PAGE EIGHIT THE MICHIGAN DAILY Graduate Club PlanseOutdoor SupperToday The Graduate Outing Club will meet for a hike and outdoor supper at 2:30 p.m. today at the northwest entrance of the Rackham Building. Entrusted with the organization of I out-of-doors activities for graduate students, the Club functions under1 the general supervision of the Grad- uate Council. The Graduate Student Council will meet jointly with the outing club for a short organization meeting. Chief duties of the Council are the promotion of the social, educational and intellectual activities of the gradate student body and the en- couragement of cooperation and un- derstanding between students and faculty. Graduate students interested in assisting in the planning of lunch- eons, coffee hours, classical recordc programs and, informal record dances; are urged to attend the Graduate1 Council meeting at 5 p.m., Thursday1 in the East Lecture Room of the{ Rackham Building.f Arrangements have already been made for the classical record pro- grams at 8 p.m. every Tuesday, a coffee hour at 4:30 p.m., July 8, and a mixer from 9 to 12 p.m. July 11 in the Rackham Building.< Read The Daily Classifieds! Foyer Francais 'Emperor Jones' To Be Shown Begin Seventh By Art Ciuem League Tonight Suiniiie Le re, Revamped 'Ensian To Cover Summer Students Program Affords Chance For Practical Training In Spoken French Idiom Foyer Francais, residence and cen- ter of activities of students interest- ed in learning the French language, begins its seventh summer on cam- pus this week. Sponsored by the Department of Romance Languages, the Foyer af- fords practical training in the spok- en idiom since only French may be spoken there. Rooms are provided in the Foyer for women students for the summer and men students are invited to have their evening meals there. Located at 149 Tappan Ave., the Foyer Francais will be under the direction of Mademoiselle Jeanne Rosselt, professor of French at Gou- cher College,. Baltimore, Md. Mon- sieur Antoine Jobin will act as facul- ty adviser and will direct the activi- tives of the Cercle Francais. Stu- dents interested should call Mrs. Hel- en Gucker, house manager, 7379. JapD escendants To Fight HONOLULU, June 27. -(A)- American soldiers of Japanese an- cestry who have been mustered into the Army in the last two years are preparing for action on one of the many battlefronts. Plans for revamping the 1943 Mich- i ;anenian to include the pictures of stuih ii graduating in the summer 'cme'I cc. were announced yesterday by Acting Editor Don Artuso and Ben Douglas, business manager. Acting to meet new problems raised by the University's stepped-up three semester year, the new 'Ensian prom- ised to be entirely modern and dif- feient. Throughout the sumfner work will be carried on by Art Direc- tor, Stu Gildart, in preparation for the 1943 year book. With its basic theme, "The Uni- versity at War," the 'Ensian will attempt to portray the role Michi- gan is playing in the war effort. Air, sea, ground and civilian units of work will be featured. In addition dances, formals, the University's new P.E.M., dinners, sports and other informal "shots" of the summer term and summer session will be included in the new 'Ensian. The inclusion of these pictures of campus life during the summer will break all 'Ensian precedent, former issues portraying University activi- 1111 Paul Robeson--the star of the cinema version of Eugene O'Neill's play, "Emperor Jones"-is shown here in the gambling scene which is climaxed in murder and escape from justice. The film will be shown at 8:15 ;.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. *' * * * mp __ __-- ----- - i The movie version of a great play, Eugene O'Neill's "Emperor Jones," will be shown at 8:15 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall by the Art Cinema League. The first of a series of cinema classics to be shown through the summer, "Emperor Jones" stars great Negro baritone Paul Robeson in the title role. The picture is the story of a pull- man porter who makes a meteoric rise to the despotic ruler of an island. Music Camp Opens Season At Interlochen 300 High School Students Will Form Orchestra Under Dr. J. E. Maddy Dramatic effects of the jungle, its booming drums and aroused natives increase the effect of the powerful drama. Tickets will be available at the League and at Rackham Hall after 7:30 p.m. Following "Emperor Jones" on July 12 in Rackham Hall the Marx Brothers will appear in one of the best comedies of their career in slap- stick, "Duck Soup." The indescrib- able plot is productive of huge quan- tities of laughs. The surprise scenes that have made Alfred Hitchcock's direction famous will be shown in their superlative form in "The Lady Vanishes" on July 19 in Rackham Hall. The pic- ture stars Margaret Lockwood and Michael Redgrave. A Russian film-"The Childhood of Haxim Gorky"-the only one of the series in a foreign language, will be shown on Aug 2 in Rackham Hall. It is a fine example of the new Soviet cinema art. Another O'Neill play will furnish the plot of the final film, "Anna Christie," which will be shown on Aug. 9 in Rackham Hall. The stellar roles are played by Greta Garbo and Marie Dressler. Quad 7 p UNIO ice4 ! Under the direction of Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, professor of radio at the University, the fifteenth season of the national music camp at Inter- lochen begins here this weekend, for the purpose of fashioning the youn- gest symphony orchestra in the world. Three hundred boys and girls from high school orchestras all over the country will arrive at the camp to- day and tomorrow to spend eight weeks studying and playing the music of the great composers. Substantiating Dr. Maddy's idea that the youngsters of America with musical talent would make good in a real symphony orchestra, there are today dozens of Interlochen gradu- ates in the ranks of the nation's professional symphonies. Again this year an imposing list of famous conductors has accepted invitations to come to Interlochen Bowl to lead the high school sym- phony in weekly radio broadcasts, to be carried by a nation-wide network Stack Dies Of Heart Attack FORT CUSTER, June 27.-(/P)- Corp. Eugene Stachowiak of Saginaw, who as Gene Stack was the first base- ball player owned by a major league club to be inducted into the Army, died of a heart attack at 2:30 p.m. today in a Michigan City, Ind., res- taurant. on Saturday afternoons. 111- lwm- IA Ir. IF 1 TAPROOM III Flags Cleaned FREE! For the Summer Session ... All Next Week $ r Our shelves are stocked with NEW and USED Text and Reference Books for every course. A staff of courteous and experienced employees is ready to satisfy your needs for the summer. W ahr's I I I .o I 14 r II