THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 21, 1939 THE MICHIGAN BATTY SUNDAY MAY_21, 1939 Alumni End Business Meet Stevens Of ICC Describes Anti-Trust Legislation And New Investigation (Continued from Page 1) of forgetting that stockholders are the zeal owners of the business, and of, keeping adequate, accurate in- formation from them. Intelligent stockholders, Mr. Mor- rison declared, need essential infor- mation about the corporation, and it is the duty of management to supply. it. This information, he explained, should include past earnings, savings, the important divisions of cost, the market outlook and prices. Only then can the investor have a sound base "to delve into the future," Mr. Mor- rison concluded. Features of this year's conference were several roundtable discussions on current business problems. Pro- minent speakers who took part in- cluded: Eric L. Kohler, '14, comptrol- ler of the Tennessee Valley Author- ity; George D. Bailey, resident part- ner of Ernst and Ernst, Detroit; James Pottinger, '20, of Ferry-Morse Seed Co., Detroit. Churches To Hold Outdoor Progras. (Continued from Page 1) supper. At the meetig which will fol- low in the open air theatre, Dr. William P. Lemon will lead a discus- sion on the "God of the Open Air" with brief reference to the recent campus lectures on the nature and existence of God. The Roger Williams Guild cabinet is holding its annual Spring Retreat at Camp Birkett on Silver Lake. Morning services will be held and plans will be made for the coming year. At a meeting of the Wesleyan Guild at 6 p.m., Mr. Harold Gray, who has charge of the Saline Valley Co- operative Farms, will describe some of his experiences as a conscientious objector during the last war. The Rev. Lenord D. Parr of the First Congregational Church will speak on "That Eloquent 'But"' at 10:45. at the regular morning serv- ice. Members of the student fellow- ship will go to Dexter park at 4:30 for a picnic and outdoor meeting. The regular weekly meeting of the Disciples Guild will be held at 6:30 p.m. Four members of the Guild Council will discuss the evaluation of the Guild in the past year, and plans will be made for next year. Former Michigan Student Describes Experiences At Pensacola Air Station G> Flying in the United States Navy is an opportunity to fly in the most modern and best developed'air force in the world, (sent Bradford, '37E, said in an interview yesterday. Bradford has stopped off here in Ann Arbor thissweek on his way home from the United States Naval Air Station at Pensacola, Fla., where he was a flying student. Every year six classes of students from the naval elimination bases located in various parts of the country succeed in pass- ing their solo flight check and are then in a position to go to Pensacola to get advanced training for a naval air career. Cadets Are From Universities Pensacola is a big place, Bradford said, with hundreds of Civil Service and WPA workers and from 600 to 700 students, including officers, enlisted men and cadets. All of the cadets are graduates of some University, Bradford stated, and are as healthy a bunch as can be found anywhere. Strict physical examinations must be passed in order to qualify for en- trance. More applicants are dis- qualified for eye defects than for any other reason, Bradford said, even though the applicant believes his eyes are perfect. The first two weeks at the station 1 i i Hillel Officers Are Inducted Banquet Is Held Today; Awards To Be Made The annual Hillel Banquet will be held at 6 p.m. today at the Michigan Union at which the new officers of the Hillel Council will be inducted. These new officers are: Betty Stein- hart, '40, president; David Friedman, '40M, vice-president and Zelda Davis, '40, secretary. Bernard Weissman, '39L, will serve as toastmaster. Presentation of a service rup to the affiliated organization which has done most for Hillel this year and two books to the runners-up will be' made by Prof. Jacob Sacks of the pharmacology college, Mrs. Isaac Ra- binowitz and Nathaniel Holtzman, '39, outgoing Hillel president, all of whom acted as judges in selecting recipi- ents of the awards. Keys will be presented to the grad- uating seniors who have been active in Jewish affairs on the campus and an honor roll will be read containing the names of those undergraduates who have done outstanding work for the Foundation. Actor Favors Federal Help To T he a trae (Continued from Page 1) cial shows, Mr. Irvine insists, the Federal Theatre has helped to train a very large potential audience never reached by Broadway's offerings. There were thousands who never saw a spoken play until the Federal Theatre offered productions rithin the popular price levels. Mr. Irvine was requisitioned to play Thomas a Becket in T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral," the Fed- eral Theatre's first hit. Combining as it did Eliot's poetic skill, Hal Welle's production, and capable act- ing, the play caused the critics to forget their patronizing attitude to- ward the Federal Theatre and accept it as a mature, professional body. r a wegt pfrig? Two of the new "PBY's" shown over the Gulf of Mexico off Pensa- cola, Fla., where the Naval Air Station is located. lip 4- 1~LV U z-i ,.r.) r , su "STRIKE UP THE BANDS!" there's one more glorious weekend ahead before that "deep purple" gloom settles down on light-hearted coeds. Merrily you may trip the