AUGUST 19, 191 THE MICHIGAN DAILY U Brahms, Bach, To Be Played In West Quad Menuhin To Give Concerto On Recorded Program; Public Invited To Attend Works of Brahms and Bach will be featured today on the Strauss Li- bral y Music Hour of recorded favor- ites, from 6:45 to 7:30 p.m. in the Main Lounge of West Quadrangle. First number on the program will be Brahms' "Variations on a Theme by Haydn," played by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Arturo Toscanini. Following this will be Bach's "Con- certo No. 1," with Yehudi Menuhin as soloist with the Paris Symphony, Georges Enesco on the podium. "The Great Fugue in G minor" by the same composer will close the pro- gram. Performing, this masterpiece will be the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski. Played yesterday on the record con- cert was Tschaikowsky's "Symphony No.. 5," interpreted by the Philadel- phia Symphony conducted by Sto- kowski. These programs are open to the public, atnogadmission charge, and are given each week throughout the Summer Session, Monday through . Thursday. Boxing Champ's Spouse Finds 'Station' Expensive CHICAGO, Aug. 18.-(W)-Mrs. Joe 'Louis asserted on the witness stand today that it cost about $15,000 a year to maintain her station in life as the wife of the world's heavyweight boxing champion. Included in her expenses of $1,300 or $1,400 a month, she said, were her table, help, utilities, automobile up- keep, muskal education, dentist, doc- tor, beauty parlor, recreation, enter- tainment of friends and travel. Stalled Russian War Machinery German advance guards" Berlin sources said, approached a group of crippled and stalled Soviet war ma- chines somewhere on the Russian front. Importance Of Guidance Programs In Schools Is Emphasized By Koch Reds Abandon, Northern City To Nazi Drive German Columns Nearing Leningrad; Heavy Action On Entire Battle Front (Continued from Page 1) marine and two "enemy" transports by torpedo boats of the Red Fleet and in Saturday's air fighting re- ported the destruction of 22 German planes with a loss of 18 Soviet air- craft. Lost battalions of Soviet troops en- circled by German pincers move- ments were reported to be fighting their way back toward Red Army lines in the face of persistent Nazi attempts to exterminate them. Pravda told of the fighting behind the German front and said Soviet mobile forces were being sent deep into the German lines in raids to check the wehrmacht offensive. The reports supplemented the Monday communique, which said merely that fighting continued along the entire front. No changes of po- sition have been reported since the Soviet High Command's acknowl- edgment yesterday that the Red troops had withdrawn from the im- portant port of Nikolaev. Pravda said one lost regiment re- joined the main forces after a dra- matic two-week campaign in which it broke out of the German encircle- ment by killing 1,500 men of a pan- zer brigade. The newspaper also told of a suc- cessful dash into German lines by a mobile regiment supported by artil- lery and tanks. The regiment was credited with wrecking a German motorized column of several hundred cars. Three officers were said to have been seized and many documents and maps taken. The' German general commanding the division was said to have fled, leaving his uniform behind him. In a final encounter before return- ing to the Soviet main forces the regiment was said to have killed more than 500 Germans, captured consid- erable booty and dispersed a German cavalry-artillery division. Official Red Army reports and Pravda dispatches told of increasing guerrilla activity. West Africa Plane Ferry is Proposed (Continued from Page 1) VenezueIan Films To Portray Festival, Travel Scenes Today Moving pictures of Venezuela,>hibiting mass exercises and gym- showing the annual Scholars' Festi- nastics and other student activities val in Caracas and some scenes of at the Scholars' Festival. Mr. Henriquez is an architectural travel in the interior, will be pre- engineer, a graduate of the Ecole sented by Venezuelan students of the Travaux Publics of Paris. He is now T~tiAar .n ti _ acvin fnnrnmxi n frn te in s.vo By PAUL CHRISTMANN "The newer concept of the school as an institution that has commun- ity-wide responsibilities which con- tinue in individual cases even after graduation, emphasizes the import-j ance of effective guidance programs in the schools," yesterday declared Dr. Harlan Koch in his talk entitled "School