'1' t ' aLt , X y 4ia U L"} "1ti 9= FfT " s31 ,.. THE MICH1C AkN-CiAILY lop 11 -,. A.s N LEAGUE CALE(NDAR SHOWS VERY 'F w University Activities Will Not be Numerous During Period of Examinations. WILL GIVE STYLE SHOW Very few University activities are scheduled for the League building i this week or during the two weeks of final examinations. Almost all the social activities planned for the ;League building during this inter- im are of a private nature. A wed- ding, private dances, bridge par- ties, luncheons, dinners and a ten- ative style show to be given in the ball room are scheduled for some- time during the next three weeks. Tomorrow people will begin ar- riving for the Michigan Engineer- ing conference. Nearly all of the I rooms of the League building have been engaged for this week-end by I those who are attending this con- vention. Dance to be Omitted. l No regular dance is to be given at the League building Friday night. Comedy Club is putting on a play there that night, however, and the regular Saturday nightl dance will be given. Next Sunday the Oriental wom-3 en will have tea in the Garden room. At 7:30 the same night the1 IJewish Society will meet in the ;Chapel. The Freshmen Girls' Glee Club1 and the Chorus Rlehearsal and Drama sections of the Faculty Wo-1 men's Club will hold their regular ;meetings next Monday. On Tues- dy' the Play Reading section of1 the Faculty Women's Club, the1 MRUniversity Girls' Glee Club and Al-z pha Gamma Sigma will hold regu-t lar meetings. Jar-Hop Breakfasts Planned. i , Twenty or more private dining trooms have already been reserved for breakfast after the J-Hop.? ,Quite a number of student and pri- vate activities have been scheduled1 for the beginning week of the new semester. LITERARY SOCIETY1 ELECTS OFFICERS FOR SECOND TERM, Electing officers for next semes- ter and honoring its retiring presi- dent occupied the attentions of the members of Portia literary society. Tuesday night in lounge 1 of the League building. Those who were elected to office 'tor the second semester are: Helen ,Cheever, '31, president; Helen Barc, x'30, vice-president; Elizabeth Mc- Dowell, '32, secretary; Frances Thornton, '32, treasurer; Marjorie Lincoln, '32, patrliamentarian; and Helen Cheever, '31, oratorical dele- ;gate Following the business meeting, .Nadine Stewart, '30, retiring presi- adent of Portia, who is graduating ,"this semester, was honored at a so- 4cial gathering. Refreshments were served and the guests enjoyed an evening of bridge and dancing. 'Frances Thornton, '32, was chair- man of the affair. About $50,000 was saved by 57 !?ives of Yale graduae and profes- ::sional students while their hus- .bands were going to school, ac- cording to a recent report of the Suniversity bureau of appointments. SOPRANO AND CONTRALTO OF CHICAGO |||I CIVIC OPERA WILL APPEAR IN DETROIT , RLL a SINGCIN NEIJ ROLES .:.. American Artist Was Popular With Chicago Opera Public PROF. ROBERT ANGELL WRITES BOOK ir(rii( |1 r( TO BASED ON STUDY OF STUDENTS HERE LL UL U1UL iU By Helden L .Doinitie mental capacity in acadlemic work, "A Study of Undergraduate Ad-Mr. Angell stated. Women are n BELTTLEALTEREl justment," a book recently pu- more intelligent than men, but lished by Robert C. Angell, ssis those women who are equipped to Dance Tomorrow Night to Start tant professor of sociolgy, brnrt's do better work are more apt to do Half Hour Later Than out several striking differences be- it than the men, many of whom re- Accustomed Hour. tween the men and women under- main in the mediocre group al- A sd_ graduates on the campus. The book though actually able to be in a for 20 Years. - i I s 1. . j I i, i 7 c 1 f' r t i t i x , 'SINGS IN DETROIT SOON is based on a study made at 216 more intelligent class. WII sophomore students who signed up Tradition is more likely to in- Mary Garden, America's favorite; for experimental work in the be- fluence women than men. Women! D of the operatic stage, will presen ginning psychology course lwo find it more difficult to break later n to Detroit in her years ago. The conclusions were away from the conservative back- mor forthcoming appearance with the drwn from a group of mtelligence ground of the home, and show a rang and achievement testsand life his- I tendency to remain traditionally - Chicago Civic Opera company dur- tories. oriented in all phases of college