FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1925 1JAAIiJ, 25*THE ,MICHIGAN DAILY- PAGE °^ l TO EXHIBI1T "8IA9D RAPIDSART WORK I'abta~ngs, TLaidseapes; Miiiatures SIVUI Be Displayed in Al'umiiu Neniorial Hall WILL OPEN MONDAY Flw'e, r paintings, landscapes and iiiniaturca, the work of four Grand Rapilds artists, will be exhibited in the West gallery of Alumni Memorial hal beginning MoTnday, April 5. The col- ledtion is coming here under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art assoc- iation, and will remain through April The artists represented in the 'ex- hibition are-Miss Helen E. Moseley, Miss Blanche McMullen, Miss Helen* Steketee and Mrs. Paul Fredrick Steketee. Miss Moseley's chief interest is ire landscape painting. Her work in that field has attracted favorable comment in recent exhibitions, particularly in Chicago. Miss Moseley studied under Hugh Breckenridge -and Charles W. Hawthorne at Gloucester, Mass., and lhas spent some 'time at the Cape 'Cod colony near Provincetown. "Water, colors comprise Miss Mc- Mu~len's principal 'Interest. Her work is particularly commanding for the effective use of pure water color. The carving of ivory miiniatures is an additional pursuit of the artist, and several of her carved pieces will be~ included in the exhibit. 7Mrs.%Steketee's work is said to have been profoundly influenced bya brief association in California with H-ovsep Pushmnan, the Armenian colorist. She studied at the Cincinnati Museum of Art, as we~ll as 'at Indianapolis, and has exhibited at both places. Mrs.I 'Steke'tee, 'also ,-known for her land - capes, displays decided talent in her flower studies, recognized by their delicacy of design and color. v Tbe exhibit will be open to the public each 'afternoon from 1:30 tor 5~ o'clock on week days, 2 to 5 o'clock Sunday,, and from 7:30 to 9:30 o'clock Thursday night. Students in, the Uni- versit'y and in thlie Ann Arbor pubflcs: schools are admtted fre'e of clta'ge. MEETINSS FILL OAY nr CTATr AiPinii ery," by GeorgeIE. Bigge; "An 'anal- ysis of the industrial relations con- troversy," by J. F. Shreiner; "The Secondl Industrial Conference and Or", settlement .of ibo)r disputes," by S. M. Levin. iI islory, IPoljiil Scenpice The section of history andl political science will li eet at 10 'clckl in room 10(09, Angell ball. The follow- ing papers wlii he lpresented : "A re- classification of wairs.'' by Preston Sloss(,n ; "The ordinance making p)ouers of the French plresident," b~y James Hart. Psycliolo-a - The section of l)sychology will meet at 10 o'clock in room P162, Natural folloews lding. The P5apers are as 'follws: Experimental work on maze learning," by .1. F. Shepard; "Th'a use' of the term 'dynamic' in psychological literature," by C. E. Ragsdale; "The relative dies iraibility of personality traits in social situations," by C. S. Yoakuim; "Preliminary study in rea- a! i a! ..( . s I Whit more TreatsT 'The -Work Of Art' In Fourth Paper * The ( mrni o, I think the review in, the Music and Dramia column was terrible; I am still indignant over it." L~ouise. Barley, '25.-"The play en- tdeavors to maintain too high -a ten- sion, and therefore the first two acts drag. I also agree in part with the review in the Music and Drama col- umnn; I believe large portions of the{ play are 'hokum,' anti its philosophy of the after-life too theatricalI to be sincere. The actin, howiever1, w«u very good." READ THRE CLASSIFIED ADS,, I C ({! l } 1 .C soig IyE .Sag;"h 'i-ception of the relative movements of two points of light," by H. R. May- f berry. Zoology Sections The zoological section will meet at 9 o'clock in room 21355, Natural Sci- ence 'building. The papers are as fol-' lows: "Michigan's conservation fal-. lacy," by A. G. Ruthiven; "The inland lakes," by Paul S. Welch; "The fishes," by C. L. Hubbs and Jan Met- zellar; "The birds a nd