PAGE FOUR TNE MICHIGAN 'DA-11.V .IMMA'V TTTr _ 144 16Ao %., .&A V, 11 f1lV1 y r a lvi%- x. JULY 17, IH-Z a t Redl Declares U.S. Education Is Inadequate Youths Should Have More Psychological Training, Says Wayne Professor Condemning the education plan of group psychology for producing snobs, Prof. Fritz Redl, of Wayne University, told of the greater nec- essity of wisely using group tech- niques during war time at the Uni- versity High School auditorium yes- terday. Prof. Redl explained that the ado- lescent during a war needed more psychological aid than his younger or draft-age brothers. "Life is highly dramatized and there is an important part for everyone except the adoles- cent. Teachers must recognise this and plan programs involving the natlonal situation," he said. Schools Have Failed "The schools have failed because the teachers work with a group try- ing to reach the individual. The group often times does not fit the needs of the individual. The child from the slums is out of place in both his home group and the one at school," Prof. Redl commented. The need for psychological facili- ties during a war are increased, but the facilities themselves are de- creased, therefore schools should util- ize and exploit present facilities," he said. Schools have previously failed by emphasizing intellectual growth' even if the result was a snob, a social failure, was his comment. Youth'Needs Security He described the youth as needing security as provided by the group, but, also needing the variety and stimulation that groups can add. He said the twofold purpose of the group was to curb the impulse of youth while stmulating the controls of youth thereby producing an interest- ing individual. Prof. Redl told o the many inade- quacies of adults when dealing with adolescents. "They attempt to lec- ture rather than advise, especially when they themselves do not under- stand the problem." High School Band To Broadcast Two Radio Programs The High School Clinic Band will present the first of two radio pro- grams at 3:15 p.m. today over station WJR. The second program will beI broadcast next Friday at the same1 time., Prof. William D. Revelli will con- duct the Clinic Band, and Cleo FoxI of Kalamazoo and Mac Carr of River Rouge will act as guest conductors. George Irwin will announce the pro- gram.I The band will play "Varsity" as at theme, and the broadcast will in- clude the Prelude from "Fugue in( G Minor" by Bach, "Three NegroI Dances" by Florence Price and "Cas- tillia," a borero by Holmes.i II -1 WAA Sponsors First Summer HostelGroup Two modes of transportation - walking and bicycling - will con- serve tires, besides providing the means of getting to the Saline Valley farms by the Hostel group tomorrow. The first organized hostel trip of the summer, sponsored by W.A.A., will leave from the W.A.B. at 1 p.m. All students are invited. Located three miles south of Saline on the Saline highway twelve miles from Ann Arbor, the farms provide places for picnics and swimming. Run on a cooperative basis, the Farms can be explored by the students. Food will be purchased there. Passes for the whole group have been arranged for a fee of 25 cents. Individual passes entitle the holders to use any of the national hostels. Michigan is located in the Great Lakes region with neighboring hos- tels at Chelsea, Detroit and Man- chester. More familiar in the East, hostel- ing is comparatively new in the mid- west. The movement is gaining im- petus because of its cheap and healthful qualities, and more hostels are being established. This inexpen- sive way of touring was first popular in Europe and then spread to the Americas. There are now centers in Canada, Mexico, Central and South America. W.A.A. is sponsoring this activity to encourage more students to enjoy the out-of-dors. Miss Marie Hartwig of the Women's Phy. Ed. dept, said the University group would probably meet other groups and that the main reason for the hostel movement is to train youth in independence and self-discipline. Dan Saulson,. '44, will read the tout. The coed group will return to Ann Arbor Sunday morning. Education Meet StartsMonday Third Annual Conference Planned For Teachers The School of Education wil lpre- sent its Thirteenth Annual Summer Education Conference planned for teachers and school executives Mon- day through Friday in University High School. The conference direc- tor will be Dr. J. B. Edmonson, Dean of the School of Education. The conference program consists of a series of lectures on educational problems supplemented by round- table conferences on guidance, read- ing, war problems and related topics. A special conference on