PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1941 Noted Speech Leaders Plan To Teach Here Whitford Kane, Church, Meredith, Cohen To Be Among uest Teachers In response to the growing demand for speech courses during the sum- mer ses'sion, the speech department is bringing many prominent figures in the field of speech and acting to Ann Arbor. Among the guest instructors will be Whitford Kane, professional actor, formerly associated with the New York Theatre Guild School;' James Church, member' of the production staff of the National Broadcasting Company; Charles Meredith, director of the Dock Street Theatre; Evelyn Cohen, formerly costumiere at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and Yale School of the Drama. Activities of the department dur- ing the past school year have includ- ed the organization of a Graduate Study Club for the discussion of papers, new texts, and new develop- ments in the field of speech educa- tion. A Speech Honors Convocation was1 inaugurated this year for recognitionI of speech students' participation ini intercollegiate actjvities. Shirley W. Smith, vice-president and secretary of the University was the main speak-~ er of the evening.- Plays have also occupied a largef part of the speech department's in- terest. "Three Men on a Horse", "The Bat", "Margin for Error", Trelawn- ey of the Well", "Much Ado Aboutt Nothing", and Remember the Day" were presented by students of play, productipn. s1 The department has arranged for a Speech Conference to be held Au- gust 11, 12, and 13, for which out- standing educators in various fields of speech education will be brought to Ann Arbor. Several members of the speech de- partment's faculty have been honor- ed in the past year. Professor-Emeri- tus Thomas C. Trueblood was elected honorary president of the National Association of Teachers of Speech at its annual convention. Professor G. E. Densmore, chairman of the de- partment, was elected chairman of. the finance committee, and Dr. Ken- neth G. Hance, assistant professor of speech was elected president of the nomination committee of the As- sociation. Credits Given At Boys Camp Experience Will Be Gained By Education Students Located twenty-four miles north- west of Ann Arbor on Patterson Lake near Pinckney, the University Fresh Air Camp gives social and- athletic facilities to three hundred "unadjust- ed" boys every summer. Thirty social agencies in the area of Detroit and vicinity select the campers, who are taken for a period of four weeks. During this time they are under the guidance of seniors and graduate students in the University sociology and education departments. The counsellors receive six hours credit for their work. The Fresh Air Camp is supported by donations, including funds received at the annual Tag Day which it originated. Prof. F. N. Menefee of the civil engineering department is chair- mai of the camp committee, and President Ruthven is on the Board of' Trustees. In the past, the camp has suceeded in rehabilitating under-privileged boys who needed physical or psycho- 1loical adjustment, 11 - Campus Center Of Legal Research E_ Eight Hopwood Awards Offered To Summer Session Authors .. % The forty-seventh annual Summer Session of. the Law School will begin Monday, June 23. The session be divided into two periods of five weeks each. The imposing structure above is the Law Library which is will open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. during the session. w -t Medical Attention To Be Given By Health Service For Session, Occupying for a second summer the1 Fletcher Street dispensary, the Uni- versity Health Service will continue its services for the benefit of those students enrolled in the summer ses-; sion Courses. Health Service offers the same type of medical attention during4 these months as in the regular ses-i sion with the exception that no phys- ical examination is required for those students entering college for the first time. The functions of the Health Ser- vice are divided into two branches, the dispensary and the hospital. In offer Work In Medicine Training In Special Fields Will Be Given Medical students interested in get- ting instruction in special fields or interested in experience in fields out- side their regular curriculum are of- fered a series of six- and eight-week courses in the Medical School during its anual Summer Session. Students who wish to earn credit to apply toward a medical degree may do so by making arrangements with the Dean of the Medical School. Oth- ers need only apply in the regular Summer Session offices. The courses offered will duplicate some of the work given during the regular year and will include: all of the laboratory and some the lecture courses of the first and second year; some of the demonstration courses of the third year; elective courses that may be pursued by medical students, technicians and others. , All work offered in the Summer Session is equivalent in method, char- acter, and credit value to similar work of the regular year; but no allow- ance for time will be given for work done in the Summer. A student can- not shorten his tenure in the Med- ical School by attending one or more summer sessions, since the legal re- quirements for the degree of Doctor of Medicine prescribe four years' at- tendance at medical lectures during the regular session. Available to suimer students will the dispensary, open during the reg- ular class