Y, JUNE 27, 1938 THE MICHIGAN.DAILY iiiiiiiijill i lll Reception Will Honor Students At League 111 i1 { °M Faculty Will Be Hosts At Annual AffairFriday Department Heads To Be Present; Dancing And Tours Are Included All students of the Summer Ses- sion will be honored at the annual Faculty Reception to be held from 8:30 p.m. ,to 1 a.m. Friday in the League, Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social director of the Summer Ses- sion, announced. Dancing, tounament bridge, re- freshments, and tours of the building will all be included in the entertain- ment. The administrative receiving line will form at 8:30 p.m. in the Assembly Room. All students are in- vited to go down the receiving line, Miss McCormick said. Special Rooms Assigned As an inovation in this year's re- ception heads and assistants of va- rious departments will be stationed in assigned rooms where students may meet and converse with them. The chemistry department under Prof. Chester S. Schoepfle will be in the Blue Room as will the physics de- partment under the direction of Prof. Harrison M. ,Randall. In the Read- ing Room will be the education and hygiene and, public health depart- ments. Dean James B. Edmonson and Prof. John Sundwall will be in char~ge. International law will be stationed in the west wing of the Assembly Room. In the Men's Lounge will be the Institute of Far Eastern Studies, headed by Prof. Robert Hall; and the Linguistic Institute, under Prof. Charles C. Fries. Will Be In Women's Lounge Library science, music and speech and play production groups will be located in the Women's Lounge on the second floor. Dr. William W. Bishop, Prof. Earl V. Moore, and Prof. Henry A. Sanders are heads of these departments respectively, and will be assisted by other members of their departments. Engineering mechanics faculty members will receive students in the East Council Room on the second floor. Prof. Edward L. Eriksen will be in charge. Prof. Howard B. Lewis will head the biological chemistry department in the West Lounge in the Blue Room on the third floor. To Serve Refreshments Punch will be served on the ter- race during the reception if the weather permits. If it is rainy, Miss McCormick hasannounced that re- freshnments will be served on the mez- zanine. Dancing in the League Ballroom will begin at 9 p.m. and Charlie Zwick and his orchestra will play. Tournament bridge will be played and prizes will be offered. Guides who will conduct tours through the League will include the Michigan pames, members of the Women's Educational Club, under- graduate women under the direction of Jean Holland, '39, president of the League, and undergraduate men under the direction of Robert May, 39. League To Hold Dance Classes Is League President Many Graduate A nd Post Graduation Weddings Have Taken Place In June Jean Holland Miss Holland '39, was appointed president of the League in May and will assume duties as president for thle Summer Session. 'A Fine Paper,' Oldest ,Reader Of Daily Saysil "Wherever we go, The Daily fol- low us." Thus Mrs. Frederick P. Jordan of Ann Arbor, whose husband was the first subscriber to The Daily when it appeared as "The U. of M.j Daily" on Sept. 29, 1890, voiced her Dpinion of the student publication.j The fact that the Jordans even re- :eived the paper during the several' seasons which they spent abroad is an indication, Mrs. Jordan believes, that she and her husband have en- joyed it very much and consider it ,ell worth reading. When asked whether or not she thought the paper had improved throughout the years, Mrs. Jordan replied in the affirmative. "A really ine student newspaper," aptly de- ;cribes the present publication, she Jelieves. Mrs. Jordan's only criti- ism concerned the spelling of fac- alty members' names. She would Advise a little more care be taken in ;his respect. This is a far cry from the criticism >ffered the embryo Daily of 1903 by he Michigan Alumnus. "The Liailh oears on every page the unmistak-' Tble marks of being strictly ama- ,eur. Commencement week and the days following have been filled with tra- Jitional June weddings of interest to Ann Arbor society. Their graduation day was chosen oy Phyllis C. Carr, '38, of Bartlesville, Okla., and Frank C. Gibbs, Jr., '38E, of Oak Park, Ill., for their wedding Jay. Miss Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Carr, is affiliated with phi Omega sorority, and Mr. Gibbs, Son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Gibbs, ts a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Was Married