SUMMER SESSION LL £fr igau ~IAit SECTION ONE SUPPLEMENT ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1939 Summer Session To Open Here Jun e 26 Alumni Will Off University r Eleven Air View Of University Of Michigan Campus In Summer F r Advance Curricula, Specialized Studies Features Of Term Ili Courses June 19-24 v M Contemporary Problems, World Relation, Art And Literature To Be Topics Graduates Given Chance To Review The Ninth Alumni University will be held June 19 to 24, the week im- mediately following the 1939 Com- mencement, in the Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Divided into three fields: world relations, con- temporary problems, and literature and art, the courses will offer three or four one hour lectures in con-3 centrated form to graduate students so that they may brush, up on ub-r jects with which they have had little contact since receiving their diplo- mas. Eleven courses will be given, each by a staff member of the Univer- sity outstanding in his field. Four ofr these will'attempt to clarify world problems and relations. Prof. Joseph R. Hayden, formerly Vice-Governor of the Philippine Islands, now head of the - political science department here, will .discuss "America, Europe and Asia in 1939." "The Political Scene in EuiPe" will be the subjectt of four .lectures by Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science de-e partment, who was the only Ameri-1 can among the judges in' the Saar plebiscite. He will consider the situ- ations in Germany, France and Eng- land. Coures in world relations will also£ be conducted by Prof. Jesse S. Reeves I on "The Aspects of Pan-American- ism" and by Prof. Robert B. Hall of' the geography department on "Japan I and China Today." Also to be included in the curricu- lum are contemporary problems inf sociology, psychology and invest- ment.; "Organizing Community Re- sources" will be the topic of lectures by Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the School of Education. Prof. Arthur E. Wood of the sociology department,t who studied in Germany in 1932-33, will round out the instruction in so- ciology with "Problems in Modernj Society." Modern gains in child training will be discussed by,. Prof. Martha G. Colby of the psychology department in a series of lectures entitled "The New Psycholoby and the Child." Prof.I John E. Tracy of the Law School will discuss "Finance for the Aver- age Investor."' "Studiestin Shakespeare" will be the topic of three lectures by Prof. Elereward T. Price of the English de-' partment. The remaining two courses in the division of literature and art will attempt to give students stand- ards for appreciating music and painting. Prof. Bruce M. Donaldson, (Continued on Page 6) Safety Courses Offered Grads Eight -Week Curriculum Is Outlined An eight week graduate course in safety education will be offered by the School of Education during the Sum- mer Session to aid in framing more effective programs of safety educa- tion. The course will be designed for advanced students who are prepared to make intensive studies of the aims, content 'and methods of safety edu- cation. Enrollment will be iiinited to approximately 40 students with preference given to those who have some responsibiity for programs of safety education or are preparing for such duties. The whole field of safety will be considered and an extensive collec- tion of recent textbooks, courses of study, teaching units, community pro- grams, reports of special investiga- tions and similar materials will be . _. _ _ .. .. . .. L. T.nx ~ w+. ;w 3rd Far East institute Open This Summer Michigan Seen Specially Fitted For Study Of Orient The Institute of Far Eastern Stu- dies will be held at the University this summer for the third consecutive year, Prof. Robert B. Hall of the geography department, director, an- nounced yesterday. The Institute is a continuation of the endeavor begun at Harvard in the summer of 1934 and continued at California and Columbia in 1935 and 1936 respectively, he said. It met at the University of Michigan in 1937 and has continued to meet here ever since. The Institute, according to its catalogue, is a recognition of the in- terrelated destinies of the United States and the Far East and the growing public and academic interest in the Far East. Our institutions, his- tory and customs, it holds, have been entwined with those of Europe; we have trained scholars in the lan- guages and history of Europe. One of the primary purposes of Institute, the catalogue maintains, is to train scholars in the languages and cultures of the Far East. The Institute, moreover, by means of its courses and seminars attempts to give students a detached understand- ing of the particular civilizations of the Far East. The catalogue also stresses the effort of the Institute to afford aca- demic training to interested students in such particular disciplines as his- ory, economics and geography, espec- ially as they pertain to the Far East and its developments. Michigan, the catalogue states, is uniquely suited to entertain the In- stitute. The University and its facul- ty, it asserts, have for a long time had intimate and friendly relations with the peoples and governments of the Far East, especially since the time that the late President Angell was appointed Envoy Extraordinary to the Chinese Empire. More recent-; ly, University educators and engineers have rendered important services to th Far Eastern governments it says. As a result, the catalogue declares, there has grown at the University a substantial group of scholars whose major interest is in Far Eastern studies. The large enrollment here of students born in the Far East, larger than that of any other Ameri- can university, reflects that interest and is an indicaioQ, the publication says, of the friendly and intimate' relations between the University and the Far East. I The Institute continues for eight weeks and is a part of the regular summer session of