________THE MCIAN . oIT ' Ellis Family Receives Offers Of Local Aid Search Continues for Permanent Dwelling Three local families have offered temporary use of their homes, but no permanent living accommodations have turned up yet for Mr. and Mrs. Gale Ellis who want desperately to have their fatally ill little boy Pat with them in his last days. The carrot-topped, five-year-old, confined to the University Hospital with a rare blood disease, would be spending his short remaining life- time with his former. Marine Corps father and his mother. But Ann Ar- bor's crucial housing shortage has made it impossible for the Ellises to find permanent rooms. And Pat must have specially cooked meals you can not get in hotel and other commer- cial restaurants. The Kalamazoo family have had offers today from three families who offered to take them into iheir homes temporarily, and of the use of one apartment until September. Local civic organizations are on the look- out. But Mrs. Ellis has been unable to find even the, "any kind of a room" she asks on a permanent basis. University hospital rules confine the time the family can spend to- gether now to an hour a day. Studebaker To. Present Talk John W. Studebaker, United States Commissioner of Education, will pre- sent a lecture in the current series of talks on science at 4:10 p.m. Mon- day in Rackham Lecture Hall. "The High School Curriculum in a New World" will be the subject of Studebaker's address. Prof. Howard A. Meyerhoff will speak at 8:10 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Amphitheatre on "Some Social Implications of Natural Re- sources." Prof. Meyerhoff is the executive secretary of the American Associa- tion for the Advancement of Sci- ence and professor of geology at Smith College. 'At 8:10 p.m. Tuesday Prof. Louis Wirth will speak in Rackham Amphi- theatre on "Social Science Research and the Impact of Science upon Society." GRADUATE PSYCHIATRY: Dr. Furstenberg Outlines Plan. For Veteran Sponsored Study WE WILL BE CLOSED INTERLOCHEN GONDOLIERS - Principals in operetta, "The Gondoliers," to be given by high school stu- dents today at the National Music Camp,. Interlochen, Michigan. Left to right: Brad McGowan (Don Alham- bra),. Helen Francis Beaty (Gianehetta), Shirley Gatzert (Tessa), Lyle Mason (Luiz), Eloise Stoughton (Cas- silda), Esther Petry, (The Duchess), Duane Smith (The Duke), Clifford Johnson (Guiseppi). New Control For Air plane Automatic Gyroplane To Make Sky Safe Skyway comfort and safety has been advanced by the introduction of a new automatic gyropilot which will provide fingertip control of an air- plane's flight. This new device, the size of a nickel box of matches, permits turn- ing, climbing, descending merely by the twisting of a knob, and can also be set to guide the plane at a fixed altitude and direction with controls untouched. The instrument can be used con- tinuously by the pilot in controlling the plane from take-off until final approach to a landing. An additional accessory, the automatic approach and landing control, to be installed later, will automatically guide the aircraft on its approach to the run- way. GILBERT 'N SULLIVAN: 'Gondoliers' Featured by High School Group At Interlochen Highlighting this week's programs at the Interlochen National Music Camp will be the Gilbert and Sulli- van operetta, "The Gondoliers." The production, for which profes- sional costumes and setting have been sent from Boston, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today. The operetta, to be presented by the high school operetta group un- der the direction of Maynard Klein of New Orleans, La., includes thir- teen solo roles, a chorus of forty and a high school operetta orchestra of 50 pieces. The regular Sunday evening or- chestra concert at 8 p.m. will have as its guest conductor Walter C. Welke of the University of Wash- ington, Seattle. Welke is the regu- lar conductor of the music camp sym- phonic band. Among the composers to be represented in the concert will be Wagner, Schumann, Ravel and von Weber. The Sunday afternoon concert will be presented by the All-State orches- tra under the direction of Elizabeth Green, director of orchestras in the Ann Arbor Public Schools. The High School Girls' Glee Club directed by John S. Elwell of Saginaw and the National Music Camp high school band under the direction of the camp president, Joseph E. Maddy, will also participate in this concert. Graduate Students Will Hold Formal A wishing well will be the central decoration theme of the Graduate Student Council annual semi-formal dance at 9 p.m. today on the Rack- ham Building terrace. Jerry Edwards' orchestra, fea- turing Cuban numbers will play for the affair which is open to graduate students and their friends. Refresh- ments will be served. DAILY OFFICIAL JIULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) A graduate training program in psychiatry sponsored by the Veter- ans' Administration is expected to begin this September. The new program will train 10 medical doctors, to be appointed each year to study for a three year period. The