SATURDAY, MARCH 7,- 1931 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE PTVY SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1931 PAGE FIV! : ... " . 'rn _..., :.. _r ° ." PLAY RHEAR9SALS MUST BE ATTENDED Absentees From Cast or Chorus Practices Will be Dropped From Play. ONLY ILLNESS EXCUSED Dress Rehearsals Will be Held Next Friday and Saturday Nights. Beginning Monday, any member of the cast or choruses of "Came the Dawn," the 1931, Junior Girls' Play, who is absent from a rehear- sal will be dropped from the play. The only exceptions will be those students who are excused by Amy Loomis, director of the play, be- cause of illness. Any one who is ill and does not notify Miss Loomis will be subject to the same penalty. "These stringent measures are necessary," claims Miss Loomis, "because attendance at rehearsals hias been. exceptionally poor this year. Fines for tardiness to rehear- sals will be strictly imposed next week." Dress rehearsal nights are to be Friday and Saturday of next week. The play will open Monday, March 16 with the traditional Senior Night, and will continue for a week's run, ,with a matinee Saturday, March 21. Tickets will be available to the general public at the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre from 10 to 7 o'clock every day for the next two weeks. For the past week' mail orders have been the only way in which rservations have been made. Senior women should present their Senior Supper tickets at the box office'in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre not later than 7 o'clock Thursday, March 12, in order to get their seats for the Play. Only balcony seats will be sold to out- 'siders-Monday night, and no men are to be permitted to attend the performance. : Because of the nature of "Came the Dawn," a. Faculty night has been planned for Tuesday, March '1..-As usual, Fraternity and Soror- ity night will be Friday, March 20, and, Alumni night on Saturday. MISS M'CORMICK SPEAKS AT HALLS _ __ i LEADING ENGLISH LADY FOR PLAYERS - ~ ---~ .-~-- Muriel Hutchison, Repertory Company Satisfies Ambitions of Visiting Actress Small and earnest and very Eng- lish is Muriel Hutchinson, leading lady of the Ben Greet English Play- ers. She stood in the doorway of her room, and after a perilous ascent in the doubtful splendor of! the lift of the hotel, her invitation' to enter was more than welcome. Her enthusiasm rose above the erratic diagonal pattern of the rug, and the chaste blue outlines of the cuspidor, which were the room's chief decorations. "Lady Macbeth is my favorite character by far," she stated, "and while the contiast between her role and the one of Viola is very great, I enjoy the opportunity for versatility which they present." "Traveling with a reportory com- pany is the very best way of seeing the world," she declared. "I have been able to satisfy my two ambi- tions of traveling and acting by combining them. We' not only have the satisfaction of carrying the inspiration of Shakespeare where people are literally thirsting for it, but we have the chance of seeing life in foreign countries at first hand." Miss Hutchinson has visited Asia, Africa, Australia, and America while traveling with Shakespear- ean and George Bernard Shaw troups. MUSIC IN PLAY WI[ 6[| 9H11| WILBE VARIED 'Came the Dawn' Will Present Nineteen Songs of Two Distinct Types. "From the total of nineteen songs which are to be presented in 'Came the Dawn! '," says Katherine Sit- ton, chairman of music for the Junior Girls' Play, "we hope that there will be some which will at- tain the popularity which has been accorded to songs from plays of past years." There are two types of music be- ing used in the play this year. The original manuscript, written by Jeannie Roberts and Donna Jones, contained a number of lyrics after the manner of Gilbert and Sulli- van, which were so necessary to the play, that the music to which they have been set also posseses the characteristics which are part of the comic opera music of these two English writers. "The second type of music," to quote Miss Sitton, "is the kind which is hummed and whistled by the audiences as they leave the theatre. The