PAGE S THE MICHIGAN lXLY MONDAY, JTUNE 24, 1940 PAGE SIX MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1940 S Library Hours Are Announced League To Have Books For Lending,. Renting The League Library will be open to women students from 12:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. seven days a week dur- ing the Summer Session, it was pan- nlounced yesterday. The Library, located on the third floor of the League, has a rental collection of current books which may be taken out at the rate of three cents a day, as well as the regular circulating collection taken out for two weeks. Current copies of the New Yorker, Vogue, Made- moiselle, Time, The Readers Digest, The Atlantic Monthly, Good House- keeping, The Saturday Review of Literature and others are available for use in the library, while back numbers may be taken out. The book collection includes mod- ern plays, fiction, biographies, travel and poetry. For Warmth On Reach Snug jackets with attached hood mean warmth on the beach. . .. of cabbages and kings ... Now that you're all through with registering and have all those eight hours (WE recommend taking only two-all work and no play makes Jill a dull girl, etc.' well in hand, you can stop worrying about the scholastic side of the summer until that fateful week in August when finals come. Personally, we just aren't thinking about that week-YET! Anyway, what we're leading up to is that each and every one of you should concentrate on the recreational side of the summer -. - What you are going to do with those long summer days shouldn't bother you a bit. A. A. offers just lots of wonderful things, and you don't even have to look them up yourself. We've investigated all possibilities for you. First, if you're the athletic type or want to get your sweet sixteen figure back, you can go out for some of the physical ed. classes that tle summer session offers. You can choose from Modern Dance, Tap Dancing, Archery, Golf, Riding, Tennis, Swimming and Badminton classes. And in case you want to make it a twosome all these classes except swimming, golf, and tennis are open to both men and women. Take Your Playmates To ... For those who don't want to take special classes but just want to play when they feel like it, there are several excel- lent golf courses around Ann Arbor, also sev- eral very good riding stables. To show off that daring new bathing suit or to get a good tan or just to swim, you can go to Portage Lake (via Dexter), Whitmore Lake, Loch Al- -pine, or Barton Pond, and oh, yes, if you don't have a car you can go to the Union pool for recreational swimming Tuesdays and Thurs- days at 11 in the morning and from 8:30 to 9:30 in the evening. If you're not a sports fan, but still want to be in the sun, out in the open air, reveling in that wonderful (?) A. A. weather, you can always go walking (Arboretum recommended) or get a sturdy beach chair and bask in the sun. The social outlook for the summer ought to make you all sit up and take notice. Friday night a grand reception will be held at the Horace Rackham School. You'll meet everybody from everywhere there and it ought to be :. ! KEEP YOUR HEAD THIS SUMMER... as lovely and as "like-you" as. it is during the other months. You'll admit there's cool comfort in a hair-do that won't allow for straggling ends. You'll also admit that "topnotch" per- fection renders you self-confident in any social whirl. Believe it or not, our hairdressing processes are downright refreshing, even on the warmest days. Come to DiMattia's for your hair-trimming, hair-shaping, permanents, finger-waves, mani- cures and all the best in beauty treatments. 338 South State (above the Parrot) 1133 East Huron I1 Free Sports, Dance Course Are Offered Men's, Women's Lessons Begin Today; Students May Rent Equipment Activity couarses in sports and dancing are to be given to students in the Summer Session free of charge beginning today, Dr. Margaret Bell, chairman of the Department of Phy- sical Education for Women, has an- nounced. Students may register for the courses, which- will be given on a four and six weeks basis, in Room 15 Barbour Gymnasium. Equipment may be rented there for a small fee. Women students may enroll in any of the classes offered, but men stu- dents are limited to seven. The two modern dance classes, archery and riding, which will be given beginning this week, and the badminton, riding and tap dancing classes which are to begin July 8. All women taking the activity courses or playing in the. tourna- ments are required to have a medical check at the University Health Ser- vice before participating, Dr. Bell stated. Tournaments in golf, tennis, arch- ery and badminton will be run dur- ing the summer. Entry blanks for the tourneys will be available this week in the departmental office. The Summer Session faculty of the women's physical education de- partment as announced by Dr. Bell will include Dorothy Beise, instruc- tor in archery, body conditioning and tennis; Marie Hartwig, who will teach golf and tap dancing; Barbara Crowe, swimming instructor; Helen Ellis, modern dance, and Catherine Good, in charge of the riding classes. West Quadrangle, Fletcher Hall Open Among the residence halls open to men students of the Summer Ses- sion will be - the West Quadrangle, which adjoins, the Union. Students in the medical school, and depart- ments of public health and the bio- logical sciences will be taken in at the Victor C. Vaughan .House, which is next to the University Hospital. Fletcher Hall, although giving preference to students entered in the eight-week