trainees, expected to be for the most part veterans themselves, will be appointed by Dr. Raymond W. Waggoner, chairman of the de- partment of psychiatry at the Uni- versity and director of the program. The Veterans Administration will approve and pay the tuition of each trainee, who, after successfully com- pleting the program, will be awarded the degree of Master of Psychiatry. As outlined by Dr. Furstenberg, dean of the medical school, the pro- gram will operate as follows: During the first year, the basic assignment of each trainee will be the study and treatment of in- patients at the Veterans Administra- tion Hospital in Battle Creek,. plus study in such formal courses as neuroanatomy, clinical psychiatry and psychotherapy. The second year, each trainee will rotate through three of the in- patient services at the Neuropsychi- atric'Institute at the University Hos- pital (children's, women's, and men's or veteran's), serving as resident for three months in each. They will then serve as resident in the Department of Neurology and do other assigned work and a course of study for the rest of the year. The final year, in which the group will be divided into two sub-groups, the trainees, will serve about four 150 Linuists To Gather for Annual Meeting Approximately 150 language ex- perts are expected to register for the annual meeting of the Linguistics Society of America, to be held today and tomorrow at the University. The program for the afternoon meeting will include "The Malao- Polynesian Word for Two," by T. Dyen of Yale University, "Two Ways of Intensifying Meaning in Thai" by Mary R. Haas, of the University of Califronia, "The Directions of Actions in Chinese Verbs" by Y. R. Chao, of Harvard University, "Two Morpho- logical Notes" by J. A. Kerns, of New York University, "Mazateco Tonal Phonology" by Eunice V. Pikes, of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, "Chatino Noun Morphology' by M. A. Gabler of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, and "The Vocabulary of the American Midlands" by Prof. H. Kurath, of the University. A subscription dinner will be held at 6 p.m. today in the Anderson Room of the Union. Prof. Kurath is the local chairman in charge of arrangements.. The evening session will include papers on "The Origin of Language" by E. H. Sturtevant, of Yale Univer- sity, "Was There Originally a Spec- ific Reflexive Pronoun?" by E. Ade- laide Hahn, of Hunter College, "The Phonetic Basis of Ventriloquism" by K. L. Pikes, of the Summer Insti- tute of Linguistics, Oklahoma. The three sessions are open to the public. Dr. Hopkins Will Go To Camp Roth Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the University summer session, will leave today for Camp Filibert Roth, the University forestry station in the Upper Peninsula. Dr. Hopkins will spend the week- end there on a building improvement consultation for the camp. Next week Dr. Hopkins plans to visit theNational Music Camp at Interlochen. 7Two Ite& l'17 ia1 -4 The Week of AUG. 4-12 months in the out-patient service and approximately two months in another department of the Neuropsychiatric Institute. Six months also will be spent at the VA Hospital in Battle Creek in the out-patient service and in the whrds. 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Spanish Teas: Every Tuesday and Friday, language tables will convene in the League cafeteria at 4 p.m. for informal conversation practice. On Thursdays, the group will meet at the International Center at 4 p.m. All stud.nts interested m practicing Spanish conversation are invited to attend Coming Events Pi Lambda Theta initiation will be held-in the Assembly Room of the Rackham Building on Saturday, August 3 at 3:00 p.m., instead of on Tuesday, July 30, as previously an- nounced. French Club: The fifth meeting of the French Club will be held Mon- day, August 5, at 8 p.m. in Rm. 305 of the Michigan Union. Mr. Richard Picard, of the Romance language de- partment, will lead a general discus- sion on the subject: "Quel message de l'Amerique dois-je rapporter en France?" Group singing. Social hour. International Center: Due to re- decorating, the weekly tea dance this Friday will be cancelled. The in- formal tea dances will be resumed next Friday, August 9, at 4 p.m. in the Recreation Room of the Inter- national Center. Russian Circle (Russky Kruzhok) will meet at 8 p.m. sharp on Tues- day, August 6, at Rm. 206, Burton Tower. Professor Glenn D. McGeoch of the School of Music will speak about the music of Shostakovich and Prokofieff, illustrating the talk with recordings. Members of the Russian Circle, Russian students and their friends are invited. The Graduate Outing Club has planned biking and swimming for Sunday, August 4. Those interested should meet at the Club Rooms in the Rackham Building at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Bring your lunch. V2 Yearly Clearance Continues, with values reduced to One-Half and more. Just twice each year do we offer such Super Values in a complete Clearance of Spring and Summer stocks. 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