dance tunes are as ' catchy' as the tunes of the popu- lar music of the day, and the songs of the various characters are ser- ious or comic, as the occasion de- mands." "Most of the music in 'Came the Dawn!,' added Miss Sitton, has been written by Ruth Allison, Burnette Bradley, Emily Randall, and Gwen- dolyn Zoller, all members of the music committee." A great many of the songs which are sung in the dormitories and sorority houses on campus are or- iginally from Junior Girls' Plays. "My Michigan," one of the best known, comes from "Becky Be- have," which was presented in 1926, and directed by Amy Loomis, who is directing "Came the Dawn." "Eight 'til Eight," given in 1927, provided the campus with a song by that name, and also with "Helen, I Love you," and "A Little College is a Dangerous Thing." It is not necessary to have been in "Forward March" to know the theme song from that Play, which was presented in 1928. "Right Out of Heaven" was its name, and "Paris Bound," from the same year is a close second in popularity. WOMEN TO TPY CHANGE IN CAM AlumnaeG'uests Are Entertained V at Various Functions I I T-+- -l- DZ- -1 1 "F - - -11 of Houses. I Imnerciass askebaz I e ea m s Plan New Method of Formal initiations have been the main social event at the majority' Starting Play. of sorority houses this week. Fol- lowing the rituals, each sorority Next week, during the last round I asnhonoredits newly-initiated of the interclass tournament, a new members with a formal banquet system of playing basketball will for which lovely appointments of be tried. spring flowers or roses and match- ing tapers have been most popular. The center forwards will not jump Many alumnae from nearby cities for the ball as they have in the have been present for the occasion. past; rather the ball will be given Alpha Gamma Delta is planning to the center on one of the teams to initiate six women this morning. at the opening of the game and They are Mary Alexander, '34, Bat- tle Creek; Evelyn Jones, '32, De- while standing in the center circle, troit; Mary Ellen Hall, '34, Ann Ar- she will be permitted to throw it bor, Ruth Neville, '34, Kenawee, Ill.; to any other player on her team. Barbara Nelson, '34, Ann Arbor; There are two systems of doing iEllen Kean, '34, Port Huron. this and it has not yet been decid- The newly initiated members will ad which method will be followed be honored guests at a luncheon here. One way is for the centers Saturday noon at Foster's tea room to toss to see which one gets the jand a formal banquet will be given ball first and then during the game, for them in the evening. Red and the team which did not make the yellow roses and green tapers are last scoring points will be given the to be used on the tables at the ban- ball as is done in speedball. quet. Mrs. Robert Taylor, of Toledo, The othei system is to give the an alumna of the sorority, is to be ball first to one center and then to a guest. the other regardless of which team Pledges of Delta Delta Delta are made the last points. i to be entertained Saturday night Abolishing the jump center is a by the actives at a slumber party. new custom which has not been Breakfast will be served to them tried before, but the National Com- Sunday morning. About sixteen mittee on Basketball Rules hasre- guests will be present. quested several colleges to try it Seven members of the faculty' out to see whether or not it will be were dinner guests of Kappa Delta successful. Thursday evening. Prof. Arthur E. Wood and Mrs. Wood, Prof. Arthur University Hospita Aiton and Mrs. Aiton, Prof. John L. Brumm and Mrs. Brumm, and Mr. Uses Sales-Coupons Ulendorf were those present. Initiation is to be held this after- The Red Arrow money that the noon at the Kappa Delta house and University collects in it various will be followed by a formal ban- purchases goes to the social service quet in honor of the new members. department of the University Hos- Those being .initiated are Alice pital, according to Miss Ketcliam, Goodenow, '34Ed, Detroit; Elizabeth who is at the head of that work. Cooper, '34Ed, Washington,' D. C.; "With the first Red Arrow money Dorothy Cummings, '32, Pontiac; that