............ FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESAY. 26.193 PIUJWJL f V, A.7007 p GEOLOGY CAMP: Boulder Scene of 'U' Summer Classes Weather To Remain Hot; Yet Not As Hot As Azizia DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (4 , _ By DICK BUCK Special to The Datly BOULDER-Summer school stu- dents at the University of Colo- rado have gradually become ac- customed to the fact that the Uni- versity of Michigan is also con- ducting summer school in Boulder. Four faculty members and nine- teen geology students make up Mi- chigan's annual six-week geology summer camp. The course is a re- quirement for all geology majors, but this summer's group also in- cludes a minerology major. For the last three summers, they have stayed at a rooming house just one block from the Colorado campus. Maping Instruction Under the supervision of Dr. E. N. Goddard, chairman of the ge- ology department, the students are receiving instruction in pace-and- compass, plane table, aerial photo- graph and underground mapping. The work takes them to a mul- titude of place's in the Mineral Belt of the Colorado Front Range and on the eastern slopes of this range. Dr. Goddard is exceedingly well versed on the area, since he was one of the men with the Uni- ted States Geology Service who did the original mapping here. ovdo-fetpaponro-is no etaoin non Students find world rough with breakfast at 6:30 a.m., field work starting around 7:30 a.m. and end- ing at 5 p.m. six days a week. The City Leaders Invite Russian Agriculturists PLAY TIME--Four University geology students shown atop 13,- WORK TIME - Dr. J. A. Door 000-foot Arapahoe Peak, a regular spare time activity. Pictured (right), affectionately termed from left to right are Earl Kaufman, Pat Cleary, author Dick "Black Jack Door" by students, Buck and Jack Focht. A nine-and-one-half hour work day leaves gives instruction in plane tabling. little time for fun. program leaves time for panning for gold, collecting fossils, Dr. J. A. Door's imitation of a prehistoric amphibian walking up a sandstone ledge, and the climbinb of Ara- pahoe Peak, 13,000 feet high. 'Black Jack Dorr' Dr. Dorr, or "Black Jack Dorr" as the students affectionately re- fer to him, assists Dr. Goddard along with Prof. Wynn Stumm and Ed Stoever. Recently, the group spent two days under ground at Poorman Mine in the famous Gold Mill min- ing district. During this period, they became familiar with mining terminology a n d underground mapping. Another two days were spent around some of the old mining campus of the district. Addition- trips have been made to a sand- stone quarry, a gypsum plant and a fluorspar plant and mine. It has become quite obvious to Colorado University students that Michigan is in town. The strains of "Hail to the ictors" and "I Wanna go back to Michigan" echo in the local college hangouts at, least once every day. Group To Split The boys have even gotten to- HUMBOLDT, Iowa ()-At least one Iowa community is calling on the state's political big guns to make certain the traveling Rus- sian farm leaders do not change original plans to visit their city. It is reliably learned from Amer- icans accompanying the Russians that some local leaders at Sioux 'City requested Iowa's Republican Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper to ask the Iowa Department of Agri- culture to get Soviet Acting Minis- ter of Agriculture . F. Matske- vich to come to their town. Sioux City Visit Cut Matskevich and his Russian farm group, according to initial plan, were to go to Sioux City and look over the stockyards there. More recently, in an effort to give the Russians more time to study special subjects of particular interest, the American planners of the tour cut out the Sioux City visit. There was an immediate pro- test. Sioux City had been prepar- ing to receive the Russians and wanted them to come. Sioux City people reportedly went to Sen. Hickenlooper. Chartered Plane The result: The American co- ordinators for the Russians, since they do not want to disappoint anyone, may fly a representation from the Russian group to the western Iowa city in a chartered plane. Plans for the shuttle opera- tion are being worked out. The Russians and the Ameri- cans conducting their tour are finding that distIappointment is caused by changes in plans. Such is the interest in their visit that communities feel slighted when there are changes in the program. Yesterday the Russians were traveling in three groups. CAMPAIGN EXPENDITURES: Kavanagh Says Democrats, Republicans Law Violators. LANSING (P) - Atty. Gen. Thomas M. Kavanagh yesterday accused Democrats and Republi- cans alike of violating a state law requiring full reporting of politi- cal campaign expenditures and collections. He issued a preliminary report on an investigation demanded by John Feikens, Republican State Chairman. Feikens had accused the Democrats of failing to report their campaign finances. Gries To Lecture, Appear on Panel A lecture and a panel discussion will be held today as part of the University's special summer series on Michigan. At 4:15 p.m. in Auditorium A, Angell Hall, Walter F. Gries, Sup- erintendent of the Welfare De- partment of Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company Ishpeming, Michigan will present a lecture entitled "Michigan's Great Upper Pennin- sula." Gries will also take part in a panel discussion on "The Future of Michigan's