THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 14. 1937 11IExcursions Will Be Given During Session Session Tours Will Cover Points Of Interest Inland And On Great Lakes (Continued From Page 9) followed by a second trip a week later, as excursion five. Trip four will be an inspection of the Cran- brook Schools at Bloomfield Hills.J Christ Church and the Carillon will be visited. This trip will be made by bus. Niagara Falls and vicinity will be visited in trip six, which will last two- and one-half days. The excursion will go by boat . this summer for the first time. A member of the department of geology will accom- pany the group as lecturer. The tripI will end on Monday morning, July 19.1 Menlo Park Laboratory will be made, and a stop will be made at the Dear- born Inn near-by. People who can- not be accommodated on the trip the first Wednesday may take the fol- lowing week's excursion. The General Motor's proving grounds at Milford, northeast of Ann Arbor, will be visited on Saturday, July 24. Here a visit will also be made to the Weather Station. This will be made by bus. A second boat trip will be taken in the tenth excursion, to Put-in-Bay, in the Ohio part of Lake Erie. After a steamer ride of 125 miles, a visit to several caves on the island, to Per- ry's monument, and other points of geologic and scenic interest will be made. A member of the geology de- partment will accompany the trip as lecturer. Last in the series will be a tour of the Ann Arbor Daily News Build- ing, where there will be an oppor- tunity to see a modern newspaper plant in operation. This is an af- ternoon trip, and there will be no fee. THEge MVsii GA DALY toHoMrAYS.o3ere Center Of Many Men's Activities Study Of Double Stars Is Made Here . TO HOLD FRENCH HOUSE The FePyver Francais under the di- On Wednesday, July 21, and on ,rection of Mlle. Deirdre McMullen, July 28, excursions will leave for will hold its second season as a Greenfield Village in Dearborn. Here house for women students, of French a tour of the Village and of Edison's this summer. The Michigan, Union, men's building on the campus, serves as the headquarters for most men's activities. Here meetings of various organi- za1kins, luncheons, and recreational activities are held. It also serves as place of residence for alumni and campus visitors. The Lamont-Hussey Observatory, shown above, situated in the city of Bloomfonetin, Orange Free State, South Africa, is operated by the University. Its equipment consists of an excellent 27-inch refractor telescope, and it serves in the study of double stars in the southern. hemisphere. __ 4 New Institute In Electronics To Be Feature rr r .ir M1 f ]r, 3. r.. f r . "yGM1 y A?;F Y r. S y iM1 i f ; f . t: L .;r f r ? " yrVfi Ar'w. t f yf5 44 Mi*chi*gan Tradi*ti*on T HAT "FASHION'SHEIGHT rr is MEN in WHITE AND THAT &CNICHIGAN MEN choose GREENE'S for the cleaning of their PALM BEACH SUITS, FLANNEL SLACKS, PANAMA HATS, LINEN SUITS, and GABARDINES. mer aarments is exemplified in the (Continued from Page 9) laboratory coming also in the after- noon. Eight week supplementary courses will be held during the time in the electrical engineering, mathe- matics, and physics departments, as part of the Institute program. En- rollment in the courses may be done through the Graduate School. Among special outside lecturers who will lead the Institute this sum- mer will be: Dr. Saul Dushma.n and Dr. Lewi Tonks, of the General Elec- tric Research Company . laboratory, Schenectady, N. Y.; Dr. Joseph Sle- pian and Dr. R. C. Mason, of the Westinghouse Research Laboratory, East Pittsburgh, Pa.; Dr. f. E. Men- denhall and Dr. F. B. Llewellyn of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, New York City; Dr. L. B. Loeb, of the Uni- versity of California; Dr. B. L. Thompson of the RCA Vacuum Tube Laboratory and V. K. Zworykin of the RCA Electric Research Laboratory, Camden, N. J. Prof. William G. Dow of the de- partment of electrical engineering is the director of the Institute. Range Of Suhjecbts GivenIn Lectures (Continued From Page 9) 'Dictionaries" by Prof, Thomas A. I Knott of the English department, who was formerly general editor of the recent Webster Dictionary, will follow. "Field Research in the Interior of Brazil," will be the subject of the lecture on the next Monday, by Prof. W. G. Smillie of Harvard University, who will be a member of the Summer Session staff. This speech will be followed by one on "Recent Biblical Studies and Discoveries," by Prof. Henry A. Sanders of the speech de-' partment. "Recent Advances in the Treat- ment of Cancer by Means of Radia- tion," given by Dr. Willis Peck of the Health Service, will be next, on Mon- day, June 26, and on Wednesday Prof. Verner Crane of the history depart- ment will speak on "Benjamin Frank- lin." "Leoprosy in Modern Times," described by Dr. Malcolm H. Soule of the Medical School will be given on the next to the last Monday, and Prof. Rene Talamon of the French department will talk on "Paris" the following Wednesday. Carillon Course Is To Be Taught Here i (Continued From Page 9) I 24, open to both