TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY- ..A..L.. s _ TAV ' q ,eague Will Give First Annua t J o tkli Daughter anqu AF FAI WIL ARK EVNT5CHDUE More Than Three Hundred Plan' to Attend; Alumnae, Mothers, Students Invited GLEE CLUB TO SING Jeannie Roberts, '32, as Social1 Chairman, Heads Committee for Arrangements. Formal recognition of Mothers' Week activities by the League will take place when the first annual Mother and Daughter luncheon is given at 12:30 tomorrow noon in the main ballroomof the building. More than three hundred are ex- pected to attend the affair, and not only visiting mothers and alumnae, but all women on campus have been invited to be present. Eittertainment Planned. The luncheon is being planned in conjunction with the events which are' scheduled for Homecoming Week-end, and will precede a bridge tea which will be given by members of Wyvdrn, junior honorary society- A 'program of entertainment has been .arranged, and skits from "Caime the Dawn!", this year's Juniodr Girls' play, will be featured. Mare Westm, '32, Eily Randall, '32, B ;rnette Bradley, '32, and Helen Van Loon, '32, will present selec- tions from the play, while Ruel Kenyon will act as accompanist. The University Girls' Glee club will also offer several numbers, and will lead in the mass singing of Michigan songs.. Social Head in Clarge. Jeannie Roberts, '32, as social chairman of the League, is in charge of arrangements for the affair, ad she is being assisted by Eleai'ioe Wlkinsha W,.32, Ruth Babbitt, '31Ed, Elizabeth Eagles- field, '33, Pauline Richards, '32Ed, Jane Thalman, '33, and Margaret O'Brien, '33. Miss Ethel McCormick, social director, has acted as super- visor. . A limited number of tickets are yet available, according to Miss Roberts. Group arrangements for seating will be made i specifled when reservations are mde. Tick- ets will be on sale at a desk in the main lobby of the League building frot 1 to 5 o'clock this afternoon. "Dig a Dime for a Doughnut" will be the slogan of the Y.W.C.A. Frosh commission of the University .of Oregon early next week when the organization holds a doughnut sale on the campus. The profits from the sale will be used to finance an annual tea which is given for all the high-school girls in Portland, Ore., who intend to enter the Tni- versity next fall. RUTH ANN OAKES TO DIRECT' DRAMA Mrs. Ruth Ann Oakes, Who is directing the new Comedy Club play, "Pierre Patelin," a med- ieval fare to be given tonight and tomorrow night in the Lydia Men- delssohn theater. There will be a Saturday matinee. MODERN STUDENTS HAVE ADVANTAGEi Director Believes High School Training Is Excellent. "Men and women of today have the chance of an experience and background which. gives them an ability and the power of interpreta- tion in their field of drama that we of the old school knew nothing about," said Ruth Ann Oakes, pres- ent director of Comedy club, in an interview yesterday.; Mrs. Oakes believes college dra- matic clubs should devote their fields to literature, well done. The new- Comedy club presentation, "Pierre Patelin," is a medieval farce done according to the old time French system of unity of time, place and action. It coincides with the modern ideas of college experi- mentation in drama, and the direc- tor believes it a "thoroughly worth- while revival, full of action and un- usual skill." Such plays are not out of harmony with present-day eam- pus life, for they possess an appeal which is universal. To keep in tone with the fifteenth c e n t u r y, imitation parchment scrolls will be used as programs, and the scenery will be made on the two-level plan,. "The attitude of the average drama student today has changed in the last eight years with the growing number of outside activi- ties, Mrs. Oakes stated. "He no longer can put his life and soul in- to the act, for he has too many oth- er distractions. But due to the su- perb preparation that men and wo- men have received in high school we are able to start them in a jump ahead." SCHOOL TO SPEAYl Marjorie Nicholson, '14, to Talk on Science and Poetic Imagination.' As one of the non-resident lec- turers brought here each year by the office of the Dean of Women, Miss Marjorie Nicolson, '14, Dean of Smith College and professor of English, will speak at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon iii room 1025 Angell hall on "Science and Poetic Imag- ination." This lecture will be open to the general public. 