment of a second front." The Berlin Radio broadcast the item Friday night but subsequent broadcasts heard in the United States have not repeated it. Ehrrnawt To Speaki Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of the history department will deliver a uni- versity lecture, his "Weekly Review of the War," at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Apmitheatre. He will discuss recent moves, interpret them, and predict future trends. A ques- tion period will follow the lecture. Jordan Tea Today A garden tea party will be held by Jordan Hall at 5:30 p.m. today. Members of the administration and 200 faculty guests and wives will be present. * * * ASME Meets Wednesday Prof. F. N. Menefee will talk on "The Engineer and the War~ at an ASME meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednes- day in the Union. The ASME will hold meetings every Wednesday for the rest of the summer, and students joining now will be members for the next eight months. * ~ -* Graduate Sym postu n Possible research projects in the fields of oral interpretation and his- tory of the theatre will be discussed at a symposium for graduate stu- dents in the department of speech at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the East Confer- ence Room of the Rackham Build- ing. Spanish Lecture SPECIAL NECK CREAM Don't stop your beauty care at your chini Help keep the delicate smoothness of the throat with this new, beautifully balanced blend of rich cream with astringent qualities. Stroke it on with your fingertips every night for a firm, lovelier skin. SPECIAL NECK CREAM, 2.25, 4.00, 7.50 27e Uar~ ON STATE AT THE HEAD OF NORTH UNIVERSITY WE DELIVER Senor Ezequiel Martinez Estrada, distinguished visitor from Southl America, will give a lecture in Span- ish on "Poesia Popular en la Argen- tia" at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in the Kellogg Auditorium. " I as se~ enini s $!4' AX a 1 - - A. at P ... 9" Union's bake shop. loe DO-NUTS - freshly made for your breakfast and again freshly made for 5 evening dunking. Malteds 15e 2for 5c Good Coffee 5e ceg SqizC U"'""V UNION TAPROOM USE YOUR ,UNION r/ cam.y:4, Read The Daily Classifieds! iii I I There IS Safety in Numbers like I I 4. 1 I I For Correct Cleaning of Summer Flannels, Slacks, Palm Beach, Tropicals THIS FALL yOurs tockings may be in new textufes but if they're Belle-Sharmeer your legs will be lovely... as usual! The magic's in Belle-Sharmeer's exquisite fashioning, subtle colors and most of all in Belle-Sharmeer's perfect- fitting leg sizes. 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