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June 16, 1944 - Image 8

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1944-06-16

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THE MIClIGXN D1AILY WAR NEWS iAGE

FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1944

U

.lw r

ROCKY MOUNTAINS:
Camp Davis Staff To Conduct
Field Conference on Geology

A geology field conference will be
conducted by the staff of Camp Da-
vis, University Field Station in the
Rocky Mountains, Saturday and
Sunday, August 12 and 13 on the
geology of the Camp Davis region.
This conference is planned espe-
cially for petroleum geologists work-
ing in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado,
and Utah. It is expected that about
50 will attend.
The relation of the Hoback Basin
to the Gros Ventre and Hoback
ranges will be the highlight of the
discussion. Glaciation of Jackson
Hole and the Teton Range and the
geomorphic history of these feat-
ures will also be reviewed.
To Follow Basic Course
The conference is scheduled to oc-
cur the week-end following the finish
of the basic field course. Camp Da-
vis will provide cabins and meals for
about thirty people and the overflow
will be taken care of at near-by
ranches.
A. J. Eardley of the geology de-
partment added that "the trial or
hearing of the Department of the
Interior, the Department of Agri-
culture, and the Jackson Hole resi-
dents over the Jackson Hole National
Monument will occur- at about the
same time. Since the 'geological ar-

guments' constitute part of the reas-
oning by the parties concerned, the
discussions of the participants of the
conference will have special interest.
Staff To Be Witnesses
"Camp Davis staff members will
probably have to appear as expert
witnesses at the 'trial' and in view
of the fact that several important
parts of the geologic history are
poorly known and controversial, the
significance of the geological argu-
ments is not clear."
Those who are interested in at-
tending the conference and field trips
may communicate with A. J. Eardley,
of the department of geology. After
July 1, he can be reached at Camp
Davis, Jackson, Wyo.
Alumni Board To Meet
The Board of Directors of the
Alumni Association will hold their
annual meeting today at noon in the
Union T. Hawley Tapping, general
secretary of the Alumni Association,
announced yesterday.
In the afternoon the group will
recess for meetings of the standing
committees.
INVEST IN VICTORY

Feldman 'Will
Close Faculty
Recitals Tonight
Soprano To Present
Songs by Moderns
The last in series of faculty recit-
als, Dorothy Ornest Feldman, so-
prano, will present a program in par-
tial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of Master of Music
at 8:30 p. m. today in the Assembly
Hall of the Rackham Building.
Mrs. Feldman received her B. M.
degree in voice and piano from the
Eastman School of Music in Roches-
ter, N. Y., where she studied with
Lucy Lee Call and Donald Liddell.
Since entering the University she has
been a pupil of Arthur Hackett.
She has been a teaching fellow in
the voice department of the School
of Music for the past year and is also
a member of Mu Phi Epsilon, na-
tional music sorority and Phi Kappa
Phi.
Opening her program with four
selections by Donaudy, Mrs. Feldman,
accompanied by Ava Comin Case,
pianist, will sing "C'est l'extase lan-
goureuse" and "Recit et Air de Lia"
(L'Enfant Prodigue), both by De-
bussy, two numbers by Franck and
"Air de l'Enfant" by Ravel.
The latter part of the recital is
comprised of several compositions by
Hugo Wolf, Three Songs (from the
Rubaiyat) by the soloist's sister, Na-
omi Ornest, as well as selections by
Osma and Bibb.
The recital is open to the general
public.

Plans for week day ehejous clas-
ses for school children took a step
forward this week when the Ann Ar-
bor Board of Education decided to re-
lease children from the city schools
for one or two periods a week.
The requevt was made by the city
Council of Churches which is plan-

ning to emp loy a j it"aly trained
teacher for thes( ases in religion,
The teacher, th cnil said, would
have expeiece in this line and
would meet the re UI'ements of the
local tcho,1 y cm Cind qualifica-

council, has termed the board's ac-
tion an important step. With the
interest in the program and the good
financial start, he stated, that in-
struction may start next fall,
Fifth or sixth grade pupils with
the approval of their parents will
be in the first class to receive this
religious training. Instruction will

7a-cSe olClii I p } To0Ree_.*ve Reliooi ns1'4rtietonl

be given in the faith of the indivi-
dual's choice, according to the plans.
The council, which is raising funds
for the program, has already receiv-
ed financial support, Prof. Katz said.
Interested persons and some of the
churches who are asked to give two
p1 cent of their year's budget have
contriluted, he disclosed.

Prof. Donald

Kl_<;; p1 rideat of the1

ASSOCIATED PRESS

D UR

NEWS V N

ENSIAN DISTRIBUTION
starts
TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 12 to 5
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY 8-5
Buy Subscriptions Now
Limited Number
Covers and February Issues
still available.
THE MICHIGANENSIAN OFFICE
Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard

Blakeman Will
Visit Chicago
Dr. Edward L. Blakeman, counsel-
or in religious education, will leave
Sunday for a three-day national con-
ference in Chicago on family rela-
tions and post-war problems of the
family.
He will be in charge of a commit-
tee to draw up needs and require-
ments for professional training of
ministers for marital counseloring.
Other $rofessions which will be
represented at the conference are
law, medicine, nursing, social work
and teaching. They will discuss the
use of education in family relation-
ships, in high schools, communities,
and colleges, child care, economic
adjustment and problems of the re-
turning serviceman.

RUSSIANS VISIT MOVIE SET-Col, A. Danilin,
Lt. Col. V. Bachtin and Capt. 1. Lebedev of the Red Army air
force chat with Eve Arden, film actress, on the set at Burbank,
Calif., where she is portraying the role of a Russian girl sniper
in a movie about Washington life.

<71
,..-Jhe

T I T o P E T S D 0 C-Marshal Tito, leaIder of Yugoslav par-
tisan forces, stands with his pet dog "Tiger' near his cabin in the
Yugoslav mountains from which he later escaped when it was
under attack by German paratroopers and glider troops.

MI1CH I GAN
ALU NUS'100r
Official Publication for Michigan's Alumni
26 Issues Per Year-920 Pages
4 QUARTERLY REVIEW NUMBERS Of 100 pages each.
A publication worthy of your University's fine academic
reputation.
12 MONTHLY NUMBERS of 28 to 36 pages each. Filled with
news of alumni and campus events & personalities.
5 WEEKLY NUMBERS of 16 pages each, telling the story of
the early weeks of the school year, with expert reviews of
Varsity football games.
5 FORTNIGHTLY ISSUES Of 16 pages each, keeping up-to-
date.
$2 for 1 year-For today's graduates only
Order at the
A I. A ~x

NAMED FO R H I L D E C A R D E-Lt. Raymond -G. Phil-
lips of Newton, Iowa, stands beside his P-47 Thunderbolt, named
" Hildegarde" after the night club singer, at a base in England.
Dark patch on cockpit denotes his first vietim. an=ME 110.

T R A V E L E R -Marjorie Law-
rence, Metropolitan soprano, who
will make a five-month tour of
Allied camps in her native Aus-
tralia, wears her "concert Jew-
elry"-diamond pendant earrings
and a diamond and ruby clip-
pendant, gifts of her husband.

PeY TBAKES OFF IN B L I Z Z A R D - Crewmen warm up a Navy Catalina (PBY) by
N turning her propellors over at an Aleutian outpost in preparation for a take-off in a blizzard. 6

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