Northland" to be held at 7:30 p.m. in Auditorium A. The Hon. J. Joseph Herbert, University Regent, Prentiss M. Brown, Chairman of the Mackinac Bridge Authority, and Gerald E. Eddy, Director of Michigan's De- partment of Conservation, will be the other panelists. "T h e information assembled thus far," Kavanagh said, "indi- cates that either from lack of in- formation or failure to understand the law's provisions, there has been widespread failure to con- form on both sides of the politi- cal fence." Not Filed in 30 Counties In at least 30 counties, neither the Democratic or Republican par- ties filed the reports required. Kavanagh said the Democratic organizations which .did file list-, ed expenditures of $393,844 and the Republicans $1,529,786. Fifty- four Democratic and 31 Republi- can county committees failed to file. He said, however, there appears to be some duplications in the Re- publican figures. Kavanagh asked Republican and Democratic coun- ty chairmen who did not file to do so at once. Does Not Conform to Law Kavanagh said the report filed by the Republican State Central Committee does not conform with the law because it does not detail money received and disbursed or by whom. He said that he was studying the law to see whether various un- ion political action groups and such organizations as the Federa- tion of Women Clubs, Farm Bu- reau, Grange, The League of Women Voters and others should have filed. gether to serenade several soror- ities. At the end of the camp the group will split as Dr. Goddard takes one part on a four-day trip through the mining districts of Colorado. The other group undei; Dr. Dorr, will tour Rocky Moun- tain National Park, Dinosaur Na- tional Monument, and the Uinta Plateau in Utah. -Auto Industry To Set Record DETROIT (M)-The auto indus- try's assembly lines still are rolling along at near-record levels; some time next week they will complete the year's five millionth passenger car. Although a production lull is ahead nobody close to the industry has any doubt the car makers can and will build another two million units by the year's end. This, of course, will set up another pro- duction record. The present record is 6,600,000 cars built in 1950. Meanwhile, at the retail level th- 1955 model cleanup is under way. Surveys indicate the retailers are getting sales volume but at the expense of profits. Big discounts and lean profits generally are the rule. As Is always the case in any trade survey there are some areas in which dealers report inventories large "but not unwieldy in view of the sales volume." The trade paper Automotive News reports that the four mil- lionth retail new car sale was made this year on July 23. At the same time it noted that the industry built the four millionth car of the year on June 20. So, theoretically, it says, the car was carried in stock 33 days. This, the paper adds, forecasts a "tough cleanup." "Things will work out happily only for those dealers who turn in prodigious sales performances in the next 60 to 90 days," Automo- tive News said. Unscrupulous merchants are sell- ing unneeded fur coats and long underwear to the natives of Fiji, a Suva resident complains. Read Daily Classifieds WASHINGTON (lP)--For most of the. United States, this has been an unusually hot summer, and the weatherman's long range forecast isn't encouraging. More of the same, he says, mop- ping his brow. So let's thumb through some as- sorted weather statistics, on the theory that no matter how bad it is, it's cheering to know the rec- ords show it might be worse. Plenty Hot Take Sept. 13, 1922, an other- wise undistinguished date in his- tory. In Azizia, Libya, that da, the thermometer shot up to 136 degrees fahrenheit in the shade. Unfortunately, no record was kept of how many natives turned to their fellow natives and gave the Libyan equivalent of: RELAXATION: Summertime Diversion Stanley Quartet .. . The Stanley Quartet will be heard in its second summer con- cent at 8:30 p.m. today in Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The program includes the Mo- zart Quartet in D minor,, K. 421, Prof. Ross Lee Finney's Quartet in A minor, No. 4 and the Brahms' Quartet in B flat, Op. 67. The public is invited free of charge. *, * * Saline Mill . .. S. N. Behrman's comedy "Jane" will open at 8:30p.m. today at the Saline Mill Theatre for a three- week run. Directed by Ted Heusel and starring Robin Hall in the title role, the play is a sophisticated comedy of 1938 London and con- cerns a dowdy country relative who comes to the big city and upsets the life of a noted novelist and his wife. The novelist is re- portedly a caricature of writer W. Somerset Maugham The theater is located on U. S. 112 in Saline, Mich., eight miles south of Ann Arbor. General ad- mission, prised at $1.65, may be purchased at the door or reserved by phone Saline 31. ISA Dance .. . International Students. Associa- tion will sponsor a dance, "Grand Cotton Formal," to be held from 8 p.m. to midnight Friday at Rackham Ballroom. With music provided by Mario Mascarenhas' band and also re- cords, the dance will feature side shows and free refreshments. Everyone is welcome to attend and tickets, which sell for $1 per couple, may be purchased at the International Center or at the door. Stranger LANDORE, Wales (A)-George Slade answered a knock at his door yesterday. The surprise caller was his brother, William, 78 years old, of