rAGE TW6 pwqTTr 19RHMAN DAMY, rRIDAY, 31AY 15, 11936 PAGE i:rw~ rUIDAY, MAY 15, 193w Summer Session Faculty Members To Give Varied Lecture Program 18> 72nd Session Of Camp Davis Opens June 29 Camp Davis, established in 18.'4 as the first university surveying camp in the United States, will open June. 29 for its 72nd Summer Session near Jackson, Wyo., within 35 miles of the Teton Mountains and 75 miles from the southern boundary of Yellowstone National Park. The location of Camp Davis, in a broad expanse of open country, can qualify as the "almost perfect" camp. There is an adequate supply of water under gravity pressure, an ideal cli- mate, with but little cloudy weather or oppressive heat and regularly cool nights. It is surrounded by beautiful moun- tains which offer unlimited oppor- tunities for exploration and is near an improved U.S. highway. All buildings at the camp have con- crete floors and sheet steel super- structure. Besides residence buildings, which are fourteen feet square, there are a kitchen, dining room, keeper's residence instrument room, shop and garage. Anyone who has completed the pre- scribed work in the engineering col- lege is eligible for attendance. A list of the prerequisites may be obtained at the office of the Summer Session. Instruction will be given for five and .one-half days a week for eight weeks. Two courses, surveying 3 and 6, will be offered at the camp. Survey- ing 3, according to the Summer Ses- sion caitalcg, "embraces azimuth wotrk; triangulation; plane table; road; boundary; and stadia surveys. Each student is required to adjust completely a transit and level. Office work includes the computation of field data, the making of maps and diagram's, and the preparation of permanernt records where such are required." Famous Center Of State Medical Research Schools, Colleges And Proper Abbreviations To indicate the various schools and colleges in which a student is enrolled, the following are in general use on the University Campus: College of Literature, Science and the Arts ......... Numerals Alone College of Engineering ........... E Law School .....................L Medical School ................. M College of Architecture ........... A College of Pharmacy ............ . . P School of Dentistry .............. D Graduate School.............. Grad Special Students ............. Spec School of Music ......... . .. . ..SM School of Education ............ Ed School of Business Administration .~BAd School of Nursing .......... . ... SN Geologry Camp, Law School To Iler--ister Early First Of Topics To Be'Modern Dictatorships' All Speeches To Be Given At 5 P. M. In Natural Science Auditorium Visitors To Speak SubjectsT o Be Pertinent; 11ol( Great Initerest For Summer Students (Continued from Page l) Above is shown a sketch of the University of Michigan Hospital, noted throughout the country for its dis- tinguished staff of research scientists. It not only serves as a state hospital, but it is the central head- quarters of the University Medical School. A recent addition, the building of a special therapeutic pool which was compieted last winter, has made its faciliities even more complete. The building stands on the bluffs overlooking the Huron Valley. r r -7 WXOMAEN In WH ITE Demand, PERFECTION lin 21 L iir .T m Ad j Director Hopkins' Guess' Of A 4,400 Peak Proves To Be Conservative (Continued from Page 1) growing proportionately more rapid- ly than the winter session, although the regular session this year has the greatest enrollment in the history of the University. In 1920 the summer enrollment was 24.7 percent of the regular session whereas in 1925 the Summer Session was 39.2 percent that of the larger enrollment. Another interesting fact also re- vealed was that the enrollment of men students in the Summer Session has been 1000 greater than the wom- en student. Since 1924 the fluctua- tion have been imilar for both men and women. In 1935 the men' en- rolment wa 2590 and the women's, 1480. The reasons for this general un- precedented rise are numerous as explained by Professor Hopkins. A few of the outstanding reasons are to be found in the character and num- ber of the Summer School faculty as well as in the special features and conferences sponsored by the various departments of the University and the general recreational program. Guest Faculty Of 34 The faculty for the Summer Session will number 410 of the regular staff of the University, supplemented by 34 from other institutions. Another factor which will tend to swell the numbers of the student body is the reduction of train fare granted by the railroads to all summe stu- dents and professors, as has been conceded to all the larger educational institutions. Furthermore, the severe competi- tion among teachers for advancement has made acquisition of the master's degree a requisite for high school fac- ulties while higher educational insti- tutions demand the doctor's degree for members of their staff. These stu- dents and scholars are accepting the Summer School as the logical place to acquire these requisite degrees and during the Summer Session is the only time they can devote to this study coming at vacation time. The activities of Ann Arbor during the summer every year include con- certs, lectures, plays, excursions, dances and, at times, study. Even out of Ann Arbor, the pulse of the cam- pus is felt in Colorado, New England, Wyoming, and, closer to home, Nor- thern Michigan and other spots