high-school students and recent graduates, and to instrue- tors and directors of music in sec- ondary schools, will also be a feature l of the 1937 Summer Session in the School of Music. , Students will be housed and board- ed under University auspices and both educational and recreational activ- ities will be under the supervision and guidance of members of the fac- ulty. Social And Public Work Institute Is On Program (Continued from Page 9) here, is offering courses sponsored by several departments of the Univer- sity. These range from problems in public administration, engineering highway and public utility problems, to courses in the economics and psy- chology departments and School of Education. One of the most impor- tant courses, Professor Benson said, will be the laboratory course in pub- Authorities In Respective Fields Form Important Fart In Program Many To Take Part In Institute; Her Speelal Foandations Send Men Here For Original Work And Research Cmninued From Ptxg(,. 9) dor Singers," an a Capella choir spe- cializing in songs of the Tudor Period, He has composed a large number of songs, choruses and or- gan works. At present lie is working on an opera and a coronation march. Other outstanding men who will be here this summer include Dr. Frank- lin Edgerton, of Yale University, who is considered the most outstanding contemporary Indologist, and Dr. Wilson G. Smillie, Professor of Pub- lic Health at Harvard University. Dr. Smillie has been associated with the Health Division of the Rockefeller Institute and is at present Science Director of its International Health " Division. He was a member of the Summer Session last year. Visiting Professors . Other visiting professors will be: Dr. Bernard Bloch, of Brown Univer- sity; Dr. Herman Browe, Supervis- ing Director of the Detroit Elemen- tary Schools; Gerald Bush, Belton; Harold Bachman, of the University of Chicago; Dr. Wallace Caldwell, of the University of North Carolina; Dr. William Carr, Washington, D.C.; An- drew Casner, of the University of Illinois; Yuen Chang of Nanking, China, at present a member of the University faculty; Evelyn Cohen, New York; Dr. Dennis Cooke, Nash- ville, Tenn.; Dr, Bessie Gambrili, of Yale University; Rudolph G3elsness, of the University of Arizona. Dr. Frederick Hamil, of Carleton College; Bryan Heise, Ypsilanti; Dr, James Hillhouse, of the University of Minesota; Dr. H. Clifton Hutchins, Washington, D.C.; Albert Jacobs, of Columbia University; Whitford Kane, New York City; Joseph Kleefus, De- troit; Dr. Hilmar Krueger, of the " University of Wisconsin; Clifford Lillya, Chicago; Katherine Manning, New York City; Dr, Arthur Martin, of Ohio State University; Eleanor Meston, Ypsilanti; Gustavus Ohling- er, Toledo, O.; Mary Parsons, Lec- turer in Library Science; Jesse Or- mondroys, Swarthmore, Pennsylva- nia; Clyde Pettus, of Emory Univer- sity, Georgia; Dr. Paul Rankin, De- troit; Dr. George Rice, of the Univer- sity of California; Dr. Leo Rockwell, of Colgate University. " Others On. Faculty Ralph Rush, Cleveland Heights; Agnes Samuelson, Des Moines, Iowa; Charles Shaw, Swarthmore College; Dr. Verner Sims, of the University of Alabama; Theo Werle, Lansing; Ralph Wilson, of the University of Idaho, Southern Branch; Alexander Wyckoff, New York City; Charles Yard, Michigan Municipal League; and Dr. Jacob Zeitlin, of the Univer- sity of Illinois. Cost Of hiving, Is Low Du.ri>nor Summer Here Regular, Outside Expenses Vary With Tastes, But Fixed Fees Are Small (Continued From Page 9) Geology Camp, $45, and in the Geog- raphy Camp, $35. All of the fees apply, regardless of the number of courses taken. Each student is required to register in the school or college in which he is doing the major part of his work, and if he elects work in another in which the fee is higher, he will pay the higher fee. Students may enroll for the latter half of the Session for a payment equal to 60 per cent of the fee for the entire Session. Activities Priviliges Students who are enrolled for ,Iourses that continue for four weeks or more are entitled through their fees to privileges of the Michigan Union or the Michigan League, to the Health Service, and to subscription to the Summer Daily. The cost of living will alse be mod- rate. Board ranges from $5.50 to X7.50#a week. Room prices are from $2.00 to $4.04 for single rooms and from '$2.00 to $3.50 for double rooms or suites for two persons. Women who are not registered -in the Graduate School are required to live in residences approved by the Office of the Dean of Women. Uni- versity dormitories for women will be open, and application for residence in one of these halls should be made Fn thn Tlnnn of WmmAn TALAL, of 4 GREENE S careful method of cleanina Sumr I t s . v a.... . . r . r .. r a..7 ..a r r . + a.+ . . a .~ a ... v .. v . . . t.... . .. r.. approval given it by the Goodall Company (sale manufacturers of Palm ... Your WHITES will stay white longer and will stay "WHITES" longer they're sent to GREEN E'S. Beach) !.r, when 4 GRFwFwN E' S :CLEANERS 6" DYERS ICROCLEA UNDER THE M I CRC Q ...._.. PHONE 23-23-1 I N H ii