light fantas- tic at all the last gay parties in a new summer for- COLLINS SHOP. They're beauties -a crisp maroon and white pique with perky bands of white spot- lighting your new "trick" steps. A fascinating white embroidered or- gandy sways an ever-so-full skirt banded with tiniest black velvet ribbon. Demure as grandmother's mosegay! Seersucker, organdy, floating chiffon-they're all lovely and quite the ticket for a gay weekend or Senior Ball. PLAY CLOTHES ARE HIT- TING A NEW HEIGHT, both in demand and attractiveness at SOREN'S (little shop around the corner from William St). There's a stunning pair of sailor-tog slacks, striped trousers - and trim tailored shirt that's just, the n'th degree in i smartness. Thee play suits are mighty clever with their new design, one with gay scenes of alibou Beach and splash- ing spray ... $3.95 to $4.95. Some pas- tel silks and gay cotton prints all ' with that handy button - on skirt. FLASH: special on lisle anklets . .. perfect summer weight, 3 for 79c and colors are just the new shades so hard to find. Stop in soon! * * * WHILE YOU'RE MAKING THAT big impression that has to last over the summer . .. why not impress him with a new hair-do the DI MATTIA BEAUTY SHOP does such grand work; wonderful shampoos with lots of brushing before hand, tricky curls ... and you leave , a walking example of the old proverb about. "Women's crowning glory . . ." The Peggy Sage manicures are grand too, and why not a facial before the sum- mer onslaught of wind and sun? * * * WHILE YOU'RE PLANNING THAT gay weekend at lakes and cottages here's a clever thought about the tricky zipper bags for bottles and lotions. You can put your pet sun tan oil in them and there's lots of room left for sun- glasses and cigarettes. The water- proof lining never cracks and the outside! . .. that's best news of all; they come in gay striped and solid colorkmoire, and look like a perfect- ly stunning sum- mer purse. $1 is the nominal fee at CALKINS-FLETCHER. REMEMBER THE GAL "dress- ed in gingham too, down by the old mill stream" (alias Huron river). For picnics canoeing and all kinds of fun you'd be a "cam- pus" queen too in some of the DILLON SHOP: .. adorable cotton' frocks. Brighty 'Mctavish' plaids\ with wee pique collars. Ever had ' one of those soft silky cotton sport. '* dres ses called, chambray? There is a beauty in Baby-blue. The current "knock- / out" number is a chintz print withl an oh-so-flared skirt in blue, red or yellow with tiny flower sprigs. Here are slacks galore of course for your play days, and skirt and shirt twosomes in gay pastel "glorified" burlap. are spent learning naval terms, his- tory and rules. When that term is completed, the student begins his real flying training. Students are divid- ed into two groups or wings, a morn- ing wing and an afternoon wing. Students of the morning wing spend from 6:15 a.m. until 10:30 in the air taking flying instructions. The afternoon for them is occupied with ground school where they learn navi- gation, gunnery, maintenance and repair. Both wings are through classes and flying at 3 p.m. when they avail themselves of the many sport facilities to be found there. Pensacola is located on the shore of the Gulf of Mexico and big, white, sandy beaches offer admirable op- portunities for sunning and the deep blue waters of the Gulf are unsur- passed for swimming and sailing. The Station owns several sail boats and races are held periodically. The stu- dents have football ard baseball teams and frequently make trips in huge transports to play games at one of the bases. Inasmuch as Florida has a year-round outdoor season, the students spend most of their time outside. Even in gunnery training there is a certain amount of sport, for accuracy and familiarity with guns is obtained by shooting skeet. and traps out on range. Golf at one or two nearby courses and dancing every Friday night at the Officers' Club rounds out the social life of the cadet.' Course Divided Into 5 Squadrons The flying course is divided into five squadrons through which the cadet must pass before he is given his wings and is assigned to a post or' fleet squadron. The first squadron is mainly preliminary flying with sea- planes. After a final check, the stu- dents graduate to the second squad- ron where they learn precision flying,' stunting and landing in small fields.' In precision flying, they get their first taste of three-plane formation.' In the third squadron, the students . fly regular high-horse power navi- gation planes and learn the nine-1 plane formation. Formation flying is very important in wartime, when compact, group-flying gives fighters a tactical advantage., Flying of the big boats, such as the new PBY's (shown in accompanying picture) and other large bombing and scouting planes, comes in the fourth squadron. Familiarization with1 night-flying is also obtained in thist group. Pensacola is the only placet at present in the country wherecata- pault-shooting is taught. This phaset of 'sea flying is also taught in the fourth squadron. Completion of this1 squadron makes the cadet eligible fort the fifth, the final one before the 1 wings are awarded. Here the cadet3 gets training with fighters, high speedk torpedo planes and learns more night, blind and cross-country flying. Thee day when the student gets a cracke at the fighters is eagerly awaited, fort these fighters are high-powered and capable of flying