THE MICHIGAN DAILY Benjamin.. Lovett Instructs Students In Square Dancing Art Benjamin B. Lovett, instructor in support to the revival of the old-time' square and country dancing in the dances. social activities department of Edi- Honorary member of the New York son Institute in Dearborn, comes to Society of Teachers of Dancing, Mr. the University campus for the third Lovett goes to various educational summer as one of the foremost auth-- BENJAMIN B. LOVETT institutions and normal schools to offer instruction to teachers. He is former president of the International Dancing Teachers Association. Scope of Mr. Lovett's work is broad. "I guess I teach every branch of dancing but adagio," he asserts. Phys- ical education departments of 32 col- leges have featured his square danc- ing classes. At the present time, with a staff of 14 assistants, the master gives instruction eight hours daily, five days a week. During a portion of the year he travels south with Mr. Ford teaching in the schools in that area for a time. When in that region he gives two demonstrations daily at the Ways School in Georgia. The classes given free to Summer Session students each year, through the courtesy of Henry Ford, take place in the ballroom of the Michi- gan League. Second meeting of the present series was held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. yesterday, with over 200 in attendance. Weather Soars School Of Educat To Extremes Roundtable I At M t. Pleasant Yesterday afternoon the School of Education held their first of a series of educational roundtable discus- Central Michigan School sions in the University Elementary OpensSummr Se~iORand High Schools. . Opens Summer Session The schedule for today is: Round- For Education Students table 1. "The Teacher's Mental Health. Raymond Fisher, Assistant By HENRY SMITH professor of education, Oberlin Col- (Special to The Daily) lege (1203 UHS). Roundtable 2. MT. PLEASANT.-With the tem- "Place of Adult Education in National perature hovering near the 95 degree Defense," Betty Eckhardt May, visit- ing lecturer in Sociology and Adult mark, summer students of the Cen- Education, University of Minnesota tral Micigan College of Education (1430 UES). Roundtable 3, "Issues in spent Monday, June 30, enrolling for the Financing of Education," Arthur the six weeks course offered by the B. Moehlman, professor of school ad- school. From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. the ministration and supervision (UHS auditorium. Roundtable 4: "The halls of Warriner Hall, the admin- School System's Responsibility for istration building, were filled with Out-of School Youth," George E. My- students engaged in the activities of ers, professor of vocational education filling out cards and paying tuition and Guidance (1426 UES). and fees. On Tuesday morning, July Olson To Head Roundtable 1, classes began in the various build- Roundtable 5: "Growth, Feeling ings about the campus. and Human Relations," Willard C. The summer session is divided into Olson, professor of education and two sections. The graduate division director of research in child develop- is carried on in cooperation with the ment (1021 UHS). Roundtable 6: Horace H. Rackham School of Grad- "Types of Group-Psychological At- uate Studies of the University of mosphere and Problems of Classroom Michigan while the undergraduate Teaching," Fritz Red, lecturer in edu- division is the second division., cation (4001 UHS). Roundtable 7: The graduate school has two visit- "Responsibilities of the Teacher of ing faculty members. Both of the the Social Studies in the Present non-resident members are from the University of Michigan. Prof. Har- old Dorr is an associate professor in New York Claims the political science department att the University and will act as an in- Title As Fashione structor of political science on Cen- Cen 'Ofld tral's campus. Professor Dorr has an Centerr A.B. degree and a Ph.D. degree. George Meyer, an assistant professor NEW YORK, July 7.-()-New of psychology at the University, will York City proclaimed itself today to teach psychology. Professor Meyer be the successor-on merit-to Paris also has an A.B. degree and a Ph.D. degree as well as a M.A. degree. as the world's fashion center. The graduate school of the Cen- The price means nothing. You tral Michigan College originated in a can get a day frock for $1.95 or an formal request from the State Board evening gown for $295. of Education which was passed as a In ceremonies at City Hall mark- resolution of the Board of Regents ing the sewing of the first "New of the University of Michigan. The York creation" labels in 20 dresses request was that the University co- operate with four Michigan teachers designed for the fall trade, Mayor college in planning a graduate pro- F. H. LaGuardia declared triumph- gram of instruction. As a result of antly: the resolution passed by the Board a "New York has assumed the lead- graduate division has been set up. ership because the creative talent is here, the skill and mechanical talent is here and there are more women a lI e r a