', JUNE 28, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIV JUNE 28, 1937 ?AGE FJV~ Summer Session Social Program Centers At League 2 - u- - - r.zl - - ________ ______ _______ _ ounimer k7ociat CAnter Of All Summer Social Activities Activities Start With Reception Students Are Invited To Annual Affair; League Open For Inspection Dance To Be Hed 1 Social activities for the Sumnme Session will officially commence with the annual Faculty Reception to be given for all students from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, July 2 in the Mi(h- igan League Building according ts Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social di_- rector of the Summer Session. The entire building will be open for inspection during the reception. Although men are not usually per- mitted in the garden or on the thirdi floor, they may visit these places Fri- day night. Faculty To Receive Tentative plans for the reception schedule the faculty administrative receiving line for 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. in the Ethel Fountain Hussey Room. There will be approximately fifty as- sistants to introduce students to the faculty members, Miss McCormick said. Following the reception, there will be dancing in the ballroom with Charlie Zwick and his band playing. As the usual custom for the summer dances, approximately twenty-five women will be selected to serve as as- sistants so that students may come, .with or without partners. Fortune Telling Fortune telling will also be a part of the evening's entertainment. Guides are to be furnished for tours of the building, and a bridge con- test has been arranged as a feature of the reception. Both contract and auction bridge will be played on the third floor. Refreshments will be served in the garden which is to be lighted by a colorful variety of lanterns, Miss Mc- Cormick stated. Approximately 3,000 students are expected to attend this annual event. The entire program scheduled for the evening will be given free of charge. Six Programs To Be Offered By Music Staff Six concerts by members of the faculty of the School of Music will be given from July 6 until August 10 in Hill Auditorium, it was announced yesterday. All concerts will begin at 8:30 p.m. On July 6, Prof. Joseph Brinkman, pianist, will present the entire pro- gram, and on July 13 there will be a group of cello solos by Prof. Hanns Pick and Professor Brinkman; solos by Hardin Van Deursen, baritone. and a group of piano solos. Prof. Wassily Besekirsky, violin- ist, and Prof. Joseph Brinkman, pi- anist, together with Prof. Palmer Christian, organist, will offer the concert of July 20. An entire program of vocal sol and duets will be presented on July 27 by Prof. Arthur Hackett, Prof. Thelma Lewis and Mr. Van Deursen. The concert of August 3 will be given by Miss Mary Fishburne, pian- ist, and Prof. E. William Doty, or- ganist, and for the last concert Aug. 10, Professor Pick, Professor Besekir- sky, Professor Brinkman and Prof. Anthony Whitmire will present a program of 18th century music. Also featured throughout the sum- a1er will be recitals by various stu- dents of the School of Music. Carillon Course Is To Be Taught Here Gym Is Scene Of Registration For Recreationl'' Registration for recreational classesE in tennis, swimming, golf, riding, bad-1 minton, modern dancinug and tap' dancing will open today in Barbour Gymnasium from 8 a.m. till noon' and 1:30 till 4:30 p.m. All facilities at the Women's Ath-l letic Building are open to women! students in summer school. A field! for golf practice, a putting green,3 and 12 clay and four cement tennis courts will be available for practice3 and play. Women students may have men guests on the tennis courts by obtain- ing a guest card from the main desk of the Women's Athletic Building. Instruction will be given in these! activities at the following times: ten- nis, 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday, and 5 p.m. Monday and Wednesday;: Golf, 4 p.m. Monday and Wednes- day, and 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thurs- day; Badminton, 7:30 p.m. Wednes- day; Riding, 6 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Wednesday Tap dancing, 5 p.m. Monday and Wednesday and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday; modern