I FRTP Y, OC T (-?DPM 10, 19301 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rR!DAY. OCTQ~ER 10. 1!3fl Tl-1F~ MICHIGAN DAILY _ .. 1' *W-"WI lffMVA EWE J ._.- 5- uZJZS 5 1 Pan-Hellenic Elects Chairman of '31 Ball and MARGARET HELY, KATHERINE WILCOX RECE IEPOSITIONS Paf--Hellenic Banquet to Take Place in League Building on October 27. BALL TO BE NEXT MONTH Scholarship Cup Will Go to Pi Beta Phi for Second Year in Succession. Margaret Healy, '32Ed., was elec- ted chairman of the 1931 Pan-Hel- lenic Ball, at the meeting of the Pan-Hellenic association which was held yesterday in the Cave at the League building. At the same time Katherine Wilcox, '31P., was chosen chairman of the annual Pan-Hel- lenic banquet. Members of all the sororities in the association attend the banquet with their pledges. At this time the scholarship award is present- ed, and the speakers discuss some angle of sorority life which pre- sents a sufficient problem. This year the affair, which is informal, will take place Monday, October 27, in the ballroom at the League building. The scholarship cup, which goes annually to the sorority maintain- ing the highest average for the preceeding year, will be presented to Pi Beta Phi. This is the second successive year that this group has received the award. Any house receiving the cup three years in succession will gain permanent possession of it. The Pan-Hellenic ball, which takes place each year on the Fri- day following Thanksgiving day, is the one affair sponsored by the wo- nen on campus to which independ- ent and sorority women alike in- vite the men. The affair is for- mal and also takes place in the ballroom at the League building. At the meeting yesterday, a per- manent time of meeting was de- cided upon. The association will meet at 4 o'clock on the first Tues- day of every month. Helen Chee- ver, '31, is president of the Pan- Hellenic association for the present school year. W.A.A. COMMENCES WORK FOR SEASON Vacancies op Executive Board to be Filled at Meeting. Activities will begin for the Wo- men's Athletic Association when the first meeting of .the executive board is held at 10 o'clock tomor- row morning in the Women's Ath- letic building, according to an an- nouncement by Helen Domine, '31, president of the organization. Beside t h e regular business, names will be considered to fill the present vacancies on the execu- tive board, and it is important that every member of the board be present at the meeting unless ex- cused by the president. A second meeting will be held next Thurs- day, October 16. BUTLER UNIVERSITY - The student council recently began a campaign to secure the continu- ance of an omnibus line which is convenient to the students. CHOSEN TO HEAD ANNUAL BANQUET MANUSCRIPTS ARE GIVEN TOJUDGES Emily Bates Announces Receipt of Five Plays for Junior Girls' Show. TIME OF MEETING SET Receipt of five manuscripts for the Junior Girls' Play was announ- ced by Emily Bates, general chair- man, at the meeting of the central committee held yesterday in the undergraduate office at the Wo- men's League building. Plans were made to read these plays Tuesday and Wednesday nights, October 14 and 15. The judges will be Dean Alice Lloyd, the members of the central committee, and the direc- tor of the play. A time was set for regular meet- ings of the committee, which will be held at 3 o'clock on Thursday of each week. The names of sub- committee members which were passed upon yesterday will be an- nounced as soon as the eligibility of the women.has been determin- ed. ROYAL BETROTHALI REPORTED ABROAD I _X X { k . Associated Press 'h/otM Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria who is reported en- gaged to Duke Charles of Spoleto, son of Prince Aosta of Italy. I Women Have Proven Their Proficiency in Study of Organ, Believes Palmer Christian T~nr~ "( irin i~n nchnn fra i-nl n thn Hrma ( fPIlI Katherine Wilcox, '31P., Who was elected chairman of the annual Pan-Hellenic banquet to be given October 27, in the ballroom at the League building. HONOR RDAE AT LEAG UE AFFAIR Reception in Ballroom is First Function Ever Given for School as a Unit. Graduate students will be enter- tained for the first time in the an- nals of the university as a separ- ate school, at a reception tonight' in the ballroom of the League building. The reception will be similar in aim to those given each summer for all summer school students to, create. a feeling of friendliness andE informality among the group. Dr. Carl G. Huber, dean of the gradu- ate school, and Mrs. Huber, will re- ceive the guests tonight. Edna Thomas Will Be Honored Guest at Tea on Monday Edna Thomas, who is called "The Ambassador of Song to the World," will be the guest of honor at a tea given by Chi Omega oh Monday, October 13. The president and chaperone of each sorority house and dormitory on. campus, the glee club advisers, and the patronesses of the sorority have been invited to meet Miss Thomas. Not only is Miss Thomas a sing- er but she is also an actress. She has charmed her audiences the world over by both her singing and speaking voice. The London Times, Le Figaro, Paris, Lokalanzeiger, Berlin, the Sydney Herald, the Egyptian Gazette, Cairo, and El Sol, Madrid, all join in singing her praises as an artist. With such a reputation preceding her arrival tickets are selling rapidly at the box-office in the Lydia Mendels- sohn theatre for the performance on Tuesday night, October 14. