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March 31, 1931 - Image 5

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The Michigan Daily, 1931-03-31

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31, 19331

THE MICHIGAN

I L'Y

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Physical

Education

D~irectors Meet in

MISS ALICE LLOYD POPENFIRST DAY
EDCTOR FETUE AT CONETION

Character Education Subject of
Talk Given by Dr. Frank
Lloyd of New York.
TROW LEADS DISCUSSION
Demonstration of Rhythm Work
Given by Pupils of Miss
Emily White.
Directors of Physical education
for women in colleges and univer-
sities opened their conference yes-
terday morning. The welcoming
address to more than one hundred
fifty delegates was given by Miss
Alice Lloyd, Dean of Woen. Edu-
cators from all the schools of the
'middle west are attending the con-
ference here in Ann Arbor and are,
planning to go to the National
Physical Education convention to
be held in Detroit the last of this
week.
Following the opening address,
Dr. Frank Lloyd, professor of edu-
cation in New York university, gave
a lecture on "Character Education
in ,Physical Education." Dr. W.
Clark Trow, professor of Education
in the University of Michigan, led
a discussion on the subject on the
subject following the talk,
Dr. Howard Lewis Lectures.
Dr. Howard Lewis, professor of
Physiological chemistry of the Uni-
versity'of Michigan lectured on the
"Physiological Effect of Light" the
next hour and Dr. Willis Peck of
the Physical Therapy department
headed the discussion following.
In the afternoon Miss Ruth Gla-
sow, of the University of Wisconsin,
'gave a talk on "A Study of the
Principles of Body Movement," dis-
cussing the subject under four
heads. The first she called body dis-
placement, the second, that of the
body trying to move other objects,
third, body trying to keep its equi-
librium, and the fourth that of the
body against outside forces. Follow-
ing her talk a discussion was given
by Dr. Mabel Rugen, of the Univer-
sity of Michigan, who held that the
findamental principles of s p o r t
should be taught high school stu-
dents in such a way that they
would follow these principles un-
consciously.
Tennis Star Discusses Game.
Miss Mary 1. Browne, one of
America's foremost tennis players
was next on the program. She
talked on the coaching of tennis,
stressing as the three most impor-
tant factors of tennis, timing, rhy-
thm, and follow through. Miss
Browne who has been a profession-
al for the last four years stated that
it takes ten years to develop a
champion tennis player.
Miss Ethel McCormick, assistant
professor of Physical education in
the University of Michigan lectured
on "An Experiment in Recreation"
followed by a demonstration of
rhythm work conducted by Miss
EmilyWhite, of the physical educa-
tion department.
In the evening a banquet was
held in the Women's League build-
ing at which Dr. Merle Coulter of
the University of Chicago was
speaker.
Junior Women MayI
Secure Play Pictures
Junior women who wish to order
any of the Junior Girls' Play pic-
tures which were taken on the
stage, may do so by signing up for
the ones they wish, in the lobby of
Miss Amy Loomis's office in the
League building. Both the snapshot
and enlarged sizes are mounted,
along with the price list. The pic-
tures may be paid for when they
are received.
TYPEWRITER
REPAIRING
All makes of machines.
Our equipment and per-
s o n n e I ar considered

among the best in the State. The result
of twenty years' careful building.
O. D. MORRILL
314 South State St. Phone 6615
IT IS HARD TO
EXCEL
A ri
A. T. Cooch
&Son

Paul Honore, Mural
Painter, to Address
A.A.U.W. Meeting
Paul Honore one of the foremost
mural painters, of Americahwill
speak on "A Sense of Light: A
Consideration of Color" at the meet-
ing of the American Association of
University Women to be held at 3
o'clock Saturday in the Ethel Foun- ,
tain Hussey room of the League
building.
Mr. Honore's home is in Birming-
ham, Michigan, although he was
born in Pennsylvania. Besides mural
painting he has done the wood1
blocks for the wood cuts of a num-!
ber of books. He has been awarded
a number of prizes including the
Marvin Preston prize for Michigan
artists at the exhibit of the Detroit
Museum of Art of 1917, the Museum
Founders' prize in Detroit in 1917,
and the Walter Piper Purchase
Prize given by the Scarab Club of
Detroit in 1928. He is a member of
the Mural Painters Society of New
York, the Authors League, the So-
ciety of Arts and Crafts Founders,
the Society of Detroit Mural Art-
ists, and the Scarab Club of De-
troit.
Regent Cramm and Mrs. Alex-
ander Ruthven will officiate at the
tea-table at this meeting.
MUSIC STUDENTS
TO GIVE RECITAL
Faculty Members Will Present'
Violin, Piano Pupils.
Lucile Graham Schoenfeld, pian-
ist, and Thelma Newell, violinist,
members of the faculty of the Uni-
versity School of Music, will present
several students in a recital at 7:45
Wednesday night in the School of
Music auditorium.
University students participating'
in the program are Phyllis Brum,
'33, Eleanor Phillips, '32SM, and
Virginia Osgood. Miss Phillips, who
is a pupil of Nora Crane Hunt, will
sing Life and Sonny Boy, both by
Curran and Sing Again by Pro-
theroe. The Bugler, from Graded
Studies, and Musical Snuff Box, of
Liadow, are to be Miss Osgood's
contribution.
The other music students on the
same program are Roberta Wash-
ington, Margaret Emery, Richard
Mann, Frances Bonisteel, Mary
Jayne Bradley, Barbara Nan Berry,,
Betty Dice, Magdalene Collins, Jean
Maddy, Edna Gustin, Bessie Field,
and Helen Smith. The accompan-
ists will be Gwendolyn Pike, Doro-
thy Knoelk, and Josephine Ball.
MRS. CRAM CALLED AWAY

