AGE SIX "I"UP MICUI CA N 'n A TT.V .qITVnAV. -nTt.V 10- 1410" Child Behavior To Be Subject Of. Talks Here Michigan Probate JudgO To Attend Conferences On Guidance Psychology A series of five lectures on prob- lems of child psychology will be pre- sented for Michigan probate judges by the Michigan Child Guidance In- stitute in conjunction with the Uni- versity Wednesday through Friday. Judges attending the institute will register Wednesday morning in the Union. Robert Whiteley, Institute psychologist, will open the series that afternoon at 2:05 in the Rackham Building with a discussion, "What Is an I.Q. and What Good Is It?" Dr. R. L. Jenkins, Institute psychi- atrist, will lecture at 9:05 a.m. Thursday on "Why Kids Act That Way." He will lecture again at 4:30 p.m. on "Treatment of Behavior Cases." Wallace Watt, field investi- gator of the Child Guidance Insti- tute, will discuss "How Kids Get That Way; How Home and Community Conditions Create Behavior Prob- lems," at 9:05 a.m. Friday. The last lecture of the series will be given by Mr. Whiteley at 2:05 p.m. the same day on the subject "What Possibili- ties Should We Look for in Sizing Up a Delinquent: What Is Important Besides the I.Q.?" A picnic at the cottage of Prof. Lowell J. Carr, director of the Michi- gan Child Guidance Institute will conclude the activities of the insti- tute. Professor Carr's cottage is lo- cated at Zukey Lake near Lakeland. 1,t Auto Dealer's Funeral Will Be Held Monda y Funeral services for Thomas K. Burt, 55-year-old president of the Huron Motor Sales, Inc., who died in University Hospital early._ yes- terday, will be held at 2 p.m. Mon- day at the Burt home on Norway Road. Mr. Burt was a resident of Ann Arbor for 25 years. He was a grad- uate of Michigan State College. Past manager of the Eloise farms and the Ann Arbor Dairy, he has been president and man- ager of the Huron Motor Sales, Inc., since 1931 when he first joined the company. He will be buried in Forest Hill Cemetery. mom= P w f w t e T-T1e~ T 1 TT11a 1 [ L9 VH fcvlATTVUJ L4 &VW Here's A German U-Boat 'Garage'~ Radio Shows ToStart Tomorrow The first program in the summer series of University broadcasts which originate in Morris Hall will be pre- sented at 3:15 p.m. tomorrow over radio station WJR in Detroit. Entitled "The Nicked Penny," the program will be an original story by Robert Reifsneider, Grad. It is a fantasy relating the adventures of a lucky penny as it goes from hand to hand. The penny tells of its adventures, starting when it was just a dirty cent which was shined to brilliance, and nicked to test a pair of shears, and finally relates how it brought good luck to a romance as it was born and grew to love and marriage. The summer broadcasts will con- tinue for five weeks on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Wednesday's broadcast this week will be a continuation of the "It Hap- pened Before" series. Sure, Sure, We Know CLEVELAND, July 11.-(P)-Po- lice in Cleveland suburbs were wat- ching all highways tonight for an automobile reported to be carrying two Japanese, heavily armed and supplied with explosives 4. s w p -J Educational Escape Party To Be Given By BARBARA DE FREIS Members of the School of Educa- tion can escape educational and its implications for an evening's enter- tainment at the "EducaLion Escape" by a special committee and will be announced later this week. to be held from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Wednesday in the WAB. Sponsored by the League social committee in conjunction with the Summer Session, this educationparty will be given for the many school teachers now on campus who so far have not had a chance to become acquainted. Entertainment will consist of old- fashioned square dancing, social dancing,bgroup andrtable games in- cluding bridge and refreshments will be served later in the evening. Com- plete plans are now being worked out. 1 Pest Beloved Of All Our Success Slips This waterfront view, which came from a neutra 1 nation through London to the United States, is de- scribes as showing a German submarine "garage" on t he French coast. Atop the concrete-covered U-boat docks a fortification is being built. Aircraft will be as signed to protect the structure. WAB hummer Sports Parade Rolls Along With Full Program Today's News / /. A On Campus .0 0 SECRETARIAL and BUSINESS TRAINING Short Victory Courses -- Longer Career Courses Hamilton Business College Air-Cooled Rooms William at State GAY .. SUMMERY Tableclothes Of Cottons, linens, and spun rayons with colorful Handbloc breezes. J GK 10 NICKELS + - ----j3.-. --- - - --- vs- -- 4 -a ,Wj" -- -~ ked Prints that suggest fresh, cool summer just the thing for home and the cottage. GE LINEN SHOP ARCADE "Always Reasonably Priced" a s s s t s 's s s s s l i i Another week rolls around and' facilities at the WAB are functioning even more strenuously offering rec- reational opportunities in all summer sports with competitive as well as non-competitive play. There will be a mixed swimming hour at 7:30 Tuesday night at the I-M Pool and only for a small fee. Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. mixed badminton will be played at Barbour Gym. Equipment may be rented there and for those who would like to polish up their game a bit, an in- structor will be available. If enough couples are interested, a club will be formed and tournaments held. Tennis Club At the WAB at the same time Wed- nesday night, the Tennis Club will get underway. So far elections for president have not been held so any- one interested in heading the club (and you don't have to be a pro) should call Helen Willcox or Miss Marie Hartwig. "If you don't have a partner, we'll find you one," they promise. Sue Cone is calling on all the soft- ball fans, both men and women, to come down to the WAB at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and play for a while and those who don't care to play are urged to watch. To wind up the week's WAA activi- ties the archery range will be open Friday afternoon under supervised instruction. Bows, women's weight and men's weight, are available there. As For Golf As for golf-at 4:30 p.m. Friday the 18 hole putting contest- will begin. Phyllis Present, head of the golf club, will be there to see that things get started all right. Outdoor minded hostelers will meet Saturday at the WAB for an over- night trip to Saline Valley Farms. Prof. Davis Will Speak On History Of University Calvin O. Davis, professor emeri- tus of education, will discuss "High- lights in the History of the Univer- sity" at 4:05 p.m. tomorrow in the University High School Auditorium. The second speaker of the 'week in the education school's lecture series will be James D. MacConnell, field representative of the American Youth Commission, who will talk on "Michigan's Study of Its Youth Prob- lem" Tuesday. On Wednesday, A. V. Overn, professor of education at the University of North Dakota, will discuss "A Professionally Competent Teacher for Every Classroom: Can We Have It?" ' It's only a 12 mile jaunt and hostelers are asked to bring their bikesror come on foot. DanSaulson, leader of the group, will be at the WAB at 1 p.m. when the hostelers will take to the highway. The group expects to return by noon Sunday and everyone is invited to come. WAB Meeting There will be a meeting of the' Women's Athletic Association at 7:45 Tuesday at the WAB. Anyone inter- ested in working on WAA activities as well as those girls who signed up at the League mass meeting, are in- vited to come down at 8:30 p.m. for an informal get-together and "talk- it-over." Entry blanks for the women's golf, tennis, badminton and softball tour- naments and blanks for the co-recre- ational tournaments are available at the WAB. They must be returned by Monday. World Peace SurveyBegun, Sumner Welles Will Lead CongressionalAnalysis WASHINGTON, July 11-Collabo- rating with some members of Con- gress, a staff working under the di- rection of Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles has begun an exhaus- tive survey of the problems the world will face when the war ends, it was learned today. One influential legislator, who asked not to be quoted by name, said it was his understanding that an at- tempt was being made to prepare a thorough-going analysis that would put detailed information on world conditions at the fingertips of Amer- ican officials when they sit down at the peace table. Legislators who professed knowl- edge of the project said it seemed ob- vious to them the survey would be based on the prospects of a peace embodying the four freedoms Presi- dent Roosevelt enunciated in his Jan. 6, 1941 message to Congress- freedom of speech, freedom of relig- ion, freedom from want and freedom from fear. The idea of maintaining a study of peace problems won applause from members of the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee holding such widely divergent views as Senators Lee (Dem.-Okla.), an early advocate of American intervention in the war, and Nye (Rep.-ND.), who opposed President Roosevelt's foreign policies vigorously before Pearl Harbor. //0 BandClinic The first High Schol Clinic Band concert of the year will be given at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. One hundred and fifty young peo- ple, ranging in age from 11 to 19, will participate in the concert. Prof. William D. Revelli, director of the University bands and head of the High School Band Clinic, will conduct the first half of the program. Edwin Knepper, of Bowling Green, O., is to be concert soloist in "Rondo Cappriccio" by Bernard Fitzgerald. Mac E. Carr and Cleo G. Fox will be guest conductors. * * * Methodist Forum Willow Run field worker for the Michigan Child -Guidance Institute, Wallace Watt will speak at 6 p.m. today in the Foundation Lounge of the Methodist Church in the third of Methodist Summer Fellowship's for- um discussions. The Summer Fellowship-open to all students-will hold discussions each Sunday until August 2. The group is chaired by George F. Liechty, '40 BAd. Each week a speaker of authority on subjects of importance leads off the discussions. The group then splits into three sections which then meet again to complete the dis- cussion. Hillel Supper Avukah, student Zionist organiza- tion, will sponsor its third communal supper of the summer at '6:30 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation. The supper will be followed by a musicale. Hebrew songs will be sung, and records will include Ernest Bloch's B'aal Shem Tov Suite. Bloch is a contemporary Swiss-born com- poser and conductor now living in the United States. The meal, which will be prepared by Avukah members, will be served at cost. All interested persons are invited to attend. ing bodice. Of Mellow Moon rayon satin, a Bur-Mil fabric. An origi al s Sizes 291/2 to 351/2 and 32 to 40. CL.95 Can you remember ever having see .ntly lovely as this? Crowned with onglaise. Patricia designed it ... w waistline .. . a form-fitting back ... .. 6 ' ,:. '. 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