FAGS ..S a .. ~~~h E MC 1 ,CAN 1)A I Y _. _ _ .. _.. TET~XV: w~V. ~O. 194.~ Highlights On Campus... Mrs. Francesca Thivi and Dr. Wolf- gang Kraus, of the political science department, will debate the question of Indian independence inha forum at 8:30 p.m. today at the Hillel Founda- tion. Mrs. Thivi, a graduate student from India, will speak on "Independence for India Now," while Dr. Kraus, who is new to the faculty this year, will maintain that India should not be granted freedom until after the war. The forum is the sixth in a series of Friday evening discussions spon- sored weekly by Hillel. The meetings are open to the public and there is no charge for admission. Refreshments will be served. "The Rochdale Principles and the War" will be the topic of an all- cooperative forum to be held at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Robert Owen Cooperative House. The discussion, intended to clari- fy and re-evaluate the Rochdale principles upon which the cooper- tive movement is based, will be led by John Culbertson, '43, of Congress House, moderator. Four speakers, Betty Schaul, of the Pickerill House; Dave Tyner, Guild House; Jerry Fleemans, Con- gress House; and Isadore Singer, of Michigan House, all '43, will pre- sent the outstanding conflicting viewpoints which will be thrown to the floor for discussion. Ann Fagan, 45, of the Lester Co-op will present a background sketch of the atti- tudes of world cooperatives in the past and in the present. All co-op members and others in- terested are invited to attend the discussion. Avukah, student Zionist organiza- tion, will hold a communal luncheon for all members at 12:30 p.m. tomor- row at the Hillel Foundation. Following the luncheon, there will be a meeting of the Avukah Council, at which committee chairmen will report and plans for the rest of the semester will be completed. All chair- men must be prepared to report or to provide a substitute. Olson to Confer in Capital Dr. Raleigh Olson of the Education School left for Washington yesterday to attend a conference group at the United States Office of Education. The group will consider ways and means of relating high school pro-, grams to the war effort, with special attention given to the Victory Corps proposed in the Office of Education's recent bulletin. Ex-PEM Delinquents? Educators Meet New Demand for Teachers Curriculum Additions Will Aid Elementary School Shortage A threatened shortage of 3,000 ele- mentary school teachers is being an- swered by the University's education school through two additions to its regular program. With courses in directed teaching and elementary-school methods, the Elementary Education program, un- der the direction of Dr. W. C. Olson, is expanding to meet the new de- mand. Both these courses originated here for the summer session, after a reconsideration of school needs. Through the new five-hour course in directed teaching, a limited num- ber of students will be able to do their practice and supervisory work in Ann Arbor. Before this summer all stu- dent teachers in elementary educa- tion work had to go to Michigan State Normal School, Wayne Univer- sity and other schools for a semester of work. The course consists of su- pervised participation in classroom work with the children of the Uni- versity elementary, school. With the new addition to the nursery school this includes about 50 children, with 14 student teachers working with them each semester. The course in elementary school methods, also a five hour course, in- volves the cooperation of eleven fac- ulty members, each representing a field of interest in the preparation of teachers. One morning a week is spent in observation in the laboratory school here or in neighboring ele- mentary schools. These courses take in not only the demand for teachers in nursery and elementary schools, but also consider the needs in the fields of child care in defense areas.' Found Rickenbacker Exercises like these are needed to keep sailors fit during a long voyage. Here sailors on the fantail of a cruiser get a workout under direction of bos'n's mate standing on the ventilator. issension is Revealed in Nazi General Staffs Lieut. W. F. Eadie, U.S.N. (above), and Aviation Radioman L. H. Bout- te found the raft on which were Capt. Edward V. Rickenbacker and two companions. The threehad floated in the Pacific for three weeks after their plane was forced down. Child Institute* Abolition Asked Abolition of the Michigan Child Guidance Institute to conserve "mon- ey, manpower and social efficiency" will be asked in a report to be submit- ted to Gov. Murray D. Van Wagoner and Gov.-Elect Harry F. Kelly by Prof. Lowell J. Carr, director of the Institute. The report will recommend that the functions of the Institute respon- sible now to the Board of Regents be transferred to the state hospital com- mission and that the research func- tions be given the University with a $15,000 appropriation to cover its costs. U'Symphony Will Present First Concert DeLamarter To Direct Orchestra On Sunday Under the direction of Eric De- Lamarter the University Symphony Orchestra will present their first con- cert of the current season with David Van Vactor as guest conductor at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. The concert will be opened by the overture to "Fingal's Cave" by Men- delssohn, and this will be followed by the fifth symphony of Schubert. The third number, "Georgian Rhap- sody" by Tcherepnine, will feature Hanns Pick, member of the music school faculty, as solo cellist. Mr. Van Vactor will then take the podium to personally direct his "Con- certo Grosso" which was written for three flutes, harp and orchestra. The soloists for this number will be Jean Jeffery, '43, Alice Spath, '43SM and Ruth Wehner, '44, flutists, and Lynne Wainwright Palmer of the music school faculty, harpist. The concert will be closed by the "Torch Dance" from "Henry VIII" which was composed by German. Mr. Van Vactor's name stands out among the rising generation of com- posers of native extraction. His other works include the "Comedy Overtures and the "Concerto for Viola" which was one of the sensations of the 1940 season of the Chicago Symphony Or- chestra. GREAT LAKES SUB CHICAGO, Nov. 19.