FOURTEEN THE MICHIGAN DAILY ___________________________________________________________________ .. Nod' Visiting Scholars Will Teach At Session Mo're Than One Hundred Non-Residents To Join Summer School Faculty More than 100 non-resident mem- bers will join the faculty for the Summer Session, Prof. Louis A. Hop- kins, director of Summer Session, an- nounced. Prominent visiting faculty will in- clude: Morton Gould, eminent com- poser, Karl T. Compton, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology; William F. Blatz, Professor of Child Psychology, and Director of the Institute of Child Study at the 'university of Toronto. The list continues with Leonard O. Andrews, College of Education, Indiana University; Prof. Emil Ar- tin, Professor of Mathematics, Indi- ana University; Prof. Ernest J. Ash- baugh, Dean, School of Education, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio; Harold Bachman, Director, Univer- sity of Chicago Band; Prof. William C. Bagley, Professor Emeritus of Ed- ucation, Teachers College, Columbia University; Prof. Claribel A. Baird, Assistant Professor of Speech, Okla- homa College ofor Women; Prof. Henry Beaumont, Assistant Profes- sor of Psychology, University of Ken- tucky, and Ollie Backus, Instructor in Speech, State Teachers College, :Slippery Rock, Pa. New York Pianist Included Also included in the faculty will be William Beller, Concert Pianist of New York City; Douglas D. plock- sma, Counselor, Institute for Human -Adjustment, Rackham Sociological Research Unit, Flint; Ivan A. Booker, of the Research Division of the Na- tional Education Association', Wash- ington, D.C.; Nancy Bowman, In- structor in Speech, Mount Clemens High School; Prof. Arthur H. Buff- ington, Associat'e Professor of His- tory, Williams College, Williamstown, Mass.: Prof. Robert Seymour Camp- bell. Assistant Professor of Biology, Central State Teachers College, Mount Pleasant; Prof. Leslie L. Chis- holm, Associate Professor of Educa- tion, Washington State College, Pullman, Wash., and James Church, Instructor in Speech. Th list continues with Evelyn Cohen, Director of Costuming, New York City; Prof. William Walter Cort, Professor of Helminthology,a the Johns Hopkins University; .Roxy E. Cowin, Assistant Supervisor of Music, Ann Arbor Public Schools; Prof. Charles E. Creaser, Professor of Zoology, Wayne University; Lera B. Curtis, Instructor in Physical Ed- ucation for Women in charge of Teacher Training, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio; Prof. Edward Everett Dale, Professor of History, University of Oklahoma; Eric De Lamarter, Composer and Conductor, New York City, Prof. Norman Wentworth De Witt, Professor of Latin and Chair- man, Department of Classics, Vic- toria College, University of Toron- to, and M. Evelyn Dilley, Head of Latin Department, Shaker Heights High School, Cleveland, Ohio. List Continues Other visiting faculty members will be Helen Elizabeth Donnely, Teacher of Remedial Reading, Wil- liam H. Lincoln School, Brookline, Mass., and Institute of Remedial Reading, Extension Department of Boston University; Roy A. Doty, In- structor in Psychology, Ohio State University; Briggs Dyer, Art Insti- tute of Chicago; Prof. Victor E. Fer- rall, Associate Professor of Law, Uni- versity of Illinois; Prof. Raymond Fisher, Assistant Professor of Edu- cation, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio; Cleo Fox, Director of Instru- mental Music, Kalamazoo Public Schools, Kalamazoo, and Orie ' Frederick, of the United States Of- fice of Education, Washington, D.C. Taxonomist Will Teach The list continues with Prof. Frank Caleb Gates, Professor of Tax- onomy and Ecology, Kansas State, College, Manhattan, Kan.; Francis L. Goodrich, Librarian. College of the City of New York; Prof. Milton D. Green, Associate Professor of Law, University of Colorado; Katherine Bradford Greene, Educational Direc- tor, Sherwood School. Bloomfield Hills; Joseph Gustat, of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, St. Louis, Mo.; Helen Hadley, Coordinator of Ele- mentary Education, Rochester Pub- lie Schools, Rochester, N. Y., and Robert K. Hall. formerly Master in Mathematics at Cranbrook School, Bloomfield Hills. Donald Hargis, Instructor in Speech, of the University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon; Dale C. Harris, Supervisor of Music, Pontiac Public Schools, Pontiac; George H. Hilliard, Chairman, Department of Educa- tion, Western State Teachers Col- lege, Kalamazoo; Mark Hindsley, As- sistant Director, University Band, University of