Instructional Problems of the Elementary School will be conducted throughout the week by Dr. Katherine B. Greene for elementary school teachers and parents of children from five to thir- teen years old. Thursday, the School of Education Guidance Workshop and Curriculum Workshop will present a separate guidance conference for educators interested in guidance problems. Soldier Watches Shell Burst In Egypt i 7=:7m= Reporter Sees Darkened City From Tower Continued from Page t) for a fast-moving Axis bomber. Ap- parently an air raid warden was on the job, for the glow was suddenly snuffed off a minute after it was first observed. In the middle of the blackout a freight train rolled through the Michigan Central Railroad station with no lights. Barricades on the edge of town stopped all cars. Five hundred and sixty-five auxiliary police and 255 wardens saw duty in the township, Police Chief Mortenson informed The Daily last night. Observers from the air saw "few lights" and said the war plants "stood out like a sore thumb." The Willow Run bomber plant could be seen in Ypsilanti, "lighted up like a big Roman candle." After fifteen minutes of a death- like silence, Ann Arbor slowly came to life. First, the dorms shot up with lights from every window. Some ob- servers from the Carillon Tower weren't sure but they thought the first building to light up was the West Quad. On Liberty Street, the huge mar- quee of the Michigan Theatre next flashed into brilliant light, splashing grotesque color on thin walking dolls which suddenly took on the form of living people. Toy automobiles turn- ed on headlights and soon State Street was humming with normal activity again. Downtown Ann Arbor was a little slow in lighting up but ten minutes after tkhe whistles had sounded the all-clear signal nobody would have known that the city had just passed its first blackout test successfully. 'Beachcomber's Ball' Is Theme Of Tonight's Dance At League "Adrift in the Tropics" will be all those who attend the Beachcombers' Ball in the League ballroom this eve- ning from 9 p.m. to midnight. As might be guessed from the title this will be a highly informal affair to which the guests may add still more color by coming in their most shift- less-looking, comfortable old clothes. The Beachcombers-for-a-night and their belles will dance to Gordon Hardy's Orchestra fronted by Doc Spracklin. Tonight the orchestra will feature for the first time the vocalizing of a brand new Harmony Quartet: Doc Spracklin, Bob Rob- erts, Bill Henline and Charlie Good- ell. The trial appearance of the quartet was received with such en- thusiasm last week that it has pre- pared several songs for tonight and evenings to come. Also featured will be the Dixie- land "band within a band," which will add a still warmer touch to the tropic setting by tearing into a jam session for the delight of all swing enthusiasts. The Dixielanders in- elude Don Whitehead on the drums, Frosh Deedier, bass, Lou Hurd, pi- ano, Toon Snyder, sax, Bill Herline, trombone and Charlie Goodell, trum- pet. Everybody on campus, dated or dateless, is invited to be present at the Beachcombers' Ball. The spirit of informal gaiety will be promoted when everybody will be given an op- portunity to join in the one-two- three kick of the twisting conga chain. Stag are urged to confine their cutting in to the staff of coed host- esses, who can be identified by their crepe paper hair hows. Tonight's hostess contingent includes: Alice Howard, Edna Russell, Elizabeth Hawley, Helen Westie, Harriet Ram- say, Josephine Clancy, Jane Scholes. Margaret Krull. Mary Lou Knapp, Merry Hefferman and Kay Allaire. Hostesses are requested to meet in the undergraduate offices at 8:45. Tomorrow evening's dance will be themeless. t An Australian soldier, almost hidden in a foxhole (foreground), peers out toward a shellburst near El Alamein, Egypt. This is a British official picture radioed from Cairo to New York. Prof. Hill Urges Development Of South American Products A dv er tis ed 1A~r- By RAY DIXON ' "With American development of non-competitive products in Latin America lies the opportunity for greater Pan-American cooperation," Prof. Lawrence F. Hill of the history department at Ohio State University said yesterday. "It is quite possible for the United States to'aid in the development of. a great many tropical products that would not be competitive," Prof. Hill stated. "Tropical fruits, coconuts and iron ore exist in vast quantities in South America and there is a great possibility for development with cap- ital and ingenuity," he said. Prof. Hill spoke on "Economics and the Future of Pan-Americanism" be- fore a University lecture audience., "The United States made two mis-' takes in the attempt to bring into ex- istence more amicable relations with South America," he declared. The program was well conceived, but was handicapped by economic and politi- cal handling of protectorates (such as Santo Domingo) which the United States established in South America. This economical and political pro- tection of the U.S. aroused bitter resentment, especially in Argentina and Chili," Prof. Hill said. The second error in establishing U.S.