THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TRFS George Dasch Will Conduct Annual Concert Massed Orchestra Festival To Feature 160 Instrumentalists, George Dasch, director of the, Northwestern University Symphony Orchestra and the Chicago Business Men's Symphony, will direct the fourth annual Michigan Massed Or- chestra Festival at 4:15 p.m. next Sunday in Hill Auditorium, it was announced yesterday. Michigan Artists To Play Constituting the largest orchestra ever heard in Hill Auditorium, at least 160 instrumentalists from towns and cities in Southeastern Michigan will play in the Festival. Players from Flint, Monroe, Dear- born, Wyandotte and Detroit as well a5 the Ann Arbor °Civic Orchestra and the University String Orchestra Will play on the program. A harp quintette from the University harp ensemble will also play for the an- nua event which is open to the public without charge. 304 Players The Festival is sponsored by the School of Music and the Michigan Civic Orchestra. Approximately 300 players from many different parts of the state gathered here for the 1942 Festival which was held in Yost Field House, but wartime travel conditions have limited attendance to musicians from nearby points this year. Dr. Emerson To Speak Dr. Haven Emerson, Professor Emeritus of public health at Colum- bia University, will speak to public healthstudents and other interested individuas at 11 a.m. Wehnesday in the School of Public Health Auditor- ium. The title of Dr. Emerson's address will be, "The Administration of Health Services at the Four Levels of Government." SOLDIER ART: Prof. Gores Praises Drawing' Exhibits by Sgt. Grover Cole RECORD BREAKER FLAGGED IN-A field man flags in the Mustang fighter plane piloted by Col. Clair Peterson of the Army Air Forces at the end of a record-breaking transcontinental flight at La Guardia Field, New York. Time from Los Angeles was six hours,. 31 minutes and 30 seconds, 2612 minutes better than the previous time set by the Lockheed Constellation. NEW RELIGIOUS TEACHING: Week- Chur ass Inaugurated "Mr. Cole has intentionally avoided. the themes one might expect in sol- dier art, for the drawings are not pictorial records of the more obvious aspects of war, such as characterize the work of many professional artists in uniform," Prof. W. J. Gores, of the School of Architecture, said yester- day about the exhibit of drawings by Sgt. Grover Cole, in the Architecture school foyer. "The main theme of Sgt. Cole's work," he continued, "is a very hu- man and sensitive interest in people and their environment. Pathos may be noted in some of the works, humor in others, sincerity and understand- ing in nearly all." Cole Stationed in England Grover Cole, formerly an instructor of ceramics in the University, is on leave of absence while in service, and is now stationed in England, attached to the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Forces. The forty drawings and water- colors, ranging from portraits to nature sketches, were done by Sgt. Cole in England during the past year. Sgt. Cole said in a recent letter to Prof. Gores, "Generally speaking, the essence of all my paintings is this- they're a reflection of fast, disrupted efforts in an attempt to get to know new surroundings with the color of war conditions and the sort of exhil- aration of these crazy days." GI Art 'Transitory "GI art seems so transitory to me and I've tried to avoid the trivialities of soldier life for something more basic. The things are not war docu- Yanks Interned in Sweden NEW YORK, May 13. -{')-Five American planes-four Flying Fort- resses and a fighter - made forced landings in Sweden today and the 45 men comprising their crews were in- terned, the Swedish radio said in a domestic broadcast. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ments. They're people and places in 1944 as seen by me in England." "I've felt free in a sense to do a lot of things-unfettered by the sur- roundings of an organized society; and yet I hope my former training and discipline is the foundation of all this." The closing date of the exhibit, which is on display from 8 to 5 p.m. week days, has been extended from May 16 to June 1. Prof. Gores, Chair- man of the Department of Design, of the School of Architecture, is in charge of the exhibit. Waste Paper To Be Collected Waste paper will again be collected Thursday, May 25, George H. Gabler, chairman of the Washtenaw County Salvage Committee announced yes- terday. Local householders, students and merchants are reminded to save ev- ery scrap of paper. Salvage collections for Washtenaw County during April netted 1,413,000 pounds of metal; 6,190 pounds of rubber, 662,000 pounds of paper and 30,790 pounds of rags. Over a 22-month period, collec- tions yielded 39,000 pounds of metals, 1,265,946 pounds of rubber, 8,240,000 pounds of paper, and 473,474 pounds of rags. An innovation in local public schools, week-day religious education is now being planned by the Ann Arbor