THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRWAY. JULY 24. 1 I I Final Session On Education Will Be Today Program To Be Opened By Special Conference At YpsiNormal College' Following a special conference meeting' at Ypsilanti State Normal College on "Education of Children With Brain Injuries," the Thirteenth Annual Summer Education Confer- ence of the School of Education will be concluded today with three lec- tures in the University High School Auditorium. Sponsored by the Horace H. Rack- ham School of Education and the School of Education of Wayne Uni- versity, the special session will meet at 9:00 a.m. in the Rackham Build- ing for Education in Ypsilanti. Knight To Lecture Returning to Ann Arbor, the mem- bers of the conference will hear Prof. Edgar W. Knight of the Uni- versity of North Carolina speak on the subject, "Higher Education and the Two Wars," at 10 a.m. in the Uniyersity High School auditorium. "China in American Schools" will be the subject of Mr. Bangnee A. Liu of the China Institute of New York City in a lecture at 2:00 p.m. at the high school auditorium. Concludes Conference Dr. Fred Stevenson of the Uni- versity Library Extension Service will conclude the Education Conference with an address, "The Extension Fris of fhU is ~ iracfv19fr" Thousands Follow Ortiz' Body In Funeral Procession MICHIGAN MILITARY MEN Word has arrived recently from the boys of Michigan's Wolverine Squad- ron of the Naval Air Corps, stationed at Iowa City for preliminary train- ing. Robert B. Stirling, '44, former member of the Daily staff who joined the squadron in the spring, writes with enthusiasm about the training. "Now that I have seen it. I can re- commend it fully, and with no re- serve," says Cadet Stirling. The Wolverine Squadron was formed early in the year when *En- sign "Whitey" Frauman, former Var- sity end, held an organizational din- ner here. About 17 students joined then, with others signed up to join in the near future. Also at Iowa City is Davy Nelson, fleet-footed Michi- gan back. * * * Among the many student and former students of the University who have left to join the armed forces recently, is Dr. Joseph H. Alli. A -graduate of the School of Public Health, Dr. Alli has been called to military service as a first lieutenant in the Sanitary Corps. He has worked as a bacteriologist at the Health Service for the past two years. * * * News from "The Annapolis of the Air," Pensacola,. Fla., has arrived concerning Gustav R. Gregory, Stu- art Japinga, Jr. and Robert A. Straub formerly students of the University. The three recently appointed Na- val Aviation Cadets have been trans- ferred to Pensacola for flight train- ing, according to an announcement from that station. Upon completion of the intensive seven-month course at Pensacola, they will receive the designation as Naval Aviator with a commission as Ensign in the Naval reserve or as Second Lieutenant in the Marine Corps Rerserve and will go on active duty . CDVO Discusses Lea gue Features Sprachlin Ton ight At 'Camera Click' Flash bulbs will be popping at the League tonight during- the Camera Click, an informal, all-campus dance to be held in the ballroom from 9 to midnight. Robert Gach will be on hand to take pictures of everybody attending. For a new "camera angle" couples may pose in a dummy frame which will reproduce the effect of those wedding pictures which were so ly- ingly mounted on plush during the dear, dead nineties. Doc Sprachlin will lead the orch- estra which features the swinging of the Dixieland "band within a band" and the singing of the Har- mony Quartet. All attending the summer session or the summer term are invited, with or without dates. Union To Continue 'Share The Ride' Plan For Students In an attempt to fit University students' week-end trips into the na- tional effort to 'share the ride.' the Michigan Union is Continuing its travel board throughout the summer. Available in the lobby of the Union for any drivers willing to share their car either for nothing or for a fee is a bulletin board on which to post both destination and terms. The same service is also available for would-be passengers seeking rides to a specific destination. Now on the board are offers to furnish transportation both to Wil- low Run and Detroit, while in the past rides have been secured to Mil- waukee. Chicago and other Midwest- ern cities. ' 'w Flanked by mounted police guards and followed b y curious thousands, the funeral carriage bearing the body of ex-President Roberto M. Ortiz nears the Arge ntine Government House in Buenos Aires where Ortiz rested in state until burial. He died July 15 after a lon g illness. Nuhmber 3 of a Series Appearin ,1Each Friday ~The Slory of the Allene is Food" Fa LAKETROT xv - Fresh from the Water to yo'u! I } r At #o' Coordinated Recruting Planned To End Competition Of Services 1 1 i y rvices of e i nversity,' at 4 p.m. Plans to coordinate officer recruit- Included in this lecture will be ans explanation of the newest addition ing activities of the Army, Navy and to the service whereby advanced Marine Corps, which will eliminate courses in college preparation will be present competitive bidding for col- made Lvailable upon request to high lege students, are now being ; con- schools throughout the state which cluded, according to Prof. Burton do not include such courses on their Thuma of the University War Board. sta~nda~rd curriculum. .h iA supervisory joint Army, Navy Aoe than2 blis hingirms par- and Marine Corps College Procure, more than 25 publishing firms par- ment Committee has been appointed ticipate, occupies the first floor cor- in Washington, which will send ridors of the high school, to displ y branch committees to each Army the advances which have been made corps area to present the enlistment in tetbook design and content in plans of the three armed services. recen~t years. At a mass meeting of all male stu- dents, each representative will out- line the plan of his service. Then interested students may discuss the OSA LE plans individually with the members of the committee according to their preference. t iWithin two or three weeks, a re- a cruiting board, likewise composed of Army, Navy and