lectures And
THE MICHIGAN DAILY P
Institutes Feature Summer SessionActivitiesjTown Club I
_ITS TOPS"
In the 46 years of its history, the
rniversity Summer Session has be-R
ome an integral part of the Univer-4
ity's educational program. Yet to
any students, upperclassmen as well
s freshmen, the interesting program
events which goes to make up the
ummer Session, is largely unfa-
iliar. For this reason The Daily
ere takes occasion to print a sum-
ary of the eight weeks' activityl
hich made up the 1939 Summer
ession.
Saturday, June 24: Last day of.
gistration.
Monday, June 26: Summer Session
pens with an official enrollment of
ore than 6,000. Dean Richard P.
cKeon tells of Aristotle and his in-
uence on the Renaissance; Prof.
ines K. Pollock pictures for the new 3
rollees Hitler's dream of a Euro-
an Empire.l
Tuesday, June 27: Dr. Heber Cur-
s showed films of disturbances on
e sun's surface while Sen. Elbert
bomas (Dem., Utah) described dis-
rbances on the earth as the result
economic nationalism and the de-
ruction of free enterprise.
Wednesday, June 28: "Michael and
.a - . .
Mary," the first production of the
Summer Session Repertory Players,
opens; the first League tea dance is
held; Senator Thomas traces the de-
velopment of Eastern and Western
culture, and the First Institute on
Secondary School Journalism opens
its four-day session.
Thuirsday, June 29: First Summer
Session excursion, featuring a tour of
the campus, is undertaken as Prof.
Preston E. James of the geography
department contrasts colonial and
native settlement in Brazil and Sen-
ator Thomas predicts disaster if the
United States should take sides in
the Sino-Japanese conflict.
Friday, June 20: The annual fac-
ulty reception at the Rackham Build-
ing attracts more than 2,000; Prof.
Leonard Bloomfield tells the Linguis-
tic Institute of the- complicated, in-
tricate method of reconstructing hy-
pothetical original sounds of parent
languages.
Saturday, July 1: Summor Session
excursionists visit Detroit; Journal-
ism Institute closes its four-day ses-
sion.
Second Week
Wednesday, July 5: Opening of
"The Good Hope" at the Lydia Men-
delssohn Theatre; Prof. George A.
Kennedy tells of similarities in Chi-
nese and English word order.
Thursday, July 6: Dr. Murray B.
Emeneau speaks on Central Indian
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languages while Dr. Jeanne Rosselet
addresses the French Club.
Friday, July 7: Prof. Robert C.
Smith speaks on Brazilian architec-
ture.
Third Wek
Sunday, July 9: First Summer Ses-
sion Vesper Service is held.
Monday, July 10: Prof. Erwin Pa-
nofsky lauds Renaissance art-theor-
ists; Prof. G. E. Edgerton tells of the
Pharaohs' search for eternal life.
Tuesday, July 11: Prof. Clark Hop-
kins of the Latin department de-
scribes the excavating of Seleuci-on-
the-Tigris.
Wednesday, July 12: University
Fresh Air Camp tag day; "Two
Gentlemen of Verona" opens at the
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.
'111u1'sday, July 13: Joseph K. Ya-
magiwa speaks on Japanese "post-
positions":
Friday, July 14: The excursion to
Niagara Falls begins while in Ann
Arbor Prof. Leonard Bloomfield re-
veals the complexities of the Algon-
kian language.
Fourth Week
Monday, July 17: Prof. C. H. Har-
ing analyzed the fundamental pow-
ers behinds and the structure of
South American governments.
Tuesday, July 18: Dr. C. H. An-
drewes lectures "On The Influence
Trail." Dr. T. Luther Purdom speaks
on appearance as an aid to obtain-
ing employment.
Wednesday, July 19: "Our Town"
opens at the Lydia Mendelssohn The-
atre. Dr. Andrewes explains the na-
ture of viruses; Prof. H. H. Bartlett
describes the effect sof cannibalism
on island civilizations.
