THE MICHIGAN DAILY League Offers Varied Social Events for Summer Sessior * * ,- * ** * * Lessons Slated for Ballroom, Square Dancing; Bridge Instruction, Tournaments Also Planned Bronze Bust of AlICe C. Lloyd Will Be Presented to University Sculptress from Israel Is Carving Memorial To Be Placed in New Women's Dormitory Winter or summer, the Women's Square dancing lessons areI League, coed mecca for student generations, is one busiest places on campus. many of the An extensive social program will provide entertainment for men' and women students every night of the week during the summer, session. * * * ACTIVITIES will include social and square dancing, and lessons in dancing and bridge. The Lea- gue Library will also be open, as well as the Grand. Rapids Room for informal get-togethers. Stag or drag, students may dance to music sent, out by the new Musicon sound system from 9 p.m. to midnight every Friday and Saturday in the League Ballroom beginning this Friday. Admission is 30 cents per person. slated for Mondays from 7:30 to p.m. Mrs. Val Moffit will teach the lessons which began Monday. Tickets for the series are priced at $1.50, while single lessons are 40 cents. * * * JOHN LEKAS, Arthur Murray instructor, will teach the social dancing classes which meet on Tuesdays, beginning yesterday.. Beginning classes are held from 7 to 8 p.m., while advan- ced dancers will assemble from League Council League Council members will hold office hours from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri- day throughout the summer session in the Undergraduate Office of the League. C ( t> C C) t ) t .t )WG ) 'CAT C H S4 REPAIRING HALLER'S JEWELERS 717 North University near Hill Auditorium ac - .ac- >--oo <-mosso= ~c tc cc < --->oc- cic o Ca4,2're i' 8 to 9 p.m. Men may purchase season tickets for $2.50. Women will be admitted free of charge. Wednesday evenings will find the bridge lessons in full swing. They begin tonight for a six week; period.s THE CLASS will be split into beginning and advanced groups at the 7 p.m. meeting today. After the first meeting, beginners will gather at 7 p.m. and advanced players will take over at 8:30 p.m. Tickets for the series are $3. > Duplicate bridge tournamentsr will be held tomorrow evening and will continue to be held at 7:30 p.m. each Thrsday. Sin- gle lessons are priced at 50 cents. Master point night will take place on the second Thursday of every month. Those who wish more information about the duplicate bridge tournaments may call Miss Hilda Heusel, 5869. RECREATIONAL facilities in the Grand Rapids Room include a television set, piano, juke box and ping pong table. The air conditioned Legue Library offers a comfortable place for women to study. Men are not allowed in the Library. It is open weekdays from 1 to 5:30 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. Sun- day hours are from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. Miss Ethel A. McCormick is social director of the League, as- sisted by Mrs. Richard Bynum. Summer Sport Classes Open To AllCoeds Registration is still open for co- recreational and coed sports in- struction, Dr. Laurie E. Campbell, Acting Chairman of the Women's Physical Education Department, has announced. Women students who wish to learn new sports\ techniques or brush up on old ones may register from 8 a.m. until noon and from 1 to 4:30 p.m. in Office 15, Bar- bour Gymnasium. Co-recreational sports which are being offered are riding, ten- nis, American country dancing and modern dancing. Sports open to women only are swimming and golf. Coeds who do not know how to swim are especially urged by the Department to enroll in the beginning swimming classes. Approximately 400 w ome n usually take part in the summer physical education courses, Dr. Campbell said, compared to more than 1,000 during the regular school year. Small sports equipment such as tennis rackets, bats, balls, and golf clubs may be rented at a nom- inal fee at the Women's Athletic Building. Wrinle-Proof Travel-wise women will select fabrics which do not wrinkle easily, such as jersey in silk, ra- yon, cotton, nylon or wool. Many fabrics are tagged to indicate wrinkle-shedding features. I you are aiwa just SEE THE LATES 1. RADIO-PHOI 2. TELEVISION 3. RECORDS, se 4. STRINGED I 5. RADIO andI MARRIES PROFESSOR-Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gabourie of Grand Rapids have announced the marriage of their daughter, Jacquelyne, to Professor Morris Greenhut. Mrs. Greenhut was graduated from the University in June, 1949. Professor Greenhut is on the staff of the English department. The couple is living at 1017 Vaughn St. A bronze bust of Alice Crocker Lloyd, Dean of Women here for 20 years until her death in March, is being presented to the University by her former co-workers. The bust will be placed in Lloyd Hall, the new women's dormitory which was named in her honor. * * * SCULPTRESS for the project, in remembrance of the Dean, is Mrs. Ellen Colmar Bernkopf from Is- rael. Mrs. Bernkopf is working from a collection of. photographs of Dean Lloyd. The bust is still in the begin- ning stages. Although Mrs. Bernkopf has in- terviewed several of Dean' Lloyd's friends and has studied her speeches to find a clearer picture of her, she said that it is difficult to create in sculpture a person she has never met or seen. MRS. BERNKOPF came to Ann Arbor two years ago when her husband, Dr. H. Bernkopf, left the University of Jerusalem, to do vi- rus research at the University. He has just returned to Israel, but