ARTIST TO DANCE
HERE SATURDAY
Ronny Johansson Is Acclaimed
by Ruth St. Denis.
"She has an elusive and most
individual sense of humor and
poetry," says Ruth St. Denis, Amer-
ica's foremost woman dancer, of
Ronny Johansson, who will appear
on Saturday at 8:30 o'clock, in the
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "And
because she is truly a creative art-
ist, Ronny Johansson has achieved
the expression of a unique person-
ality in a unique style." Critics have
acclaimed Miss Johansson the
greatest exponent of the humorous
dance, both in its lyrical and dra-
matic forms.
Miss Johansson, who is Swedish,
is the third of a group of famous
women dancers who have been in
Ann Arbor this season. Carola Goya,
the Spanish dancer was the first,
and Yvonne Georgi, the German,
whom critics name the world's
greatest dancer, was the second.
SCkHOOL OF USIC
Raymond Morin to Appear in
Recitals in Tour of
Eastern Cities,
--_
Of interest to students and resi-
dents of Ann Arbor is the an-
nouncernent of several out of town
programs to be given by Raymond
Morin, '31SM, during the next few
weeks. His tour will include several
eastern cities but he will also ap-
pear in a recital in Ann Arbor on
May 5 and has been engaged for!
the Adrian May Festival on May
22. Fitchburg, and Worcester, Mass.,
and New York City are the cities
where Mr. Morin will give concerts
during Sjcin Vacation.
The fIisi f these out of town
program 3;ledch wil be played for
the Women's Educational Club of
Toledo on April 2 will include the
following numbers: Notturno, by
Respighi; Chopin's Scherzo in B
Flat Minor; La Plus que Lente, of
Debussy, Danse Rituelle du Feu, De
Falla; Suggestion Diabolique, Pro-
kofieff; and a test of pianistic abil-
ity. La Campanella of Paganini-
Liszt.
Two Fencing Classes
PostponedThis Week
Fencing classes which would be
held at 7:15 o'clock tonight and
Thursday night of this week will
be postponed because of the Direc-
tors of Physical Education Confer-
ence according to an announce-
ment by the Physical Education
faculty.
The open hour dancing class will
be held at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday
night as usual.