the University. the catalogue explain. All students enrolled in the Institute are classi- fied according to' the previous train- ing they have had in Far Eastern studies.Classes are divided into levels of study; there is a progression of courses from courses for beginners to those for advanced students. Three language schools are con- ducted at the Institute: the tacing of Chinese is under the direction of Prof. George Kennedy of Yale; Jap- anese is conducted by Mr. Yamag- iwa of the University Russian by Mme. Lila Pargment. International Ceniter Is Open For Sessio" The International Center, recently established in the new South Wing of the Union, will provide a club where foreign students enrolled in the Sum- mer Session and others interested in knowing representatives of many foreign countries may meet of mu- h - ia arm iifat _anriChoa -nhfn Above is shown an aerial view of the campus and surrounding 'Ann Arbor, looking down from the south. In the center of the picture can be seen the Law Quadr angle, with the buildings of the literary college beyond, and those of the Medical School and engineering college still further northeast. Graduate Study Of Renaissance To Be Repeated New Approaches To Age Will Be Emphasized In Conference Discussions With the purpose of emphasizing new approaches to the Renaissance and disseminating fresh information concerning that period, the Graduate. Conference on Renaissance Studies will present for the second time a series of summer courses, lectures and other activities. Represented in curriculum, cov- ering all branches of study of the Renaissance and including approxi- mately 25 courses, arenEducation, English Literature, History, Latin Language and Literature, Mathema- tics, Music and Romance Languages. A series of lectures has been ar- ranged which will include outstand- ing speakers from outside the Uni- versity as well as qualified members of the University faculty. Richard P. McKeon, Dean of the Division of Humanities of the University of Chi- cago, will be the first speaker, and his topic will be "Transition from Medieval to Renaissance." The list of lecturers also includes Prof. Erwin Panofsky of Princeton University; Paul Oskar Kristeller of the philos- ophy department of Yale Universi- ty; Prof. Conyers Read of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania history de- partment; Prof. C. F. Tucker Brooke of the English department, Yale Uni- versity; and Prof. Leicester Bradner of the Brown University English de- partment. These lectures will be de- livered in the Rackhamn Amphithe- SUMMER SESSION CALENDAR June 15-17:. Registration in the Law School. June 19: Work begins in the Law 'School.., June 19-23: Session of the Aluni University. June 19: Work begins at Camp Davis. June 22: Registration begins In the Graduate School. June 23, 24: Registration in all other schools and colleges. June 26: Work begins in the Divi- sion of Hygiene and Public -' Health, at the Biological Sta- tion, and in all schools and col- leges except the Law Cehool. July 25: Second term in the Law School begins. Aug. 4: Work closes in the Medical School (six-week courses), in the School of Education (six- week courses), and in the Divi- sion of Hygiene and Public Health. Aug. 11: Work closes at Camp Davis. Aug. 18: Session ends in the Col- lege of Literature, Science and the Arts, the College of ngi- neering, the College of Arcitec- ture, the College of Pharmacy, the Medical School, the School of Education, the School of Busi- ness Administration, the School of Music, and the' Graduate Expenses Less t For Su mmer; Tuition Is Ten-Week Law School Course Is $45; Five-, Week Course Is $27 Attending the Summer Session isc an inexpensive proposition, the cost'. of tuition, rooms and recreationals facilities being considerably less thans during the fall and spring semesters.X Thirty-five dollars will cover tui-1 tion for the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, the College of Engineering, the College of Phar- macy, the College of Architecture,c the School of Education, the Schooll of Business Administration and theR School of Music for the session con- sisting of eight weeks. In the Law School a 10-week course with a tuition of $45 and a five-week program for $27 are offered. Fees for the Medical School, six or eight weeks, amount to $45, and the course in Public Health Nursing costs $35. Field work at the Biological Sta- tion, located on Douglas Lake in Che-; boygan County, can be taken for $50, as can forestry instruction at Camp Filibert Roth on Golden Lake in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. 'The fee for field courses in Geology given in Wyoming amounts to $50. Although the cost for board is about the same as during the regular ses- sions, room rates are reduced. Single rooms range from three dollars to five dollars, while double rooms or suites for two persons will cost from two] dollars to three-three fifty a week. Students who enroll in courses that (Continued on Page 4) Latin-American Institute Again Planned Here Staff To Be Supplemented By Faculty Men From Outside The Institute for Latin-American Studies, under the direction of Prof. Preston E. James of the geography department, will be conducted during the regular Summer Session at the University to increase the knowledge and understanding of Latin-America and thus to better the relations and aid the cause of world peace and pro- gress. Ann Arbor was chosen as the seat for this institute because so many men at the Univerity are experts in, and have made special studes of Latin-American affairs, according to Professor James. These include Prof. Arthur S. Aiton of, the history department, Prof. Dudley M. Phelps of the School of Business Administra- Ion, Dr. Carl E. Guthe, director of the University Museums, and Prof. Julio del Toro and Mr. Ermelindo M4ercado of the romance language department. The specific purposes of the In- stitute are: (1) to focus attention on a