Mrs. Bernkopf is staying to com- plete the bust. At the age of five Mrs. Bern- kopf became interested in sculp. turing. She was born in Han- over, Germany and studied in Berlin and later in Paris and Italy. Most of her work has been done in Jerusalem and Europe, she said. After her marriage she moved to Israel with her husband, where she lived for ten years. She has a 10-year-old daughter. "I AM GLAD to be able to leave something here because I like Ann Arbor so much," Mrs. Bernkopf said. "The abundance of trees and foliage, Burton Tower and the other buildings, the people and the life in general here all fas- cinate me," she added. Associate Dean of Women Mary Bromage is directing the project. Other committee members are Mrs. Leona Diekema, Martha Cook director; Mrs. Frederick Klein, director of Mosher; and Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social director of the League. * * * OTHERS ARE: Mrs. Boaler Rowles, director of Collegiate Sor- osis; Mrs. Pauline Elliott, an un- dergraduate League house direc- tor; and Mrs. A. W. Baker, a grad- uate League house director. This committee represents res- Contrasting colors and fabrics are high style now - which means that your slacks or culottes can go with the coat from your suit. The fashion-wise coed will coor- dinate her clothes by selecting two or three colors that will blend or contrast well. Often some drama- tic or subtle accessory will en- hance the color scheme. ident staff members who work. ed with Dean Lloyd in former years. Lynn Fry, supervising architect for the University, worked with the committee in selecting the Lloyd Hall location. Upon completion, the bust will be presented to the Board of Re- gents as an official gift to the University. International Center - T weekly tea will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Cent Miss Genoveva 0. Deleon will the hostess. * # * House Presidents-Presidents women's residences will meet a p.m. tomorrow in the League. 'I room number will be posted. ., Welcomle to Michigan We specialize in 00 Short Cuts Personality Styles for your comfort " Fan-cooled Shop aNooWaiting * 7 Barbers The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty off State ROa DaC== =i=>0 fi= STUDENT SUPPLIES IT'S BEEN REAL.. . I 'Those Who Know' Discuss Etiquette of Saying Good-bye Reference Books Fiction for Summer Reading SPECIAL ORDERS IN SMOOTH WHITE LEATHER Sizes to 91/2 -AAAA to B "Don't just stand there, go home!" say authorities on the leave-taking etiquette. Leave-taking, they claim, may add an awkward note to an other- wise pleasant visit unless handled with the proper social grace. Learning to say good-bye quick- ly and with ease willemake a guest instantlyappreciated by his hosts. It will also be to the guest's advantage, the latest reportssim- ply, if he has a plentiful supply of simply hysterical stories to re- late half an hour before he leaves. MRS. AGNES ROGERS ALLEN, a noted hostess, states that the guest should wait for a pause in the conversation - that alone re- quires more social finesse than many people possess - and then start a little story. As the guest is relating his tale, he is to rise from his chair, walk over to his hostess, and come to the climax of the story as he stands beside her. Just when she thinks that he has something urgent to tell her, and her alone, he puts out his hand, says good-bye, and leaves. * * * THIS TECHNIQUE is guaran- teed to make a lasting impression on any host or hostess. Married couples have a much easier time of it. They merely arrange a quiet high sign, per- haps a wave of the hand or a coded phrase. This fact will be good news to wives who are attached to men who think a high sign consists of standing up and screaming, "Dear, when can we go home?" * * * ACCORDING TO authorities on the subject, the secret is in fast timing. A good guest never makes ex- cuses, since a legitimate excuse makes a host feel unimportant, and a weak one leaves him standing at the door babbling inanely. Once the guest has said good- bye, he is not to bring up any new topics of conversation. This may niean leaving the hostess with a spider crawling up her back, but none the less, an ideal guest will save his conversation for the next time. ANOTHER NOTED authority has set definite times for leaving specific gatherings. Two and one half hours is the longest period of time that guests should remain for a par- ty, and this length is the ex- ception rather than the rule. Consequently, if the hostess sees a guest get up and leave in the middle of a sentence, she is not to be indignant, but should realize that he is only abiding by the latest rules of etiquette. We are living in an ever-chang- ing society. Read and Use Daily Classifieds LAW MEDICAL PUBLIC HEALTH Color Contrast 0 ye rbeck Bookstore 1216 South University no" $6 95 VAN BOVEN SHOES ---------- 17 Nickels Arcade 1 f a APPETIZING, ECONOMICAL MAN-SIZED MEAL EVERY NOON' COMPLETE LUNCH . . 3 EVERY NIGHT COMPLETE DINNER . c OUTDOOR ART CLASS PAINTING - DRAWING FOR BEGINNERS 6 weeks-$12. . . Sat. 10-12 Ph. 3-0425 - B. Enfield I BELLE-SHARMEERS Regularly 1.50 to 1.95 1.30 to 1.65 SAVE during this one-week-only selling of famous Belle-Sarmeer nylons, your favorite leg-sized hosiery. Take advantage of this unique opportunity to stock up on your summer and fall nylon wardrobe. There's Gay Touch, Cool Beige, Seofoam, Neutrone, Bayou and Tower Taupe, all flattering shades for now and later. You'll want to buy them by the box for greater value for yourself; for gifts, too. 11