-Latin American relations "was the erection of high tariff walls by the United States between itself and the South American countries." Since President Hoover's administration the U.S. has been trying to rectify this "enormously unfortunate" poli- cy, he said. "Brazil has practically every na- tural resource in the world, including 23 percent of the iron ore, and al- most unlimited coal and water power to develop them," Prof. Hill stated. "The rubber rplant was originally taken from Brazil by Dutch and British capitalists and adapted to the East Indies, where they gained a vir- tual monopoly. There is no reason why South America (to which the plants are indigenous) cannot pro- duce rubber with a little scientific experimentation," he declared. "One of the reasons that Argen- tina and Chile have been lukewarm to Pan-American relations with the U.S. is that economical arrangements haven't been pleasant," he continued. "Both these countries produce goods that we have a surplus of and selfish groups in this country have been opposed to trade relations with them. There is no good reason why the U.S. shouldn't accept some of their goods, such as flax, or why a three-cornered arrangement to sell wheat to Latin American thousands who do not eat wheat bread could not be worked out," he stated. 'Blackout' City Seen From Police Car (Continued from Page 1) his car. We took his license number because he was smoking. At 10:44 we were at Main and William again and with the first notes of the all-clear an over-anxious storekeeper flashed on his neon sign. It suddenly went off, but when the all-clear was unmistakable it flashed on. Main Street suddenly became a flare of light which hurt our eyes. We could see a chef throwing ham- burgers onto a hot grill in Hillbilly and then we knew it was all over. Arid when all the lights came on, like a sputtering Christmas tree string, we saw hundreds of people step out of doorways-Ann Arbor had come back to life again. }# July SUMMER SHEERS, CREPES, Sale I S C N B C C P N B c C s c p c b n d - Thursday's Results New York 3, Pittsburgh 1 Cincinnati 7, Boston 6 Brooklyn 0-2, Chicago 1-2 Friday's Games New York at Pittsburgh Broklyn at Chicago Philadelphia at St.Louis Only games scheduled AMERICAN LEAGUE W Brooklyn .......59 t. Louis ........50 Cincinnati ......46 New York .......43 Chicago ........42 Pittsburgh ......38 Boston ........37 Philadelphia .....2 L 24 30 39 42 46 43 53 60 Pct. .711 .625 .541 .506 .477 .469 .411 .268 GB 7 f2 14 17 191/2 20 251/2 361/ GB 71/2 9/2 13%/2 131/2 20 231/2 241/2 V 650 Originally $4.95 and 1.,95 w rew York.......57 Boston .......49 'leveland.......49 Detroit.........45 t. Louis.......43 'hicago........36 ?hiladelphia ....36 Mashington .....32 L 28 35 39 45 43 47 56 54 Pet. .671 .583 .557 .500 .500 .434 .391 .372 C;O N N IE S H OES SPECS! SANDALS! PUMPS! ALL-WHITES! WHITES with COLOR! All heel heights and sizes included! s I ,. 4 Hundred Draftees Leave J~ico on 4 - More than 100 lassified under oard No. 1, left horning for the lutionstation in Ann Arbor men, Selective Service by bus early this Federal draft in- Detroit. Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE t' A1('tAV1 CtOn~tA if 111 -rnI VU I J PAIRS . al . r.r I 1/2 Price PRINTS Misses' and Women's Sizes Lightweight i i QUdi 9,0, Prh pilt icej / w Working on a production line - Sunfunning - Bicycling - Picni ing - Catching a few hours of pla Hop into these sturdy, comfortab clothes - they're cool, made f free and easy action ...ttracti, as they are practical. At down-to- earth practical prices, too! }, f .: c- y. le or i e WOOL COflT 4 S $1995 Formerly to $29.95 Sizes 10-18 The National er Cullotte Dr Striped Chami $7.95. Golf- ress of 5ray at SHORTS ... from $2.00 Cotton Dresses . . from $4.00 Special Groups at $5.95 and $7.00 One Special Group of Slack Suits at $2.49 SLACKS . .. of Fall kinds and colors . . . from $3.00 SLACK SUITS. ... from $4.00 OVERALLS and PLAY SUITS ... from $3.00 SHORTS at $2.00 SHIRTS from $1.50 up. Better Dresses, including Eisenberg Originals, CULOTTES with the comfort of a Slack, the look of a II 'LII' I I i I ww;61