SECTION TWO ~Xg Sir igo ttt SUMMER SUPPLEMENT ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, MAY 16. 1941 Noted Scholars To Teach 'Public Policy In World At War' Conclave Here Will Feature Noted Leaders Of Education Lerner, Sandburg, Frank, Sherwood, Studebaker Are Among Lecturers Lecture-Seminars Will Be Conducted Coincidentally with the 1941 SuiA- mer Session, from July 6 to 12, the New Education Fellowship will hold its Eighth International Conference 1 in Ann Arbor. The conference has been planned by the Progressive Education Asso- ciation, the United States section of the Fellowship, in cooperation with members in panada and Mexico and in consultation with South Ameri- can leaders A complete program of study groups, lecture-seminars and general sessions has, been prepared although a few of the arrangements are as yet only tentative. Among those who will participate are Max Lerner of Williams College; John W. Studebaker, U.S. Commis- Aioner of Education; Luis Sanchez Ponton, Minister of Education of Mexico; Frank Ayelotte of the Insti- stute for Avanced Study at Prince- ton; Jonathan Daniels, author of "A Southerner Discovers the South;" Carl Sandburg; The Honorable Hu Shih, Ambassador of China; Waldo Frank of the New School for Social Research; and Robert Sherwood, winner of the latest Pulitzer Prize. Although definite acceptance has not been received from them, Thom- as Mann, Henry A. Wallace and John Dewey have been invited to partici- pate. . In addition to the regular sched- ule, exhibitions of children's art, of Indian arts and crafts and of books dealing with Latin America have been planned. On July 8 memers of the conference. will spend the day at Greenfield Village as the guests of Henry Ford. Because of the importance of re- lations between the American repub- lics and because educators are anx- ious to know more about them the six lecture-seminar groups will dis- cuss thd culture, literature, history, arts, music and economics of Latin America. Two "workshop" groups will meet every afternoon except Tuesday and Saturday. These groups will consid- er "Understanding the United States through Educational Programs in Latin American Schools" and "Euro- pean Education When Peace Comes." Thirty-nine study groups on spe- cialized aspects of educatio will neet each morning except Tesday and- Saturday. Chairmen of the General Commit- tee are Laurin Zilliacus, rector of the Tlo Svenska Samskola in Fin- land; Carlton Washburne, president ° of the Progressive Education Asso- ciation; and Harold Rugg, of Colum- bia University Teachers' College. Geography Camp Work Is Offered Field work in geography will again be offered this summer at the 'geog- raphy department's headquarters at Wilderness Park on the .Straits of Mackinac, ten miles west of Mackinaw City, it has been announced. The highly diversified country within a 50-mile radius of headquar- ters forms an ideal location for study of this sort. Both intermediate and advanced courses will be given, under the supervision of- Prof. K. C. Mc- Murry. The work will be carried on in co- operation with the Cheboygan Pro- ject, sponsored by the Land Utiliza- tion Institute of the graduate school. In addition to a survey of the im- mediate region, occasional trips wiJli be made to more distant parts of the state, in both the Lower and Upper Peninsulas. The courses will begin June 30 and will run to Aug. 22, Professor Mc- Murry announced. Ann Arbor Churches An Aerial View Of The University Campus In Summer 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 quadrangle, with the buildings of the literary college beyond, and those of the Medical School and the engineering college still further northeast. Business Work Entrance Rules Are Suspended The, business administration school is offering a program of seven first year courses without formal entrance requirements for the University sum- mer school session. Entrance into the business admin- istration summer school session does not, however, qualify the student for candidacy for a degree unless he meets the regular entrance require- ments. Courses in industrial relations, marketing principle, financial princi- ples, business law, and cost account- ing will be open to undergraduates and graduates. Prof. Robert L. Dixon of the ac- counting school of the University of Chicago will be guest lecturer in a course in cost accounting. Professor Dixon received his degree at Michi- gan in 1931. The industrial relations course will take up the study of relations between employer and employees first as col- laborators in production then as shar- ers in the proceeds of their joint ef- forts. } The concluding topic in this course is the bearing of recent state and federal legislation upon industrial re- iations. Prof. Charles L. Jamison will lecture. Market principles will deal with the economic and business problems in- volved in getting