PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1937 wr rrrrrirq Band Concert By Ensembles Will Be Today Woodwind, Brass Sections Of High School Clinic Scheduled For 4:15 The Woodwin and Brass ensembes of the High School Band clinic will present a program at 4:15 p.m. to- day in the Perry School auditorium, it was announced yesterday. The School of Music is sponsoring the clinic, which was held for the first time here last year. Following is the complete program: Formner'Excur'sUinPariity /11tlMilfo~rd 4 ! , I I I 1 Divertimento No. 8 .... W. A. Mozari Allergo Spiritoso Andante Minuet Molto Allegro Flute, Seymour Okum Oboe, Noah Knepper Clarinet, Sam Capaldi Bassoon, Edward Ostroski Horn, Marilyn Cooke IL. Londonderry Air........Traditional 1st cornet, Jack Stevenson 2nd cornet, KennethMHowes Trombone, Wilbert Martin Baritone, Donald MacLoud III. Three Blind Mice......Traditional Flute trio. IV. Northland Suite ......... Carl Busch (a) Moonbeams on the Lake (b) In The Woods Flute, Lynette Spath Oboe, Peter Van Scherpe Clarinet, Sam Capaldi Bassoon, Edward Ostroski Sounds from the Hudson........ ................Herbert Clarke Alfred Burt, cornetist Vlasta P. Schumate, piano. VI. Scherzo ...........Eugene Hunter Flute, Roger Stephens Oboe, Noah Knepper Clarinet, Sam Capaldi Bassoon, Charles Wilder Horn, Orrin Decker VII. Notturnino di Luna .. . .Paul Painter Flute Ensemble: Roger Stevens, Lynette Spath, Pat- ty McFarland, Julian Levinso, Thel- ma Shook, Jack Prakken, Mary Priest, Shirley Smith,.Seymour Ok- um, Robert Voss, Keith Miller. VIII. Ronde des Lutins ..Christian Kriens Flute: Lynette Spath Oboe, Noah Knepper Clarinet, Sam Capaldi IX. Third Movement of Second Suite.. ...,.......... Francis McKay 1st cornet, Theodora Bowman 2nd cornet, Dale Hauck Trombone, Richard Taylor Baritone, David McFarland X. Finale from Octet in E Flat Major ..............L. van Beethoven 1st oboe, Noah Knepper 2nd oboe, Peter van Scherpe 1st clarinet, Sam Capaldi 2nd clarinet, Patricia Sommer 1st bassoon, Edw. Ostroski 2nd bassoon, Charles Wilder 1st horn, Marilyn Cooke 2nd horn, Orrin Decker When Prof. Wesley H. Maurer of the journalism department led the University Excursions in the summer of 1935, this large group of students accompanied him to Milford on a tour of the General Motors Corpora- tion's proving grounds. This summer Prof. Louis Rouse of the mathe- matics department will lead another group on the same tour this Sat- urday. State Education Director Talks At Conference Need Of Flexible Programs Stressed At 8th Annual Summer Meeting There is need to develop for Michi- gan a clarification of the responsibili- ties of general education and to reor- ganize a secondary program in terms of functional needs of youth, Dr. Eu- gene B. Elliott, state superintendent of education, told the first meeting of the eighth annual summer educa- tion conference yesterday in the Union. "Institutions of higher learning should develop programs which will allow youth to continue their educa- tion along lines which are flexible enough to provide for the needs of the learner," he declared. I Would TeachGovernment Methods Speaking of the instructional pro- gram in Michigan today, Dr. Elliott continued saying that another re- quirement of this program would re- late itself to the need for giving boys and girls an appreciation of the tools of the democratic form of gov- enment for use in solving common social problems. "Closelyrelated with the instruc- tional problems is the need for con- tinued study of teacher problems," he stated. "These problemstrange from what is to be taught to im- provement of teacher technique." Dr. Elliott pointed out that there was need for a functional education program which is as completely in agreement with the educational goals as is possible. Dr. Carr Outlines Program Speaking at the same meeting, Dr. William G. Carr, secretary of the Ed- ucational Policies Commission, stat- ed that the first problem of the Com- mission is an attempt to restate the true function of a public school sys- tem in a democratic society. "The next problem," Dr. Carr con- tinued, "relates to the specific ob- jectives of schools and educational agencies. There has been no com- prehensive statement of this kind which has claimed a nationwide at- tetion since 1918, and the Commission plans to begin a report with a kaleido- scope review of the changing objec- tives of education from the primitive education of savage tribes down to the complexities of modern society." He went on to say that the third problem relates to the raw materials of education, and that the fourth one is a problem in economics. Plan Second Week Of Radio Programs The second week of scheduled broadcasts will continue at 3 p.m. to- day with the presentation of another University program over WJR from studios in Morris Hall. Today's pro- gram will consist of a review of Fra- ser Bond's book, "Give Yourself Back- ground," followed by choral readings of "Tarantella" by Belloc and "The Congo" by Lindsay. Prof. W. E. Halstead's class in radio drama will present a cutting from the play, "Yellow Jack" which will open at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Wednesday. Carney C. Smith has been selected as the student announc- er for today's broadcast. Dr. Smillie Tells Of Disease Toll Among Natives (Continued from Page 3) was seated on a porch. One soldier, having shot a comrade, fled across the street to escape the latter's friends, running straight toward the Ameri- cans. "We tumbled into