w ,,. x .:., n__, --... --..... _. pp PAGCE FOUR rTE MICHWTEAN nfi-X. ., T '-.. ..". _ _ aaa a.+ ua a. v.aaa va"a1 .. LA1L 1 - .. ,: :.;.. 1 iVl1/ THEY GIVE HOT TIPS: Weather Bureau Doles Out Facts and Forecasts By NANCY BYLAN "We answer anything but ques- tions on income tax." Thus claims the Weather Bureau at Willow Run. Pegged with eight to ten calls an hour during the current hot spell, the weather ex- perts must be a source of informa- tion for everyone from cement pourers to strawberry growers. WHEN A CALL is received, the Weather Bureau doesn't know if a radio station or a picnic planner is' on the other end. The entire forecast is given as a matter of form. However, weather officials are frequently greeted at the end of a long forecast with an apolo- getic, "Oh, but all I wanted to know was the temperature." One gentleman asked the bu- reau which comes first, day- light or darkness. A well-pre- pared official replied: "If you mean what I think you mean, the answer is obvious." The bureau's most frequent call- ers are farmers and builders. The latter often leave their phone numbers with the bureau to assure constant contact with the weather report. TRIP PLANNERS also keep bu- reau phones busy, desiring to know flying or road conditions. The weather report has to be flexible enough to serve all these inquiries, according to the Bu- reau. Most of the complaints re- sult from a lack of understand- ing of this fact. If the Bureau predicts scattered showers, one farmer will get a downpour while another will meet with clear skies. Both will phone the Weather Bureau to complain of gross inaccuracy. * * * THE WEATHER men have to know how to handle irate voices, for they get blamed for all tem- poral inconsistencies. Contrary to popular belief, the Willow Run Weather Bureau is not at all a cool haven on a hot day. The Bureau possesses an air-conditioning unit noteworthy only because it has been inopera- tive for the past two years. It also uses 24 neon lights and two tele- type machines, whiph contribute generously to the heat in the room. DINNER IS SERVED--Tourists, some dressed in cowboy attire, eat dinner on the steps of the State building, Reno, Nev., after obtaining food from the emergency center set up by the Reno Chamber of Commerce when culinary workers left their jobs in a wage dispute closing most of the city's eating houses. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN " i I 1it Cinet /ea9ue Presents RAI~U in THE ETERNAL HUSBAND A FRENCH ENOCH ARDEN AT HIS PASSIONATE BEST 'Raimu equals his Performances in "the Baker's Wife" and "The Well-Digger's Daughter":' This is a wonderful' Show" -1IMB RACKHAM AUDITORIUM4 Friday & Saturday - 8:30 TICKETS ON SALE Thursday 2-6 At Friday 2-9 MICHIGAN LEAGUE Saturday 2-9 )ONLY No Door Sale (Continued from Page 2) Events Today Canterbury Club, 218 N. Divi- sion St., 4-6 p.m. Tea and Open House for all students and theirI friends. Stage Play presented by the De- partment of Speech; Life with Fa- ther, the delightful comedy by Lindsay and Crouse, tonight at 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Tickets on sale now at the box office. Graduate Students: The Grad- uate School Student Council in- vites you to attend its second Mix- er Dance of the Summer Session,1 Friday evening, July 8, 8:30 to 12 in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Dancing, bridge, refreshments. Ad- mission 25c. German Coffee Hour: Friday, 3:00-4:30 p.m. Russian Tea Room. All interested students and fac- ulty members are invited. The second Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be held at the main lodge, Patterson Lake, Friday, July 8. Dr. Rabinavich, Director of the children's division of N.P.I. will be the psychiatrist. Any University students interested in problems of individual and group therapy are invited to attend. Classical Studies: The next reg- ular coffee-hour will be held in the Museum of Classical Archae- ology; Newberry Hall, on Friday, July 8, at 4:00 p.m., by invitation of the Museum staff. All students and staff members interested in Classical Studies are cordially invited. Coming Events Russian Circle Meeting July 11 at 8:00, International Center. All interested in Russian are welcome. All Chinese students and their guests are invited to attend a re- ception for new Chinese students, given by the Chinese Students' Club on Saturday, July 9, 1949, 8:30 p.m., at the Rackham Assem- bly Hall. Flashy Fish KEY WEST, Fla.