- (P)- The Peto, first submarine built on the Great Lakes during the war, will be accepted formally by the U.S: Navy Saturday at Manitowoc, Wis. The Ninth Naval District an- nounced today the craft would be re- ceived for Naval duty by Commander R. F. Hans, operations officer of the district. Huge Trailer Camp Planmed, Bomber Plant to be Housed Men Soon A gigantic trailer camp project in- cluding 480 two-family trailers on a 30-acre site near the' Willow Run bomber plant is being planned by the Federal Housing Authority in Cleve- land, it was reported yesterday The camp is to be located on Holmes Rd., across from the Willow Run employe dormitory, three miles from the plant. Every one of the 480 trailers is to have living quarters for two families each having been planned for an average family of three, Col. E. E. Hollenbach, acting chief of the con- struction section of the FPHA in De- troit explained. More than $247,000 is being spent for installation of a utility system and other improvements on the site of the trailer project. Ann Arbor's city council will dis- cuss plans for a' similar but smaller trailer camp near here at its regular meeting Monday night. HOSIERY We still have sheer rayons at $1.00 and $1.15 Lisle mesh - Lisle laces from $1.15 to $1.50 PAJAMAS Flannelette- Broadcloth - Seersucker. From $1.69 to $3.00 BLOUSES Long and short sleeve blouses in crepes or gabardine. All colors and white. $2.00 SMART EST HOSIERY SHOPPE Michigan Theatre Bldg. v LONDON, Nov. 19.-(,)-The turn of the tide for the United Nations from North Africa to the Solomons, plus Adolf Hitler's strategic errors and party favoritisms, were reported here today to have led a strong group of dissident German generals into a subversive movement to sacri- fice the Fuehrer and the Nazis and gain a peace favorable to their own class. The Junta, reputedly led by Field Marshal General Walther Von Brau- chitsch and Field Marshal General Fedor Von Bock, both of whom were ousted from command by Hitler, is said by a responsible foreign diplo- matic sources here to have begun "isolation" of the Fuehrer. Provoke Hitler's Ire Feelers are being put out by the generals to determine how the United Nations would respond to an offer of peace from a "de-Nazified" Germany, the report declares, the Junta hav- ing become convinced that it is im- possible for the Axis to win the war. The foreign diplomatic source, who cannot be further identified but who said he believed his information was reliable, said that some members of the military clique were "deliberately provoking Hitler's ire" so as to be dismissed or relegated from places of responsibility in order to be able to blame him (Hitler) for the disasters last winter in Russia. Dissenter List Swells Von Brauchitsch was dismissed as army commander-in-chief last win- ter after counseling against the win- ter campaign against Moscow. Von Bock was fired in the midst of the drive against Stalingrad this fall. Also reported to be members of the Junta were Gen. Franz Halder, Gen. Erich Von Mannstein, Field Marshal Gen. Karl Rudolf Gerd Von Rund- stedt and Gen. Johannes Blaskowitz. All were said to be dissatisfied with Hitler's "intuition" and with his steady Nazification of the army and high command. Marshal Erwin Rommel's defeat in North Africa was said to have been attributed by the officer group to the fact that Hitler did not take ear- lier steps to reinforce him from the Russian front. The officers regarded the Fuehrer's address of Nov. 8, in which he de- clared he would never give up; as strongly defeatist, the informant said, and strengthened their deter- mination to make a "deal" for them- selves. They were, said also to have been influenced by the steady decline of civilian morale. h. iI r i 3 t t i t t i i t i a, Babushka s A must in every college girl's wardrobe, and especially here. No one needs to be told that! In all colors, bright plaids, and of ample size. Priced at $1.00 The BUDGET HOP Two Doors East of the Michigan 1' ' About this Christeaas itSt a hrstmas have urged our customers to shop eary f rta For many years we ayehowever, "Shop Early" has a new andimportant meaning for you.ainur present stocks YAU yoprobably know, there are many gift items in or peseit sok on which manufacture haor ctheduration. We conditions and they will be irreplacable for lyshop ingstue o r gift items sold Another reason f oreryhppnistadutowrcdtosad delivery delays , we may not be able to secure re-orders on git te s 5 d ut early in this season.,ftslcinbewn Ouvr friendly mavc is Mkeyu advance gift selections between ottakeyy.urakeayatrits peak and you our friendly 5th." Our stock of gifts is now member, now and ee before the shopping ruh embere5th. can browse leisuryfts must be maied by assured of delivery i s ZIP-IN COAT r t .M v .9 1599 t ., ' .. .. , .. l fq 4 :, .y. _ " . ,fit:- s , ,. .. s , . . .,, . _ .: .f ,. :. ,. : CASUALL supple and soft as an Indian moccasin! handsomely, precise- ly tailoredl GUERN- SEY or BROWN. v f ' ..2 . a {I $595 glisten of TOWN BROWN Leather, tailored in a trim pump that's stunning in it's very simplicity! toe comfort a-plenty . . . and a "skim-along" low heel! (also of BLACK Leather.) CAMEL HAIR COAT WITH DETACHABLE LINING WOOL AND CAMEL HAIR BALMACCAN STYLE. REVERSIBLE COLLAR LEATHER BUTTONS 29.95 e in oxford form, if you're an oxford fan! leather heel and sole also GUEIRNSEY ! . fII II 1