mammals," byi L. R. Dice-Symposium--Th~e Zoolog- ical Resoure's' of Michigan. I eiig thefinirtango-i t~lflllllltlllllllll1111ILIII~I~~i191 1119(IltlllilEl~llh 1Qitwork ofdl arC1Dt~llllt tlsa lo< , ' 4. A.JJ .4P. tion of an experienice involving aes- -- Sthetic value and set apart within ,a (A C redo n~r1T~L centain mediumz, Prof. Charles El. C: r L RGE DIXUII ONCER Whitmore, Of thie rhetoric dep'a1- imerit, yecterday continued his Sc'e od's question: What id you Ofesahighly esrbl= ' o leturs o asthtic inAngellI think of "Outward Bound," the Coin-f=- hall. Th le topic for this discuss ion1 edy club production?I= was "The, Work of zArt." "A genuine I ~- w ork of art includes a development Wh ~lere asked: At the Wrhitney the- - OPPORTLI or a differentiation." he stated; "the ;Ater.-- - work of art is a transmitting device ! Te aiswers: Martin Code, Grad., and s ued fr apurose. -~ thnk: Outard oun' i thefin insales work of the highest order to Senior men who wash to make Aesthetic values, Profe sor Whit- Iest production I have ever seen on,,= mere declared, depend on the circumr- the Michigan campus-or ever hope to a permanent business connection. stanco§ of the reccipient.- The recip-,isee. It was thoroughly professional d ient's mind does not work all the in every sense." = TH(~IS g NO' cA Af!' A E ~ for t th she facts he m a bethem selvesa a, '2$ --Tol-t I.wCatherine:Fj l st niM f r aem acsrtem elv sfo - --"T he o O tat-Bou d'is=er a l owing the line of reason, or using his weird, but I fairly lived the play. The COurepentiv wllb inhctyfr two dy onyintihe near imazgination entirely. The values them- production seemed well cast to me, ftr oitriwtoeworpyt hsavrieet selves seem at times to spring fro(=an lthuhthfuuetineve thswh rpytohsadriem t.. -mIadIthuh h final scene was ,:. ~the miedium in which they are. pre- I sented rather than the original mast-IEinrerkable.the onceptinaft T heo=t erriece :of the inventor. Exmnri~h nl al aet Reply by letter, giving name, address, age, telephone, personal refer -- Any definitioni of a literary value rfid.1 = ences, home town, and tell u.s WHY and HOW you expect to succeed q which does not include the aesthetic e GdyBoner '27.-"I thought-levn value is an inadequate theory, Pro- !teprorac f'Outward Bound' afterlevn college.- fessor Whitmore claimed. Moreover, was remarkable, and the audience es- -. over analysis of a literary iaster- pecially appreciative. The etnd" piece nt olydettosonlyecan destroysy bauiflthecdetinechan-'11 too,1l11 was119l111veryIU111beautiful.91i13#illInciden1611tally, _________________________________________________________________ ical value, but causes eventually the collapse of the aesthetic value.RE D T E L S t i D A S REDTlECL TIE)ADNWYORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF RETIAILING § @ 0%1111111-% 'll:s" Experience in NewfYoks, Newaks and Brooklyn's largest deparmentstores. Earn while you train to be an executive. Store 'L'iiinlservice linked with classroom instruction. Certificate..........M. S. in Retailing _______________________ mW R NFall term opens September 17, 1925. Suimmer School July 7 to 'seen Supremacy Signifiant In -its 4eanhig a ylAuustrat4d 1925.e on application. For* further information write , 1iieeNGV PLAYING YDou. ~Norris A. Brisco, Director, 100 Washington Square, New York 2:Simple4in1Its Grindeu ' -D efiant Iq Its Magnitude Clothes -SAn Inspirationrto All Humanity M at our 9Jor Youlng Ay//lenG Ou fThere is nothing like a- ~s aleSTETSON vs fiS a"iCT ,s'', ~ r~~4r., r ii ,, Don'rP Price ft Easter '4 J ' V, y,' r" 4x Get thei Gointg Busin (Continued from ate One) towards _the soil, wo~ds, and birds. "Thoreau *as the +trU'e lover, and Crevecoeur took his appare-nt deliglit from the exalted feeling of the prop- erty o'Wner," he said. The ilogani or the sectional nmee i g;today is as follows: Botaniy Programl