June 18 The wedding was held at 2 p.m. Saturday, June 18, in the First Pres- oyterian church. Jean Gibbs of Oak Park, sister of the bridegroom, was maid of honor, and Betty Jo Belknap >f Cedar Rapids, Ia., a cousin of the pride, served as candlelighter. Mr. Tibbs, Sr., an alumnae of the Univer- ;ity, performed the duties of the best ,nan, while the ushers were Frank- din Graham of Detroit, and three fra- .ernity brothers of the bridegroom, Richard Schaus, '38E, of Ann Arbor. trdward Soucaze, Grad., of New York, md William Fleming, of South Bend. End. Marion L. Hodson, '38, and Louis 0. Landon, '38, both of Ann Arbor, ,hose their marriage to be performed At 8 p.m. Saturday, June 18, following ,he Commencement exercises at which both received their diplomas. Miss Hodson, a member of Alpha 3micron Pi sorority, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Hodson, And Mr. Landon, affiliated with Del- La Sigma Pi, is the son of Mrs. Fran- :es J. Landon. Wedding On Graduation Day Another Commencement Day wed- ding of interest in Ann Arbor, was ierformed at Waban, Mass., uniting n marriage Helen May Stetson, and Dr. Baldwin Rapier Curtis, both of Ann Arbor' The bride is the daugh- er of Dr. and Mrs. Harlan True Stet- son, a former professor of astronomy At Harvard University, former direc- ,or of Perkins observatory at Ohio Wesleyan University, and now at Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy. Dr. Curtis is a son of Prof. and Mrs. Heber D. Curtis. Professor Cur- Ais is director of the University ob- servatory and head of the astronomy .lepartment. Miss Stetson was graduated from 'he University in 1935, and Dr. Curtis received his degree in 1934, after study at Swarthmore and here. He :eceived his master's degree in 1935 and his doctor of philosophy this year. He is a member of Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. Dr. and Mrs. Curtis Plan to return to Ann Arbor July 5. Hold Wedding At St. Thomas Mary Alice McQuillan, '37, and Francis Conlin, '36, were married at 10 a.m. Saturday, June 18, at nuptial nass said in St. Thomas Catholic church by the Most Rev. William F. Murphy. Miss McQuillan is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Mundus of Ann Arbor, at whose wed- .ling Bishop Murphy officiated, and Mr. Conlin is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Conlin, also of Ann Arbor. The maid of honor at the ceremony Nas Marguerite McQuillan, '39A, and 'he bridesmaid was Joan Mundus, arlso a sister of the bride. Charles A. Conlin of Lansing, rother of the groom, was best man, and the ushers were William and Irv- ing Conlin, Louis C. Andrews, Jr., '40, and John M. Noble of Jackson. The bride is a member of Theta Phi A.lpha sorority. Dr. E. W. Blakeman Officiates Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, Univer- 3ity counselor of religious education, officiated at the wedding of two University alumni June 20 in the First Methodist church. The couple, Miss Florence Marion Hiscock of Ann (Continued on Page 10) W..ear At Summer Hat WITH YOUR SUMMER DRESSES.. . It can be white or black or navy with white trim. ALL EARLY DARK HATS REDUCED TO $1.75 DANA RICHARDSON 309 South State Street -- At the Dillon Shop y t FA ;® M -I BOOKS and BOOKS FOR THE SUMMER SESSION P, LOADS OF THEM AT BARGAIN PRICES! Teach And Students Country Social Dancing Square and country dancing, be- ginning and intermediate social dan- cing will be offered at the League to students during the Summer Ses- sion, Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social director, announced. The square and country dances will be given free of charge every Monday night. Ivan Parker, who has studied at Henry Ford's School, will teach the classes. Students may come with or without partners. Beginning social dancing classes Will be held Tuesday nights and the intermediate dancing will be Wed- nesday nights. A charge of $1.50 will be made for six lessons. Dancers will be permitted to remain after the instruction to dance to recorded music. Friday and Saturday night dances will be given at the League through- out the summer. Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social director of the Summer Session said that these dances are given to encourage socia- bility and acquaintances on the cam- pus. A charge of 35 cents a person is made. Tea dances will be given every "Wednesday free of charge. Wednesday Night Is Set For Meeting Of Dames Fountain Pens, Loose Leaf Note Books Laboratory Supplies, etc., etc. EVERYTHING FOR THE STUDENT -.at- BOOKSTORES I 11 11 mill