was given us, we won a hair- Harriet Jennings, '31, Detroit; Mar- dryer," said Miss Ketcham." It has garet Cole, '34, Detroit; Dorothea been a sourse of great convinence Ann Williams, '34, York, Pa; Helen to the patients in the convalescent Scott, '34, Rochester; Geraldine ward where we placed it. Our next Grover, '32Ed, Detroit; Katherine Red Arrow purchase was a small Moore, '33, Grosse Point; and Mrs. child's play wagon, which will go Clara LasJecquette, Colorado. to the social hygiene ward" Miss May Youngberg, Evanston, "A subscription [o the Sat-urdlay Ill., national inspector of Zeta Tau Evening Post which we w-n will Alpha, is a guest at the local chap- go to the cases which mast remain ter house this week-end. A formal for a long tine in the hospital, con- dinner was given in Miss Young- tinued Miss Ketcham." berg's honor last night at which the Ann Arbor alumnae were guests. Predatory animal bounties paid The sorority entertained five guests by Montana last year totaled $9,336. at a rushing dinner Tuesday night. Alpha EpsilonhPhi initiated six women last night: Natalie Arden, '33, Detroit; Ruth Cohn, '34, De- troit; Georgia Geisman, '34, Nor- wich, N.Y.; Jacqueline Navran, '34, Kansas City, Missouri; Gertrude' Rush, '34, Detroit, and Elaine Sles- singer, '34, Detroit. A formal din- ner was given in honor of the ini- tiates. Sunday afternoon members of the sorority will entertain guests at tea from three to five o'clock. Chi Omega announces the pledg- ing of Dorothy Coll, '32, of Detroit, and Gwendolyn Zoller, '32, of Ann Arbor. STUDENTS RESIDE IN PRACTICE HOME Women at University of Kansas Try Practical Experiment. Four women students in the de- partment of economics at the Uni- versity of Kansas are living in a practice home management house for the first six weeks of this sem- ester. These four students assume all the responsibility of the house. The duties are divided between them and thy are shifted throughout the six weeks period so that each woman practices every phase of the work. The house has been adopted as a laboratory course to accompany the course in home administration. Fifty vacant houses and two Negro churches have vanished in Birmingham, Ala., having been carried away a few pieces at a time for fuel. INITIATION AND BANOUETS MARK SOCIETY OF WEEK AT SORORITIES GROUP WILL HEAR PROFESS'OR SPEAK Katherine Greene Will Address Education Club on 'The Pre-School Child'. Members of the Women's Educa- tion Club will meet Monday after- noon, March 9, at 4 o'clock in the parlors of the Women's Athletic building. Dr. Katherine Greene, professor of psychology of educa- tion, will speak on "The Pre-scliool Child." All women interested in ed- ucation are cordially invited to at- tend this meeting. The last meeting of the Women's Education club was held February 16, in the Cave of the Michigan League. Tea was served, and pro- gram on schools of other countries followed. Miss Antoinette SooHoo, Grad., discussed schools in China; Vera Dobroudjanska, Grad., de- scribed schools of Bulgaria; Agnes Johnson, '31, spoke on French schools; and the Delaware Plan for Junior Year Abroad, was outlined by Elizabeth Howard, '31. Professor of English Will Address Society Dr. Clarence Thorpe, professor of English, will speak before a meet- ing of Mummers at 4 o'clock next Thursday afternoon in the League building. His subject is to be "Sal- vaging the Theatre" and will in- clude the trends of the modern theatre. This is to be an open meeting _and all who are interested are cordially invited to attend. ~-~~~- Among the Best and at Reasonable Prices FREEMANS . t l DINING ROOM Lunches 40c, Dinners 60c Sunday Dinner 75c ONLY ONE BLOCK NORTH FROM IILL AUDITORIUM Interest in Fencing Has Grown in Past Few Years', Says Coach John Johnstone i,, ___ ____ ___ __ _ _ . ___._._____ _ __,_ _ _._._... _ __ ._ _ _ . ;,;,M, i . I 4 nll.,,QPQ nt,,4 F4;crlt Yf Ar 1C Mnc7n Tells Students to Have as Many Experiences as Possible. "Learn everything you can, have every experience possible, and make all the contacts with other people for which you have the opportun- ity," stated Miss Ethel McCormick social director in the of fce of the Dean