The section of botany will meet atj 9 o'clock in room 207, Natural Sci- ence building. The following papers will be presented: "Jane Colden, a pioneer in American botany," (to be read by title) by H. H. Bartlett; "Al- j lac of the Douglas lake region," by ,Alnfa B. Ackley; "The wild roses on and near the shore in the Mackinac'. region of Michigan," by Eileen W. lier-I lanson; "The vegetation mf the region of D~ouglas lake, Michigan," by Frank C. Gates; "Meteorological data, Doug- j las lake, Michigan," by Franzk C. Gates; "Enlarged bases 'in the black ash (Fraxinus nigra Marsh) in Mci Mihigan," by Fknk C. Gates and C. 0. Erlanson; "An ecological study of Smith's bog, Chboygan .county, , Michigan," by Edith Woollett, Dorisf D(;an, anzd Helen Coburn; "Applica-f tion of Gleason's formula to A Careif asiocarpa association, an associationi of few species," by Edith Woollett, Doris Dean, and Helen Coburn; "~Tie development of vegetation ini the PFor-' cupine mountains of Michigan," by 14. F. ,Darlington; "Can America producet its own rubber?" (to be read by title)j by Carl D. LaRue; "Morphology of3 the seed in Claytonia virginica," by MF. Woodcock; "Notes on Indian reuderals;" by L. A. Keyiidyer; "The source of materials comiposing the coral reefs on Oahu, Johniston, andl W~ake islands; is it of plant or animial origin?" by James 1. Pollock. Etonon ics Prograjn The economies section will meet at I 10 o'clock in the economics building; and the papers are as follows: "The! recent discount and open-market pol- icy of the federal reserve system,'yby RI. G. Rodkey; "The trend of bond p~rices," by L. A. Morgan. The after- noon session, will meet at 2 o'clcok and the papers are as follows: "Coin- .,ptition between labor and Machin- -at i :1 4 ;i :3 1 I r know the iimportance of looking fit. Good ap- pearance counts mi-.ch in the game of life. The yoning man who dresses with taste has a difecided advantage. But--it is surprising how little thought the average man gives to his hat. It is his crown, yet he seems to stop dressing at the heck. Be careful in your selection of your headwear. When you buy a hat, select a Stetson. Its style is right, its quality means long wear. One-h ird 0Off One=Quarter Off IJ-a1 We bought themc before we decided to go out of business anid rent our store to the Kresge people. Hart Schaffner & Marx had sent us the largest and Finest selection of new acid stylish suits and topcoats evdr brought to Ann Arbor. l~ ~= f A 'V /; We must turn theme into mon~ey and wind business in a hurry. It's lucky for you that we have this sacrifice right at the beginning of the season. up our, to make Easter Clothes for Boys of All A ges Half Price Onte-Third COff One -Fourth Off 1 It" GORDON an ILQRO T~his salt is" i great thing for mothers who take a bride in their boys' appearance, but want tio save money, too. Suits, ;CAPS, blouses;,' der 'ver; hosiery-evety- thing now 'at a half, a third or a quarter off. Men's Hats, Shirts, TVies, Hosiery at II One-Third Off One-Fourth O0ff i. i I I Christie Comedy I "LOV' YEMANIA" PANS' SIN( NEXT WEEK -With- JACKIE .COOGAN As Partners :with Ma'x -Gli sb49' Fromt the Story by WI1LA RD MACK t CHEON - GERS I Feature DWIN It THEODORE ROBERTS VIOLA DANA Kei cithI GOO CILDRED'S SPECIL MATINE 1E FRIDAY, 2:,OQ AND 3:40 10c ALL SEATS 10Ct Scre'en Supremacy Signaifieut In Its Me n-hi You w'wiit have to play htockey Friday aftternoo~in)ttsee".Ji )leredcth. I". Sh-h--- There Is, no school Fr~iayand itjst~ fo niakle it more interesting -we are going to eater to you,'tome on and clap) and yell to your heart's content 'ca use this piture suare -sill" make you Flo it. And the grown-ups iII have to I11~ it on this day. cdbWX4irTi V IHere s your chance io get just about twice as many of the new things,; you're going to need for spring and summer because of the reduced prices. Iai- f t