T H E -MIMGA N D A LY FRDAY, JUNE 26, 1942 _,I Emperor Jones' To Be Shown Sunday By Art Cinema League purchased at Wahr's Book Store. Films following "Emperor Jones" include dramas, comedies and trage- dies, both domestic and imported. On July 12 the Marx Brothers will ap- pear in "Duck Soup," a picture which set a new high in insanely inspired laughs. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock, "The Lady Vanishes" will be shown on July 19. This picture, full of the famous suspense created by the ro- tund English gourmand, stars Mar- garet Lockwood and Michael Red- grave. Critics call it Hitchcock's best picture. I On Aug. 2 "The Childhood of Max- im Gorky" will be shown. This pic- ture 'is an import from the Soviet Union and shows some of the new developments in the celluloid art. The picture, as the name indicates, por- trays a portion of the life of the great Russian author. 'Anna Christie' The season of brilliant screen plays will be concluded with another O'Neill play-"Anna Christie." The intense drama is the story of a sea captain's Maughter. Greta Garbo and the late Marie Dressler play stellar roles. The Art Cinema League each year revives the masterpieces of the screen plays. Series of comedies and series of silent films have been run in the past. Art Cinema Series have pro- vided movie-goers with Ethe gems of movie entertainment. Student NoVels To Be Printed Five Of Nine Hopwood Works Are Accepted Four of the nine novels submitted in the eleventh annual Hopwood competition, which drew $2,650 in prize money, have been accepted for publication by three of the biggest United States publishing houses, ac- cording to Prof. Roy W. Cowden, di- rector of the Hopwood Room. Jay McCormick, four times winner of a Hopwood award-the maxi- mum times possible, will see his nov- el, "November Storm," published by Doubleday-Doran. McCormick, for- mer editor of Perspectives and asso- ciate editor of The Daily last year, based his story on Great Lakes steamer life. . Rosemary J. Obermeyer's novel, "Golden Apples of the Sun," a tale of religious significance, will be pub- lished by E. P. Dutton & Co. Doubleday-Doran has accepted an- other 1942 prize manuscript in Leslie Cameron's "My Mother Is an Archi- tect," a tale concerning life in a Shaker colony. Last year's $1,000 winner, Beatrice Borst, follows in the footsteps of Hopwood headliners Mildred Walker ("Fireweed," "The Brewer's Big Horses," "Dr. Norton's Wife"), Iola Fuller ("Loon Feather"), Marietta Wolff ("Whistle Stop"), when her book, "Nearer the Earth" rolls off the Random House press in August. Never before the 1942 contest have the major American publishers been so well represented. League Holds 'Floral Fling' To morrow From 9 p.m. to midnight tomor- row evening the League will be gaily blossoming out for a "Floral Fling." The flowers of June have provided the inspiration for the theme of this all-campus dance which will be ac- companied by the music of Gordon Hardy, His Piano and His Orchestra. Flowers will not only be featured in the decorations but will serve as iden- tifying symbols for the staff of coed hostesses. For this purpose a num- ber of fresh /flowers have beers do- nated by Ann Arbor florists. Everybody on campus, whether here the summer semester or the eight week session, is invited to the Floral Fling. Hostesses for the evening, (those girls wearing the 'purty' posies in their topknots) will be: Polly Estes, Mary Keppel, Gloria McVittie, Cheryl Davidson, Dorothy Wineland, Dorothy Chamberlain, Joan List, Virginia Rock, Mary Lou Knapp, Gerry Ratner, Sylvia Rat- ner, Margaret Krull, Herma Fieder, Midge Weiss, Elaine Brown, Gertrude Inwood, Ruth Wood and Helen Rott- schaefer. "Keep A-Head of Your Hair" Try the Michigan "Crew Cut," a Scalp Treatment, or a Personality Hair Style. Be Smart, Individual, and Suave. Ask upperclassmen about us. The DASCOLA BARBERS Between State and Mich. Theatre ASSO CIATED PRESS D4 PUCTURE NEWS At { 3~ %4v KING PETER LAUGHS AT ,PRESID9!NT1AL JOKE- Nineteen-year-old King ,Peter of Yugo- slavia (left) laughed heartily at a joke President Ro osevelt told him during, ceremonies in which the young king was welcomed to the White House as a n official visitor. - I Sumier Students Eligible For Elementary Class Elctrical Engineering 23n, a course in elementary radio communication, originally announced for the sum- mer term, will be given in. the short term from June 29 to August 21, ac- cording to an announcement yester- day by Prof. Lewis N. Holland of the electrical engineering department. EE 23n is .a course in the elements of radio communication which will give basic training in radio to those interested in further work in the sig- nal corps, air corps and other branches, and those interested in ob- tairiing amateur radio operator's li- censes. The course is primarily for those enrolled in the literary college and schools other than engineering. It carries no prerequisites. The first meeting of the class will be held at 8 a.m., Monday, June 29, in Room 223, West Engineering Building. Three lectures will come at 8 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Fri- day, and one lab on Monday from 2 to 3 p.m. Three other lectures, one lab and four one-hour code practice sessions will be arranged. Code prac- tice sessions will be held in the eve- ning. TYPEWRITERS RENTALS AND REPAIRS STUDENT SUPPLIES 1 0. D. MORRILL ..314s. StateSt. ri i ---- ., I I ATTRACT IVE COM PACT INEXPENSIVE ALBUMS of PlI N MUSIC e for MODERNS FRANKIE CARLE AT THE PIANO . ENCORES EDDIE DUCHIN COLE PORTER TUNES MUSIC BY GEORGE GERSHWIN FATS WALLER AT THE CONSOLE .. ON THE IVORIES . $2.62 $2.62 $2.62 $2.62 $2.62 $2.62 FIRST RADIO PICTURE DIRECT FROM CAIRO- The first radio picture to 'be sent over a 5,639-mile circuit which inaugurated direct service b etween Cairo and New York shows King Farouk of Egypt (on right) with Alexander Kirk, American M inister to Egypt, in the royal palace in Cairo. Trans- mission of this picture by R.C.A. Communications, Inc., required just 10 minutes. Inter-Guild's Weekly worship serv- ices have beerf cancelled for the sum- mer, it was announced at yesterday's luncheon, because Inter-Guild is co- operating with the University in its noonday services to be held every Tuesday and Thursday throughout the Summer Session. Instead, one Union Worship Serv- ice to be held Aug. 9 is being planned by a committee headed 6y Greg Hile- man. The organization is completing plans for some'*work to be done in cooperation, with the Unitarian Church at Ypsilanti which will in- clude a trip to the Willow Run area July 11 to help work on the creation of a recreational center. And the Debut on Records of OSCAR LEVANT Famous Star of "Information Please" playing MODERN PIANO MUSIC ..$3.67 Shostakovitch, Gershwin, etc. You will find an exceptionally large stock of Popular Albums at the beautiful, air- conditioned MUSIC. SHOP 1 e 1 205 EAS r LIBERTY Phone 3675 Free Delivery Operated by Musicians for Music-Lovers It H EA LT H Y .-'Bathing suit makers picked Janet Blair (above), movie starlet, as ideal girl to show benefits of "swim. for health",week campaign.r ROYALTY ARRIVES IN BERKSHIRES -Queen Wilhelm- ina, of The Netherlands (right) with her daughters, Princess Juli- ana (left) and Juliana's two daughters, Irene, 3 (in white), and Beatrix, 4/2, pause on the station platform at Stockbridge, Mass., in the Berkshires, en route to nearby Lee, where the Princess has leased an estate for the summer. I