i g i our country wearing pretty clothes ad In necreating hanroan thnin any other country of the r " " "world. New York City i the fashion Lilpatrick Claims center of the world from now on. "For a long, long time it was be- lieved that a dress, in order to be "If only we can agree to support fashionable, had to be designed in law and order, really agree and really Paris. That is not true." mean it-that will itself bring law Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who and order," he concluded. participated in the ceremonies, said Three other prominent educators it was necessary to have a public gav spechs o wecom atthewith taste in order to promote a gave speeches of welcome at the fashion center, and she credited the opening session of the conference. WPA with elevating the country's President Alexander G. Ruthven, taste. John W. Studebaker and Carleton__ _ _ _ _ _ Washburne gave welcome addresses, and responses were made by John G. Althouse of the University of Toronto. Ty p write Gustavo Adolfo Otero, Bolivian Min- ister of Education, and Luis Sanchez Office and Portable Models Ponton, Minister of Education in Mexico. Harold Rugg of Teachers o all leading makes College, Columbia University, was chairman at the session. Bought, Sold, During the opening session a Union Rented, Exchanged, Jack was presented to the University Cleaned, Repaired 4 by the Canadian delegation. Dean Clarence Yoakum accepted the flag One of the largest and best in the name of the University. stocks in the State. Wakefield Gets Two Hits Dick Wakefield, the University's Q . D . M orrill sophomore outfielder for whom the Deetroit Tigers paid a more than 314 South State St. $40,000 bonus last month, got two The Typewriter & Stationery Store hits in four trips to the plate yester- i n (opposite Kresge's) day as the Tigers defeated Saginaw Since 1908 Phone 6615 NOW PLAYING Mats. 25c - Nights 40c, incl. tax D ME ROthERT CN ALSO CARTOON - TRAVEL - NEWS ion To Sponsor Discussion Series Emergency," 0. W. Stephenson. asso- ciate professor of the teaching of his- tory, and head of the department of social studies in the University High School (1022 UHS). Roundtable 8, "Arihtmetic Readiness." Clifford Woody, professor of Education and director of bureau of educational re- ference and research (2015 UHS). Tomorrow: Roundtable 1: "Tech- niques of Diagnostic and Remedial Reading (class period) Irving H. An- derson, assistant professor of educa- tion (4009 UHS). Roundtable 2: "Par- ent Education as a State Responsibil- ity," William E. Blatz, professor of child psychology and director of the institute of child study, University of Toronto (UHS Aud.). Roundtable 3: "The Language Arts and the Dem- ocratic Way of Life," Fred S. Dun- ham, associate professor of Latin in the University High School (1202 UHS). Eggertsen To Lead Discussion Roundtable 4: "The Effect of World War I on American Education," Claude Eggertsen, instructor in the history of education (4001 UHS). Roundtable 5, "The Role of the High School in an Organized Community," Harlan C. Koch, professor of educa- tion and assistant director of the Bureau of Cooperation with Educa- tional Institutions (2015 UHS). Round table 6: "Mental Health in the Class- room-The Thirteenth Yearbook of the Department of Supervisors and Directors N.E.A.," Rudolph Lind- Two Floors is I Get into the Teachers Must Le World Order, K Stressing the responsibility of the teacher in recreating an international order after war, Prof. William H. Kilpatrick of Teachers College, Col- umbia, charged 2,000 educators at the opening session of the confer- ence Sunday with spreading the les- son of a common moral responsibil- ity. It is the duty of the teacher, he said, to proclaim the three moral con- cepts necessary for a world of peace -regard for others, justice or the ethical equality of treatment and the acceptance of responsibility for the common good. The burden must be borne by the United States more than any other nation. We must cultivate intimate and friendly relationship on an ever widening scale. In the past, Prof. Kilpatrick charged, this country has been neg- ligent in carrying its share of inter- national duty. He cited our relations with the League of Nations, the way in which we built the Panama Canal, and certain commercial relations with nations to the south. It is proving a moral strain on the individual nations to move from their merely self-centered view of regard only for themselves to the more ade- quate view of cooperation for the common good of all. "But the very existence of a decent civilization de- mands that we make this moral ad- vance." If we cannot be sure of interna- tional law and order, Professor Kil- patrick added, we shall have to re- main armed and equipped at great expense to be ready to repel any at- tack that may at any time come. Swim of things! ., ti.; ' -' , ,- v ) -{ Summer's at its height right now! Vacations are in full swing ... week-end dates roll around like clockwork ... afternoon, swim dates pop up out of everywhere! 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