goods from producer to consumer. This course will be taught by Prof. Edgar H. Gault. Prof. Merwin H. Waterman will lec- ture on financial principles with the idea of giving those whose speciali- zation may be outside the field of finance a closer acquaintanceship with financial problems, techniques and institutions. A general survey of the law govern- iig busines's transactions will be the purpose of the business law course Defense Issue Will Highlight Engine Courses Visiting Teachers To Aid Graduates In Studying Of Advanced Theory Especially timely in view of world conditions and national defense are certain courses in the eight week En- gineering Structures Institute of the College of Engineering. A group of two visiting professors and three members of the University faculty will teach a group of grad- uate courses in civil engineering, en- gineering mechanics and aeronauti- cal engineering. Heading the list of new courses is the eight weeks session in Advanced Theory of Structures to be taught by Prof. S. P. Timoshenko of Stanford?' formerly of the University. Also in- cluded in the division of civil engin- eering are: Applied Soil Mechanics; Bridge Construction; Problems in Statically Indeterminate Structures; Laboratory Course in Soil Mechan- ics; and Highway Transportation. Prof. Lewis E. Gram, a member of the administrative council of the In- stitute, will be the advisor in the civil engineering divisions. Prof. E. L. Eriksen will act in the same capac- ity in the group of Engineering Me- chanics courses, while Prof. E. A. Stalker will take charge of the Aero- nautical Engineering courses. Prof. L. H. Donnell, of the Armour College of Engineering at Illinois In- stitute of Technology, will teach a course in Methods of Analysis of Monocque Structures. Two courses in Engineering Mechanics - Applied Elasticity and Stability of Elastic Structures-will also be offered in this summer session. . Famous Guest Jurists Added To Law Faculty Michigan's Law School, which will offer Summer Session work this year in two periods of five weeks each, will bring three outstanding jurists from other American universities here to augment the regular sum- mer professorial staff. The guest professors are Prof. Vic- tor E. Ferrall, University of Illinois College of Law; Prof. Milton D Green, University of Colorado School of Law, and Prof. Frank R. Strong, Ohio State University College of Law. President of the 47th annual Sum- mer Session will be University Presi- dent Alexander G. Ruthven. Dean E. Blythe Stason wil continue in his regular position as will Dr. Paul A. Leidy, Secretary. Session To Begin June 23 The session will begin Monday, June 23 and will continue through September 3. This year's Summer Session schedule is planned so as to offer in successive summers most of the prescribed courses of the first two wyears of the work leading to a degree. The work is the same in kind and amount as that given in the cor- responding subjects in the regular session, but the number of courses offered is limited. Students here for the Summer Ses- sion in the Law School will have access to the 157,000 volume Law Li- brary as well as the General Library containing more than a million vol- umes. Rooming and boarding facili- ties of the Lawyers' Club will be open to the students. Offer First Year Subjects First year subjects offered are Ju- dicial Administration and Torts. Sec- ond and third-year subjects offered, both terms include Bills, Notes and Banking and Evidence. Offered during the first term only are Business Associations, Equity II, Municipal Corporations, Rights in Land, Taxation and Trade Regula- tions. Second term upper-class courses are Business Association II, Land- lord and Tenant, The Legal Process, Public Utilities and Trail and Appel- late Practice. All courses will meet for six hours a week. Students will be permitted to elect a maximum of 12 recitation hours a week, and to earn a maximum of eight credit hours for the full ten-week session. Observatory Opes For A stronomers Expect 5,000 For Summer Registration Law School Term Begins June 23; Other Classes To Commence June 30 Numerous Guests To Teach Courses The University's 48th Annual Sum- mer Session, which more than 5,000 students are expected to attend, will open with registration of the Law School from June 19-21 and registra- tion in all the other schools and col- leges on June 27 and 28. The regular semester's work begins June 30 for all schools except Law School, which starts June 23. There members, many from educational in- stitutions in other parts of the coun- try and abroad. The Board of Regents controls the Summer Session which is considered as a regular part of the University. The courses given are similar in method, character and credit value to those of the regular semester. Courses will be offered in the Col- lege of Literature, Science and the Arts, College of