throughout the country in the field camps sponsored by the various de- partments of the University during the summer. Plan Mano Activities Almost daily, for the greater part of the session, there will be University lectures by recognized faculty author- ities on the widest variety of subjects. Several times opportunities will be offered to hear visiting professors speak and the popularity of these, as well as the other lectures, has been proven in past years by the uni- formly large attendance. This year, as every year, there will be a series of excursions under the direction of members of the faculty. These excursions will be climaxed by a trip to Niagara Falls. Typical of these excursions will be visits to the more interesting attractions of De- troit and inspection of various phases of the motor industries. For years the competent Michigan Repertory Players have presented one play each week, and this year these plays will form an integral part in the program of the Summer Session. Plans are being made to conduct an- other opera such as was held last year through the combined efforts of the Repertory Players and the School of Music. These productions have al- ways been anticipated and received with pleasure and are one of the high spots in the summer program. Wilson G. Smillie, of the public health administration school of Har- vard University. He will lecture on July 8 on "The Common Cold." Pro- fessor Smillie has done distinguished work in his field, having been for ten years a member of the staff of the International Health Division, of the Rockefeller Foundation, and director of the Institute de Hygiene, San Paulo, Brazil for two years. Prof.+ Edward B. Green of the psychology department will deliver the eighth lecture of the summer ser- ies. He will speak on "Niagara Falls and Their Vicinity," July 13. He will be followed by Prof. Robert E. Spiller, visiting professor of English from Swarthmore College, whose topic will be "Henry Adams, Artist and Critic of the Modern Age." Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, director of the Simpson Memorial Institute for Med- ical Research, and director of the department of internal medicine, will give an illustrated lecture on July 15. His subject will be, "Anemia." "The Integrity of Humanism" will be the subject of the next lecture to be given by another distinguished member of the visiting faculty, Prof. Harry S. V. Jones of the English de- partment of the University of Illinois. Prof. Winter Will Lecture Prof. John G. Winter, chairman of the Latin department, director of the Museum of Classical Archaeology, and director of the Division of Fine Arts, will give the twelfth lecture of the series, speaking on "Recent Ex- cavations in Rome," on July 20. Pro- fessor Winter was the recipient of this year's Henry Russel Award for outstanding research work by a Uni- versity faculty member. On July 21, Prof. E. H. Sturte- vant of the linguistic department of Yale University, will lecture on "The Hittite Discoveries and Their Bear- ing on Linguistic Science." Professor Sturtevant has been associated with the Yale faculty since 1923, and has achieved nation-wide prominence in his field. He has also served as president of the Linguistic Society of America. A lecture on "War and Economics" will be given by Prof. Max. S. Hand- man of the economics department on July 22 The next lecture, which will be heard the following day, July 23, will be given by Prof. Henry Miller, pro- fessor of mechanism, and head'of the department of mechanism and engi- neering drawing. He will give an illustrated talk on "Neutrality and Ethiopia." Professor Miller was the organizer and president of the School of Military Aeronautics in 1917, and also served in France during the war as major, ordnance chief of railway artillery, and lieutenant-colonel, ord- nance chief of the heavy artillery division. He is the author of "Amer- ican Seacoast Artillery," "Mobile Ar- tillery," and " The Paris Gun." On July 27, Prof. Harold M. Dorr of the political science department will lecture on "Constitutional Re- form and the Supreme Court," while the next lecture will be given by another political science professor, Arthur W. Bromage, who will speak the following day on. "The Forty- Eight Indestructible States." The next talk will be an illustrated lec- ture on astronomy, but the subject and speaker have not yethbeen an- nounced. Keniston To Speak "Modern Poets of Spain and Span- ish America" is the subject of a lec- ture to be given July 30 by another member of the guest faculty, Prof. Hayward Keniston of the University of Chicago. Dr. Howard B. Lewis, head of the department of physiological chemis- try, and director of the College of Pharmacy, will deliver the twenty- first lecture of the series, speaking on "The Chemist and the World's Food Supply" on August 3. The next lecture, to be given August 4, will be on "The Gyroscope, Its Application to Ocean Lisers and Aircraft" by Prof. J. P. den Hartog of Harvard University, who will display models along with his lecture. The last two lectures will be on highly diversified subjects, with Prof. Qreene s Offers You the individual care that is necessary to the handling of white hats, suits and coats. The equipment employed by Greene's in cleaning white linens and all delicate is especially designed for this type of clean- white fabrics ing to insure you longer wear and greater satisfaction. GREEN E'S CYaERS 8' DYERS ICROCLMA Dail r.6 iN -'IIII