I WEDNESDA, APRItL 36, 1930 iTHE TCRICAN DAILY ~PAm FTVF #1 rn ( l7a'IA M .......i . ... a ViENNA JOURNALIST Spring Dances Predominate in Social Events; 7.j GLEE CLUBS - Formals and Informals Held by Many Groups Dean-Emeritus Myra Jordan Calls Delcroix, Author of Mussolini Book, Remarkable Man tcnvi of h n n ,.. 4. TIn , " rr j.. . .,. . . "TLS ON EASTER LIFE AND_OCUSTOM Alice Schalek Tells A. A. U. V of TEpic Progress of the Oriental Women.' COLORED SLIDES SHOW ;fells Audience Their Interest Needed by the Women of the Far East. "Women in the Western wor have been in the habit of asserti their freedom, but they forget t many millions of other womenc the other side of the world w need their help," said Miss Ali Schalek, of Vienna, noted Europe journalist, in her lecture before t Ann Arbor branch of the A. A. W. last night in the ballroom the League building. Slides Illustrate Lecture. Colored slides made from p: tures which the speaker hersi made while travelling through t Oriental. countries illustrated t points which she wished to ma reference to concerning the unu ual customs of dress and life Eastern women. Though not a feminist, Mi Schalek believes many of the exis ing conditions under which the women suffer should be remove "For," she said, "very few of t women can do anything for then selves and our help is needed. The fate is affecting them deeply an only the women of India and J pan are attempting any refor whatever." Tells of Sumatra Women. "Perhaps the most down-trodd women of the world are those Sumatra," continued the speake "They wear dresses all alike an any money which they are ablet save is used to buy jewelry. Th custom is typical of allyEaster women and they array themselvi in ornaments of pure.gold, no im tation, jewelry is worn." In continuing Miss Schalek d scribed hows the white man is roAny places harming the orients rather than helping him. In e plaining this she cited the cond tion in southern Sumatra where th women are skillful weavers, but a buying imported cheap printed ma terials which are not to be con pared to the beautiful native silk Dancing is Chief Recreation. "Dancing is a recreation enjoye by all the unmarried women in th East except those of India whe it is forbidden all except the danc lig girls, who are outcasts. In th Malay peninsula the dancing is ex otie and the girls may not danc with boys of their own villag These peoples dance every evenin but a married woman may -n dance," asserted Miss Schalek. The queer customs of dress the South Sea Isles, and New Ze land, the Geisha girls of Japa and the purdah and child-marriag systems of India were all describe in detail. Discusses "Mother India." Katheryn Mayo who wrot "Mother India" only depicts on side of the question and she di not meet the pioneer womenc India," said Miss Schalek. "The women themselves admit that e ery word in the book is true b Why? they say." This meeting was held in hon of the Junior group of the A. A. I W. and Miss Schalek in conclusio stressed the fact that the wome of this country should not forg their sisters in'the East. BUTLER UNIVERSITY - T Junior Prom will. be attended b 15 presidents of Indiana colleg( If all patrons accept their invita tions. -s-- - - - ------- ---- - i-----I r N Ann Arbor reminded one of the Ayres, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Jordan, of the football season last week-end Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hussey, Mr.' I with the crowds around for the and Mrs. Ross Bittinger, Mr. and I Athletic Conference of AmericanI Mrs. Albert H. Marthwort, and Mr. Herbert Fowler. College Women, the Schoolmasters' The Misses Marion Talmadge V. club meetings, the state champion- and Katherine Beardslee of Grand ship debate, and also a number of Raphis, Olive Nichols of Marshall, parties given by fraternities and Romaine Busch of Bay City, and s Genevieve Coan of Detroit were sororities' f week-end guests at the Kappa Al- IN Alpha Delta