Y14, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ELEVEN New Record Enrollment For Summer Session Is Expected Great Choice In Curriculum STo Be Available Divisional Field Stations To Conduct New Courses In Specialized Study (Continued from Page 9) the Arts, the College of Engineering, the College of Pharmacy, the College of Architecture, the School of Edu- cation, the School of Business Ad- ministration, the School of Music, the Medical and Law Schools, the Horace H. Rackham School of Grad- uate Studies, and the Division of Hy- giene and Public Health. Outside Field Stations Many courses will also be carried on in special field stations outside of the campus. Among these will be the Biological Station at Douglas Lake, nine miles from Pellston, and Camp Filibert Roth of the School of Forestry and Conservation, near Mu- nising. The Biological Station is for field work in the departments of botany and zoology, and will form an important part of the work of those departments, supplemented by courses here. The Forestry Camp wil have all of the courses offered by the forestry school for the summer. In State Bridge, Colo., the Geology Station will hold its regular session, offering field work of introductory and specialized character, while sur- veying work in the College of Engi- neering will be held at Camp Davis, in Jackson Hole, Wyo. Sessions will be held also at the Geography camp. Institutes To Take Part Another important part of the Summer Session program, Professor Hopkins added, will be the work done by Institutes organized by coopera- tion of various departments of the University, many of them supported by outside foundations. The Linguis- ties Institute, for the study of lan- guages from their historical and functional point of view, will hold its second session here. International lawyers will follow work given in the Institute of International Law, and the Physics Symposium, which has won recognition for its work in past sessions, will again be held. Far Eastern Studies Among, new Institutes will be the Institute of Far Eastern Studies, sponsored by the Institute of Pacific Relations. This will deal with ma- terials of study in Oriental culture and political relations. The Elec- tronics Institute will be held for this summer only. Sponsored by several large electrical corporations who are sending men and material for study to the University, the course will deal with electronic principles, and is con- sidered an important experiment, Professor Hopkins said. In the Grad- uate School the Institute of Public and Social Administration will hold courses in practical training in these fields. The Curricula of Public Ad- ministration will be held here, while the work in Social Administration will be done in Detroit. Regular Privileges Will Be Continued By Health Service There will be the same privileges at the University Health Service dur- ing the Summer Session for students as during the rest of the year, accord- ing to Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, direc- tor of the Health Service. The Health Service will be open from 9 to 12 and 1 to 4 on week days, and from 9 to 12 on Saturdays, he stated. Students will have unlimited use of the dispensary and free use of the infirmary for thirty days. The privilege of using the infirmary free of charge also applies at the Univer- sity Hospital, where each person is allowed four dollars per day and some fees toward expenses i n c u r r e d. Charges are made for special nursing and for a private room. "There are not many students who take elective operations during the Summer Session except operations after which it takes only a few days to recover," Dr. Forsythe declared. "During the eight weeks of school there are fewer calls at the Health Service in proportion to the number of students than during the regular term. Many students who are stran- gers on the campus do not become oriented in such a short time, while others, who have been in adverse fi- nancial conditions while out of school, take advantage of the medical care at the Health Service.". "A greater amount of disease and chronic illness is recognized in the older age group which attends the Summer Session because many of them have been unable to get easily the proper medical attention," he stated. During the Summer Session last year 10,815 dispensary calls were made at the Health Service, accord- ing to a report issutd in October, 1936. o-i-- Geology Camp Is Again To Be Held A t State Bridge, Colorado Variety Of Rock Features who are planning to do graduate work migeology. Offers Opportunity For i Toive General Course Student Research The purpose of the Station, ac- cording to Prof. George M. Ehlers of The Geology Field Station, an an- the botany department, director, is" nual feature of the University Sum- to give both a broad general instruc- m'er Session, will hold its second sea- tion in field work in geology in the son at State Bridge, Colo., this sum- first year, and further instruction in mer. more advanced, specialized lines. A! The Station was organized for field general course in field work methods' courses in the geology department and study and two that will deal with and is operated during the summer specialized lines of work, he said, are for students who are planning to con- to be offered. centrate in that line of work. Studies This will be the second year that there consist of observation, measure- the station will be held at State, ment and interpretation of geological Bridge, having been located for about phenomena and in research and spe- 16 years previously in Kentucky. Last cial work in physiography, structural year the camp was shifted in an ef- geology and stratigraphy. Work at fort to find an area that could give the station is required of all students material for a more rounded field1 course in geology. The new location volcanoes and lava flows formed in, is about 15 miles west of Denver on very recent geologic times. Study the western slopes of the Rocky of the geological history of the Col- Mountains. It is situated on the orado River is also available. upper part of the Colorado River at The area has not been extensively an elevation of about 6,700 feet, and studied since. 