Summer Session, will be open to all students. Of' YOUh'LL WANT IT AS .O SW4 . . .T0 I I P ON AS YOU SEE IT! 4 2 Lastex For Freedom In Seas Along with all the current hulla- baloo about "freedom of the seas" and the inviolability of the Monroe Doctrine, goes freedom of movement and the Mexican influence in the new summer bathing suit and play- suit styles. For weekends at a cottage on the shores of Lake Huron or Michigan, a "must" for the serious swimmer is an elastic swim suit, designed to assure greater freedom of movement. Combination playsuits and swimn suits, either one or two piece, are more practical for the beach lounger, and can be made just as stunning cis a lastex suit. The dressmaker suit, that erstwhile favorite of the old and infirm, has enjoyed a pre- nomenal rise to popularity among the young fry this season. Matching sbort coats for beach wear are a frequent complement to these suits. Playsuits fit for the tennis court, picnics or canoeing may be either shorts, slacks or skirts with halter tops or shirts. The shorts-and-skirt combination goes very well fLr the particular case of the woman student at the University. "G IMME" Sandal FOR PLAY 0 FOR SPORTS 0 FOR LOAFING fun. Every Friday and Saturday night there will1 League ballroom. You can come with or without partners and it's a swell chance to hook a new man or gal to amuse you this summer. Don't let opportunity knock in vain.! be social evenings in the L i . . -I A1 Be Popular-Learn Dancing If you can't dance and don't want to let thist wonderful chance to secure that life partner go by, join the League dancing classes. They're held f every Tuesday night. Also, every Monday night Square and Country Dancing classes will be held at the League. Learn to do a barn dance gracefully and surprise all your friends when you return home (Really it's lots of fun!). The League gives bridge lessons too. If sports and bridge and dancing don't appeal to you you can turn to the stupendous productions the Repertory players will put on (ADV.). They're giving seven plays, a new one every week, and we have first hand information that they're all going to be good. All smart girls are crying, "Gimme GIMME" . . . It's the coolest, smart- est, comfiest casual shoes made! WHITE! All sizes! Come see it! 3.19'5 m d CEAWH COLLEGIATE SHOE SHOP FASHIONS (r d .. Cadpe6Pee TAKE IT EASY - have fun -and make your summer school a vacation. Live a carefree sum- mer in clothes designed for campus living - for the class- room, lectures, teas, the summer plays and dances at the League, -for picnics and active sports. Choose from our big collec- tion of everything that's new and news this summer for the budget-minded. i N " p W ;\. j.9v v 97c I COTTONS for 'round the ciock hours, from $3.9-5. PRINTS, chiffons, nets and jer- seys, from $7.95. PLAYSUITS and SLACKS, If you are SHORT and Yearn to Walk Taller . . Sit Taller . . . Feel Taller i 1 Wear "HALF-SIZE" It's the WHOLE Foundation Fashion Picture . . . but it's in "Half-Sizes!" Yes, by shrewd manipulation, Half-Size seems to add inches to your height! It has that "soft young look" so desired by mothers and their young count- erparts, and is designed to com- plement their new Half-Size Dresses. Fits with little or no alterations ... for it not only carries your size on the tag, but is styled as you want it-proportioned the way you need it! The TwoWay- OneWay back panel controls with greatest of ease and com- fort. 3 variations of cut and fit to mould 3 basic types of Half- Size Figures! * the short, full-busted in sizes.. *the average in sizes.......... Othe tail, full-thighed in sizes.... Lovett To Open SquareJ Pance SeriesTonight For the third consecutive year, Benjamin B. Lovett of the Dearborn Edison Institute will conduct tonight the first of a series of six square dancing classes to be held at 7:45 p.m. each Monday in the League Ballroom. These dancing classes mark the opening of the League social pro- gram for the 1940 Summer Session and are presented free of charge for the benefit of all students enrolled in the University. The enthusiasm of the partici- pants in the dance last year promp- ted the return engagement of Mr. Lovett who will instruct interested students on the principles of the walk, quadrille formation, badger gavots, waltzes and other variations of basic square dance steps. Last year, Mr. Lovett was originally sche- duled for a series of four lessons but by popular request, the series was extended to six. Because of the large attendance at the square dance lessons, students are urged to come early to eliminate any possibility of being turned away. There will be adequate facilities for those wishing to witness the classes. In cooperation with Mr. Lovett, the Henry Ford Square Dance Or- chestra of Dearborn will again fur- nish the music. The members of this musical organization are selected musicians especially trained for this type of dancing. Crowd Attends League Dance More Than 400 Throng Ballroom Saturday A lively crowd of more than 400 students of the Summer Session in- augurated the League's social pro- gram at this first event of the sea- son held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the League Ballroom. Dancing enthusiasts, ranging in rank from freshmen to graduates, danced to the music of Earl Stevens and his 10-piece band. A feature of the summer dances noted Saturday was the presence of the stag line, which is notably absent from winter dances at the University. Performing the duties of official You Go... Wherever , "I "<.;;;p jc eccoaa 6 b;,:r. ty rY. Yxuo .r -. £ t {.' S. $ t i, '4 -