su m R a G. v DAY FAC T 3'REL THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY PAG!1 THREE Women Offered Sports STUDENTS TO VISIT Instruction Each Week Rnnn nniirr Qrn RM T 1 SPO S WORLD Physical Education Department Provides 4-Week Courses. Activities for women in the De- partment of Physical Education have been divided into four-week periods of instruction for each dif- ferent sport; each week the begin- ning of a new class in an additional activity will be announced by the department. The purpose is to give the beginner in a sport, instructions1 concerning the etiquette and skills; of a game and1 help him judge prices and kinds of equipment to be usedi. The members of these classes will not be charged any coaching fees but are expected to furnish their own equipment and meet charges made for swimming at the Union pool, for riding, and for canoeing. The use of the pool in Barbour gymnasium is gratis. At present courses being offered by Physical Education Department are Riding and Golf on Monday and Wednesday; recreational swimming or class work, Tuesday and Thurs- day at the Union pool; beginning swimming on Monday and Wednes- day in Barbour Gymnasium; and Tennis on Tuesday. There are also classes on Tuesday in Rhythm, Tap- dancing and Canoeing. Archery will be offered, hours of which have not yet been decided upon. All of these classes meet at 7:15 o'clock at night. Faculty members present at the meeting were Dr. Margaret Bell, Prof. Cleo Murtland, Prof. Laurie Estelle Campbell, Sarah M. Gillam, Edith Thomas,- Mildred A. Valen- tine, Edith L. Hoyle, Dean Lydia B. Jones, and Nida B. Smith. More than 40 members were pres- ent. Music School Alumna Will Present Recital Mrs. Helena Munn Redewill, an alumna of the School of Music, will give a recital of modern Russian, Norwegian, French, and Spanish music, illustrated with original po- ems, at 8 o'clock tomorrow night in the auditorium of the music school, Maynard street. Mrs. Redewill has won distinction in the West, where she is active in both musical and literary fields. The Los Angeles Times, in a re- view of one of her performances, described her as "a woman of rare personality as well as a musician and poet of outstanding power." There will be no charge for the recital, according to music school authorities. r ! I UIIV IIUUUL I LflhI I S e c o n d Excursion Sponsored by the Summer Session Begins Tomorrow. Methods and technique of large scale manufacturing will be in- spected tomorrow by students tak- ing the trip to the Ford plant at River Rouge, on the second excur- sion sponsored by the Summer Ses- sion. The excursionists will visit Ford's motor assembly plant, the final as- sembly lines, the open hearth fur- naces, and the rolling mill. The conveyor-belt system will be in- spected, and other examples of ex- treme specialization will be pointed out. Efficiency in the standardized processing of materials will be shown to the students in their in- spection of the furnaces, where great ladles holding 90 tons of mol- ten steel are lifted by overhead cranes and ,carried to the pouring places. The excursion will start by bus at 1 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in front of Angell hall. About two hours will be spent at the River Rouge plants, and the excursionists will be back in Ann Arbor at 5:30 o'clock. Carlton F. Wells, secretary of the Summer Session, will direct the trip. Reservations for the excursion must be made before 5 o'clock to- night in the Summer Session of- fice, University hall, Wells said yes- terday. The only expense will be $1 for bus fare. No charge will be made to students furnishing their own transportation, Wells added. Betsy Barbour to Hold First of League Teas Residents of Betsy Barbour house will be at home from 4 to 5:30 o'- clock this afternoon to members of the faculty and students of the University. The tea is the first of three that have been planned for this week through the League so- cial committee. Tomorrow after- noon a tea dance, which is to be a I weekly event, will be held in the Grand Rapids room and Concourse of the League building, and on Thursday Mosher-Jordan halls will be hostesses at tea from 4 to 5:30 o'clock. Special emphasis is to be placed upon the informality of these teas. Men do not need to be invited by a woman or escort a woman in or- der to attend the affairs. Tommy Armour, the canny Scot, who holds forth at Tam o' Shanter, and who was picked as the fav- orite in the United States Open, was completely off form throughout the 72 holes of play, and finished with 315 strokes, far behind the two leaders, George Von Elm and Billy Burke. Armour had been picked to win largely because of the driving finish he made to take first honors in the British Open at Carnoustie. But, while he stood ace-high in the heavy going on the Scotch course, he faltered badly at Inverness. Von Elm turned in the same sort of finish at Toledo that Armour did at