Pi gave its spring pha Theta house. formal at the chapter house Friday ATimnae Groups Hold Tea. Is night with 50 couples attending. The Ann Arbor alumni club ofj Mr. and Mrs. Carl Coe, Mrs. Pres- Delta Zeta entertained the active ton ame, ad Ms. lic Dais'chapter and the Detroit alumni at ton James, and Mrs. Alice Davis a bridge tea Saturday afternoon. were chaperones. Week-end guests at the sorority ld Kappa Delta Gives Dance. house were Elizabeth Torongo, Bat- ng . Kappa Delta also held its spring tle Creek, Mary Dunnigan, Detroit, he Shirley King, Detroit, Josephine on formal the same night. Professor Simons, Coleman. ho Roy Cowden and Mrs. Cowden and Marion Seitz, '31, and Delphine ce Mrs. Anna Dillingham were chap- Johnson, '31, represented the local an erones for the affair. . chapter of Phi Beta at the province ;he Miss Marve Hough of Bowling convention held at Delawage, Ohio, U. Green, Ohio, was a guest at the Al- during the past few days. of pha Omicron Pi house this week- Students Attend Convention. end. Mrs. Chester Barnes, a patron-1 Members of Delta Delta Delta ess of Alpha Chi Omega, entertain- ic- entertained their chaperone, Mrs. ed the junior and .senior members elf Thomas Anderson, at tea last Wed- of the srority at dinner at her he 1 nesday afternoon. The Ann Arbor home last Thursday. Several mem- he alliance of the sorority gave a ben-; bers of the chapter attended the ke °efit bridge Saturday afternoon in state convention held at Albion on s- the chapter house. Satercnvetnd hda Adono of: Alpha Xi Delta Entertains. Saturday, and Mrs. Thomas Adams, o Alpha Xi Delta gntertsasring province president, was a luncheon s fmAlpha Xi Delta gave its spring guest at the house yesterday noon. tS eformal Friday. The chaperones Miss Dorothy Kirby, '29, Flint, s ere Mrs. Nancy Burton and r. m .1announced her engagement to Dr. d r to Chumaan Mrs. huma Milton Butler of Flint at the Zeta de. The Collegiate Sorosis house. was Tan lh os rdyngt h the scene of a formal dance Satur-t Alpha house Friday night. - day night. Mr. and Mrs. Herman IES TO HOLD id Kleene, Dr. Robert Wilton and Mrs. CET a- Wilton, and Mrs. William Robert- FRESHMAN DEBATE, s son were the chaperones. Faculty Dinner is Given. Athena literary society held its TO 1211ff POiprAT i i . S I U U I V L U U II U.L I I JI caneUot. Ithe greCa aii war sort of an education. - The father, heroes," began Mrs. Myra B. Jor- a convinced and pasionate believer dan, Dean Emeritus; "haswritten a in the rights of man, with his force S nt nce most interesting psychological and determination, gave his sonj Hot n 3ustudy of Premier Mussolini called the lantern and the pick; his Here May .3. 'Un Uomo e Un Popolo.' The auth- mother, with her beauty of char- or is Carlo Delcroix, who, in the acter and faith, gave him his abil- I FACULTY TO TAKE PART debacle at Caporetto, a fearful de- ity to reconstruct,' writes Delcroix. feat, lost both arms and both eyes.;1 Doctrines Cause Banishment. Announcement has been made by Nevertheless the moment that he "'Mussolini was sent to a CatholicI Nora Crane Hunt, director of the was out of the hospital he started school in Faenze where he was local club, of the complete program going up and down the face of taught by the brothers of St. Fran- to be presented by the University Italy urging his fellow countrymen cis de Sales," continued Mrs. Jor- to go back into the fight and. wi n. "ecoxtlsta usln Girls' Glee club and the University Writes of Wounded Soldiers. was constantly being punished by of Cincinnati Girls' Glee club in "He is a very, very remarkable the priests. They recognized that their joint concert to be given atman," Mrs. Jordan went on to say. he had an excellent mind, but he 8:30 o'clock on May 3 in the Lydia "We heard him speak in the Chain- !was always stirring up trouble. He Mendelssohn theatre.ber of Deputies, and when he came Itaught for a time after leaving in every one rose. He has written school, but