straight up. When squadron five is completed, the cadet gets one of the much-treasured wings and is then assigned to the fleet for the remaining two or three years. Some Amusing Experiences Many amusing experiences mark the student's training period. The, fist man to soloin the first squadron gets a ducking in the bay and the last man receives like treatment. Many's the time that a cadet, accompanied by an instructor, lands his seaplane on the bay on a rough day and cuts the waves at the wrong angle, giving the instructor a spray bath. Need- less to say, the neophyte flyer gets a bawling out. In squadron one, it is necessary to land a seaplane on the bay in a so-called buoy shot. The landing is made from an altitude of 800 feet, and the pilot must sight the buoy on his wing-tip and circle down- wind past the buoy and make an "S" curve in toward the buoy. The idea is to land as close to the buoy as pos- sible. Occasionally, some cadet lands a little too close and carries the wood- en buoy with him. The result is gen- erally a bath in the cold salt waters of the bay. Some of the gunnery practice also provides humorous twists. For ex- ample, a plane is sent up trailing a large cloth sock some 400 yards be- hind and then fighters are sent up to riddle this sock with machine gun bullets. The planes head for the tar- get one-by-one and dive down past it shooting as they go by. Sometimes a cadet misjudges his distance and dives right through the sock. In taking off, some of the students fail to rise in time to miss fences, wires, etc., in which event they often leave their undercarriage perched on a pole or even a tree. The safest thing he can do is to attempt a landing in the bay. Speedy cruisers, or motor boats are on duty at. all times in the bay, equipped with radios. In the event that a pilot must land in the bay with a landplane, these cruisers are notified and speed out to await it. Sometimes the procedure is so efficient that it is possible to remove the pilot from his plane so soon after the landing that he doesn't even get his feet wet. Planes thus sunk are recovered by a repair ship and re- conditioned.. Becomes Full-Fledged Officer Upon completion of his four-year course, the cadet is released and be- comes a full-fledged officer in the United States Naval Reserve. He doesn't get his official commission until a year after his release, however. He is then eligible to fly government planes in his spare time and keep up his training, for which he gets paid. At the end of three or four years, he is then eligible for advance- ment in the air force. Many pilots get good jobs with commercial airlines. Representatives of the big airlines come down every year to Pensacola and interview pros- pective applicants, for they realize there is no better flying education than at Pensacola. These cadets have the advantage of the best equipment money can buy. And as the productivity of American labor is so much greater than any foreign country's, the government can buy equipment of a better quality and yet pay much less than is necessary in other countries. Flight gear is the best available and every cadet takes excellent care of all his equipment, especially his parachute, for he knows that his life may sometime depend on his 'chute. Planes are checked every morning by a mechanic and the pilot also checks things over before taking it up. At any time that a student feels his plane is not in the best of condi- tion possible, the plane is wheeled in- to the repair shops and given a thorough overhauling. Often planes come through the shop much better than when new. After all the training and instruc- tion at the Station, the pilot is as- signed to Pearl Harbor, T.H., or Nor- folk, Va., Seattle, Wash., Sitka, Alas- ka, or Coco Solo, C.Z. Life at these bases can often prove to be a lot of fun, especially the island bases. Life in the United States Navy Aair Force is indeed one of the most adventur- ous and varied to be found anywhere. Senior Health Exam Urged All men students graduating from the University in June are urged to secure complete physical examina- tions before leaving. Men desiring check-ups should make appointments immediately at the Health Service. The DANCE will be given at the UNITARIAN CHURCH SUNDAY at 8:00 P.M. The music is to be by RAY CARRY'S ORCHESTRA. Prize winning moving pictures of rat behaviorisms will be pre- sented by Dr. Norman Maier. The dance is for the Benefit of the Czechoslovakia Relief Fund. I 11 New Invisible Half -Soles will keep your feet DRY Don't wait for the spring rains -anticipate them.. . by having your shoes soled today you may avoid illness ! COLLEGE SHOE REPAiR WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER! I4 I r -- -1 Try A DAILY Classified I 611 E. William 3400 'Sumeer Sunday"' a Pinecapple Print Dress of Cool Spun Rayon by 19,95 As refreshing, as appreciated as a Sunday in summer .. . the new look of the staccato touch of vibrant color against white, of the wide revers and cuffs . . . the flattery of the squared shoulders and the swirling skirt. In magenta, cactus green, Pacific blue or fiesta red on white. Goodyear's COLLEGESHOPS and DOWNTOWN STORE I s Headquarters for WEDDING STATIONERY *Invitations * Announcements * At Home Cards Complete Price Range - Printed, Ther- mographed and Engraved . . . Also PERSONAL CARDS Priced from 85 cents up, per 100 Cards. I' I U U -- ~ ~ - - U U U U ~.. - U I ~ km ~EM U