INTRAMM HealthEducation.
Iii
INTO MU 9[ M[E ,]editor's Note: This is the Eirst ()f a se-ries
of articles oil physical and Health ec tio al' a
aCtivt es. . ,na
Event Will be Run off at 7:30 "Health is the indispensable foun- s
O'clock in Pool of dation for the satisfaction of life .
Michigan Union. according to the late President Elli-jIt
ot of Harvard," said Miss Laurie E.i
16 WOMEN TO COMPETE I Campbell, assistant professor of c
physical education, in a recent h
Cup to be Awarded for First statement concerning Physical edu- C
Time to House With cation for women in colleges. "It is a
Highest Points. this satisfaction of life which we n
are all consciously or unconsciously
seeking," she continued.
Final events in the Intramuralg "The physica and mental atti-
swimming meet will be held at 7:30 tudes of the individual are insepar-
o'clock tonight in the Union pool. able. As the individual grows older, s
Both men and women students and however, less and less attention is
faculty members are invited to at- hoee,.ssad s aCnini
tenduthe memer, arednvitd toatn given to physical well being," Miss
tend the meet, and no admission Campbell went on. "Most adults s
will be charged.my
are satisfied when they are free o
The 16 women who made the best from physical disabilities. They
times in the preliminaries in each know little about positive health," 1.
event will compete tonight for the she stated. t
final awards.R
We are living in an age of great i
Crawl Is First Event. social change. In this day of air-
The crawl will be the first event, planes, radios, and rapid communi-
followed by the side-stroke, the rac- cation we are constantly receiving
ing back stroke, and the breast I stimuli from many different sources.
stroke. The finals of each event will Our nervous systems are called up-
be run off in the same order. on to make rapid fire adjustments.
The diving contest and relays will We are making demands on bodies
follow, the swimming in the latter which are less able to carry this ex-
being free-style. There will be four tra burden because no provision has
entrants from each house in the re- been made to substitute other forms
lay. Judges of the diving contest of physical activity for those which
will be Dr. Margaret Bell, Miss were formerly a part of one's every-
Laurie Campbell, and Mrs. Dorothy day existence.
Hall of the physical education fac- Moderns Fail to Rclax.
ulty. Modern life is placing a hea.y
f ouse ToC et Cup. strain upon us all. We are forget-
A cup will be awarded this year ting how to relax. Physical activi- I
for the first time to the house ties, if systematically engaged in
which gets the highest total num- offer a splendid relase when chosenj
ber of points in the meet. This cup according to individual needs. It is
will be awarded at the Women's for this reason that physical edu-
SAthletic Association sprint banquet.cation has been included in the
tetisc an, Associatio sprin . ban school curriculum and is recognized
Teresa Romani, '33,an.d.A. swim- as a vital part of the education of
mint; manager, and Marion Gimmy, thle chile?.
'31, intramural manager, will be "But what,yk
assisted tonight by the senior phys- 1to do iti women at colegmya lcvcl?'
ical education 3laor , of whom Miss Campbell's answer is that the
Florence Seys, '3lEd., is chairman.
The meet tonight will be inter-
class as well as intramural, as each
entrant will be competing for her
class as well as her house and her
individual record.

VWOMEN WILL SWIMl'WE#
TONIHT rH Flg['Quotesa

ARE SEEKING
OF LIFE, SAY
Late President Eliot of
Harvard in Discussing

SOUTHERN WOMEN DIET.

AJay i. WL~

The younger set seems to be diet-
ing. Twenty-six of the fifty-six
freshmen women at Birmingham
Southern are underweight. A mere
fourteen are plump, and sixteen are
normal.
VALENCE SALON AND
ART STUDIO
(Over the Ritz)
Complimentary makeup, prescrip-

tion and color scheme.
No obligation.
Phone 5807 for appointment.

5

III

Complete Line of Everything Musical

Mrs. Esther M. Cram, a member I_______
of the Board of Regents, was called PRINCETON UNIVERSITY---Un-
out of town Saturday by the death usual lighting effects are provided
of her aunt, Mrs. Widdicomb, who for in the massive equipment ne-
was a resident of Grand Rapids. cessary for the expressionistic play,
Mrs. Cram returned late last night. Toller's "Man and the Masses," to
be presented by a group of uni-
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA-Engi- versity players. The effect of dis-
neers are presenting a musical tance and height will be secured
comedy farce, "Jonsey," here. They by a 9,000 watt battery of flood-
have composed and directed the lights, located in a trough below
chorus routines themselves. I the level of the stage.

. %

Unexcelled Baldwin Pianos
Victor Mirco-Synchronous Radio
Victor and Brunswick Records

M'usic Tfeacher's Sttpplies

Ann StreetrgCo.
1117 East Ann Street
12 Blocks West of University Hospital

UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE
William Wade Hinshaw
Devoted to Music
601 East William Phone 7515

1I

III

Special EASTER Boxes
of
Johnston 's and Whitman's Candy
Wrapped and mailed, or delivered anywhere in the city
We deliver from 10 a. in. to 11 p. in. Phone 7850
- - - ---

Correct Riding Forim
The position of the hands in riding is a matter of utmost importance
-until you know how to handle your reins-you can't expect to manage
a horse. In all forms of pleasure riding the reins ar held in two hands
-the reins on each side in the hand of that side. If the bridle on your
horse has double reins-the upper one is the snaffle and the lower one
the curb. Place the little finger between the two-the snaffle rein on
the outside and the curb inside-between the little and the third finger.
You will notice that the reins will cross. Hold the curb rein a little lower
,than the snuffle-just so you can FEEL THE BIT but not enough to
fret your horse. Hold your hands directly in front of your body-waist
high-with palms down and elbows close to your sides. Many think they
will be mistaken for a BEGINNER when reins are held in both hands.
Well-just the opposite is the case. The greater your riding experience
with that much more ease and grace will you assume this position when
mounting-There are however the exceptions of the polo player, the mount-
ed police, and the western worker-all of whom ride a hrose trained to
guide over the neck-and all of whom need one hand free for some
kind of work. So always rmember the correct form for park or pleasure
riding is HOLD YOUR REINS WITH BOTH HANDS.

III

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LABORATORY
SUPPLIES
CHEMICALS

E BER ACH
AND
SON Co.

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