of women, in a talk Thurs- day at Mosher-Jordan halls. "These are the things to do throughout your life." "If you really are alert, that is the thing that counts," said Miss McCormick commending the Mich- igan women for their unusual exe- cutive ability. tn discussing new careers for wo- mIen, Miss McCormick said that there are many positions open to college graduates as hostesses in the better hotels and summer re- Sorts, in conducting tours abroad, in being hostesses on the trans-At-1 lantic boats, and in being social di- rectors at colleges. She said that the qualifications for this sort of work are "to be interested, interest- ing, sincere, and charming." Miss McCormick herself has a unique position at the University, as she was made social director for women this year. This office was created with particular regard fort the women who live in the league houses. onege an riigI nacnUU A dsave Introduced Sport as Part of Health Program. "Interest in fencing has been growing slowly but steadily," said John Johnstone, supervisor of phys- ical education and coach of fenc- ing, who is instructing the recent- ly formed fencing class for women students. "The interest, naturally, is in fencing as a sport, not as a means of self-defense against en- emies nor as a means of vindicating one's 'honor'." "The last war, of course, gave some impetus because of natural association,"he continued, "but the present interest comes both from the sport and the health factor. Colleges, and more recently high schools, have b e e n introducing fencing as a varsity and intramural sport." "The sport side will be with us as long as fiction is written and read and dramas are portrayed," he stated. Mr., Johnstone called at- tention to the fact that the litera- ture of the last three hundred years is filled with fencing bouts. In reading Shakespeare and the other Elizabethans, Dumas, Scott, and Stevenson, one "finds pages filled with the ring of steel;" and "when he turns to Sabatini for modern fiction he again is thrilled by the brave deeds accomplished by the sword." "But fencing," Mr. Johnstone em- phasized, "has another factor that gives it real validity in a physical education program; health! It gives excellent co-ordination of body and develops harmony in the physical organism. Furthermore," he added, "investigation shows that it is extremely beneficial as a cor- rective and reducing exercise and consequently it is an ideal sport not only for men and boys but for women and girls also." S tnnin styles ill1 .. 75 SPRIG OPENlP4G SALES MACK'S ENTIRE COLLECTION Clearance of FRENCH ROOM FORMAL Robes add-kd r~ 1' r~ I.' WATER SNAKE ' y~'' oS:;'">i Values to $25.00 "A thing of beauty is a oy forever"---and you'll agree with Keats, when you gaze at the smiling picture of loveliness in one of the long mirrors in the French Room, and realize with a shock that it is your humble self, and that the price of this is so small in Footwear for Negligees /3 Less NEGLIGEES 10.00 to $25.00 Values /3 less Lacy, delicately colored negli- gees of crepe de chine and satin crepe, fitted in becoming princess lines. These bits of loveliness come in o r c h i d, peach, green, apricot, or blue. KIMONAS $2.95 to $25.00 Values Y3 less Every kind of kimona, whether it be gaily flowered or stun- ningly hand embroidered-all reduced to clear. Also some 3-piece pajamas suits in this group. t4 t e . a- w "Read this letter first," says OLD HAMPSHIRF STATIONERY when it makes its appearance from the postman's bag - and a fine appearance it makes too. For Old Hampshireis notably good looking stationery. It has quality, character, suEstance--there is something about its crispness, its rich texture, that tends to make even the dullest letter seem positivey eloquen'. miur IiF~'rnnt Spring!I Choose from blonde kid . . sea-sand kids . . . reptiles .. . black kids . . . black moires ... blue kids . . . and others. comparison as to nominal. They come all the pastel shades, bTack,rin white and deep redl. be in in in s to S8 MATERIALS: SATIN TAFFETA NET Lvening Wraps, Values to $45.00 $24.50 Lounging Robes Originally $6.95 to $17.50 1/.I I 1 9.1"'T±1./ 1 U I it'MI!~l~~~I rs~~3 U . . I