THE MICHIGAN DAILY AY, E 40 Informglity To Mark Workshop Program Of Educational School Clements Library Houses Noted Historical Collection Frencli House Reestablished For Additional Vocal Trailiin Informality will be the keynote of the annual Workshop in Curriculum and Instruction conducted by the faculty of the School of Education for teachers, supervisors, and admin- istrators who lave educational prob- lems requiring research and who seek the opportunity of sharing the con- sultation, social, and recreational facilities cfiered during the Summer Session. In the organization of the Work- shop thei. are no formal classes or extended lecture courses. Each mem- ber of the program selects a definite problem and formulates a plan for work under the guidance of a staff member. These individual plans are then grouped into two classification, subject-matter areas and general fields including community studies, guidance and evaluation of curricu- lim.i Speakers Prominent Graduate students enrolling in the course will meet daily to hear one of a number of prominent educators discuss problems common to all fields of study. Among those in- cluded on this informal lecture series will beProfessor-Emeritus'William C. Bagley of Teachers' College 0ol1 umbia University, Mr. George H. Fein, assistant state superintendent of public inrstructioi for Michigan( Dr. Rudolph Lindquist, director of Cranbrook School, and Dr. Fritz Redl, research expert in secondary education. Raleigh Schorling To Speak Following this program all mem-' bers of the Workshop will lunch to-I gether in the School of Education and will participate in discussion sec-I tions centered on the morning lec- ture. Planned by the members, rec- reation and social functions will be outlined from week to week. Late each afternoon tea will be served to give students and visiting members of the faculty an opportunity to be- come well acquainted. To Lunch Together Directed by Dr. Raleig Schorling, supervisor of directed teaching; the staff will consist of nineteen mem- bers of the faculty of the School of Educetion, University High and El- ementary Schools, and the Summer Session. Among the five special in- structors wall be Mr. J. Cecil Parker, who has recently acted as adviser for high schools revising their cur- riculums. Dr. F. G. Langford of the University of Virginia will serve as supervisory assistant in science and mathematics while Mr. George McCune of the University of Minne- sota will be the consultant in social studies. Le Foyer Francais, the traditional French House for women residence will be instituted again this summer for students who wish additional training in oral French. Organized under the leadership of Prof, Charles Koelia of the romance languages aepartment in 1936, the house has been one of the centers of foreign language study during each succeeding Summer Session. Its pur- pose is to make possible greater flu- ency in French for those living in the house where only French is spok- en. As in previous years the Kappa Al- pha Theta House will be used to house approximately 20 students. Besides those who room and board at the house, provisions are made for men and other women students to be ad- mitted to luncheon and dinner as regular boarders or for occasional meals. The directrice this year will be Miss Jeanne Rousselet of Goucher College assisted by Miss Deirdre Mc- Mullan. Faculty director will be Prof. Antoine Jobin of the romance languages department, replacing Pro- fessor Koella, who is teaching at Pennsylvania State College this sum- mer. Application for the house may be made through the Office of the Dean of Women accompanied by a state- ment in French of the applicants training. The William L. Clements library, shown above, houses one of the most complete. collections of Amer- ican historical papers in existence. It is a gift of the late Regent William L. Clements. Ca psWriterps T Prtciqt For Prizes OfSmer Hopwoods, IMEMO f Mademilselle Ir ~ 1 flt £im ertiwe at ColUin4 You'll find all manner of smart, cool fashions for the going-on in town. tZV~e44e i. fi. < f W 9 t ,,++ a'uf2! . ,. 