Illinois; Evan Charles Horning, Instructor in Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College; Russell S. How- land, Instructor, Music Department, Colorado State Teachers College, Greeley, Colo.; Prof. Herbert Baker Hungerford, Professor of Entomol- ogy, University of Kansas, and Prof. Edgar W. Knight Kenan, Professor of Education, University of North, Carolina. Continuing the list are Prof. George C. Kyte, Professor of Educa- tion and Director of the University Elementary School, University of California; Rudolph Daniel Lind- quist, Director of the Cranbrook School, Bloomfield Hills; Prof. Har- vey Kames Locke, Assistant Profes- sor of Sociology, Indiana University; Stuart Lottier of the Recorder's Court of Detroit; Edmon Low, Li- brarian, State Agricultural and Me- chanical College, Stillwater, Okla.; Frederick Dean McCluskey, Director of Scarborough School, Scarborough- on-the-Hudson, N. Y., and George H. McCune, Head, Department of Social Studies, University of Minne- sota High School. Buffalo Economist Ilcluded Prof. Fritz Machlup, Professor of Econmics, University of Buffalo, Buffalo, N. Y.; Charles E. Martin, Chairman of the Department of Po- litical Science, University of Wash- ington; Charles Meredith, of the Dock Street Theatre, Charleston, S. C.; Leonard Meretta, Instructor in Brass Instruments, Lenoir Public Schools, Lenoir, N. C.; Prof., Perry Miller, Associate Professor of His- tory and Literature, Harvard Uni- versity; Bernice Moss, State Director of Health and Physical Education, Salt Lake City, Utah; Robert Moss, Instructor in Piano, School of Fine Arts, University of Texas, and Prof. Claude L. Nemzek, Assistant Pro- fessor of Education, University of Detroit. ' The list continues with Olin Sew- ill Pettingill, Jr., Instructor in Zool- ,gy, Carleton College, Northfield, Minn.; Prof. Everett R. Phelps, Asso-! ,late Professor of Physics, Wayne University; George Poinar, of the Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory of Music, Berea, Ohio; Prof. Gerold Webber Prescott, Associate Professor of Biology, Albion College, Albion:; Eleanor M. Putney, Head Cataloger, DePauw University, Greencastle, [nd.; Fritz Redl, Guidance Depart- nent, Cranbrook School, Bloomfield Hills; Theodore L. Reller, the School of Education, University of Penn- sylvania; Mlle. Jeanne Rosselet, As- sociate Professor of French. Goucher College, Baltimore, Md. Other members will include Norma V. Scheideman, Lecturer in Educa- tion. of Los Angeles, California; Arthur Schwuchow, Director of Mu- sic, Aberdeen Schools, Aberdeen, S. D.; Charles B. Shaw, Librarian, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa.; Henry Sopkin, Instructor in Strings, Woodrow Wilson Junior Col- lege, Chicago, Ill.; Harold Spears, Director of Research and Secondary Education, Public Schools, Evans- vills, Ind.; Prof. Hans Spier, Profes- sor of Sociology of the Graduate Faculty of the New School for So- cial Research, New York City; Prof. Frank R. Strong, Professor of Law, Ohio State University. Milwaukee Educator Listed William W. Theisen, Assistant Su- perintendent of Schools, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Prof. Lyell J. Thomas, Assistant Professor of Zoology, Uni- versity of Illinois; Prof. S. Harrison Thomson, Professor of History, Uni- versity of Colorado; Charles Warren Thornthwaite, Assistant Director, Weather Bureau, Washington, D.C.; Prof. Stephen Timoshenko, Profes- sor of Engineering Mechanics, Stan- ford University; Harvey L. Turner, Director of Michigan Teacher Edu- cation Study, Lansing, and Prof. Victor Chandler Twitty, Professor of Biology, Standard University. Also included will be Theodore J. Werle, Executive Director, Michigan Tuberculosis Association, Lansing; Heinz Werner, Research Psycholo- gist, Wayne County Training School, Northville; Prof. W. Meinzes White- law, Professor of History, University of Saskatchewan; Mary Elizabeth Whitney, Instructor in Physical Edu- cation, Vassar College, Poughkeep- sie, N. Y.; Fred Wiest, Instructor in Music, Pontiac High School, Pon- tiac; Francis Orlando Wilcox, Chair- man of the Division of Social Studies, University of Louisville, and Alexan- der Wyckoff, Head of the Design Department and Director of Stage-' craft, Philadelphia Museum, School of Industrial Arts, Philadelphia, Pa. Bidwell To Instruct Viriting faculty Oi the Graduate Study Program will include Percy W. Bidwell, Director of Studies, Council of Foreign Relations, New York City; Prof. Charles C, Colby, Professor of Geograpiy. University of Chicago; Prof. John