he was banished to! Burnet C. Tuthill will direct the 'i evwer o ros. H e s tte S ditzerland in 1902 for the revo-I Neela number of books. One, *Setteiluinrdotnewhc.eup Cincinnati club. Thelma Newell, Santi' (Seven Saints), is one of the lutionary doctrines which he up- violinist, and Retta McKnight, pi- most moving things I have ever heldb.f anist, of the School of Music fac- read. Seven men who were fright- ID"Then began his life of tumult. ulty, will assist the glee clubs. Folffully wounded in the World War. Delcroix calls him the 'eternal Ssbut who cotinued to.live on. and wanderer.' He fought all through lowing is the program: tried to do something for Italy, are the war and was wounded many The Dove.........Tuscan folk song the saints. They are all men whom times. After that he began to pub- Arranged by Schindler. Delcroix knew. lish a paper, 'Popolo d' Italia' in n" said1which he voiced his revolutionary Volga Boat Song, Russian folk song dThis book on Mussolini"sai ideas. It was about in 1920 that he !Mrs. Jordan, "has been called by Arranged by Tuthill.DI first became interested in the for- SnwLged......!lce Delcroix himself an act, of faith.' mation of the Fascisti. And then Snow Legend ... . . Clockey fHe begins the book with the fol- m F nom +hnfo rnc sinh.. Rz m MUSICAL SORORITY HOILDS INITIATION Eight Women Are Members of Mu Phi Epsilon, National Honor Society. Initiation activities, which in- cluded a luncheon. a formal ban- quet, a dance, and initiation cere- monies, occupied Gamma chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music society, Saturday at the League building. An dalumnae luncheon in the League building opened the activi- ties, which was followed by the initiation ceremonies at the home of Mrs. Grace Konold. Those ini- tiated were: Olivia Gilkey, '31SM, Marjorie Brody, '30, Erma Kropp, '31SM, Emily Randall, '32SM, Kath- leen Murphy, '32, Edna Wiefen- bach, '31SM, Eleanor Wortley, '32, and Marguerite Henry, '315M. The formal banquet in the eve- ning was followed by a formal Cicinnati Glee club. Gypsy Life ............ Schumann' Soloists: Dorothea Forbeson, Kath- ryn Evans, Orma Weber, Ruth Marshall, Audrea Haver. Michigan Glee club. Violin Selection .. . . Thelma Newell Sacerdotes Domini ..William Byrdl The Swallow Leaves her Nest .... ...................Gustav Holst Sound Sleep ... R. Vauhn Williams Cincinnati Glee club. Invocation to St. Cecelia, Michigani Glee club lowing statement 'To know a hero cameItheCramous marenLnC home.I ! Psychological is Stressed. or a people you must live with "Bych'UoUicaleisnStressed. them, in their homes, and be one "But 'Unb Uomo e un Popolo' is with them.' He says that Dante and notda "ghy, bro o rs. Frances d' Assissi lived with the Jordai. "What Delcroix tries to common people, and so Mussolini, show in this book is that psycho- too, in the Romagna, spent hisl outgrowth of the Mussolini is thyearslf youth in the simplest circumstan- outrowt ofptesongn years-f ces. This has always been a region j Austrian oppression and supres- torn by various factions, which _____ may explain somewhat Mussolini's + early interest in all questions of economics and freedom.! Describes Mussolini's Youtho "Mussolini was born between a Styles fo dance. ' ___ _r. '__...... .a _ , . _- ~ ..K.. ..c:vM Alpna Phigave a racuity dinner en Thursday with the followingas oguests: Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin of Merritt, Dr. William Ayers and Mrs.' ~r. __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zd to CLOSING PROGRAM ni OF DETROIT OPERA! es TO BE PRESENTED e- 'The Detroit Civic Opera com-j i pany will conclude an unusually! a successful spring season tomorrow l x night with the traditional double- - header of "Cavalleria Rusticano" 1e and "I Pagliacci," to be presented re at 8:15 in Orchestra hall, withl - Chevalier Fulgenzio Guerrieri con- ducting. s. "Cavalleria Rusticano" will mark the final appearance of Bianca