THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. All Notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the umaer session bfore 3:30 pm. of the day preceding its publication except on Saturday, when the notices should be submitted before 11:30 a.m. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: Sunday, 8:00 aim. Holy Communion; 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Ser- mon by The Rev. Henry Lewis; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten, Church House; 3:00 p.m. cars will leave Harris Hall for the Cranbrook Foundation, Bloomfield Hills. After the tour there will be supper and swimming at a nearby lake. Please make reserva- tions and please note the time, 3 p.m. Zion Lutheran Church, E. Wash- ington St. at S. Fifth Ave. Church Worship Services at 10:30 with ser- mon on "The, Church and Children" by Mr. Roland Weideranders. Trinity Lutheran: Church, E. Wil- liam St. at S. Fifth Ave. Church Worship Services at 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. with sermons by Rev. Henry 0. Yoder on "Faith's Trium- phant Declarations." Lutheran Student Association meet- ing at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington St. at 5:30. Supper at ¢:00. Program of the evening will be- gin at 6:45 with a talk by Mr. Ken- neth Morgan of the Student Religious Association. First Congregational Church, State and William Sts. Dr. Leonard A. Parr, Minister. Director of Music and Organist, Mrs. Mary McCall Stubbins. Services of Public Worship at 10:45 a.m. Sunday. Sermon: "Do You Wear Sackcloth." The Michigan Christian Fellow- ship invites all summer school stu- dents to an hour of fellowship on Sunday afternoon, July 20, at 4:301 in Lane Hall. Mr. Harold DeVries will speak and Misses Josephine Bak- er and Gertrude Van Zee will have charge of the tea. Unitarian Church, State and Hur- on'Sts. Sunday, 11 a.m. "Freedom's Blackout in Central Europe." Rev. Leona Handler of the Western Uni- tarian Conference in Chicago, re- cently returned from preaching in the Free Churches of Hungary. 7:30 p.m. Round Table. Miss Hand- ler will speak on "Women in the New World." First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: "Life." . Sunday School at 11:45. Summer Session Church School, 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship and Holy Com- munion, 10:45 a.m. Sermon "The Sense of God' by Dr. W P. Lemon. Sunday Evening Vespers, 6:00 p.m. supper; 6:45 p.m. discussion on "How Doe God Speak to Us?" led by the Minister. First Methodist Church. Student Class at ,9:45 a.m. in the Wesley Foundation Assembly Room. Prof. Kenneth Hance of the Speech De- partment will continue the discus- sion on "Thechurch of Tomorrow." Morning Worship at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. Charles W. Brashares will preach on "Toward Christian Peace." Wesley- an Guild meeting at 6 p.m. beginning with fellowship and supper. At 6:30 Dr. Brashares and students will lead the discussion on the theme of the morning's sermon. First Baptist Chuirch, 512 East Huron. C. H. Loucks, Minister. 10:15. The Church at Study. There are classes for all ages. The Pastor's Class for students will discuss "The Idea of Fellowship With God" in Dr. Fosdick's "A Guide to Understanding the Bible." 11:00. The Church at Worship.l Sermon: "If a Man Die." An activ- ity program is provided for the Kin- dergarten and Primary Children dur- ing this hour so that the whole fam- ily may come at 10:15 and go home together at 12:00.1 6:15. The Roger Williams Guild1 will present the colored motion pic- ure "Chaff" which describes the Christian work being done amongr the "migrant workers" in our coun- try. The meeting will be open to all who are interested. It will be held in the Guild House, 503 East Huron. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church:i 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 11:00x a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by The Rev. Henry Lewis; 11:00 a.m.f KindergartenrChurchsHouse; 3:00 O5.m. Cars will leave Harris Hall for the Cranbrook Foundation, Bloom- field Hills. After the tour there will be supper and swimming at a near-t by lake.\ Please make reservationsa and please note the time, 3 p.m. Square Dancing classes held under the supervision of Mr. B. Lovett willr meet Monday evening from 7:30 un- til 9:00. All those planning to par-! ticipate must arrive before 8:00. Ad- - mission is free. Come with or with- out partners. Excursion No. 5-Greenfield Vil- lage. Visit to Ford's Village, museums of early American life, Edison's Men- lo Park Laboratory; the Dearborn Inn. Round trip by special bus. Res- ervations in Summer Session office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 5:45 p.m., Ann Arbor. Students, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Students whose records carry reports of I or X either from last.