1875, so there is great its headquarters and housing accom- opportunity for research and investi- modations compose the entire village. gation by advanced students, Profes- Besides the work at the Station, the sor Ehlers declared. program of study also includes an Instruction at the Station is a very eight-day faculty-conducted trip out essential part of the geology depart- to most of the classical American ge- ment curriculum, Professor Ehlers ological areas between Ann Arbor concluded, the field work being re- and the Rocky Mountains. The group quired of all students who wish to will inspect the unglaciated region of carry on graduate or special studies central Wisconsin, the Great Plains, in geology. The field work this sum- the Bad Lands and Black Hills of mer will begin on June 21 and end South Dakota, and the Southern on August 13, an eight-week period. SRocky Mountains. __________ , Offers Research Opportunity A The Station has been chosen be- PLAN GERMAN TABLJ3 cause of its variety of geological fea- j A German Table where only Ger- tures in its area, Professor Ehlers man is spoken during the meals, and said. Rocks of the pre-Cambrian, a German Club will be held under Paleozoic, Mesoic, and Cenozoic ages the direction of the German depart- are all located at the Station or near- ment this summer. Hikes, picnics, by. Beside a wide variety of geolog- and similar excursions will be taken ical structures, the region contains by these groups. Libraries Open Every Facility For Summer Special Service Is Planned For Linguistics Institute And Far Eastern Studies Although only half the number of students attend,'the Summer Session as are present during the regular term, the complete facilities of the General Library and the depart- mental libraries will remain in force during the entire period of summer activities, according to Dr. William W. Bishop, director of the department of Library Science. "The pressure on the library serv- ices remains substantially the same during the summer as during the reg- ular year," Dr. Bishop said, "and in some sections is even increased. This is true of the graduate reading rooms and the main reading room in par- ticular, as well as the School of Edu- cation library." The library is planning to give special service to the Institute of Lin- guistics and Far Eastern Studies dur- ing the summer, Dr. Bishop said, in both of which it is expected a great deal of interest will be taken by summer students. Besides 'the people who enroll as degree candidates, the library also serves a large number of research scholars who are either only taking one or two highly'specialized courses or in some cases are not entered in the University at all, according to Dr. Bishop. These students are attracted by the wide facilities of the library, in particular the rare book room collec- tions and the files of journals and documents, he said. MichiTan Field Men To Camp On Green Bay Located on Green Bay in the cen- ter of areas that show varied geo- graphical types and different kinds of occupance, the summer camp of the Geography department will offer a field course that has aroused much interest in previous years. With near-by agricultural settle- ments in various stages, cut-over and timber land of several types and in- dustrial, commercial and mining communities all available for exam ination, the first half of the summer will be spent in study of areas close to the camp. Systematic land inventory of the several areas of special interest in the Upper Peninsula will be made the last part of the summer. The camp will last from June 28 to Aug- ust 20 and is under the direction of Professor K. C. McMurray. Its loca- tion is 16 miles from Menominee. Plays And Radio Work Given In Speech Course (Continued from Page 9) oratory of General Linguistics and Speech, located in Angell Hall. This laboratory will be at the service of students doing work requiring the fa- cilities of the apparatus, while grad- uate students can conduct research in Miolinguistics in a second Laboratory of Biolinguistics and Human Adjust- ment, at 1007 E. Huron. This is con- ducted in cooperation with the Uni- versity Hospital and the School of Dentistry. Special work with the deaf and those with speech defects will be done here. As concerns broadcasting, the de- partment will have the services of the broadcasting equipment of Morris Hall. Besides class work, arrange- ments are being made for actual radio programs with students performing, during the summer. Trips will also be taken by the classes to nearby * I a t\ .r4 surnmer at cY~ichigan WHERE "H Lovely Sight's H Maid in White' i r, r , f ' . ,v f F S 3! l ' ! t t 2 f f ^ f r. Y ,:..: ,t FFF : r> f" ti ri$ti , .. ., ,, ,,.;. f &c . t. "V < # . 1 r { r . Y f r 3 ' + r 2 rY S t 'f . L . ' bi l i;;r. RUE, WHITE is traditional at Mich- igan Summer Schools - But that's only half of it, really - White AND GREENE it is, because it's to Greene's "whites-stay- white" cleaning that the particular Mich- igan woman entrusts her cool linens, gloves, hats and all those other summer fashion "must-haves." Gs CLEANERS S' DYERS E-UNDERTHEMICRCOPE P PHONE 23-23-1 U 1 I