THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, JUNE MIII III II IIIII IIrI l111 11111 I 111111111 1 p I I IIIIA MICHIGAN MERRY-GO-R OUND ...by Calliope... Michigan women! Your scholastic programs are made out by now, but what about your exercise programs? Of course walking is one of the best exercises, and everyone gets enough of that, trotting around the campus. But walking is only "E Pluribus Unum," and with so many delightful opportuni- ties offered by the Physical Educaton Department, why not take advantage of them and trim your figure down for fall or preserve what you have against sumnmer let-downs. Archery is not nearly so difficult as the Indians made it seem. It develops the thin, reduces the fat, and best of all, it is not too strenuous for women of average health. Badminton is easily learned and uses all of those dormant mtscles. It is not nearly so strenuous as tennis and requires much less skill. Tennis, like badminton, wakes up all your muscles, but it is strenuous and requires skill in order to be successful on the courts. However, if you have lots of stamina and no heart trouble, tennis is a perfect workout. There are sixteen courts available, so it shouldn't be hard to find a vacant one for out of class playing. Golf includes the merits of walking as well as the benefits of the swing of arms and upper trunk. A-putting green and golf course in addition to excel- lent instruction are offered for student disposal. Riding is an easy sport because the poor horse does most of the work. But be sure you have a calm-head for managing. the horse. There are beginning, intermediate, and advanced classes. Six rides are offered for the special price of $5. Swimming is the best exercise of all, for it guarantees to take fat off in the wrong places and put it on the right. For poise and grace, nothing is bet- ter than dancing. Classes in tap as well as modern dancing are being offered this summer for men and women. For bridge fiends or wold-be fiends, the League is offering lessons as well For bridge fiends or would-be fiends, the League is offering lessons as well as duplicate bride. The League is also sponsoring classes in square and On Friday, June 30, there will be a general reception of the faculty for the students at the Horace H. Rackham School. Every Friday and Saturday' the League is sponsoring a social-evening at 9 p.m. in the League Ballroom. The League is giving a "Watermelon Cut" for Southern students at 7:30 p.m. Friday, July 14. More chances for dancing will be offered by the League with tea dances every Wednesday afternoon. r "All work, no play-" You know the rest. So plan on playing this summer at Michigan, and get on the Michigan Merry-Go-Round! Deutsches Haus Is Iaugurated For Summer By Dr. Otto Graf French House Opens Fourth Season Here eddings And Engagements Feature Graduation And Post Graduation Days Varied For Will Activities Planned Summer; Library Be Maintained The Foyer Francais, a residence and center of activities for students in- terested in French, begins its fourth summer on campus this week. Women students may live and board at the house while men are invited to take their noon and eve- ning meals there. Only French may be spoken in the house. A library of French books, magazines, news- papers and reviews is maintained there for reading. Activities include card games, chess and checkers, musi- cales and parties with the great French holiday, July 14, forming the occasion for a special celebration. The house is again under the direc- tion of Mlle. Deirdre McMullan, house manager; Mlle. Jeanne Rosselet, social director; and Prof. Anthony Jobin of the French department, faculty director. The Foyer is to be located at the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house at 1414 Washtenaw. A second house will also be made available if the number of applicants warrants. Miss McMullan is instructor in French at Grosse Pointe High School. She has studied at the Uni- versity of Grenoble and is widely travelled in France. Miss Rosselet is instructor in French at Gaucher Col- lege. Members of the faculty are fre- quently invited to the house to con- tribute to the conversation. Also a nucleus of graduate students and teachers of French assist students 4in improving their French. The Foyer is modelled after the famous French House at Middlebury, Vermont. Pre-School Drama Registration Opens Registration for pre-school play groups begins at 8:30 a.m. today at the Mack and Angell schools. The play groups begin tomorrow and last from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. They will be held five days a week for eight weeks. Mothers must present a statement from their physicians concerning the fitness of their child's physical condi- tion. Trained teachers will be assisted by the mothers. Those mothers un- able to assist will pay a higher fee. The program of mother assistance was carried on during the past year by the Ann Arbor Cooperative Nursery Group and was found beneficial not only to the children who learn to play together under supervision but also to the mothers who found it helpful in studying the newer method in child care and child management. Traditional June weddings and en- gagements have filled commencement1 week and the days following. The Ethel Fountain Hussey lounge in the League was the scene of the nuptials of Ann Elisabeth Mitchell '35, daughter of Prof. and Mrs. Elmer Dayton Mitchell, and Robert Grim- shaw Dailey, '37E, of Akron, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hunt Dailey of Allentown, O. The ceremony was held Saturday, June 10, and was officiated by Dr. Leonard A. Parr of the First Congregational Church. Matron of honor was Mrs. Jerome W. Eberts of Detroit and bridesmaids, Joanna Dailey, sister of the bridegroom, and Mary B. Johnson of Ann Arbor. Mar- tha Rasch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rasch, cousin of the bride, was flower girl. Best man was Paul Con- aty Roche of- Old Lynne, Conn. A reception in the Grand Rapids room of the League followed the ceremony. Miss Mitchell is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Mr. Dailey is affiliated with Psi Upsilon. The engagement of Laura Jane Zimmerman, '36, daughter of Mrs. Edward Zimmerman of Ludington, to Thomas A. Andersen of Detroit was announced Sunday, June 11 at a breakfast in the alcove of the