-semester or (if they have not been in residence since that time) from any former session, will receive grades of E unless the work is com- pleted by July 30th. Petitions for ex- tensions of time, with the written approval of the instructors concerned, should be addressed to the Adminis- trative Bord of the College, and presented at Room 4 University Hall, before July 30th. Student Graduation Recital: Bur- ton Page, Pianist, will present a re- cital in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the Bachelor of Music degree at 8:30 p.m., Monday, July 21, in the School of Music Auditorium. Mr. Page is a student of Prof. Joseph Brinkman. This recital is open to the general public. Lectures on French Music: Mr. Per- cival Price, Professor of Composition and University Carillonneur, will give a series of three lectures with records on French music. In the first lec- hir P~naen T in 1A11 +1s _ Hill Auditorium. They will be ac- companied by John Kollen and Joseph Brinkman, Pianists, also of the School of Music Faculty. This recital will be open to the general public, ure roessor Price will talk on "Early French Music of the Jon- Carillon Recital: Percival Price, gleurs and the Troubadours.'I University Carillonneur, will present These lectures, which will be given a program composed entirely of works in English and are open to all stu- of Mozart from 7:15 to 8:00 p.m. dents and Faculty members interest- Sunday, July 20 in the Burton Me- ed, are to take place in Room 202, morial Tower. Burton Memorial Tower on Monday, July 21, Monday, August 4 and on Concert, High School Clinic Band: Monday, August 18, respectively at The University of Michigan 1941 High 4:10 p.m. School Clinic Band of 147 pieces will The lectures are sponsored by The present a concert at 4:15 p.m., Sun- Department of Romance Languages, day, July 20, at Hill Auditorium. Mr. Mark Hindsley, who is Assistant Con- Seniors: Colle of L.S.&A. and ductor of the University of Illinois Schools of Education and Music: Ten- Bands, will be the guest conductor. tative lists of seniors for August Although this performance will be graduation have been posted on the complimentary to the general public, bulletin board in Room 4, University small children will not be admitted Hall. for obvious reasons.1 Dancing Staff To Give Time For Coaching Preceding the fourth of the weekly square dancing classes, which will convene from 7:30 to 9 p.m. tomorrow, in the League Ballroom, Benjamin Lovett, instructor of the course, will meet students interested in special coaching in the dance at 4 p.m. in the ballroom. This will be an opportunity for students who wish more personalized training in country dancing to secure the same, or to brush up on steps they might have missed in the classes. The regular class, which is free to all members of the Summer Session through the generosity of Henry Ford, is led by Lovett and a staff of assist- ants, all from the Edison Institute at Greenfield Village. Mary Neafie, '42, chairman and her assistant, Alice Pearl Kramer, '41, have announced that due to the lar ge numbers who have taken advantage of this opportunity-more than 325 attending last week-those arriving after 8 p.m. will not be permitted to enter the dancing. For comfort, this is the one social function of the Sum- mer Session at which 'participants are urged to wear sports clothes and low heels. Value of the course, stressed by Ford in his campaign to revive this type of dancing, lies in the social training which it fosters. In an edu- cational system in which this is so badly needed, he stresses, the classes shoud prove useful to those planning to teach. Sunday at the Wol0veirine 209 SOUTH STATE Celery Hearts Garden Radishes Ripe Olives. Chilled Tomato Juice, Florida Grapefruit Juice or Cream of Tomato Soup Roast Stuffed Milkfed Chicken with Cranberry Sauce, or Broiled Sirloin Steak with Fresh Mushroom Sauce, or L Special Cold Plate French Fried or Whipped in Cream Potatoes Corn on the Cob or Creamed Asparagus Head Lettuce and Tomato or Fruit Salad with Whipped Cream Parker House Rolls or Homemade Bread Special Brick Ice Cream Coffee Tea Milk Punch Guest Price 57c SERVING HOURS: 12:15 to 2:00 P.M. "You Can't Take It With You:" On Monday, July 21 at 8:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the University High School, the Department of Speech will open its Secondary School The- ater with the presentation of "You Can't Take It With You." Students in the School of Education, The De- partment of English, the Department of Speech, and season ticket-holders for the plays of the MichigantReper- tory Players are invited to attend as guests of the Speech Department. Others interested in the educational aspect of secondary school dramatics may secure permission to attend by' calling the Speech office, 526. Enid Szantho, Contralto and Arthur Hackett, Tenor, members of the Sum- mer Session Faculty of the School of Music, will present a joint recital at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, July 22, in the Graduate Students in Speech: A graduate symposium in Public Speak- ing and Interpretation will be held at 4 p.m. Monday, July 21, in the West Lounge ofsthe Rackham Building. All graduate students are urged to at- tend. Graduate Outing Club will meet in rear of the Rackham Building on Sunday, July 20 at 2:15 p.m. Note change of time. A trip to Clear Lake is planned, including swimming, horseshoes, and softball, followed by an outdoor supper. Those having cars are urged to bring them; an allowance is given for transportation furnished. All graduate students, faculty, and alumni are welcome. 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