relatively underdeveloped field of study and instruction, (2) to offer a selected group of graduate students and teachers an opportunity to im- prove their equipment under a com- petent staff, drawn from this country and Latin-America, (3) to permit the specialist to see the problem of Latin- American study as a' whole, (4) to offer training in the Spanish and Portuguese languages and literature and (5) to introduce outstanding scholars in the Latin-American field who will appear on the program of special lectures and round tables. An eight-week program of formal courses, luncheon meetings, round- table conferences on special subjects and lectures has been arranged. Leading Latin-American authorities who will be brought toyAnn Arbor include Dr. Gilberto Freyre, Brazil- ian social historian, Prof. Clarence H. Haring, chairman of the history department at Harvard University, Prof. Lloyd Jones of the Wisconsin political science department, a noted authority on the Caribbean, and' Wil- liam Berrien of the University of Cali- fornia, a specialist on the Portuguese and Brazilian literature. Courses will be offered in Spanish and Portuguese languages, Spanish- American and Brazilian literature history, geography, international re latons, anthropology and economics The institute will be directed b the Committe on Latin Americar Studies, an informal group of schol ars interested in South and Centra America, and will work in coopera tion with the Division of Cultura Relations of the United States De partment of State. The program wil be financed by the University an the American Council of Learne Studies. A limited number of grants-in-ai will be available to graduate stu dents through the American Counci of Learned Societies, the Rockefelle Foundation and the University, Pro fessor James announced. All interest ed should contact him as soon a possible. Lingistics institut To Conduct Studie The Linguistics institute, spon sored by the TLinguistics Society o America, one of the leading feature of previous Summer Sessions, wi once more conduct discussions th year. Under the direction of Prof. Chare C r, p of.w ~a V.. alih Bnn nr. Many Prominent Visiting Faculty Members Join Staff For Summer Term Lecture Program, SymposiaArranged Featuring prominent visiting lec- tures and special programs not avail- able during the regular year in addi- tion to a curriculum of ordinary stu- dies, the 46th annual Sumner Ses- sion of the University will open on June 26. Offering primarily supplementary and ordinary courses of the regular year, the Summer Session will also carry in its program a series of In- stitutes and special study curricula which will draw students interested in advanced and specialized work to Ann Arbor. Visiting professors have been invited by the departments and prominent outside lectures have been scheduled for a series of symposia and lectures. All of this, according to Director Louis A. Hopkins, has made the Sum- mer Session one of the outstanding and most recognized sessions of its type in the country. A possible at- tendance of 6,000 students is expect- ed, surpassing last year's record en- rollment of 5,771, which represented nearly all of the states and 25 for- eign countries. The Session will open in all schools and colleges of the University except the Law School, on June 26, and will end for most of, them Aug. 18. The Law School, will open June'19 for 'a five week term lasting until July 25 when a second tem' of the same dura- tion will open. Six week courses in the Medical School, the School of Education and the Division of Hy- giene and Public Health will close Aug. 4. The session at the forestry camp ends Sept. 1. Registration begins June 22 In the Graduate School and June 23 and 24 in all other schools and colleges. The Law School will hold its registration June 15, 16 and 17. Students plan- ning to do summer work are asked by the officers of the Session to noti- fy Secretary Louis M. Eich in ad- vance. Courses which will be offered dur- ing the Session will be of three main types. There will be courses for un- dergraduate students regularly en- rolled in the University. These will supplement regular work and fulfill requirementsfor special curricula. SThere will be special or technical (Continued on Page 4) Music School In 51st Session y Three-Week High School Band Clinic Scheduled d The University of School of Music - will again offer instruction in a wide 1 variety of courses during the regular - 1939 University Summer Session. 1 This summer will mark the 10th d appearance of the School of Music d as a regular unit of the University Summer Session. For 41 years pre- d vious, instruction was offered by the - School of Music in its own Summer .1 Session. r Musical courses are offered to stu- - dents who are candidates- for gradu- - ates degrees M.M., A.M., and Ph.D.; s to students in other schools and col- leges of the University who wish to study music for oultural purposes, professional musicians, and other spe- cial students who wish to learn to play instruments. -Instruction will be offered in ele- mentary and advanced playing of pi- ano, voice, violin, violincello, organ - and the principal orchestral instru- f ments. S A feature of the 1939 Summer Ses- 11 sion will be a three-week high school is band clinic, to be held July 10-July 28. Enrollment in this clinic is open es both to high school students and to School. Aug. 19: Session ends logical Station. Aug. 30: Session ends at the Bio- in the Law School. Sept. 1: Session Camp. ends at Forestry atre on successive Mondays through- out the summer. Also included in the activities planned by the Conference is as (Continued on Page 5) seriesI Houses American Historical Papers L} William L. Clements Library Early American history could not ( _ I- - . _rsi ,_ v a2.. _.vti+ _v2+ 'h L. Clements, Bay City steel manu- facturer. To his gift have been added ters are now in the Clements Library. Because of he official capacities of