Thursday, July 20: Professor Cres-
sey illustrates his talk on the deserts!
of central Asia with slides as Dr. An-
drewes continues his discussion of vi-
ruses and the possibility of their be-
ing the cause of cancer.
Friday, July 21: Chinese ice cream
social is held; Prof. Leonard Bloom-
field explains word-derivation in the
Algonkian language.
Saturday, July 22: Summer Ses-
sion excursionists 'travel to Jackson
Prison.
Fifth Week
Monday, July 24: Prof. Tucker
Brooke describes the reign of Queen
Elizabeth; Dr. Paul Harrison tells of
life and experiences among the
Arabs.
Tuesday, July 25: Dr. Andre Gra-
tia speaks on the origin and possible
nature of bacteriophages.
Wednesday, July 26: "Androcles
1 and the Lion" opens at the Men-
delssohn Theatre; Prof. Leroy Wa-
terman, chairman of the department
of oriental languages and literature,
ells of the archeology of the Holy-
land.
Thursday, July 27: Prof. Gratia
outlines recent discoveries in ultra-
microscopic organisms.
Friday, July 28: Professor Gratia
concludes his theories by showing
the latest types of scientific appara-
tus used in the investigation of ul-
tra-viruses; Prof. Jesse S. Reeves
urgesithe remodeling of the Pan-
American Union.
Sixth Week
Monday, July 31: Prof. Conyers
Read reviews the period of English
history between the reigns of King
Henry VII and Queen Elizabeth as
Prof. Charles E. Nowell describes
personalities in South American
politics.
Tuesday, Aug. 1: Dr. Shio Sakani-
shi speaks on the work of Kobo
Dasihi; Prof. John P. Gillin terms
South America a frontier land cul-
turally.
Wednesday, Aug. 2: Dr. Sakani-
shi explains the difficulties under-
gone by Honen Shonin and Shinran
Shonin in bringing Buddhism to the
Japanese masses.
Thursday, Aug. 3: Don Treadwell
won the campus swimming cham-
pionship.
Friday, Aug. 4: Professor Bloom-
field explained the ways in which vo-
cabulary roots behave in the various
Algonkian languages.
Seventh Week
Monday, Aug. 5: Dr. Paul Oskar
Kristeller cited and described the
leadership of Marsilio Ficino in the
PROF. LOUIS A. HOPKINS
revival of Platonic philosophy during
the Renaissance.
Tuesday, Aug. 8: Dr. Kristeller con-
tinued his lectures on Ficino, ex-
plaining how the Renaissance phi-
losopher defined Platonic love as the
true love between two persons and
how the Italian believed the common
love for God was based on the or-
iginal love for God and that this lat-
ter love constitutes the essence of
human consciousness.
Wednesday, Aug. 9: Gilbert and
Sullivan's comic opera, 'Iolanthe,'
the final offering of the Summer
Session Repertory players, opens at
the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Dr.1
Paul M. A. Linebarger claims that
a
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the undeclared war in China has be- Session with a talk on the neo-Latin
come a race in the competitive crea- poets of the English Renaissance be-
tion of new governments; Prof. Car- fore the Graduate Conference on
los Oarcia-Prada describes the racial Renaissance Studies. National In-
I stitute for Traffic Safety Training
and cultural development of the An- opens.
ticquian region in Colombia; Dr. J.
O. Perine lectures on music.
Thursday, Aug. 10: Dr. Hu Shih, K ESGE'S
China's Ambassador to the United
States, claims that Japan is trying
to bring an end to the war in China
by creating some fundamental change t
in the international situation.
Friday, Aug. 11: Conference on Ec-
onomic Relations with Latin America
opens.
Eighth Week
Sunday, Aug. 13: Final Vesper
Services and breakfast for master's
degree candidates are held.
Monday, Aug. 14: Prof. Leicester
Bradner gives final lecture of the
50
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