Marine Corps offi- cers, will arrive at the college or unit SLA T E R' versity to enlist candidates in the service. From that time on, students may not leave school except to trans- / 336 SO. State fer to another school or go on active service with their chosen branch of the armed forces. Enlisted students may be called to active duty at any time an emergency demands. The program is expected to begin with the fall term, and will not inter- fere with present Army and Navy re- serve officer training programs. Successful student applicants will be deferred from selective service re- sponsibilities. Recent confusion caused by over- lapping recruiting programs for Ar- my ground officers, Navy deck and engineering officers, Marine Corps officers and for Army and Navy fly- ing officers has made this solution to the problems necessary. Second Children's Radio Presentation Will Be Broadcast "Prince Ahmed and the Fairy Princess Periebanou," a tale from the Arabian Nights, will be broad- cast at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow as the second in a series of University-pro- duced children's radio programs. One of the four regularly sched- uled radiocasts which originate each weepg in Morris Hall, the show will tell a story of the quest of three brothers for the hand of Princess Periebanou. -The brothers will be portrayed by Strow Roberts, Paul Johnson and Robert Reifsneider. The Sultan, their father, will be acted by Dave Rich, and 'Doris Hess will play the pretty Princess Periebanou. The program will be directed by Mr. Donald Hargis. Registration For First Aid Course Will Start Today Final registration for a nine-week first aid course sponsored jointly by the Union and local Red Cross will take place from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today in front of the main library. Classes will be held beginning next week every Tuesday and Thursday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., but students will meet in only one session a week. Textbooks and other supplies will cost approximately one dollar. The course is for men only. 'U' To Offer Camouflage Course RHe A course in camouflage of civilian installations of military significance will probably be offered next fall by the department of landscape archi- tecture, Prof. Harlow 0. Whittemore, chairman of the department, an- nounced recently. Prof. Whittemore is now preparing the course after spending two weeks at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, where special instruction in camouflage was given by U. S. Army Engineers. Although a laboratory course with extensive use of model construction, actual physical construction and aerial observation would be preferred by the department, Prof. Whittemore stated that the many difficulties in- volved in procurement of such facil- ities make a straight lecture course more probable. Such lectures can be given with specialists in the field of camouflage as instructors. It was stressed that the course would not be one in the study of mil- itary camouflage techniques, because of the necessities of military secre-y. However, factories and civilian air- ports outside the jurisdiction of the Army need camouflage work such as will be presented by the new course. Branches of special camouflage study are aerial photography, prac- tical aspects of color, form and pat- terns and the practical aspects of general psychology of camouflage. Three-Year Mata Hari Is Foiled By Censor CINCINNATI, July 23 ()P)- A little Cincinnati lass of three, whose daddy is an Army captain in Pan- ama, sent him what she claimed was a picture of a cow-roughly sketched, indeed, but her very own ... The mailman called at her home soon afterward-with a very polite note from an Army censor. "It is against military regulations," it read, "to mail outside continental limits of the United States, drawings of public buildings." .' F j 5 r. I County Shelter Evacuee Facilities ANSWER: In its ever expanding effort to pre- pare Washtenaw County for war ex- igencies, the County Coordinating Committee of the CDVO recently met to discuss the emergency housing facilities of the county. Encouraging results of a survey of emergency housing facilities in the county show that rooms to house over 2,000 evacuees have been of- tered. The names and addresses of houses where rooms will be available throughout Washtena* County in an emergency may be obtained from the township CDVO chairman. For the county's protective serv- icec, the sheriff's department is list- ing emergency equipment. Read The Daily Classifieds! "Out of the water into the frying pan" can almost be applied to Allenel lake trout. Regular delivery from Alpena brings the fish to the Allenel the day after they have been caught in the clear, cool waters of Lake Huron. Served with lemon or tartar sauce and French fries, Allenel lake trout becomes a definite delicacy. 4A LLENEL HOTEL i Friday and Saturday S Phone 4241, 126 EAST HURON STREET ./ J r ,& / COATS --SUITS f / ._ ,:, : 1 4 Y t I .01 ti Mt a ". _ . h ,. i r , . More and befter values added to the $12.95 group for the week-end. THE COATS: Black, navy, blue. Sizes 9-17, 10-44. THE SUITS: Summer suits in gabar- dine, linens, an c rayon combina- tions. Sizes 9-20. THE DRESSES: Better dresses of all kinds and colors. Jacket dresses, redingotes, sheers, prints and crepes. Also Dinner and Evening Dresses. Values to $25 in sizes 9-17, 10-44, 1612 to 261/. r cl~eIwa37,91dAOAmuh4 .amf4z5 fah AI $3.95 I p iG ? a >~g' aSt AAAto C Q ~ p . .. and many more like hini serve Associated Press newspapers Other Groups of Dresses and Suits JULY SALE PRICES Other COATS at $18 and $28 UNI1Ea STJETES 1WARt JULY SALE PRICES lo"~D r , Gd1"r For his coverage of the British fleet in the Mediterranean, Larry Allen of The Asociated Press has won journalism's cov- eted award, the Pulitzer prize for interna. tional reporting in 1941. He became the fifteenth AP mant n recive a Pnlitzer rita. Allen is typical of AP war correspondents the world over. They are ignoring all man. ner of personal danger and hardship to bring the news to you in these pages. They are writing brilliant new chapters in the servi ethat ha& lrent AP nwsnanern First i