hours, the student may con- sult the physician of his choice for any medical attention. There may be a small charge for some services which are clearly not of emergency nature, such as thorough medical check-up, or eye-tests, but otherwise there is no fee. Infirmary Gives Care Students requiring bed care are provided for in the infirmary, located on the fourth floor. There they are given thirty days' care, including emergency surgical operations, free, if their cases have previously been approved by a physician in charge. However, out of necessity, extra cost of private nursing and private rooms, in the University Hospital must be charged to the students. ' Medical attention is also given the students in the University camps on the same general principle as for those in regular attendance in the summer session. In two of these camps, the Biology and Forestry Sta- tion, a staff member is included in the regular corps. Summer Differences The nature of the general work of the Health Service is somewhat dif- ferent during the summer session mainly due to the season. At this time there are fewer colds and in- fluenza, but because the age group is generally older there is danger of more chronic disease. During the regular session the physicians must be on their guard against tuberculosis and appendicitus, but in the summer, cancer becomes more of a problem. If a student becomes ill in his room he may summon a, physician for a minimum university charge of $1.00 for day calls and $2.00 for night ser- vices. The complete Health Service staff together with added assistance of the Medical School for any specialist at- tention, is provided for the mainten- ance of the health of the summer school students. be the Medical Library, which 97ow numbers over 66,000 volumes, Cur- rent magazines are also subscribed to from all over the world. The facilities of the University Hos- pital are also to be made available to students enrolled in the Summer Ses- sion. Noted Leaders Ineering Will Meet Here Convention July 23 To( 27i Will Attract Famous Technical Experts The 49th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Promotion of Engin- eering Education will be held in Ann, Arbor June 23-27 as a part of the Graduate School's summer program. The meeting will have as its theme "Science and Technology in the En- gineering Curricula." Leaders in in- dustry and engineering education from all over the nation will be here to deliver addresses. D. B. Prentice, president of the Rose Polytechnic Institute, will de- liver the opening address at the gen- eral section at 9 a.m., Tuesday, June 24. Other speakers will be R. A. Seaton,'Director of the Engineering Defense Training, U.S. Office of Edu- cation, and James W. Parker, vice- president and chief engineer of the Detroit Edison Company. Sections in aeronautical engineer- ing, chemical engineering, civil en- gineering, electrical engineering, en- gineering drawing, mechanical engin- eering, mineral technology and phys- ics will be conducted by the country's best engineering minds. Students' Children To Have Play Group The problem of what to do with their children while married students are in class here this summer wil be solved by the Ann Arbor Pre- School Play Group, which will care for them each/day from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. from June to August 2. Tuition, for the entire term will be sixteen dollars, or eight dollars plus four or five mornings of assistance by the mother at the school. Each child must be accompanied by an adult who will remain for a medical inspection the first day. In addition, each child must be called for at 11:30. Since the play group is a co-opera- tive organization designed to educate mothers as well as children, each mo- ther will be asked to assist a trained teacher occasionally and to attend two study groups and one lecture. Again this summer the lure of lit-_ erary prominence and the added in- ducement of the gold of Avery and Jule Hopwood will entice students from swimming pool and picnic andt place them ambitiously in front of their typewriter. Fourth of the summer Hopwood contests, this year's contest will offer, eight awards, one of $75 and one of $50 in each of four fields of literary endeavor - drama, essay, fiction and poetry. In practice, however, variations are frequently made from this schedule. Last year four students received a total of $150 in the essay division, two shared $125 in the drama division, three $150 in the fiction contest, land one contestant recived the only essay prize award, a prize of $75. Avery Hopwood Donor The Hopwood Awards were founded under the will of Avery Hopwood, famed American dramatist and mem- ber of the class of 1905. In his will, Mr. Hopwood set aside one-fifth of his estate to be given to the Regents of the University for the encouraging of creative work in writing. In ten years awards have amounted to nearly $10,- 000 a year. According to the bequest the Re- gents are empowered - "To invest and keep the same invested and to use the income therefrom in per- petuity, as prizes to be known as 'The Avery Hopwood and Jule Hopwood I Prizes,' to be awarded annually to student in the Department of Rhet- oric of the University of Michigan who perform the best creative work in the fields of dramatic writing, fic- tion, poetry and the essay." In 1930 the Department of Rhetoric was fused with the Department of English. Subsequently students in the Department of Journalism were per- mitted to compete. Will Stipulates To insure independence in selection of subjects, the will stated that "it is especially desired that the students competing for the prizes shall not be confined to academic subjects, but shall be allowed the widest possible latitude, and that the new, the un- usual, and the radical shall be es- pecially encouraged." The rules of eligibility for the sum- mer contest in 1941 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 Eng- lish composition in the Department of English or in the Department of Journalism are eligible to compete - except students who have already competed three times in summer con- tests or who have already won a major award in a Hopwood contest. 