dancing, 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Swimming will be given at 11 a.m. Monday and Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Katherine Manning lo Give Dance Work Katherine Manning, of the Ben- nington School of dance, has been relected to head the modern dance in- struction for the Summer Session, itI was announced by the Women's De- partment of Physical Education. Miss Manning, a member of the Humphrey-Weidman Concert Dance Group, with which she toured the country last winter, is a graduate in1 Physical Education of Skidmore Col- lege, Saratoge, N.Y., and has had ex- tensive training in the modern dance. Classes in modern dance for be- ginners, intermediates, and advanced students, and instruction in teaching modern dance are available for Sum- mer Session students. Registration will be held today and tomorrow in Barbour Gymnasium. Dancing And Bridge Registration Is Today Registration for dancing classes and bridge lessons will open today in the Michigan League Building, ac- cording to Miss Ethel McCormick, di- rector. A series of six dancing lessons is to be given for $1.50, and will be held every Monday and Tuesday evening in the Ballroom of the Michigan League. The classes are to be divided into beginning and intermediate groups, to be held Monday and Tuesday evenings respectively. Six bridge lessons will also be pre- Get into the SW"V . all wool knit trunks, cut to fit snugly and in a variety of colors. . . gabar- dine trunks built for swim- ming comfort as well as style . . from $3.95 Tn N A Nickels Arcade : j . f' nde Mao~ Reg Plitured above is the League, which will be the center of all social activi~es of the Summer Session. Dances, receptions and teas will be held here. LEAGUE LIBRARY EARITART HOPS OFF 'e League Library, located on the KOEPANG, Timor, Dutch East in- third floor of the Michigan League dies, June 28. - (Monday) --- (P) - Buding, is to be open for women Amelia Earhart, on a leisurely round students from 12 :30 to 9:30 p.m. the world flight, hopped off from this every day during: the Summer Ses . tiny island at 5:30 a.m. today (4:30 . ius is the only library on the. 1.m. Sunday Eastern Standard Time , for Port Darwin, on Australia's north- ::umlns reserved exclusively for the ern coast. She faced a 500 mile flight jse vf women students. across the Timor Sea. GET INTO SOMETHING sented for $1.50. These lessons will BEACH SANDALS open next week. Multi-colored, toeless beach san- dals with wooden heels and crepe FOUR ARE KILLED rubber soles have been ranked first LONDON, June 27.-(f)--Four per- for this summer's bathing accessories . rons were killed and 12 injured late Along with these, may be worn tonight when a Southern Railway striped robes made of towelling. train crashed into a dead-end sidingI L GH IT AND TS 4 SUMMER SCHOOL I ..: :.. ' k,. : . \. , J' .J ~^ ' . :: r < r .: .. ,% 'S '... 1 , ". 4 '.; ":;: ' ; :; : ? 4 t :}.,i t_ " ,::;: .. ;;>::::::z:: { i s'ir 'z ; ;::< 'i }5's?' iS _ ..,$ ZZZ } ': 'iii: i;>:;:;r:"':c}'3. tiy:., . r z:::;::; 's :::::;:i: ;ry#<:; < <> < . s :. ;>,,'.: }- W1 III ."That's the best ad- vice we could possi- 1 bly give you on how to spend a cool and fashionable sum- t mer. Spend your days in a light-color- ed tropical worsted, fit a Filmspun or a linen into your mid- summer's nights schemes . . . and when you come to make your selections spend a few minutes with us ... we have the right whites for you! Also many dark colors to select from. (OU R SPE IALTY) At BargainPrices " $l 075 o $4500 The first course on the carillon ever taught in America will be offered here this summer by the School of Music under the supervision of Prof. Wilmot F. Pratt, University Carillonneur. According to President Charles A. Sink of the music school, those stu- dents who show that they have a'- vanced far enough musically will be allowed to take this course-onc of the two available in the world. The credit hours allowed, Processor Sink explained, will depend on the! number of lessons taken. WHOLESALE ich 's NICKELS ARCADE Please Come in and Browse Opposite Engineering Arch Half Block North of Education School _ , 1I The . .- a-F ° i c. / ': --- , t n a e : Q , wt, Watch the R.&S. 170 I . III' i -_, I I L , 1 = '' 1 1 II 1 ___ __ 1 III