, SEPT. "? "936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I PAGE' lp I Summer Term Proves To Be Great Success .A.A. Plans Mixed Women's Athletic Association for the" next year which will provide for Sports Participation mixed participation in sports. Every Wednesday afternoon men as wellas A putting green has recently been women will be allowed to make useI completed on Palmer Field next to of the facilities of the Women's Ath- the Women's Athletic Building for letic Building. Among the sports of- the use of all women students. In- fered are tennis, badminton, riding, struction in golfing is offered during dancing, swimming, archery, bowl- the year as a part of the regular cur- ing, basketball, volleyball, field hock-; riculum. ey, ice hockey, skiing, bobsledding A program is arranged by the and tobogganing. Baker Case Heads a killing very similar to the Kenyon case, which is also as yet unsolved. Local Court Docket Padgett, after a three-day trial in _ which he was defended by Arthur (Con inued from Page 27) Lehman with an alibi of presence in all scientific questions : connection the East at the time of the hold-up with the as yet unsolved slaying of and shooting, was found guilty by 11-year-old Bobbie Kenyon of Detroit the jury after about an hour's delib- near East Tawas, and the arrest of l eration, however, and sentenced by a suspect, later released, in the killing Judge George W. Sample to life im- of 9-year-old Robert Streicher of prisonment at hard labor and in soli- Ypsilanti in that city March 7, 1935, tary confinement at Marquette prison. TYPING and SHORTHAND Without them a student is like a chicken in water. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE William at State Phone 7831 Enrollment Is History Of :session Largest In University 24 Lectures Offered Outstanding Physicists Are Invited To Symposium At School From June 29 to August 21 this summer the annual Summer Session of the University was held in Ann Arbor and attended by 4,530 stu- dents, the largest enrollment in its 43 summers and an increase of 11.4 per cent over last year. Credit equal to that earned by similar work during the academic session was given and as in the past the' faculty of more than 400 was augmented by members of other ed- ucational institutions in this country and abroad. The greatest gain in the various schools of the Summer Session was ii the Graduate School which had 2,365 students and was the largest of the 11 schools, having an increase of 340 students or 16.8 per cent over last year. In total enrollment, the literary college was second with 735 students and the education school third with 328 students. The other shools and colleges held in the ses- sion were engineering, medicine, law, pharmacy, architecture, business ad- mihistration, forestry and conserva- tion and music. Many Plays Given .Work done in these various schools and colleges was supplemented dur- ing the Summer Session with an in- teresting array of activities not un- like that presented to students in the academic session. A.series of 24 lec- tures was offered on varied topics stich as literature, psychology, medi- cine, linguistics and journalism. The speakers included men as well known on the campus as Prof. Irving D. Scott of the geology department, Prof. Arthur W. Bromage of the po- litical science department, and Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department. For those interested in dramatics, State Street was likened to Drury Lane by the Michigan Repertory Players under the direction' of Val- entine B. Windt. The customary July and August doldrums in the enter- tainment world were swept away by such plays as Zoe Akin's "The Old Maid, Maxwell Anderson's "Mary of Scotland," Glasswor-thy's "The Pig- eon," Katayev's "Squaring the Circle" and the apparently perpetual "Pi- rates of Penzance." The ten excursions provided by the Summer Session to nearby points of industrial, scenic and scientific in- ter'est were also popular both for diversion and education. Some of the places visited were the Ford fac- tory, Cranbrook School, General Mo- tors Proving Grounds and Niagara Falls. Conventions Held Numerous contacts were also made during the summer through the sev- eral onventions and meetings held in Ann Arbor. One of the first of these was the fifth annual five week pro- gram on Teaching International Law sponsored by the Carnegie Endow- ment Peace. During the course of this five week program authorities on international law spoke and courses of'study dealing with the various phases of international law. were given. The Linguistic Society of America and the University jointly sponsored the first Linguistic Institute since 19$2 and the first to be held in Ann At'bor. The Institute, directed by Prof. Charles C. Fries of the English department and editor of The Early Modern English Dictionary, offered courses designed for the scholar wishing to familiarize himself with remote parts of linguistic territory, graduate students and language teachers interested in linguistic sci- ence and for those desirous of learn- ing language or group of languages. The University was selected as the location for the revival of the Insti- tution because of its many facilities useful in this work, such as The Early Modern English Dictionary, the pa- pyri collections, and various mater- ials from recent excavations in the Near East. Music Training Offered A special feature of this year's Summer Session was the three week high school music clinic which con- sisted of an intensive training period for high school musical directors and music teachers. Besides instruction in individual instruments the clinic con- ducted instruction in field and band drills and demonstration rehearsals. Outstanding physicists were invited to attend a symposium conducted in connection with the Summer Ses- sion combining discussions of theor- etical and practical physics. Of par- ticular interest were the lectures by Prof. E. O. Lawrence of the Uni- A L O E P D to the of'40 9 TO YOU ... one of the new 2,500 students enrolling at Michigan ... we extend a warm and cordial welcome to our city. We know you will like Michigan. And we are sure you will like Ann Arbor. You will fied its citizens and its merchants hospitable and considerate, and ever willing to encourage the feeling of real friendship. 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