2. No manuscript which has re- ceived a prize in any Hopwoodhcontest shall be considered eligible in these contests. 3. No manuscript that wins an award in the Summer Session contest is eligible in any subsequent Hopwood contest. 4: No manuscript or any part of a manuscript that has been published in a medium other than a college magazine or college newspaper shall be eligible. Three Copies Three copies of each manuscript must be submitted, double-spaced, on one side of the paper only. The entire manuscript in any one category of the contest shall be firmly bound in a neat and durable cover. In ad- dition the name and character of the manuscript and the category in which it is submitted, a non de plume must appear on the title page of the work. A sealed envelope must accompany the manuscript containing the non de plume and the student's real name and address, as well as a statement from the student's instructor testi- fying that his work is satisfactory at the time the manuscript is sub- mitted. All manuscripts must be in the Hopwood Room, 3227 Angell Hall, by 4:30 p.m. Friday of the seventh week of the Summer Sessionl. Anyone desiring further informa- tion in regard to the contests may address R. W. Cowden, Director of the Hopwood Awards, 3227 Angell Hall. Union To.Have Every Facility Ready For All Michigan's Union - center of cam- pus activity for all Michigan men -- will offer a varied list of facilities for use by members of the Summer Session. Every unit of the two-million dol- lar organization wil be open during the entire session except the bowling alleys. Students should secure Union membership immediately after reg- istration to be eligible to partake of Union service, according to Acting Manager Franklin Kuenzel. A mem- bership card is required before the student can cash checks. The Pendleton Library on the sec- ond floor, containing reference books popular new novels and copies of the latest magazines will be open daily from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Camp Davis To Give Work For Geologists Wyoming Field Project Provides Opportunity For Landscape Study An integral unit in the modern ed- ucation method of giving practical experience in actual field work is Camp Davis, the University summer surveying and geology camp near Jackson, Wyoming. Camp Davis, ideally situated both for a surveying camp and for its re- cently acquired function as a base camp for geology field work, provides fore the surveyor a large variety of landscape conditions, varying from the flat valley floor on which the camp is located to the towering peaks and steep slopes of the Grand Te- ton Range. The prospective surveyor is here given an opportunity to gain an in- timate, working knowledge of any possible type of terrain that he might meet in his future work. This year two courses in field practice will be offered. The region surrounding Camp Dav- is offers a variety of geological fea- tures. Within a short radius of the camp are located many types of strata and structural formations. Of spec- ial interest are the great slide on the Gros Ventre River and the glaciers of the Tetons. The beautiful lake country along the base of the Tetons and the automobile- journey to Jack- son's Hole are interesting weekend diversions. Instruction in geology as presented along the route from Ann Arbor to Camp- Davis will include a study of the Driftless Area of Wisconsin, the Bad Lands of North Dakota and the Black Hills uplift, in addition to a survey of the general physiography land structural geology of the route traveled. Exclusive of these courses, Camp Davis and various types of equip- ment are available for a limited num- ber of independent investigators. Among thefirst to establish and maintain a camp for summer field r work, the University organized Camp Davis in 1874 under the supervision of the late Prof. J. B. Davis. Until 1929 the camp occupied several sites in Michigan. In that year the Univer- sity purchased a tract of land at Jackson's Hole, Wyo. The camp site is in the valley of the Hoback River, 75 miles south of Yellowstone Nation- al Park, to which a trip is planned during the summer. Built for convenience and comfort, the camp contains residence build- ings fourteen feet square 2) t cP' 4 ,r L~ 4 ' RESULTS! There's not in her mind that both exercise and classified advertising in the Michigan Daily will bring results in their own way. : s. "Wy.. F+ f :ice ,.s'' ..,. v f f n fem. a , ? " i$' __., ; '/" _ 4. >x ::ti. . y ". - {, r L i 1 3 ; L' 1 r jj I COT'TONS . . FORMAL DANCES You'll be the hit of the party in lovely cotton formal with or without a jacket. 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