T T HE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1941 Educators To Convene Here For International Confer ence I (Continued from Page 1) chez Ponton, Mexican Minister of Education, and John G. Althouse of the University of Toronto. At 8 p.m. Sunday the Ford Sum- mer Symphony Orchestra will give a special concert in Hill Auditorium. The first of the study groups will be held at 9 a.m. Monday, in rooms to be posted in the Rackham Build- ing lobby. The study groups will be held every ,day except Tuesday and Saturday, and will deal with educa- tion througlitout the world-modern trends and the effects of the world crisis on education. Distinguished. educators will organize the groups. Kallen To Speak The general session at 11 a.m. Monday will feature a talk on "De- mocracy and Civilization" by Horace Kallen of the School of Social Work. he lecture-seminar series will be held every afternoon except Tuesday and Saturday, from 2 to 3 p.m. The seminars are being held because the Conference is giving a great deal of attention to relations between the American republics. The series will deal exclusively with Latin America, opening with a lecture by Waldo Frank of the New School for Social Research on "The Culture of Latin America." Mr. Frank will also deliver an ad- dress at 7:45 p.m. Monday on "Fu- ture Prospects for Democracy." Clarence Streit, director of the Fed- eral Union, New York, will speak on the same program. Tuesday Session Tuesday night's.general session will highlight talks on "America: Its Land and Its People," by Jonathan Dan- iels, Paul Engle and Carl Sandburg. Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. the Hon- orable Hu Shih, Chinese ambassador to the United States, will discuss "America and the Far East." Count Carlo Szforza will lecture on the same program. The evening session oil Wednesday will highlight a talk by Maurice Bonn of the University of Pennsylvania on "Prospects for the Future." Carlos Davila, former pres- ident of Chile, will discuss "Cultural Relations Between the Americas" on the same program. Thursday morning the general ses- sion will be devoted to "Social Change and Education," and the evening ses- sion will deal with "Democracies of the World." Highlight of the Conference Fri- day will be the dinner meeting of members of the Fellowship and the Progressive Education Association. Henry A. Wallace, vice-president of the United States, has been invited to speak at the banquet.- Saturdaymorning the special group on "Education in Europe After Peace Comes" will report. The group will work on the subject during the en- tire week of the Conference. 1 olk Festivals Folks festivals will be held at 9 p.m. every day of the Conference, featuring programs by folk groups from various countries represented. The first festival, Monday, will be given by Mexican, Polish, Yugoslav, Ukrainian and Norwegian folk dance societies. Ineconjunction with the Confer- ence an international exhibit in chil- dren's art will be shown daily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Rackham Building galleries. Tuesday has been designated as Parents' Day. On that day the for- eign delegations will be shown through Greenfield Village. An information booth will be main- tained in the lobby of the Rackham Building during the entire confer- ence. F Will Be Discussed, Problems In Theoreti I Contemporary problems in theoret- ical physics will be discussed again this year in the Symposium on The- oretical Physics under the direction of the University physics department. Six authorities on various phases of modern physics will conduct the lecture program of the Symposium in the Rackham amphitheatre this sum- mer. Featured leczurer this summer will be Prof. Wolfgang Pauli, formerly professor of physics at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, and now as- sociated with the Institute for Ad- vanced Study, Princeton University. Professor Pauli is famed for his for- mulation of the Pauli Exclusion Prin- ciple and for other contributions to the subject of nuclear physics. He will discuss problems related to stu- dies of atomic nucleo at 11 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday of each week. Prof. Frederick Seitz of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania will lecture at 10 a.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday during the first four weeks of the Summer Session. He will discuss special topics theory of solids. Prof. Victor F. Weisskopf University of Rochester will a series of lectures on the 5 nuclear reactions, with pa Dean Edmonson ToI On Educational Plai Dean J. B. Edmonson of t cation school will speak on "1N Planning for Education" at 4: today in the University High Auditorium. The talk is one of a series or and National Trends in Edu a one hour credit course being in the School of Education. wide-spread interest in the the course has been thrown the general public. Dean Edmonson is givin !course, assisted by Leonard . of the education school facul tures will be given through semester by members of the and by guest lecturers. c ca1L Physics Brenda Frazier, Ex-Glamnour Girl, 'Marries Athlete NEW YORK, June 30.