-Neon Tetra, a tropical fish, has a blue-green line that shines as brightly as a neon light, according to inland residents. Soil Authority Says Surplus Food Possible Soil resources and technical knowledge exist to provide far more food than the world now requires, according to Charles E. Kellogg, chief of the soil survey division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Kellogg spoke yesterday in the University's summer lecture series on "Natural Resources in World Affairs." * * * "WE COULD HAVE abundant food," Kellogg said. "The big question is, how badly do we want it? The technical problems with soils, plants and animals, great as they are, are small compared to the economic, social and political ones. "Approxiimately 1,300,000,000 acres of land, mostly in the tropics, could be brought into sustained production if an ef- ficient agricultural technique could be established on a world- wide basis," he asserted. As Kellogg sees it, a vital point in any plan to assure an adequate world food supply will be an effi- cient industrial organization in all areas. * * * THIS WOULD be needed to pro- vide the modern agricultural needs of electricity, fertilizer, insecti- cides and machinery. The agricultural expert declared that freer trade is a necessity, since the whole apparatus of in- ternational exchange, credit and finance is vital to the efficient use of resources and the importance of tools and credit. Grads Will Hold Rackham Mixer Graduate students will have an- other chance to get acquainted at the mixer to be held from 8:30 to midnight in the Assembly Hall and on the Terrace of the Rack- ham Building. There. will be dancing, bridg( and refreshments. The mixer is sponsored by the Graduate Student Council. The charge is 25 cents. SHORTER HAIR FOR WOMEN!! KEEP COOL and comfort- .able with one of our Hair styles-cut and feathered to your individual desires .. . children are invited too. The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty off State dwrf N. L MANGOUNI L.YDIA 334 S. 4th Ave. MENDELSSOHN Ph. 6878 ET TH EATER Best by rws Doors Open .1 :15 P.M. TODAY & SAT.! Matinee 25c Nights 35c The Devil Rides the High 2 30 / 6:00 RICHD ________ at 1:30 - 4:50 - 8:20 "DYNAMITE" DEAN STOCKWELL " CECIL KELLAWAY with Win. Cargan DOROTHY ADAMS. HIENRY MORGAN- 11 . - % I I I m - II Today 35c and Saturday until 5 P.M. A RIOT Of COMEDY! Robert YOUNG Shirley TEMPLE TRAW-LER BATTERY RADIO This powerful little set will give you listening pleasure wherever you go. Long-lasting batteries; 4-tube superhetero- dyne circuit; 4" P. M. speaker; red, brown or blue simulated alligator case. Less Bat teries I I Jacok son>L rr - y Guaranteed to pack a wall with every smart youngm as een -n SEVENTEEN CHECK and DOUBLE CHECK Fashion's newest hit! Il BLACK, BROWN or GREEN L; with SMOOTH LEATHER TRIM $595 Pinchecks. .. news everywhere this Fall! And on perfect standing with all your casual street- wear and tailored suits. Comfy lo-wedges...leathep trims on your-color-with- white checked suiting! MATCHING HANDBAG 2 095r 1111 ,I I I I FOR THAT '1liM q SPECIAL DANCE. . and all your social needs C/IJa6eth 4ion £Al'p I Th e John J@ephifle :~' AGAR-HUTCHINSON 4 ALBERT SHARPE JOHNNY SANDS CAROL BRENNAN: AN RXO L&D4O PICUE~ Also "SKY'S THE LIMIT" CARTOON ODDITY - NEWS Continuous C O from 1 P.M. COOL - Today & Saturday - s6 - t 6: o i~- iI Plan on these beguiling dresses to keep you cool and lovely round the clock. Gracefully flared dance frocks in rayon, I and BUDGET MINDED! " JACKETS THAT TOP EVERY- THING - Corduroys, Light Wools and Sacony Fuluras, also delightfully cool cotton fabrics. $5.95 to $12.95. MANY NOW REDUCED " DENIM CO-ORDINATORS Sun Dresses, Clam Diggers, Shorts and Bras, Jackets, Skirts, and Slacks, from 13.50 " T-SHIRTS of every style - every color. Sport Shirts in Plaids, Checks, Stripes, and Solids. * SHORTS alone or with match- ing Shirts or Bras in Denim, Chambray, or Cord. from $2.25 * PEASANT BLOUSES - Sport Blouses, T-Shirts, and Hal- ters. - Plaids, Checks, and Solid Colors. * SKIRTS of Chambray, Denim, and Iridescent. Peasant and Tailored Styles. $3.95 to $8.95 is ,.. -.. b " ' a..... l i ' 3 fJ f 1 r ,,.,r' s ' ... . r fi a ' i . 5 t SMx Mu i 1_i. op modern COTTON SH IRT and SHORTS Crisp cotton cuffed twill shorts, easy mate for the t_ - * L L - L-!-'L~1 V .- * V * CRISP COTTONS for at home, for the office, for your travels. Many better cottons now re- ~' with YL........ lFl*7 "* iL..;.WINDSORfl III s ilk and cottn. All hi~'J, 1 I I I I