the front rm thrughanhewindows, " Smillie said, "and lay on the floor until the excitement died down." "The soldier escaped," he added. An ex-Southern feudsman who had escaped from a man-hunt after a court-room gun battle in which a judge, a prosecuting attorney and several jurors were shot was one of the characters the lecturer told of meeting in his travels through the plains. This man, who had become foreman of a ranch, was attacked one night by several dissatisfied and drunken gauchos who had not re- ceived their pay as he was about to enter the ranch house. Although severely cut across the face, he man- aged to lock himself in the building where he was besieged by the gauchos for several hours. When the gunfireE ceased he left the house, crawled 25 miles to the nearest town, obtained a gun and ammunition and returned to the ranch. A missionary's wife whose only complaint was that she didn't like the poisonous snakes which constant- ly crawled into the children's beds, a border clash in which a gang of Bo- livian cattle raiders were slain and a cure which he affected on a man bit- ten by a deadly snake and which astonished the superstitious natives were also among the people and in- cidents described by Dr. Smillie, who apparently stopped his lecture only because of the elapsing of his al- loted time and received the biggest ovation of the Summer Session series. University High Science Exhibit To Open Todayf An exhibit of science equipment and materials under the direction of Dr. Leslie I. Steinbach of the Chi- cago Apparatus Company will open for three days in the biology rooms of the University High School today. Recent advances in new design in- cluding photoelectric relays designed to open your garage door by casting a shadow across a beam of light, and a' high frequency coil of a new type of interest to all science students and teachers on the campus are among the items included in the exhibit. New types of preserved material are shown in the biology section of the display as well as two of the latest projectors now available for miscroscopic work. All students on campus who are in- terested are invited, and the material offered is also available to the general public for inspection. The research department of this company places its new developments on display an- nually at the University of Michigan each summer. fw i I Some IVE POUNDS OF LAUNDRY (not including the weight of the laundry box) shipped to your home, costs Seventy-six Cents for Express Charges alone! On the other hand, the laundries listed below offer you on their new Rough Dry Students' Bundle free delivery and charge you only T'en Cents per pound with excess charges accordingly. This gives you finished service on Shirts, Handkerchiefs, and Socks. Underwear and Pajamas are washed and fold- ed ready for wear. Why not enjoy the convenience of this new service and at the same time, pay only for the washing of your clothes and not for just their transportation. Interesting Facts---- ' Price per lb. " " 0 0 0" lOc (Minimum Bundle - 50c) Skirts Extra * 00 1 . 12c wr w. r Full Dress Shirts not included in this Service Sox Extra, per pair .... 3c Handkerchiefs, Extra . . Ic I I Major Standings I I I ' NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. New York ...........52 23 Chicago .............49 32 Detroit ..............46 31 Boston ..............42 33 Cleveland...........37 37 Washington .........30 44 St. Louis ............25 50 Philadelphia.....:....22 53 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 8, Washington 4. New York 8, Cleveland 5. Chicago 6, Boston 4. Only games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Detroit. New York at St. Louis (2). Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cleveland. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pct. .693 .605 .597 .560 .500 .405 .333 .293 Pet. .633 .617 .551 .538 .450 .416 .408 I =.m~UM Chicago .......... New York ........ Pittsburgh...... St. Louis....... Boston ........... Brooklyn ......... Cincinnati........ . . . . . . . W. L. ... 50 29 ...50 31 ...43 35 ...42 36 ... 36 44 .. .32 45 ...31 45 WHEN you send your clothes to one of the four Laundries listed below, you know with- out question that wear will be reduced to a minimum; that tensile strength of all fabrics will be carefully preserved; that the original brightness of colors will be protected and guaranteed. All of these things and more you may expect and will receive at no extra cost from safe, scientific, certified Ann Arbor Laundries. VARSITY LAUNDRY TRO Phone 2-3123 ,. f s- a 0 - A in t - -0 f M I L M ter.- ® 'M- SAMPLE BUNDLE 2 Suits of Underwear 3 Shirts 6 Handkerchiefs 3 Pairs of Socks 2 Bath Towels COST 99c Philadelphia .........31 50 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 5. Chicago 9, Brooklyn 0. St. Louis 3, New York 2. Only games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at New York. Chicago at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Boston. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. .383 TYPEWRITERS FOUNTAIN PENS Student Supplies 0. D. Morrill 314 SOUTH STATE STREET I j, momommommom n Interference In Spain Criticized By 'Friends' A telegram criticizing interference in Spain was sent Sunday by the Friends of Spanish Democracy to Italian and German consulates in De- A COOL DINING ROOM BEST QUALITY OF FOOD EXCELLENT COOKING, LUNCHEONS 40c 50c 65c 75c' JAN LAUNDRY Phone,9495 DINNERS ........... ..60c 75c 85c $1.10 CTTATT r A v T 1TAT WT '0 S? C7 C.- 4t1 nn 4t!t IA