ballr ing the week of February 17, in the In general the women e2 the uni- life, customs, morals, and religion. Nati Masonic Temple of Detroit. The two versity show the influence of a bet- Personal disorganization is not Engi new operas are Massenet's three- ter home background than the so frequently found in women n9:30 act lyric miracle play, "Le Jongleur men. The average number of years men. More problem cases of men de Notre Dame," which will be giv- of education of both parents, and were studied than of women. the c en Wednesday evening, February I the general cultural and economic Mr. Angell considered these dif-IDu G19, and Italo Montemezzi's music background of the women is consid- ferences due to fwo factors. Al- I dan Coe Glade (left)n e M"adalena in Rigoletto" and Mary Garden drama in three acts entitled "L'Am- erably greater. The women are a tho.ugh the woman of today is more balli (right), as Fora in the "Love of Three Kings, will appear in De- our dei Tre Re," to be presented;, more homogeneous group made up emancipated than her predecessor,'b troit next month with the Chicago C--ic Opera company Saturday afternoon, February 22. mainly of women from the upper she is not yet as much out in the urda . Was Born in Scotland. economic strata. This is due to the world as the man. The second rea- nigh Sped rpaayto Read One of the most popular and fact that in the present day a col- son is that undergraduate women J-Hc .s .best-known artists of the Chicago lege education is not as much of are more of a selected group and and Comprehend Spanish Literary Language Civic Opera company, Miss Garden an economic necessity for a wom- have had greater cultural and eco- - - "The common has spent most of her life on the an as it is for a man. Girls in the nomic advantages. "Th m nquestion which in the "Poem of the Cid," a story concert or operatic stage. She was I lower groups do not make an effort people ask me is why Spanish lit- on a historical basis of the adven- born in Aberdeen, Scotland,. in 1877, to better themselves by education Basketball PlayersbT erature is not better known, since tures of Spain's greatest medieval and came to the United States at as frequently as do boys, as .ist bal it is believed to be one of thene the age of six. When twelve years not so essential to their economic Asked to Bring Dues sop world's greatest literatures and very national hero. One of the earliest old, she played the violin on the independence. For the women, col- erse rich in cultural value," said Pro- novels was the "Book of the Knight concert stage and shortly afterward lege is more often a broadening Members of interclass basketball fre fessor Charles P. Wagner, depart- Zifar," a romance of chivalry with went to paris to study voice. Her process than an economic neces- teams are asked to bring the 50 Mo ment head of Spanish. "There are realistic elements with interpolated operatic debut was made in Paris sity. Thus the women are more cents for the informal spread to em various reasons, the chief one be- stories of varied interest. In the as a substitute for Mlle. Riotan in highly selected on a cultural basis. i the practice today, and to give it to iom ing that the greatest Spanish works fifteenth century it gave a large Carpentier's "Louise." The success The women of the university either the manager or captain of bal are in the past, the best having group of ballads, short narrative j of her performance was so instan- proved themselves inferior to the their team, or to Margaret Ohlson, pra been written 300 years ago. In this poems, the best of which deal with 'jtaneous that she continued to sing men on the information tests '30, interclass basketball manager. q respect it might be compared with old epic material, grouped into the same role for one hundred which were given. They made high- ing English literature. We all know the cycles. In the sixteenth and seven- Inights. She made her American er averages on the art literatur Many of the newer coats are at preparation required for an under- teenth centuries it developed one debut in New York as Thais, and and religion test, but fell down on semi-fitted and are cut with the offi standing of Shakespeare, a remote of the world's greatest dramas, a has been with the Chicago Civic the natural and social science higher waistline found in many of Ev product of our own