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July 06, 1950 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1950-07-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MTICHIAN DAILY

TIHURSDAY, 3JLY 6, 1950

Instructors
lo Convene
For Music
Some 100 music teachers from
11 over the state will convene at
he League and Harris Hall to
tear the Summer Session Orches-
ra, Stanley Quartet and them-
elves "in performance."
The performances are a part of
he School of Music's annual
bree-day conference opening to-
lay for Michigan music teachers
nd summer students, designed to
ive quick training in string teach-
ag, school and community or-
hestra training and school vocal
nusic.
ONE OF THE highlights of the
'rogram, outlining the role of the
Jniversity in helping s t ri n g
eachers throughout the state, will
e a "live" demonstration in solv-
ng the instrumental problems of
tring group activity, and a morn-
ng concert by the Stanley Quar-
et.
Tomorrow conferees will watch
a rehearsal of the University
Orchestra under its director
Wayne Dunlap.
Louis Wersen, director of music
1 Philadelphia, will present dem-
nstration orchestra rehearsals at
a.m. and 1 p.m. tomorrow and a
ix-member panel discussion on
Orchestra Training Problems" is
cheduled for 3 p.m.
Saturday, Prof. Maynard Klein,
irector of the University Choir,
ill demonstrate a choral rehears-
I using the audience as the choir.
Wingo To Speak
Principal of University Element-
ry School, Prof Wingo worked in
rade school administration in the
ublic schools of Connecticut be-
ore joining the University facul-
y in 1945.

BETWEEN FLIGHTS-Lt. John
Doolittle, son of Lt. Gen. Jimmy
Doolittle drinks coffee at an air
force base in Japan. He pilots
a C-46 transport plane carrying
supplies for U.S. troops from Ja-
pan to South Korea.
ls To Binmg
ExhibitToday
Students will have a chance to
see the touring exhibit bus of a
Milwaukee electrical c o m p a n y
.when it stops at 3:30 p.m. today in
front of the East Engineering
Building.
The bus, which displays some 40
feet of product equipment, has
been traveling through 37 states
east of the Rockies on a two year
touring program.
The display is completely set up
with industrial motor control
equipment and lighting, power and
distribution equipment. Two field
engineers will accompany the ex-
hibit to give information and ans-
wer questidns.
The display, which is open to
the 'public, is sponsored by the
electrical engineering department.

U.S. Business
Largely Small
Says Warden
Ninety-two percent of all Ameri-
ca's vast industrial enterprise may
be classed as small business,"
Beryl E. Warden, of the Depart-
ment of Commerce, told the first
meeting of an Institute for Small
Business Education here yesterday.
Sponsored by the University
School of Business Administration
and the U.S. Department of Com-
merce, the Institute will run
through tomorrow.
"HOWEVER, the small business
in the 'small' classification employ
only 45 percent of all the people
in industry," Warden said.
In a business panel, educators
agreed that college training in
business and commerce has pre-
viously been intended largely
for young persons planning to
seek positions in business owned
by others.
Now, however, the demand and
need for a different kind of busi-
ness education comes from stu-
dents who want to go into work
for themselves and from persons
off campus who are already run-
ning or want to run their own
businesses, it was agreed.
A SURVEY indicated that out
of 997 colleges, 248 are now offer-
ing courses in small business man-
agement, according to Warden.
State Universities and junior
colleges have the broadest courses
in this field, and throughout the
nation, some 28,000 students were
enrolled last year for such offer-
ings on the college campus.
Book Published
Prof. William Clark Trow of the
education school has had a book,
"Educational Psychology," pub-
lished by Houghton Mifflin Co., of
New York.
The book deals with child
growth and with the learning pro-
cesses.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
PUTURE NEWS

C 0 O P E R A T I 0 N-Al Stohiman (right), leather hobbyist,
and Charles Martinez, silversmith, combine talents in Hollywood
to complete a silver-studded, leather-carved mural of a Palomino.

SI A T U A R Y O N F OOTB AL L F I E L D--Like figures in clay, these players appear
immovably encased in mud during Australia-England Rugby League test at Sydney, Australia.

.4

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HIASPEL
REFRESHABLE CLOTHES
TRADE MARK

P E A T F Q R F U E L-Hans Gebhardt, of Unterfoehring,
Germany, holds handful of peat which, he says, when mixed with
carbide and water, will drive auto engine he developed 65 miles.

FOR COLLEGE MEN

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B E R L i N C L E A N U P-Equipment purchased with funds stemming from Marshall Plan
expedites clearing of rubble in Kurfuersten area, Berlin counterpart of New York's Fifth Avenue,

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pyt M W iM Myv. yM1
VNiNA'N!NMIN

VAN

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LIGHTHOUSE KEEPER AT 70-FrauEmma
Miethbauer, 70, cleans the mirrors of the reflectors at Cuxhaven
Lighthouse on German North Sea coast where she is the keeper.

They Pass Every
Hot-Weather Test!

Has el
sirJFreme
COTTON NYLON RAYON
viawwNAu$PELw ONAns

Voted most popular by a cool majority
of the student body-Haspel Refresh-
able Clothes are on the required list for
campus wear in hot weather. Sensibly
light, invitingly cool to the appearance
... to your comfort, Haspel whisper-
weight suits are thoroughly schooled
in good taste . .. completely correct for
classroom, social and traveling wear.
Also Available are separate trousers
at $8.50

B L OO D M O B 1 L E ON 'BIG MO'- U. S. Naval Academy midshipmen make blood
donations to the Red Cross bloodmobile under the big guns of the USS Missouri at New York.

>

JIASPEL SIR PREME

. . . $25.50

These are the new

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with the perfect proportion of NYLON for
durability and fabric stability; Rayon for
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for cool porosity.
Yarn dyed; Clor-fast; Washable

Haspel
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SUMMER STORE HOURS I

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I

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