'i '3 The gold of Avery and Jule Hop- wood will be dangled before the eyes of campus writers again this summer in order to lure them from the swim- pool or tennis court and plant them before their typewriters. Under the terms of the will of Mr. Hopwood, prominent American dramatist and member of the class of 1905, one-fifth of his estate was set aside and given to the Regents of the University for the encourage- ment of creative work in writing. In the eight years the awards have been given they have amounted to nearly $10,000 per year. Regents Have Control According to the bequest the Re- gents are empowered-To invest and keep the same invested and to use the income therefrom in perpetuity, as prizes to be known as "The Avery Hopwood and Jule Hopwood Prizes," to be awarded annually to students in the Department of Rhetoric of the University of Michigan who perform the best creative work in the field of dramatic writing, fiction, poetry and the essay. The number and value of the prizes shall be in the discretion of the Faculty or other governing body of the University, but the in- come shall be distributed annually or semiannually, and shall not be allowed to accumulate from year to year." As a declaration of independence for writers, the bequest stipulates "that the students competing for the prizes shall not be confined to aca- demic subjects, but shaall be allowed the widest possible latitude, and that the new, the unusual, and the radical shall be especially encouraged." The rules of the contest state that "there shall be eight awards, one of $75 and one of $50 in each of the four fields of writing-drama, es-' say, fiction and poetry." Further Rules Listed In practice, however, there is greater latitude. Five students were awarded a total of $225 in last sum- mer's essay contest, three others won $125 in the fiction division, and four poetry entries brought $150. The rules of eligibility are these: 1. All regularly enrolled students of the Summer Session who have been doing work of passing grade in all course work up to the time manu- scripts must be handed in, and who are enrolled in one course in English composition in the Department of English or in the Department of Journalism are eligible to compete- except students who have already won a major award in a Hopwood contest. 2. No manuscript which has re- ceived a prize in any Hopwood con- test shall be considered eligible in these contests. 3. No manuscript that wins an award in the Summer Session contest is eligible in any subsequent Hop- wood contest. Further Rules Listed 4. No manuscript or part of a manuscript that has been published in a medium other than a college magazine o college newspaper shall be eligible. In the preparation of manuscripts, the most difficult rule to abide by is the one requiring that "three copies of each unit of composition shall be submitted." Entries must be bound in a cover. Unbound manu- scripts, manuscripts fastened togeth- er merely with paper clips, and other mantuscripts not likely to remain bound together will be rejected by the committee. To insure an im partial considera- tion on the part of the judges, tht' following rules are added: On the title page of the manuscript shall appear (1) the name and character of the composition; (2) a nom de plume; (3) a statement that the manuscript is submitted in the cate- gory of drama, essay, fiction, or poetry. The deadline is 4:30 p.m. Friday of the seventh week of the summer session. Anyone desiring further in- formation may address Prof. A. W., Cowden, director of the Hopwood Awards, 3227 Angell Hall. Summer Seession Costs Are Considerablly Less (Continued from Page 9) $50; for Camp Davis (surveying, geol- ogy and botany) $45 and $60; for Camp Filibert Roth (forestry) $50 and $65; and for the Biological Sta- tion (botany and zoology) $50 and $65. Students who enroll for courses that continue for five weeks or more will be entitled to the privileges of the Michigan Union or the Michigan League, to the Health Service, and to copies of The Michigan Daily. FOUNDATION GARMENTS.. LINGERIE. ST Il INS 0 0 (OUR SPECIALTY) SENSATION LE GANT GOSSARI) MUNSING NEMO I IICKORY SPORTSWEAR SLACKS PLAYSUITS CYCLOTTES BL USES .. . \ " M VAN RAALTE . . GOWNS SLIPS STEP-INS KAYSER HOSIERY . . . 79c - $1.75 ALSO. . HOUSECOATS ROBES SMOCKS 8 NICKELS ARCADE to^ A,- m*, style That will stand the test of and weather - dressy, but not droopy, cool but not cruel. SPORT DRESSES, DRESSY OUTFITS, AND FORMALS i >1/ For Every Course on the Campus pt TOP Ideal for action - clothes you know are comfortable, and set you off to your best advantage at the same time. Playsuits for tennis, for bike-riding, and for picnics; swim suits for swim- ming and sun-worshipping; slacks suits for any sport - or for just plain loafing! in I ++ w wm for SUMMER SCHOOL ...Our Specialty . . . III f, USED REFERENCE BOOKS r Remember the Store I Iumer a well I )c Each and up Uluich q II if 11 I