-(P)-Bren- family friends, Kelly, who once played ya Diana Duff Frazier, 20-year old professional football, had insisted. In So i m hireswowntetteo lmu that Rev. Joseph F. Flannelly of St. Ieirs o wo t d te o Glmour Patrick's Cathedral include the word Girl No. 1, vowed today to love, "obey.' honor and obey John Simms Kelly, Culminating a much-publicized ro- in the emphasis on experimental observa- 31, Kentucky athlete, for life. mance that began in January193, tions and their interpretation. He In a ceremony witnessed by 36 the wedding was held at 3:15 p.m. conduct will speak at 11 a.m. on Tuesday and yield of Thursday of the second and third ticular weeks of the Summer Session. _ - Other lecturers scheduled for the latter part of the summer include Talk Dr. Leon Brillouin, formerly of the mnnin College de France and later radio 2 e They Last! communcations director for the he edu- Vichy government. He is now a Iec- Vationalturer on radio communications at the University of Wisconsin. HeTa :05 p.m. will lecture during the fifth week on The Finest Ta le Nodel School the production of ultra short radio waves. COMPLETE PHONOGRAPH n "State Dr. Ladislaus Marton, formerly of cation," the University of Brussels, and for w h Magn vox Speaker, offered the past two years associated with Due to the University of Pennsylvania andSss Cr sta the RCA laboratories, is one of the a d C n tn subject, pioneers in the development of the and Constant Speed Motor open to electron microscope. He will speak here during the fifth, sixth and sev- g the enth weeks. H Andrews Dr. Julian Schwinger of the Uni- ty: Lec- versity of California will discuss prob- out the lems of nuclear forces here during they faculty fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh weeks of the Summer Session. No w. $.00 When our present supply is exhausted, we must sell it at the new price of $22.50. COME IN AND LISTEN TO IT! and while you're here, see our ep Down! RADIOS and Complete Record Stock aners Radio &RecordSo Ac. an Theatre Bldg. 715 N. UNIVERSITY AVE. OPPOSITE NORTH END OF CAMPUS PHONE 3542 phone University To Conduct Series Of Excursions During Summer (Continued from Page 1) ges will be made on these trips for bus and boat fare and meals. Excursion three is a trip to the Ford Company's River Rouge fac- tory, to take place Wednesday, July 16. The party will be shown the assem- bly lines, open hearth furnaces and the rolling mills. These will pro- vide an opportunity to see typical phases of the Ford Company working techniques. The fourth excursion will be a trip to Niagara Falls and vicinity, leaving Ann Arbor Friday, July 18 and re- turning the following Monday morn- ing. This trip will be conducted by Prof. I. D. Scott of the-University's geology department, who will offer explana- tions of the geological features to be observed. . The party will go to Detroit by bus and take a boat to Buffalo, and from there, a bus to the Falls. Trips through the Cave of the Winds, and rides on the Maid of the Mist will be offered. A short trip into Canada is includ- ed in the itinerary, where the Whirl- pool, Niagara Glen and the Cana- dian Heights Park may be visited. Excursion five will be a trip to Greenfield Village at Dearborn. The Village was created by Henry Ford and is typical of American small town life of 80 years ago. Included in the Village are the Menlo Park laboratory of Thomas Edison and several other buildings of historic interest. This is also a museum of early America, with a remarkable collection on transporta- tion. For the sixth excursion, students will be taken to the schools of the Cranbrook Foundation in Bloomfield Hills. Here, the party will have a chance to go through the schools, the Insti- tute of Science and the Christ Church, all noted for their architec- tural distinction and setting. The seventh excursion will be a re- turn trip to Greenfield Village for those who were unable to attend the fifth excursion. The eighth excursion will take the party to Jackson for a trip through the State Prison. A tour through the institution will be conducted and prison officials will explain the con- duct of the prison and its educational program. Ninth, and last of the excursions, will be a trip to Put-In-Bay, Lake Erie, with Professor Scott again in charge to explain the geological fea- tures of the trip. Points of interest on the island in- clude the caves, the geological his- tory of the shore line and the 352 foot monument to Commodore Perry, commemorating the naval victory of Lake Erie in 1813. - to keep your Upke wi ti Greene's I CIe '1 Microcleal 516 East Liberty - Opposite Michic FREE DELIVERY 4 _ For Every Course on the Campus DRUGS...... ........... KODA K S Welcome Summer School Students Make Calkins-Fletcher Your Headquarters for all your Drug Supplies. The Most Complete Photographic Department in Ann Arbor. 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