literature." body of plays employing the ro- Opera company since 1910. Among tests. Mr. Angell considers that the the longer dresses. -- Spanish culture, being largely Or-- mantic formula similar to the her most famous roles, most of reason the women did not rate as I iental, not European, requires a Elizabethan dramatists. which she was the first to present high on the social science tests for j special preparation for compre- Foundations for the modern novel in America, are Melisande, Salome, which a general knowledge o Six months' FREE ser hending it, while, contrary to pop- originated, in types developed in Sapho, Griselde, and Marguerite. world affairs was necessary was ular belief, Spanish language is ex- I Spain in the sixteenth century, Other Singers to Appear. that women do not read the papers tremely difficult. Spain's remote- namely, the sentimental novel, the Other artists appearing during as much as do the men. ness may be accounted for histor- romance of chivalry novel, the pas- the current season who are well- Women more nearly reach thei1 , th-- - - - 1 ,L k. t D .t,.i . 4l s. n I.it ir ' R E_A UT vice with every ITY ically. in the sixteentn century it iLorai novel, and tie rogue nove , niiownL o Leroi au dinces are . drew away intellectually from the the latter of which is the ancestor Claudia Muzio, who recently ap- rest of Europe, and politicallylost of our modern novel of manners. peared in Ann Arbor on the Choral its prestige and world dominance f In the modern period, it has been Union Series, Coe Glade, Rosa! 300 "years ago, leaving the country agreed upon by critics, thiat Spain .Raisa, Edith Mason, Maria Olszew- more or less isolated. has developed in a late nineteenth ska, and Margherita Salithe At the beginning of the four- century group of novelists, a group Spanish coloratura soprano .who teenth century Spain contributed not inferior to any other national j will make her first operatic appear- one of the world's greatest epics one. 1 ance in Detroit.t Furs and Fur Coats Makeup, Repaired, Re- modelled and Relined Prices Reasonable E. L. Greenbaumr 448 Spring Street 'hone 9625. ... i iII 4 "- 1111 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. PI V 1 1 VlIY t Na44U A)U lj/ i -ai e w .=. - HATS --- Made-To-Order New Felt and Straw Combinations and all Straw $6.50 to $10.00 McKINSEY HAT SHOP 227 South State There's Something About The Fit of the Shoe ,--- _.. .1 I r- - "I can't explain it," said a girl the other day, "but there's something about the fit of a Walk-Over shoe that's different from any shoe I've ever worn. "They seem to be made for my foot. They are con- fowtable from the first minute I put them on. They hug up under the arches, grip snugly around the ankles, give toes plenty of room, and they hold their shane splendidly." We thanked the girl for her kind words and told her a few things done to Walk-Ovezs that make them better than ordinary shoes-the care in designing and making, the little touches that give this nicety of fit. I ml A .h .. ~ .a-. ..,..---- if a~ l rt ' r f ,ti ¢t '' We'll gladly tell you, too. BURTON'S WALK-OVER SHOP 115 SOUTH MAIN STREET - - r . e ... o9 Second Floor FOR THE J-HOP Personally blended French powders. We blend .these (J powders for you ,individual complexion. Expert Waving and Facial" Work. STODDARD BEAUTY SHOP 707 North University Phone 2-1212 **"=>"<-->0---0<-="--~54 dio- 0A s 0 4i Supper 75c this Evening IL The most popular ready- to-eat cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eating clubs and fra- ternities are made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. They include Corn Flakes, Pep Bran Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat Krum- bles, and Kellogg's Shredded Whole Wheat Biscuit. Also Kaffee Hag Coffee-the cof- fee that lets you sleep. You CAN "keep up" in your studies as well as engage in college activities if you maintain good physical condition. Since constipation is the cause of most ill-health, it pays to prevent this widespread evil. Kellogg's ALL-BRAN is guaranteed to bring prompt and permnixnt relief from constipation - even in chronic cases. It supplies the system with roughage in generous quantities. Just eat two tablespoonfuls every day. With milk or cream-fruits or honey added. Ask that it be served at your fraternity ,r I: course. I- MARBRUCK TEA SHOP U ill ___Ma ._