B. Condliffe, Professor of Economics, University of California; Prof. Percy E. Corbett, Professor of International Law and Jurisprudence and Chairman of the Social Science Division, McGill University; Prof. Edward S. Corwin, McCormick Pro- fessor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University; Prof..Edward Mead Earle, Professor in the School of Econom- ics and Politics, The Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton Univer- sity, and Prof. Brooks Emeny, Asso- ciate Professor of International Relations, Western Reserve Univer- sity, and Director of Foreign Af- fairs Council, Cleveland. H. Duncan Hall, formerly of the League of Nations Secretariat; Prof. Richard Hartshorne, Professor of Geography, University of Wisconsin; Prof. Calvin B. Hoover, Professor of Economics and Dean of the Gradu- ate School of Arts and Sciences, Duke University, Durham, S. C.; Hu Shih, Ambassador of China to the United States; Prof. Max Lerner, Professor of Political Science, Wil- liams College; Prof. Philip Mosely, Social Science Research Council and Associate Professor of History, Cor- nell University; Prof. Dexter Perk- ins, Professor of History, University of Rochester, and Carlo Sforza, Car- negie Visiting-Lecturer. Non-resident members of the fac- ulty of the School of Education will include Charles Forsythe, Director of High School Athletics in the State Department of Public Instruction, and Elizabeth Eckhardt May, Visit- ing Lecturer in Sociology and Adult Education and Executive Secretary of the University Committee on Rec- reation Curriculum, University of Minnesota. Receives Catalog Cards The University Library is one of the depositories for the printed cata- log cards issued by the Library of Congress. It also subscribes to the card publications of the John Crerar Library Association, Harvard Univer- sity. Summer school students will findi that more than a million valuablei volumes, representative of every period and phase of history are lo- cated on the shelveg of the various units of the University library. The Library proper is composed of several smaller branches, all of them available to students and located on the University campus. Standing in the middle of the campus diagonal is the General Library, the largest unit, containing 607,615 volumes, and 14,389 maps. Containing a number of special selections received as gifts during recent years , the General Library houses the Parsons Library of Political Science, the Goethe Li- brary, the MacMillian Shakespeare Library and a number of other groups of smaller §ize. Opened in 1920, the large library building has seats in its various read- ing and study rooms for about 1,000 persons. The General Library is open daily from 7:45 a.m. to 10 p.m. except Sunday during the academic year. On Sunday it is open from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. The William L. Clements Library of American History, completed in 1923, contains an invaluable collec- tion of books, manuscripts, and maps. The library was the gift of William L. Clements, '82, and is used to collect materials relating to the discovery of the western continent More Than One Million Books Found In University Library and its settlement and later history. The collection is said to be especially rich in rare books and pamphlets dealing with early colonial history and the period of the American Rev- olution. The Clements Library is lo- cated on South University Avenue. Other branches of the University of Michigan Library are the Architec- ture Library, the Chemistry and Pharmacy Library, the Economics- Mathematics Library, the Engineer- ing Libraries, the Forestry Library, The Law Library, the Medical Libra- ries, the Museum Library, the Natu- ral Science Library, the Physics Li- brary and the Transportation Li- brary. The various libraries receive 4,418 periodicals regularly. ill Ear our speciaty SALES - REPAIRS - RENTALS Special Rental Rates for Summer Sessions MEALS THAT PAY in dividends of. hea th, success and happiness as a re- suit ofa well-bal- anced and benefi- cial diet. GOOD FOOD is even better with GOOD WINE PHONE 3.95 5 - WE DELIVER Ball & Thrasher "Everything for the Office" 205 SOUTH FOURTH AVENUE The Floutz Cafe 122 W. Wash. Ph 7070 - on the corner - i t ,, F .11111 - -- _ _ f NEWV and USED ft Summer School 1 STUDENT SUPPLIES NOTE BOOKS STATIONERY FOUNTAIN PENS We have given successful and dependable se Students for over fifty years - LET US DRAWING SUPPLIES rvice to Michigan SERVE YOU! UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE I - ' - m