Council of Churches for chil- dren in elementary grade schools to supplement their religious training. Donald Katz, president of the! Council and chemical engineering professor, stated yesterday that the Council hopes to employ a trained teacher for the program which would begin next fall with a section of the sixth grade. Not a Cure-All "This would not be a cure-all for the lack of religious training, nor would it take the place of the church Sunday school, but it is to reirnforce the spiritual life of the children in this community," he said. Plans for a church school week in September are now being formulated in order to put the general topic of religious education before the par- e its and children. It will stress the necessity of improving religious training in churches and increasing attendance, Professor Katz said. It was emphasized that these week-day classes in religion are an experiment and will at first touch only a small fraction of the school- age children. Permission Must Be Obtained Permission must be obtained from the public school authorities for re- lease of the children from classes once or twice a week. The religious education classes would be conducted in churches adjacent to the schools. Final plans are also subject to the approval of the churches. The board of directors of the Counil reported that attendance would depend upon the consent of parents. The curriculum would bje child-centered using the best mater- ials available and taught by a pro- fessional teacher of the same calibre as those found in public schools. A budget of $3,500 has been set up by the Council for the next fiscal year to cover expenses of the entire program. Member churches and in-I dividual gifts would form the source of the contributions. Nine Churches Represented Although the Council now repre- sents nine churches, Prof. Katz said that it was hoped that other church- es would find it favorable to join or co-operate with the Council's pro- gram even if they are not members. "This project is one type of work that can be done better collectively and by united action," he stated. Under the sponsorship of the city Ministerial Association and the Michigan Council of Churches, the city Council was organized last sum- mer to bring churches and laymen closer together. The five members of each church on the Council are the minister and representatives from the women's and men's groups, Sunday school and youth clubs. Churches'now holding membership are the Presbyterian, First Baptist, Second Baptist, C o n g r e gational, First Methodist, West Side Metho- dist, Unitarian, Christian Memori- al and Bethlehem Evangelical. 1) w x~ 2e Jo 2Dt& WHITE SU E DE PORTHOLE TRIM .. __ ..,s ._ 1 _ .. .. . - Summertime At the old swimming hole or in the club's swanky pool you'll be in the swim in a mid- riff or dressmaker suit . . . cotton or jersey. They're cool under the sun and form flatter- f { ° ;: r.' -..: 3.; iajv -- yJt;@y ?.' i ..: ,lw.:.iA :-Xf Ati i : r' SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1944 VOL LIV No. 134 All notices for The Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publica- tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices School of Education Faculty: The May meeting of the faculty, originally scheduled for May 15, will be held in (Continued on Page 4) BROOKINS 108 East Washington Sm art shoe Phone 2-2685 1 1. 7 f4'. ing in the water. have one. You can't afford not to :. , IT }, I r_ .'3' c\'" $ 1 . J {tip... , t , {' ..; ' $'> ; r::>- {:. . <.:; $;-t.. _:..> .' r:';.: f r ;, ;.. ;.; :, { 3 }}$ 9 Y' ," . ':......... ...r ° . ! t i i }^ -.* f # ' .-7y , :" i~ Sizes 9-17 10-44, 161/2-2412 q B'4y Wy S War Stamprs and I I kaS*pop ". Feminine-fresh cool cottons-each one front page fashion news! See the ruffled U-necked cottons, the bare-back beauty playsuits with their own skirts, the slick-suiters--and we've lots of smooth casuals, too! Do your cotton pickin' here . .. from the smartest collection in town. Ginghams, piques, chambrays, seersuckers--all easy to launder. Old Mr. Sunshine will be all smiles when.he sees you in your New Vitamin D Weskit. Wear it with your shorts, your slacks, skirts ... comes in striped pique. $3.50 Dresses from $7.95 PLAY SUITS Short Staits ....... 8.95 Slack Suits from . . 8.95 Shirts fro1........ 2.00 Shorts from....... 3.00 16-4 SLACKS go everywhere on the all- around girl. Smooth lines that hide those tiny figure faults . . . bright gay colors for play . . . darker more serviceable shades for chores. Live in slacks and you live easy all sum- mer long. 1t . AN ALL-DAY AFFAIR and you are ready for it in a festive sun-back dress with seperate jacket. The jacket slips on for cool mornings and city street wear. Take it off to catch the sun's rays in the garden n rnriv - A' ,_', A " ct n r v l .> .N Ir 17"S A SHORT STORY that's long in fashion news. Neat little shorts that give you freedom of motion on the tennis court, on your bike, and Bonds First I I I I I