PAGE FOUR THE MICHIC AN Oxity SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1940 THaMCTTaN Tb . a+ TTNaa SATURDAY, JULY 27. 1940 Speech Group To Hold Meet RADIO SPOTLIGHT August 5, 6, 7 Conference To Be Directed By Prof. G. Densmore; 15 Sessions To Be Held For the annual three-day Speech Conference of the Summer Session several hundred persons engaged in various speech activities, students and faculty will convene in Ann Ar- bor August 5, 6, and 7 to witness classes and demonstrations an'd to participate in roundtable discussions. Under the direction of Prof. G. E. Densmore of the speech department members of the faculty of the de- partment will conduct the 15 sessions of the meet. All students of the Summer Session and faculty as well as the regular conference members are invited to attend any or all of the meetings, Professor Densmore emphasized. Teaching Problems Problems in the Teaching of Speech will be the first conference on Monday under the supervision of Professor Densniore to be followed by "Problems in the Directing of Forensics" led by Prof. Kenneth G. Hance. Monday's program will be concluded with a demonstration de- bate" by students from two of the Summer Session debate courses on the national high school debate ques- tion, "Resolved: That the Power of the Federal Government Shall Be Decreased," in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. On Tuesday three demonstration classes will be held in the W. K. Kel- logg Institute Auditorium. Prof. Louis M. Eich will head the opening session at 9 a.m. on, "Studies in Read- ing and Dramatics." Dr. Emil Froe- schels of the Summer Session faculty of the speech clinic will direct "The Study of Speech Disorders" at 10 a.m. and Dr. Harold Westlake, "Structure and Function of Voice and Speech." Demonstrate Radio Technique Prof. Waldo Abbot and his assis- tants will demonstrate radio tech- nique with a broadcast over station WCAR at 2 p.m. at Morris Hall and will lead the discussion of "Organ- izing and Producing Radio Pro- grams" at 3 p.m. Prof. Harlan H. Bloomer will con- sider "Problems of Radio Programs" at 3 p.m. at the Speech Clinic in the Institute for Human Adjustment. Choral Reading by students of Pro- fessor Eich and individual readings by Prof. R. D.' T. Hollister's pupils will be given at 8 p.m. in the W. K. Kellogg Institute Auditorium. "Fundamentals of Speech" by Professor Hollister at 9 a.m., "Prin- ciples and Methods of Discussion," by Professor Hance, at 10 a.m., and "The Teaching of Speech" by Pro- fessor Densmore at 11 a.m. will con- clude the morning discussion pro- grams, on Wednesday. WJR WWJ WXYZ CKLW 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC Red 1240 KC- NBC Blue 1030 KC - Mutual Saturday Afternoon 12:00 Keyboard Capers Buck Rogers News Ace Tenor 12:15 Health Highways " Marguerite Werner " 12:30 Melodies Bradcast Police Field Day News Ace 12:45 " Your Treat Fan on the Street McFarland Orch. 1:00 Vera Brodsky Your Government Ray Kinney Orch. "Might Be You" 1:15 " Dance Music " To Be Announced 1:30 Follies Phil. at Detroit Lunch at Waldorf Music 1:45 " "otoF.H.A. Sneaker 2:00 U.S. Mar. Band Bobby Byrne Orch London Calling 2:15 ,>of''I 2:30 News; Music Nat'l Music Camp 2:45 Keyb'd, Console" 3:00 Bull Session "oClub. Matinee News; Songs 3:15 "t"t Melody; Turf 3:30 Handicap Race Tiger Talk " Jamboree 3:45 Quartet Phil. at Detroit 4:00 Buffalo Presents Gus Steck Orch. 4:15"a> 4:30 Nat Brandywine " R'ythm by Ricardo Reynold's Orch. 4:45 " " " Tea Dance Tunes 5:00 News; Warner Cecil Golly Orch. News; Rhythm 5:15 Lieut. Parkinson " " The Turf Club 5:30 Yella Pessl " Day In Review Rumanian Hour 5-15 News Reel Merle Clark The Sandlotters Saturday Evening 6:00 Stevenson News Sport Review Benny Kyte Orch. Sons of the Saddle 6:15 Inside of Sports European News 6:30 Gay Nineties I Want A Job Record Review Sports 6:45 "fMichigan Hgwys " Tropic Com'entary 7:00 Sky Blazers Statler Orchestra Town Talk News-Val Clare 7:15 " " Bourbonnais Orch. Tom Tucker Orch. 7:30 News-to Life S. L. A. Marshall The Marriage Club Nobody's Children 7:45 " Detroit Policett 8:00 Your Hit Parade Nat'l Barn Dance Gabriel Heatter Evening Prelude 8:15 "o" Jenkins' Orch. 8:30 . r t Grant Park Conc't Choral Festival 8:45 Sat. Serenade " ."oi 9:00 " Camel Caravan European News Hope Tabernacle 9:15 Public Affairs " Concert Orchestra " 9:30 News of the War Dance Music Paul Laval Orcb. News Ace 9:45 Melody Marvels' " " Music Hall 10:00 Musical " News Ace Canadian News 10:15 Al Kavelin Orch " Dance Music Britain Speaks 10:30 Jurgens Orch. " Baron Elliott Orch. Musical Mirror 10:45 " ,I" News Interlude 11:00 Larry Payne " Club Reporter 11:15 Ozzie Nelson " Glenn Miller Oroh. Thompsoa Orch. 11:30 News Music Eastwood Orch. Joe Sudy Orch. Barron's Orchestra 11:45 Leighton Noble " 12:00 Bobby Day Orch Westwood Orch. Dancing Party Ray Noble Orch. Bloomfield And Harris Speak At Linguists' Annual Convention ASSOCIATED PDCTURE PRESS N E WS S ON FIRING LINE... AFTERWARD--Mightyglad they weren't Inside at the time are these soldiers at Fort Lewis, Wash., peering out of a tank of world war vintage, ripped apart Sby U. S. army practice fire with 75 millimeter shrapnel. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY (Continued from Page 1) of selection of forms in construction. Differences exist, he said, simply because of the choice of forms avail- able. Given the word "milk," one may add "fresh" and have "fresh milk"; or he may add "drink" and get "drink milk." By the different selection the speaker produces quite different results because of the dif- ferent functions of the words "fresh" and "drink." One kind of selection, Professor Bloomfield continued, is that of gov- ernment or concord, that is, the choice of a form that will fit properly with some other word already there. If the speaker says "that" he cannot follow it, for instance, with "boys," but must bollow it with "boy." Selection In English Selection is less complicated in English than in many other lan- guages, it was pointed out. In the Phillippine Tagalog tongue, for ex- ample, a speaker who uses a word as a verb (there are no distinct verbs), has to choose not only for tense and mood but also among four forms corresponding to four different aspects of an action. Thus with re- spect to the action of cutting with a knife, "pumutul" emphasizes the end of the action, "pinutul" the in- itiator of the action, "ipinitul" the instrument of the action, and "pinu- tulan" the place of the action. The effect of all these devices in the language, Professor Blodmfield concluded, is to produce the box within the. box, to produce, that is, units within units, the limits of each unit being determined by some kind of closure. One can say "fresh milk" and then say "nice fresh milk" and add other adjectives indefinitely, but. when he uses "this" as in "this nice fresh milk" he uses a closure which marks the limit of that unit, or phrase. Supports Theoretical Approach Professor Harris, the .second speak- er on the evening program, presented an argument for a theoretical ap- proach to linguistic study based up- on an analysis of what he termed "linguistic structure" rather than upon all the various conventionalized aspects of language. He would ex- clude meaning as a basis in making such an analysis. At the opening session yesterday afternoon the Greek aspirated per- fect received the attention of two speakers. Prof. E. ,H. Sturtevant of Yale University advanced the theory that certain hitherto unexplained Greek aspirated perfects in -pha or -kha owe the aspiration to Indo- Hittite perfect endings beginning with the voiceless laryngeal conso-' nant. In reply, Prof. Roland G. Kent of the University of Pennsylvania contended that other influences may have caused .the aspiration. Carriere Speaksj Prof. Joseph M. Carriere of North- western University next discussed change of meaning that has occurred in Louisiana French. French "em- barguer," which means to get on board a ship, has developed in Louis- iana French the meaning to get on or into anything, especially a horse or automobile. French "habitant." or resident, has come to mean "far-' mer" in Louisiana French, since only the land-owners were the permanent residents in the early French colonies. Phonograph records of Indian songs were used by Prof. Charles F. Voegelin of De Pauw University to demonstrate certain unique linguistic changes that occur in Delaware words when they are employed in certain ritual songs. Red Cross Asks 100O Contributors For 'Blood Bank' (Continued from Page 1) Kleine and Dr. Bethell agreed was the most common injury sustained by a soldier on the battlefield. They cited three advantages of liquid blood plasma over whole blood for use in emergency transfusions: it can keep under ordinary sterile conditions for long periods of time, it avoids the necessity of typing pa- tients and bloods, and is easier to administer since it can be mixed with the different types. Whole blood, they explained, can- not be stored effectively for more than 10 days, generally. Richard P. Swigart, assistant man- ager of the Red Cross Midwestern Office, St. Louis, M., and Dr. Raphael Isaacs, assistant director of the Simpson Memorial Institute, assisted in formulating the procedure for the enlistment of blood donors in Ann Arbor. FRENCHMAN -Vice Ad- miral Emile Muselier (above), credited with saving a large part of the French navy for Britain, Is shown in London. Museller and Gen. Charles de Gaulle are organizing Frenchmen into con. tinuing war against Nazis. RETURN E N GAG E M E N T-Charity brought Bobby Jones, one-time golf master, back into exhibition games, to aid the Red Cross war relief fund. He's seen in New York. His mother knitted those different-colored hoods for his clubs. N O R MALC Y ?--The royal yachting season delayed by War, King Christian (above) of Den- mark finally managed to to for a sail at Copenhagen. The king reportedly goes about his daily life little affected by German occupation of Denmark April 9. LAUNDERING--9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. 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A IC S E R V I C E--Oliver Stanley (above), war minister under Neville Chamberlain govern- ment in England, has rejoined his regiment, the Royal Artil- lery, as a seconid lieutenant, C A L L E R S I N T H E H U D S O N-Three U. S. battleships, the Texas (right), New York and Arkansas. ride anchor at New York after they'd disembarked cruising Annanolis midshipmen. Invest in your own Appearance It Pays Dividends! In our shop you find every convenience for Personal Barber Service. ....... . . . ................... :i: :.