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Show iUSAC Summer Session ! iTo Begin Next Monday Plans for the opening of the 1941 Summer Session at Utah State Agricultural college next j week advanced Tuesday with the announcement by college summer session officials that registration would be held on Monday, beginning begin-ning at , 8 a.m., and continuing until 3:30 p.m. Students not registering reg-istering completely on Monday may do so Tuesday afternoon frim 1 p".m., to 5 p.m. Regular cla-sses get under way Tuesday morning to officially open the session but the fifteenth annual an-nual Summer School for Coaches directed by E. L. "Dick" Romney will begin Monday at 8 a.m. The popular Cox will give basketball instruction. Monday morning with Phaun-hnessy giving his initial football foot-ball lessons in the afternoon. Shaughnessy will revert to the morning and Cox to the afternoon during the remainder of the five-day five-day school. During the entire six weeks of the summer session classes will begin be-gin at 7 ajn., followed with classes clas-ses at 8, 9, and 10 a. m., each morning with the afternoon classes clas-ses being held from 1 pjn., to 5 p.m. At 11 a. m., no regular classes clas-ses are scheduled which will allow al-low all students to attend the daily one-hour lecture series. Governor Gov-ernor Herbert B. Maw will give the opening lecture Tuesday at 11 a. m., speaking on his staU reorganization program. Other special lecturers the first week are Dr. John L. Child, professor pro-fessor of education at Teacheri college, Columbia University; Dr. Paul J. Mlsned, superintendent ot schools at ' Glencoe, Illinois, and Dr. Mandel Sherman, professor of etfQcationar psychology at th University of Chicago. . . ... Appearing during the second, week the lecture hour is , . Dr. S. W. Chan, a member of the school of letters at Stanford university, who will give ' all five lectures during the wek. He . Will speak on "The Chinese Drama," "Chinese Poetry," and China's attempts at Modernization." A conference on curriculum building in elementary education which is to be directed by Dr. E. A. Jacobsen, dean of the school of education, nad eJnnie Campbell Camp-bell of Salt Lake City, director of elementary education in the state department of education, will begin with the poenlng of the session ses-sion and last the first three weeks of the session. To be held the first three weeks also will be a course In . "Driver Education and Traffic Safety" under the supervision of H. S. Carter, Car-ter, professor of civil engineering at the college. Two added features of the session ses-sion will come later during the month, an English Teachers' con- ference from June 16 to 20 and the "Family Life Institute" June 24 to 27 inclusive. Dr. Robert C. Pooley, president of the National Nat-ional Council of Teachers of English Eng-lish and Professor of English at University of Wisconsin, will direct di-rect the English Teachers' conference, con-ference, and Dr. Mark L. Entorf, specialist in family life problems and child development at Cornell university, will direct the Institute. Insti-tute. - |