Ellwood City, Pa., whom he had not seen for 42 years. "I decided suddenly to fly over," the brother explained. "I didn't tell anybody I was com- ing because I wanted to find my own way home, and I did." "Hot enough for ya?" No other spot has equalled this lamentable r e c o r d, although Death alley, in California, gave it a good, hot try. There on July 10, 1913, at the Greenland ranch, the temperature climbed to 134. Naturally, in h o t weather thoughts turn to rain and Baguio, Luzon. For to this former summer capital of the Philippines, in mid- July of 1911, came the grandaddy gully-washer of them all. Within 214 hours, a whopping 46 inches, or almost four feet, of rain poured down. Russian Winters When it comes to cold weather, it's acknowledged on both sides of the Iron Curtain that Russia has everyone else licked all hollow. In 1892, in Verkhoyansk, Siber- ia the thermometer twice dropped to minus 90. That's more than 20 degrees worse than the worst we can do: A mere minus 69.7 de- grees, set Jan. 29, 1954, at Rog- ers Pass, Mont. Fries Speaks On Language "The old grammar was an at- tempt to classify 'dead' language while the new grammEr is an attempt to make it possible for the student to find the meaning of a sentence by teaching him the signals that determine this mean- ing," Prof. Charles C. Fries said in speech yesterday. Prof. Fries spoke at the last session of the Conference for Teachers of High School English. He explained that "It was necessary to know the meaning of sentence before you could apply the old grammar. With the new grammar it is possible to use the grammar to find the meaning. Prof. Fries has recently returned from Germany where he has been the advisor in setting up a pro- gram to teach English as a foreign language. He is the head of the English Language Institute. .All-American City Unsettled (Continued from Page 2) PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: A representative from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Tuesday, July 26. Easterling Co., various locations in- cluding Ann Arbor - men and women for aTraining Program for Supervisory and Executive Sales Positions. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext; 371. Lectures Linguistic Forum. Joseph K. Yama- giwa, Professor of Far Eastern Langu- ages and Literatures, will speak on "Linguistic Data: Some Qualifications," Tues., July 26, 7:30 p.m. in Rackham Ampitheater. Academic Notices Seminar in Mathematical Statistics. Tues., July 26, at 7:00 p.m., in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Jack Meagher will discuss a recent paper on "Transforma- tions of Statistical variables." Doctoral Examination for Albert Wey- man Patrick, Business Administration; thesis: "The Theory and Technique of Cost Accounting in the Hosiery Indus- try," Wed., July 27, 8th floor Conference Rooom, School of Business Administra- tion, at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, H. F. Taggart. Doctoral Examination for Frank Bur- ton Womer, Education; thesis: "The Evaluation of Item Selection Tech- niques Appropriate to a New Response Method- for Multiple-Choice Type Test Items," Wed., July 27, 7611 Haven Hall, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, C. H. Coombs. Sociology Lunch for staff and stu- dents in the Sociology Department. Wed., July 27, 12:00 m.-1:00 p.m., Sociology Lounge, 5th floor, Haven Hall. Bring own food. Concervs Stanley Quartet. Second program in the current series of concerts at 8:30 p.m. Tues., July 26, in Rackham Lecture Hall. Mozart's Quartet in D minor, K. 421, Ross Lee Finney's Quartet in A minor, No. 4, and Brahms Quartet in B-flat, Op. 67. The general public will be admitted without charge. Student Recital. Robert Pratt, tenor, 8:30 p.m. Wed., July 27, in Rackham Assembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music (in Music Education). Works by Purcell, Ford, Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, jDelius, Respighi, vaughan- Williams, and Warlock. Open to the public. Pratt studies voice with Harold Haugh. Events Today Students of Russian will converse at the International Center, Tues., July 26, 3:30-5:00 p.m. Refreshments. Business Education Students -- free afternoon treat. Basement of the Cor- ner House, 3:00-4:00 p.m. today. Cour- tesy of Picnic Committee. Coming Events Invitations for the Master's Breakfast, Sun., July 31, are in vne mail. Candi- dates for the Master's degree at the close of the Summer Session who have not received invitations are asked to call for them at the office of the Summer Session, Room 3510, Adminis- tration Bldg. La Sociedad Hispanica, Department of Romance Languages will present two speakers at its weekly meeting on Wed., July 27 at 7:30 p.m., East Con- ference Room, Rackham. Dr. Carlos Eduardo Nasjleti of Argentina will give an illustrated lecture on, "Sintesis his- torica del arte argentino," and Senorita Marlene Esteves of Buenos Aires will speak on, "Buenos Aires -- Ayer, Hoy, y Manana." Period for questions and discussion, followed by Spanish music and songs. Open to the public. The Happy Time, Samuel Taylor's comedy, will be presented by the De- partment of Speech tomorrow through Sat. at &00 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are available at the box office 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. today. $1.50-$1.10-75c. 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