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS-The student hospital here is paying $10 a pint' for blood to be used in pre- paring infantile paralysis serum. Two students have made the sale already. - - -_ Palmer cristian, wno has been i giving the Wednesday Twilight Re-t citals in Hill Auditorium for thej past six years, believes that women students have equal chances with men in the study of organ. "Women are very eager to learn and work very hard," he said. "Some are taking the course with- out credit and accomplishing re-t markable success. The men are usually intent on pushing forwardj to Concert work, whereas few wo- men actually plan to do this. The latter desire to play in the home, in some of our large churches, or teach theory. "Some of the largest churches object to women organists because the direction of the choir requires such strict discipline and they be- lieve that men are better able to maintain this. However there are, critics that prefer women, believ- ing that they have a lightness and delicacy of touch that a man does not possess," said Mr. Christian. Women Attain Distinction "Until recent years it has been the custom to go abroad to study, but now it seems to be an accepted fact that due to the latest im- provements in the building of or- gans in this country and the a- mount of interest cultivated by teaching, there is a greater oppor- tunity right here. We have fresh- e- thought and newer methods de- void of tradition." Mr. Christian states that there are some very prominent women who have been obtaining distinction as organists. He heard Mrs. Charlotte Lockwood, New York, N. Y., play at a conven- tion at Toronto Canada and be- lieves her to be one of the most successful organists of the day. He attended a convention of the Na- tional Association of Organists at Los Angeles this summer where Miss Lillian Carpenter, another leading woman organist played. Audiences Are Appreciative The audiences for Mr. Christ- ian's Recitals are made up of an equal number of men and women usually. Both seem to be appre- ciative just as far as they are in- Lerested ei program.ne ee s that each individual has his own favorities and he tries to make his selections as representative as pos- sible. Mr. Christian states that he is just as interested in women stu- dents as he is in men, and remarks that they work as faithfully and are as appreciative as the others. "It is the training and perseverence of t h e individual that really counts," he said. There will be no dance at" the League tonight in order to avoid any conflict with sorority rush- ing formals. A dance will be held as usual, however, tomor- row night in the League ball- room. ~- ~- I Organized Nursing Is Answering Needs Of Middle Class, Believes Director "Organized nursing is reaching out to answer the needs of the modestly salaried group just as more than 15 years ago it organiz- ed public health to meet the needs of poverty," so stated Janet M. Geister, headquarters director of the American Nurses' association. "Waste is the result of the pres- ent system," according to Miss Geister. "Unemployment in the private duty field has reached a peak this year. When we need a doctor, he comes to us for 15 minutes, half an hour or an hour, according to our need, and is able to do more for us in that short space of time than could the practitioner of a score of years ago in a much longer time. "But when we need a nurse, we engage her on the basis of the en- tire day, whether the patient needs 24 hours of continuous nursing or only an hour or two each day." The result of this maladjust- ment is that there are large num- bers of persons not now receiving the skilled nursing they need be- cause they cannot afford to pay for' it. The wealthy class can buy the services of a nurse; the poverty group has nursing care given to it, but the moderately circumstanced group often goes unnursed. To meet this need, many official registered have been formed. The nurse works on a full-time basis through the registry, ministering to the needs of several persons each day. It is to ascertain the place of the registry in relation tu community health programs that the Ameri- can Nurses' association is under taking its survey. Your New Hat- modeled head- Our trained in every way to your cutters are capable of m.t 111111111111111111111111111111111! liii 11111 I It I 111111111liii! uiiiii liii I I 1hII1u1uiI1n|nII,1II1 I L IGIHIT L UNCH ES and CANDIES Where Service and Quality Reigns 212 SOUTH MAIN STREET Ilrlrrtll Ulll rIIJIIIII1 IIIII III I111111 liIII II 111l1 I I llll I l1 Illll 1llll111111llill 111 1 making your hat perfect in line and detail. Individuality is stressed above all else--and the sur- prising thing is-they cost no more. EMMA B. FOGERTY 117 E. LIBERTY ST. - - .It El LI-JL u fI F , / r ; . _ j '': ( '. i. j 1 0 I i Coats of subtle grace-dashing individual styles - fashionably correct, as Jacobson's coats al- !5' Ir ridionis more f±hcrn.a i se'a of faces 10 the h'cirned 1 eC-ye of a "woman whose lade in colhes 3sjtirqueslionctle t lShe sees ai-a herin8T of' sm-nor ly dress~d women, and thos j J.he _Colrs kopjx ways arc. Richly fur trinmned that are lead- ers of winter fashion. Priced $59.75 up 11 111111 t d l ) 31 1111 U U I a ==i _"---- i--" - -II JillI IN Amm .. A 1~ 1111