Handicaps to Guidance." "The economic depression," he said, "through which we passed and now the tightening circle of world events have made guidance service in the school mandatory. If the schools, therefore, are to meet their respon- sibilities to the community and through it to the country at large, guidance must receive progressive at- tention." Ever-increasing guidance resources such as agencies, techniques and de- vices emphasize by contrast, how in- adequate present efforts at guidance in most schools really are. Tlhis in- adequacy of effort may be attributed to many factors, some of which are immediately controllable and some are not. For instance, most schools fail clearly to define what they mean by guidance. School officials are prone to forget that no machinery can "stem the tide of young persons driven to delin- quency through their revolt at the formal curriculum." Efforts at guid- ance in a preponderant number of schools are largely confined to courses /rather than to individual counselling. Since relatively few Ischools can af- ford to employ guidance specialists, there is a strong tendency to delegate much responsibility for guidance to both the homeroom teacher and the classroom teacher without clearly de- fining their guidance functions. Add- ed to the foregoing is the fact that few attempts are made to evaluate' guidance in whatever form it may be administered in most schools. Since the school is a community serving institution, its effectiveness would be enhanced if a closer articu- Opera To Continue Run Through Today Concluding its 13th annual Sum- mer Session Drama Season, the Mich- igan Iepertory Players of the De- partment of Speech will present one more performances of "The Gondo- liers" at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. One of W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan's best known operas, "The Gondoliers" deals with the attempts of the Duke of Plaza-Toro and his wife to find the heir to the throne of Barataria. The Duke finally dis- covers that one of the gondoliers is the king but, as he is unable to choose between them, the Venetians reign jointly until an old nurse solves their problem., lation were worked out among all those who have an equity in the guid- ance service of the school-citizens, parents, children, and school staff. Since approximately 60 percent of the 25,000 high schools in the country enroll 150 pupils or fewer and when the nomadic character of the kradu- ates of these schools is kept in mind, it is clear that what happens in the small high school or fails to happen there has wide social significance. A definite handicap to effective guidance is inh rent in the size of the ma:prity of the high schools since numbers are an important considera- tion in working out any type of really effective educational program. Tenure of teachers in these schools is appallingly short; they are pre- dominently young; they are inex- perienced and are in the hands of relatively inexperienced administra- tors. Irk spite of brilliant exceptions to the limitations just outlined, the prevailing condition, particularly in the field of guidance, is one of in- effectiveness. Awareness of need which has given tremendous momentus through the events of the past ten years is stimu- lating great effort in educational in- stitutions all over the country to ob- viate such short-comings as are v %Ile 11 known but in large. to exist not only in guidance the work of the schools at This is one way to keep cool-- but there is a better one.. . TRY ARBOR SPRINGS WATER Phone 8270 c* e Unqj and nqaqementi ......,c....., e o <...,=..., =...o<....= --> < .= -----, *3 In The Majors AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB New York. ...80 Chicago......62 Boston .........60 Cleveland.......59 Detroit.........53 Philadelphia ....51 Washington .....48 St. Louis ........47 39 55 55 55 63 63 65 65 .672 .530 .522 .517 .457 .447 .425 .420 17 18 181/2 251/2 26/2 29 29/2 Week Days 2-4-7-9 P.M. NOW PLAYING Miss Jacqueline Otterbine Myers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Adel- dert, Myers of Ann Arbor and Kala- mazoo has selected Aug. 31 as the date fox' her marriage to Mr. Robert B. Klinger of Ann Arbor. and Kala- mazoo. The ceremony will take place in the First Methodist Church at Kala- mazoo. Miss Myers received her bachelor's degree in piano at the University in 1937 and her master's degree in 1938. Since then she has taught in a pub- lic