The League -Social Headquarters For Women (I#,J IJ | Union Offers Facilities To Summer Students 9 ( I +n Dancing, the Michigan Repertory Players, reading rooms, and many other entertainment facilities - they are all offered in the Michigan League. Although only women students enrolled in the Summer Ses- sion are members of the League, use of the building is also open to men. Three University Of Michigan Camps Begin Summer Studies the camp was moved to Wyoming. . A trip to Yellowstone Park will be made during the camp session, and many of the students plan to. tour the West and Southwest after the camp session is over, in order to ex- amine such projects as Boulder Dam and western irrigation systems. The University's Biological Station, known to the adjoining "natives" of Northern Michigan as the "bug camp" is one of the oldest fresh-water bio- logical stations in the country, and one of the largest in the world, now that it has taken over the former holdings of Camp Davis. Director George R. LaRue has a faculty of 14 members, and the student body of the camp numbers from 90 to 100, of whom all but about 20 are not stu- dents at the University during the regular year. Over 300 scientific papers have resulted from research carried on at the camp in the 26 years it has been in operation. Prof. Robert J. Craig, director of Camp Filibert Roth, the forestry field station in Alger County near Munis- ing, expects that, this summer will see a new high record set for at- tendance at the camp, due to the rise in interest in forestry. The student body of the camp consists mostly of forestry students between their soph- omore and junior years. The camp is housed in buildings formerly used by a logging concern, and the work, carried on in a region where extensive logging operations still exist, will consist mainly of such tasks as the mapping of forest areas, the estimation of timber stands, scal- ing logs, the fighting and control of fires, and the construction of roads, trails, fire breaks and telephone lines p The facilities of the University's General Library, with books number- ing over 800,000 volumes, will be available for the use of students of the Summer Session. The General Library will be open daily, except Sunday, from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Books may be drawn by all officers and students of the Univer- sity. In addition to the many volumes, the library contains 5,000 maps, and a collection of 4,000 prints and pho- tographs, mainly of art subjects. Several special collections, includ- ing the Parsons Library of Political Science, containing 6,076 volumes; the McMillan Shakespeare Library of 6,- 525 volumes and 174 pamphlets; and the Goethe Library of 1,131 volumes are to be found in the General Li- brary. I I I I E I hrnirc I 1 -;0 to 1 -;0 ,,rrl 1 to 7-AU U U I I I