Engineering,, College of Architecture and Design, School of Education, School of Business Ad- 'ministration, School of Music, Law School, Medical School, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. The Institute of Public and Social Administration, the Division of Hy- giene and Public Health, the Biologi- cal Station, the Field Station at Camp Davis, and Camp Filibert Roth of the School will also be in session. All the states and 29 foreign coun- tries were represented in the total enrollment of the 1940 summer ses- sion which was 5,680. More than 250 colleges and universities were also represented. Grads To Have TWo Workshops W. K. Kellogg Foundation To Sponsor Studies Two workshops under the auspices of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and the University Summer Session will be open this summer to graduate students and to mature undergrad- uates with teaching experience who have been awarded scholarships by the appropriate committees in the Michigan Community Health Pro-1 ject. Both workshops, one at Grand Lodge in Eaton County and one at Marshall, will open June 23 and con- tinue for a six-week period. Six hours credit will be given to those whoa participate in either of them. Instruction in the community workshop at Grand Lodge will cent- er around the study of the school in its community meeting with special attention given to plans for improv- ing the programs of health and civic education. The community workshop at Mar- shall will stress the health of the child, with emphasis on the contri- butions that can be made by the home and the community Provision will be made in both di- visions for demonstration classes at various levels of the elementary school. Summer School HeadI LOUIS A. HOPKINS Summer Gives New Course In U. S. Problems School Tuition Rates For Summer Are Explained' With tuition fees of about one half those of the regular semester, sum- mer courses will be easily in reach of student who have financial difficul-. ties.. Courses in the Graduate School,, College of Literature, Science and the Arts, College of Engineering, College of Pharmacy, College of Architecture and Design, School of Education, School of Business Administration,' School of Music, Division of Hygiene and Public Health, and Library Sci- ence will be offered to state residents for $35 and non-residents, $50. Six or eight weeks in the Medical School will cost residents $55, and non-residents, $90. $25 for residents and $40 for non-residents will entitle one to a five-week term in the Law School. A law course of two terms or ten weeks will cost resident students $45 and non-residents $75. Fifty dollars for residents and $75 for non-residents will enable pros- pective dentists to take a summer's training. For $35 resident students may at- tend Wilderness Park, geography camp. The fee for non-residents is $50. Camp Davis, surveying and geol- pgy camp, is open to residents foi $45 and to non-residents for $60. Botancial and Zoological studies may be made at the Biological Station by residents for $50 and non-resi- dents for $65. Grads To Register All summergraduate students will be required to register in the Rack- ham Building at the opening of they Summer Session and will be able to enjoy the facilities' of the building and the social program planned for the summer. The regular Tuesday evening record concerts will be continued Corwin, Compton, Hoover To Analyze S, nificant Issues For Students Prof. Max Lerner Will Also Appea Six departments in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts will co-operate in offering the Graduate Study Program in Public Policy in a World of War during the 1941 Sammer session. The ppose of this program of study is to present to the summer ses- sion students a well co-ordinated course of instruction and reading in the fundamental elements of domes- tic and foreign policy, the forces that have shaped the course of interna- tional affairs in recent decades, and the relationship of the United States to present war and prospective peace. The program, 'officially designated Course 351, is intended primarily for those who are well advanced in their studies in their own field or depart- ment and who are prepared to follow profitably such a collaboration of scholars in various fields as this program contemplates. Students may become members of the Graduate Study Program by reg- istering in Course 351 ir. any one of the departments offering it aftergcon- sultation with the director of the course in that department. The.fol- lowing departments are co-operating in the program for this summer: ec- onmics, geography, history, philoso- phy, political science and sociology. -Two hours credit will be grnted for the course, and these and other de- partments will offer regular courses related to the subject of the program. The aim of the program is not to present a survey of elementary factual