'Dean Nicolson attended Michigan as an undergraduate and obtained her A. M. here in 1918. Two years later she was awarded a Ph. D. by Yale University. She also did grad- uate work at Johns Hopkins Uni- versity and abroad, and in 1926 received a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. As a teacher in two Michigan high schools, and later as assistant professor of English at the Uni- versity of Minnesota and Goucher College, she has had a wide exper- ience in education work. In 1926 she joined the faculty of Smith College, and was made Acting Dean in 1929. "The Art of' Description" and "Conway Letters" are two of the books which have won her recogni-i tion as an authority in her field, and she has also contributed num- erous aritcles to "Studies in Philo-1 logy," "Philology Quarterly," "Mod- ern Language Notes," "Philosophy Review," "Modern Philology" and the "Atlantic Monthly." Dean Nicol- son has also edited selections froni Shelley and Keats, and from Ten- nyson. She is affiliated with the Modern Language Association of America, the American Association of Uni- versity Professors, the British Insti- tution of Philosophical Studies, Phi Beta Kappa and Chi Omega. Sorority Houses Plan Varied Functions for Mother's Week-end Although nearly every campu- sororit is occupying itself with plans ?or Mother's Week-end par- ties, one house var ied the social events of the week with a formal faculty dinner. Collegiate Sorosis honored several members of the faculty and their w ives at a formal dinner last night 'The guests were Prof. Win. Clarkc Trow and Mrs. Trow, Prof. Roy 11. Holmes and Mrs. Holmes, Pof. Henry Hutchins and Mrs. Hutchins, Prof. Louis Straus and Mrs.. Stlrauis, Prof. Harry Halley and Mr. Hally and Mrs. Edgar Durfee. Delta Zeta wishes to announce the pledging of Beatrice Collins; 34, of Detroit, and Beatrice Olm sted, '34, of Cleveland, 0. For Mother's Week-end Delta Zeta has planned a tea Saturday afternoon and a special breakfast for Sunday morning. Mothers of fifteen women at the Alpha Gamma Delta house are planning to spend the week-end with their daughters. They will be honored guests at dinner Sunday noon. Miss Emily Butterfield, a na- tional founder of Alpha Gamma Delta, will also be present for the occasion. Alpha Phi has planned numerous affairs for the entertainment of their mothers. For this afternoon the Ann Arbor Mother's Club will give a bridge party at the house for these guests and Saturday schedule will include a buffet lun- cheon at the house and the Wyvern bridge tea. After dinner Saturday evening the mothers will be taken to see the play at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Sunday a dinner wil conclude entertakinment for the week-end. COLUMBIA - An investigation made by Dr. Roy N. Anderson of Teachers College, Columbia Uni- versity indicated a lack of voca- ti6nal discrimination on the part; of women from 255 colleg s and universities. PHYSICAL EDUCATION INSTRUCTOR EMPHASIZES OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES Mrs. Dorothy Hall Cites Lives tinued. Considered from the stand- of Ancestors as Example point of physical health, outdoor oF ssexercise builds resistance to disease. of-Ftness. "The newer education realizes r r vhow closely the mental and physical Edior' Note. This is the eighth of a series of articles on the activities of the i life are interwoven. Bodily sluggish- Takona, Y. W. C. A. P Accomodates Forty Chid ' " ysi I duCald0t deparment. "If we had the opportunity to talk with our early ancestors, we certainly would not feel the need of impressing the value of outdoor activity on them," said Mrs. Doro- thy Hall in a recent discussion of outdoor sports. "Their very lives wcre bound up in the out-of-doors.I "Food, clothing and shelter de- manded bodily skill and alertness. Health and strength were absolute- ly necessary for survival. Amuse- ments were few, simple and active. "Today we are reaching the other extreme. Man has become