Rus- sian Tea Room of the League. No date has been set for the wedding. Miss Zimmerman served as treas- urer of the League while in the Uni- versity and is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi and Pi Lambda Theta. Mr. Andersen, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Andersen, attended Wayne University. A luncheon at the Barton Hills Country Club Friday, June 16, was the scene of the announcement of the engagement of Elizabeth Hunt- ington, '39, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George B. Huntington, to Robert James Beuhler, '39E, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman R. Beuhler, of Ann Arbor. Miss Huntington, who re- ceived her diploma last week, is affili- ated with Alpha Phi and Mr. Beuhler is a member of Zeta Psi. The lun- cheon was given by Miss Hunting- ton. Commencement Day Weddings Commencement day was chosen as their wedding date by four former University students. At 4 p.m. Jean Alicia Seeley, '37, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dana E. Seeley was married to Vaughan William Greene of Flint. The bride was president of the League Council, a member of Kappa Alpha Theta and Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music sorority. After re- ceiving her diploma in 1937, she con- tinued her studies in the School of Music. Ann Timmons of Detrot was maid of honor to the bride' and brides- maids were Kathleen Mead of Bir- mingham, Nancy Averill of Racine, Wis., Betty Little of Detroit, and Mrs. A. Jackson Day and Margaret Cowie of Ann Arbor. Mr. Seeley's father was best man. A reception at the Seeley residence followed the ceremony. Dorothy Louise Novy who received her Master of Science degree from the University last week was married to Russell Everett Wilson, '39, of Grand Rapids on June 17. Miss Novy, who lived at Martha Cook Building during her senior year on campus, is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Novy of Detroit. After a summer in the South Mr. and Mrs. Wilson will return to Ann Arbor where Mr. Wil- son will-teach at Tappan Junior High School. Of great interest to the forestry school was the wedding June 17 of Lillian Starrett, '39F&C, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Starrett of Ann Arbor, to Frank C. Becker, Jr., '39F&C, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Becker of Columbus, 0. Miss Star- rett was the first woman ever to receive a degree in forestry at the University. The ceremonies were held in the gardens of Mrs. Frank N. Blanchard on Geddes Road. Matron of honor was the sister of the bride, Mrs. Rachel W. Milleer of Cleveland and maid of honor Florence Hanz of Cleveland. Mr. Becker's brother James was best man. A reception in the garden followed the wedding ceremony. Carney-Briscoe Nuptials The League Chapel was the scene of the nuptials on Sunday, June 18, of Dorothy Ann Briscoe, '37, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Briscoe of Trenton, and Dr. Robert G. Carney, (Continued on Page 9) R'wwtd tbe J'urnmeA 6&LC& in &tAsRrrnz-2ide c~aEtfee.6 frnm &d2iru , .Rfapi I. DRESSES For All Occasions Cottons, Ginghams Dotted Swiss, Spun Rayons, Washable Silks p Size 11 to 17-12 to 42. $4.00 to $19.95 I' PLAY CLOTHES Opportunities for German students to speak and understand the German language are being offered this sum- mer by the newly organized Deutsches Haus. The Deutsches Haus, located in the Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity house at 1315 Hill St., offers room accomnodations for 18 men students and eating facilities for both men and women students. Members of the German faculty will be present at the meals. The house will be the center of extracurricular programs supplementing classwork in German and will be the meeting place of the, Summer German Club. The Deutsches Haus, presented this year for the first time, is an out- growth of the Summer German Table. Language teachers for many years recognized the need for bring- ing their students together for spe- cialized training and practice in the spoken language, according to Dr. Otto G. Graf, of the German depart- ment, director of the house. As a result of frequent requests of high school teachers,.a German Table' was established during the 1936 Summer Session and continued dur- ing the 1937 and 1938 sessions. Meals were served a group forming the Ger- man Club of the Summer Session and the club together with the 9erman department served as the center for special entertainments and social activities, climaxed by a banquet at the end of the session. Through the efforts of Dr. Graf and assisted by Dr. Walter A. Reich- art of the German department, the Deutsches Haus was organized for the 1939 Summer Session. The Alpha Sigma Phi House was taken over for the summer and through an arrange- ment with the Dean of Men and Dean of Women, room accommoda- tions for. men and eating facilities for men and women have been made possible. Meals will be served six days a, week and members of the German faculty and graduate stu- dents of German will guide the con- versation at the table and conduct a social hour after dinner. The social program for the summer for the members of the Deutsches Haus and members of the German Club includes a faculty reception for residents of the house, excursion, picnic, visiting lecturer, evening of musical -entertainment and a final banquet at the end of the Summer Session. Application for room accommoda- tions should be in by Saturday, July 1, and reservations for meals must be made in advance according to Dr. Graf. All interested should contact him. The German Club which will hold its meetings at the Deutsches Haus is open to all students, faculty mem- bers and others interested in the German language. Ix V?7: Plays Suits, Slack Suits, Sport Shirts $1.95 - $5.95 4 Swim Suits, * **C*O*L*LINS * * 4' Liberty at Maynard Spend Your Summer in Carefree Clothes! Puzzled about assemblng your Summer Wardrobe on a budget? fp'Whether your plans in clude a vacation - a trig to the Fair-week-ends a the lake or being on th campus-we have a gran collection of Carefre Clothes for you. Do come in and let u suggest what you need. We know our easily af- fordable prices will pleas you. +- Sketched at left: A Sophie Wagner model of exquisitely sheer non-crush voile . . . at $10.95 (Other Cottons from $3.95) E- p t le d e s .e I '1I 1