information or to deal exhaustively with so complex a theme as it has. ft is rather to deal with problems of interpretation, with definition and appraisal of fundamental elements in American foeign and domestic po- cies. "Interrelation of the Domestic and Foreign Policies of a Nation" by Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the University, one of two talks on Public Policy, will .start the lecture series July 1. The second will be given by Prof. Dex- ;er Perkins of the University of Ro- chester. In the group on The World From 1918 to 1938 the lecture on "The Con- ilict of Ideologies" will be delivered oy His Excellency, Hu Shih, Ambas- sador of China to the United States. Also in this group are lectures by Prof. John B. Condliffe of the Uni- versity of California and Karl T. Compton, President of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology. "The State in War Time" will be -he subject of Max Lerner, Professor of Political Science at Williams Col- lege, in the series on A Nation At War. Prof. Calvin B. Hoover, Dean of the craduate School of Arts and Sciences at Duke4 University and Prof. Hans Speier of the New School for Social ,esearch in New York City will give Uhe other two talks in the series. Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the politi- 2al science department of the Univer- sity will start the group on The Unit- ed States in Relation to the Present War by discussing "The Concepts of Neutrality and Nonbelligerency." He will be followed by Prof. Philip E, Mosely of Cornell University and Prof. Edward S. Corwin of Prince- con University. Reconstruction: - Problems and Prospects will be begun by an address on "The Prospect for a Union U1 Democracies" by Prof. W. Menzies Whitelaw of the University of Sas- katchewan. Prof. Charles C. Colby of the University of Chicago and Prof. Percy E. Corbett, Chairman of the Social Science Division, McGill Uni- versity, will complete the series. The final succession of lectures on The Enigma of Adaptation will pre- sent H. Duncan Hall, formerly of the League of Nations Secretariat; Per- cy W. Bidwell, Director of Studies of the Council of Foreign Relations in New York City; and Prof. Edward / University Broadcasting Service To Give Work In Radio Drama 12th Summer Term Of Music - For the summer session, the Uni- versity Broadcasting Service will of- fer courses in radio broadcasting and radio dramatics. A special feature of the summer dramatic group will be weekly assemblies of the same character as theatre dramatic groups. A majority of the programs to be broadcast this summer will be re- leased through WCAR, Pontiac, rath- er than WJR, Detroit, since the Pon- tiac station's schedule allows more time for student programs than does WJR. Climaxing a year of expanding ac- tivities, the radio broadcasting service is preparing to ask for a separate University owned station to carry on its work. Dr. Josenh E. Maddv. actina direc- Five new programs have been add- ed to the University schedule during the past semester, bringing the total number of broadcasts to 19. These include "Youth and the News, in cooperation with the state NYA; "Out of Court," written in col- laboration with the State Bar Asso- ciation; "Call the Doctor," broadcast with the aid of the Washtenaw Coun- ty Medical Association; and musical programs by the University Band and the School of Music. "Why Save Democracy?" a pro- gram of wide interest, twas also in- augurated the second semester this year. These weekly broaGcasts are given by recognized authorities on the differences between the United States School Offers Special Courses Caring Summer Tncreased opportunity for those in- terested in the study of music to get instruction in courses outside the regular curriculum will be offered during the twelfth annual summer session of the School of Music, Dr. Earl V. Moore, director of the School, said recently. During the eight-week session, courses will be offered to two groups of students: those who are candidates for a degree in some unit of the Uni- versity; and those who are not. Curricula are offered in the School leidina to Bachelor of Music and School may be applied to require- ments for degrees in othNr schools and colleges in certain cases. Also, stu- dents who are not candidates for a degree may elect courses for which they are qualified, without regard for curriculum or sequence requirements. Many of the basic courses offered during the regular school year will be included in the summer school curriculum together with special courses which are not frequently of- fered to students. Special concerts, lectures, excur- sions and other forms of entertain- The Observatory of the De- partment of Astronomy, located near the University hospital, will remain open during the summer session to permit laboratory work in astronomy to be carried on and to provide instruction in astronomy