Carnoustie, showing a card of 69 for the last 18. In the first day's play-off he performed in much the same way, winning the 36th hole again to finish the day all square with Burke. He was two down at the end of the 18th on that day. Britain's performance in the nat- ional open was unimpressive. Sev- eral of her golfers failed to qualify, and those who did were unable to turn in anything less than 320. Fred Robson was first among the invading contingent. * * * Speaking of golf, the miniature game is taking an awful licking this year-that is, from the finan- cial standpoint. And the odds are that the American fancy for fads is the chief reason. That fancy brought the abbreviated course to every crossroads in the country a year ago and now its passing is leaving those same courses desert- ed. The depression may have some small share of responsibility for the present condition, but prosperity wasn't at peak in 1930 either. Fur- thermore, a quarter is a cheap as- sessment for an evening's enter- tainment. COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - A student here recently discovered that a high school friend had handed in one of his own themes in a college contest. It took the prize. "Evidently good literature never loses its true value," the Spectator, student newspaper, re- marked. With 15 letter men returning, Indiana is hardly expected to prove a doormat for any of the teams in the Western Conference during the approaching football campaign. The Hoosiers will meet Harry Kip- ke's stalwarts in Ann Arbor Novem- ber 7, and the fact that they will have present a considerable num- ber of the men who helped trim Purdue 7 to 6 last fall adds interest to that game. Michigan succumbed to Indiana 6 to 0 in their last meeting, which took place during the disastrous start of the 1928 season. Tad Wie-' man was at the helm here then, and though his men turned back the knife-like thrusts of Chuck Bennett, Hughes and others for three quarters, Bennett finally slip- ped through for the lone score. While mentioning that game it is only justice to say also that in the final contest previous to the 1928 game, that which took place of Ferry' field in 1925, "Hurry-up' Yost's championship eleven ran the Hoosiers into the ground. Adding machine tape at the close of that contest showed the following: Michigan 63; Indiana O. Getting back to 1930, Michigan and Indiana both laced Purdue by a single point, Michigan by a 14 to 13 score. Michigan surprised the world by turning the trick at the season's outset, While Indiana gave the dope bucket another kick by doing it in the season's finale. But, if football results from one week to another during the same season are hardly a criterion for judg- ment, results from one season to another are much less so. ANNUNES RES To Be Open Only During Hours Librarian Is in Charge; No Books to Be Taken. Because books have been remoyed from the library of the Women's League building, the room will be open only during the hours when a librarian is in charge, it was an- nounced yesterday. Mrs. Maude Thompson, library chairman for the summer, and her assistants have planned library hours to include times of greatest demand. All women are encouraged to take advantage of the fine books which are to be found in the library but are requested to replace them be- fore leaving the room. Either by mistake or design many valuable works have disappeared from the shelves and should be returned im- mediately; many of the offenders of this rule are known but an oppor- tunity is being given them to re- turn the books because of a proba- ble misunderstanding of the cus- tomary regulations, Mrs. Thompsop. said. These books, most of them costly, have been donated to the League through the kindness of alumnae, students, and organiza- tions, and their loss would be great- ly regretted. UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA- A history student here, having com- pleted the answer to a question, changed his mind, scratched it out, and wrote another. The first one was right, and the professor mark- ed it "B," adding the following note: "You fool, don't you know that your first guess is always right?" The Harper Method Office for the scientific care of the scalp, face and hands is located at 403 So. Division St. Phone 4016 A Patio for out door drying is provided. --t___mkiI COLLEGE BEAUTY SHOPPE Shampoo and Fing Shampoo and Mar Manicure ... . Open Every Evening !Ve offer der Wave..... .. cel.......... .....$1.00 ...$1.00 - . 50 Phone 22813 By expert operators THE MOST POPUI OF THE SEASO] ANNUALJ SALE OF ALL SUMMER STYLES And its great LAR SHOES N IN OUR JULY : OUR REGULAR $7.00 SHOES -J Its a fact that the most desirable fash- ion right Summer styles are offered that makes this a stirring value event, for such savings are unexpected on the season's "Hits" so early in the season. Jacobson 's ' : . Lc.. . .: ! N:. ::. . yf? : er+:: 4 a. iyi=i:t' : 8 i i ::._ i