a more sedentary animal, spending the greater part of his time indoors. Machine methods, crowded city life,{ a great number of artificial and chiefly passive amusements add to the rush and accompanying nerv- ous strain of modern life. There are probably many people who realize there is value in outdoor activity but think they have no time for it, little considering that they can not afford to neglect it," said Mrs. Hall. "The busier a person is, the more essential it is that he set aside some regular time for exercise," she con- TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All makes of machines. r Our equipment and per- i o n n e I are considered . among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. o. D. MORRILL #14 South State St. Phone 6615 ness brings a corresponding lack of mental alertness and mental quirks and unhealthy mental attitudes are frequently traceable to physical rsources. "There is no denying that there is a moral value in wholesome outdoor life," Mrs. Hall continued. "We enjoy nature second hand fromn our artists and poets. It seems to me the bAter plan to get outdoors and obtain first hand the physical hardiness, the mental alertness, the moral steadiness and boundless inspira- tion of a fuller type of existence," Mrs. Hall concluded. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY -Women who wish to learn to drive may enter a special class in automobile motivation which has recently opened for the benefit of Evanston women. It is being spon- sored by the Evanston police de- partment. Three University women will sist at the Y.W.C.A. summer co for children during the coming son. They are Olo Collins, '32, will be in charge of music and reation, Cathelia Pollock, '32, wl offliate as an instructor in turo craft, and Dorothy Kittel, who will act as nurse of the ca he position including general pervision of the children's heali The camp, which is called Ca Takona',.is situated on Clare h between Ann Arbor and Jaclk The season opens officially on J 28, and will last eight weeks. E camper's stay lasts from two to weeks. Camp Takona can accommo but forty children at a time, a is desired to prevent overcrow conditions. Last year more tha third of the campers were chile of faculty members of the Uni sity. WOMEN STUDEN TO DIRECT CA .._ .v_.______ _ .___ .--- _- .._...__ __ ___.... __ _ ,. ____._ ..._ _ --. . _ _ !- r r- ^r ^w--.rr.^-rw°w"-w v-www - r°Y -r" -w v w .-rw y1 FRATERNITY JEWELRY PARTY FAV ARCADE JEWELRY SHOP CARL F. BAY. JEWELUf AND OPTOMETRIST Nickels Arcade , Is; I' The Haunted Tver Tea Ro "With a charm all its own" lBrown I III and Aperfect setting for your private parti Luncheon 50c & 7c-Dinner 75c, $1, $1 R 2)o tir - re dr 9Ue-12o! Ile bpcwnsk~n days are almosi' upon us fr'eedcm fiom school is Ie mod/ cscused hvp c, seccnd only foerhaps, Io fha/ Soma new frockcs.kear /hem enl on - - - C'd//ts J/qppa ycA/ovwMa Ihey wan l& need . - and weknewul . LIBERTY;AT MA'YNAP X&dtus$ve/ef wtIQ! x/vzs'c I White type's .0 * , 417 East Huron Street S Ii 6emim=JP-orma'l This smart tic of white buck and Evening Frocks with black calf trim. { Also in pump with black NOW IS THE TIME FOR REMODELING and RENOVATING FURS Alterations of All Kinds CUSTOM TAILORING MARTHA A. NILSEN 228 SOUTH THAYER OPP. HILL AUDITORIUM and white white . . . brown and e . . . combination . . . fI. taify other SmA art AAA to C .Aft ! iEo [a cc on's ff1 MOW . adoT ~ Pinehurst Hats "Over the Counter Sale" of Tickets for f By studying Paris . . . by studying the personality of the smart American Woman ... Pinehurst craftsmen create . r :- ,. ' ,, . , _ > SINGLE CONCERTS their models with unerring taste. Witness "Yvonne" for instance . . . a tiny, sleek fitting crown . . . a simple angel- skin-ribbon trim . . . a softly drooping brim with that un- expected upward roll. $7.50 to $4QO0 -N"v00O These are frocks of the better sort - dresses that one in- cludes in her wardrobe for those occasions of distinct im- portance. And with all their elegance of styling, workman- ship and painstaking finishing touches that stamp them as smart, prices are yery attrac- tive at f AT SCHOOL OF MUSIC OFFICE CONSISTING OF ALL REMAINING TICKETS AS FOLLOWS: 'A ;i' ~ I III II