schogl in Anchorage, Alaska. After receiving his bachelor's de- gree at Western State Teachers Col- lege in 1936, Mr. Klinger ,took his master's in 1937 at the American University in Washington, D.C. He has been in the political science de- partment at the University for the last three years doing research for his Ph.D. At present he is assistant to the counselor of foreign students and assistant director of the Inter- national Center at the University. * * * Elizabeth Anne O'Dell of Bloom- field Hills will be married at noon, Aug. 30, in Christ Church, dranbrook, to Dean Loyd S. Woodburne, assis- tant dean of the College of Litera- ture, Science.and the Arts. The bride-elect was graduated. from the University in 1936 and is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority: Mr. Woodburne was graduated in 1929. He was a member of the Uni- versity Glee Club. Since receiving his Ph.D. in 1932, he taught in the Uni- versity and studied for a time in Ber- lin. Following his return he was pro- moted to the postiion he now holds. After a wedding trip in the East, the couple will be at home about Sept. 22 at 1402 Washington Heights. * * * At a reception at 4 p.m. Sunday at the League, the engagement of Joan K. T. Lee of Cornell University and David Liang of Hankow, China, was announced. A student in the business admin- istration school, Mr. Liang is active in the Chinese group at the Univer- sity's International Center. * * * A University graduate was married Saturday, when the nuptials of Helen Merle Douglass, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Douglass of Detroit, and R. William Cooper, son of Mrs. Walter Christensen and Robert L. Cooper of Detroit, were performed in the garden of the League. Mrs. Cooper received her bachelor's degree at the University, and the bridegroom is a graduate of the Wayne University business adminis- tration school. Monday's Results' New York at Detroit, raid Washington 4, Cleveland 2 Boston at St. Louis, rain Only Games Scheduled Tuesday's Games New York at Detroit (2) Philadelphia at Chicago (2) Boston at St. Louis (2) Washington at Cleveland NATIONAL tLEAQxUE W L Pct. GB rect air service from New York or Baltimore to Africa. The route itself was not disclosed. It was believed, however, that the ferry service for bombers might oper- ate from 'rinidad or some other United.States south Atlantic base to Freetown, in British Sierra Leone, on the West African coast, a distance of slightly more than 3,000 miles. As for shorter-flight military planes, it was thought that arrange- ments might be made to fly them from a Pan-American base farther south, perhaps on the bulge of Brazil -about 1,600 miles across to Free- town. Still another possible landing point in Africa was.Bathurst, British Gam- bia. From there the planes could fly by way of the Gold Coast, a British colony,, to Khartoum on the Nile. Freetown, an important British naval base having what is considered the best harbor in West Africa, is 500 miles south of Dakar, where Ger- many has been reported to be de- manding military facilities from the Vichy government. Described by some military experts as more valuable for joint Anglo- American naval use than Dakar it- self, Freetown is the headquarters of the British General Officer com- manding in West Africa. U Brooklyn .......73 St. Louis ........72 Cincinnati ......62 Pittsburgh ......60 New York .......56 Chicago........49 Boston .........46 Philadelphia ....31 40 41 49 50 55 67 66 81 .646 .637 .559 .545 .505 .422 .411 .277 1 10 11/2 15 /2 251/ 261/2 411 / ------ Monday's Results New York 6-7, Chicago 4-1 Cincinnati 13-5, Philadelphia 5-4 Brooklyn 6, Pittsburgh 5 Only Games Scheduled Tuesday's Games Chicago at New York, night Pittsburgh at Brooklyn 62) Cincinnati at Philadelphia (2) St. Louis at Boston er ection4 odem With the end of summer school near, we sincerely hope that you have enjoyed your stay at Michigan. We appreciate the patronage of many of you that have visited our shop and trust that you will return this fall so that we can trim you again. The Dascola Barbers Between State St. & Mich. Theatre DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH, SCHOOL OF MUSIC, AND DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION FOR WOMEN present MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS and UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA in Uh'1 " I! 99.7a... ... 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