d Saroya, soprano. Ethel Fox will be ie the -Nedda in the "Pagliacci" pro- re duction, with John Dwight Sample - and Giuseppe Martino-Rossi, both le of whom appeared in last week's - "Aida," as Canio and Tonio. The e Detroit Civic Opera chorus of 95 e. voices; will appear in both operas, ,g, as will Theo J. Smith's ballet. The of orchestra is composed of musicians' of the, Detroit Symphony orchestra. in This year the general policy of a- the Detroit Opera company has n, been in the hands of Jefferson B. ge Webb of the Symphony orchestra, d and Thaddeus Wronski. Mr. Wron- ski believes that featuring stars is rather a modern idea, most detri- t mental to the morale of the asso- e ciate artists in the cast, and in the id long run damaging to the cause of of opera itself. Hence, Detroit has se adhered to the old-fashioned way: v- well balanced performances, no ut1 huge deficits anticipated, co-ordi- nated efforts with the sole aim to or preserve opera for future genera- U. tions. n, n et NOTICE. There will be a meeting of the Executve board of the Wom- e en's Athletic association, at G y o'clock Thursday in Yh'- rW. A. A. es -board room at Palmer field - house. regular business meeting last nigh Timothy Moffat in the club room in Angell hall. Believe Me, If All Those Endearingf Madelon Andrus, '31, was made Young Charms .......Old Irish a chairman of a bridge party which Old-Fashioned trio. t is to be given the afternoon of The Straw Guy and See the GypsyX May 17 in the League building. Hungarian folk songs arranged v Olympia LaMarca, '31, was put in by E. Vaun Williams.v charge of the coming freshman de- Cincinnati Glee Club. I. bate with Zeta Phi Eta. Following Cincinnati College Song,I the business meeting, a program of Yellow and Blue. interpretive readings was given Combined Glee clubs.f by Kathryn Kratz, '32, . During the intermission"the Col-D In preparation for the Zeta Phi ored Sisters quartet will entertainl Eta-Athena freshman debate, the in the lobby. Erma Kropp, '31SM, subject of which will be announc- Audrea Haver, '31SM, Mildred, ed later, freshman members of Drinkhaus, '31SM, and Elaine Zeta Phi Eta gave two-minute try- Frost, '30, comprise thi quartet.s out speeches on the subject of Those in the Old-fashioned triod chain store buying and selling be- are Mildred Drinkhaus, '31SM, De- fore the society at its meeting lastlmarious Cornell, '31, and Kathryn night in Angell hall. Evans, '30. :II11111111111111111111U1II~i11 1S11 '.i 11111111111111 1111111111 1111111 ii jiilIi ll1111111 BEAUTY SHOP Guaranteed Permanent Waves $6 and $8= With Six Months' Service Marcel . 75cr4 Shampoo . 50c We use soft water only and offer a 25% discount every Monday & Tuesday 1110 S. "U". Phone 7561 MILLINERY SPECIAL- - Wednesday Only For today only we are offering a specially selected group - of expensive hats at greatly reduced prices. They are mainly straws, baku braids and hair braids. When you see these hats you'll know they are excellent values. 500 ALL SALES FINAL! Costume Jewelry -- MILLINERY DEPARTMENT -. We are closing out all costume jewelry ui to two dollars in price including rarings, bracelets. pendants and necklaces. forge and a school-his father was a blacksmith, and his mother taught school in the village," ex- plained Mrs. Jordan. "In the long winter evenings all the neighbors. would gather around the forge fire- in the smithy while his father read Karl Marx to them. Delcroix makes it clear in his book that Mussolini's father was not an ignorant man. Mussolini himself remembers that in addition to Karl Marx and others, he read 'Les Miserables,' and 'King Lear' aloud. "Both parents realized that their son was more than ordinary. They did all they could to give him some Every Select Yo th D RICHK 7 NICK] Occasion our Hat to Fit i AFTER UNIVERSIT Y WHA T? A practical secretariat or accounting course will prepare you for definite employment. 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