PAGE £PIV TUi; RRt(' Iitr n ht nA l V SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1930(1 " C.. IVI I l.I I.I t, H IN I H.t c., __ p ,' --qr 'wo F NEMVAVM M EWAum am M 0 JUNIORS Jill HOLD GENERAL MEETING THURSDAYA9T 4:15 Dean Lloyd, Amy Loomis, and Emily Bates Will Speak on Play Tryouts. ELIGIBILITY REQUIRED Women Can Pay Class Dues Next Week; Must Have Receipt to Enter Tryouts. At 4:15 o'clock Thursday, Dec. 4, there will be a meeting of all the women in the junior class in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. Miss Alice Lloyd, dean of women, and Miss Amy Loomis, director of last year's Junior Girls' Play, will be the speakers of the afternoon. Emily Bates, general chairman, will be in charge of the meeting, and will explain all the details of the tryout appointments and try- outs for the Junior Girls' Play, which are to be held next week. A special meeting of the Central Com- mittee will take place at 8 o'clock tomorrow night. Eligibility for tryouts consists of two things. First, an average of C with no E's for the last semester's, KANSAS FRESHMAN EARNS EDUCATION .... .. ...... .T E SUE EBAZAARS AlROOM TO BE UN BY SONORITY' All Campus Women Expected to Have One Meal in Tearoom, December 5 or 6. MUST RESERVE PLACES, Aid Asked for Fortune-Telling; No Professional Training Necessary. Delta Gamma sorority has charge of the tea room in connection with, the League and Interchurch Ba- zaar being held Friday and Satur- day, Dec. 5 and . Luncheon and dinner is being served both days and all women on the campus are expected to have one meal in the tearoom. Reservations should be made as early as possible this week. Soror- ities planning to have a meal serv- ed in the tearoom should inform Jane Brooks, '31, chairman of the tearoom, of the number of places they wish to reserve and the hour, they wish. to come. In order to have all patrons of the tearoom well pleased these reservations MRS. F. B. FISHER TELLS OF THE ntanxUrTal{ CHANGES OF THE WOMEN OF INDIA They Are Depriving Themselves to take to spinning than for us to - N E- for the Sake of the Cause do something independent. It is expected of the American woman. Inspired by Ghandi. Some of the women of the most elite Brahmin society have depriv- Schedule of Games "I have great faith in the supre- ed themselves much for the sake of 4 p. m.-Alpha Xi Delta vs. Delta mecy of women in the next era," the cause inspired by the Ghandi's. Gamma; Mosher-Jordan vs. Alpha jst ted Mrs. F. B. Fisher, wife of the Believes Ghandi A Great Soul. Gamma Delta. minister of the Methodist Episco- Mrs. Fisher says of Ghandi, "He 5 p. m.-Kappa Delta vs. Zeta Tau pal church. Having been on inti- is a great soul; silent and power- Alpha; Alpha Delta Pi vs. Theta Phi mate terms with the women in In- ful." Madame Ghandi has worked Alpha._ dia and China, she has become side by side with her husband. She deeply interested in their religious, has adopted an outcast boy and ist Any women desiring to play inter- social and political activities. also an ardent prohibitionist. TheyE class bkel usfit play ne- "oen h a v e changed more were great friends of the Fisher's. class basketball must first play on T an intramural team. The interclass teir tensr "The women have an equal edu- teams are being chosen at the close turning their attentions away from "athenawpoenhaeunit ihealed ofthse trmurg hsesn und thse the home because of the change in cational opportunity with the men t tl of the intramural season under the the kitchens. They need to carry in India. All of the colleges and new plan being inaugurated by the theit enThgento chrry-universities are open to them.t new lanbe~g iauguate bythetheir pent up energies into the s0Tahigadmeiiear-hi Physical Educations department. ilrdrndrgnevredp- Teaching and medicine are their The intramural season opens to- cial order and organize varied pro- main fields of specialization andg day and all women interested in fessions for women: not o ow the one language that they allb athletics should affiliate themselves Ms Fisher was on the Women's study is English. When it was pro-J with an intramural team. National Committee in India: her posed that there should be a com- sympathies being with the inde- montlanguage for all of India, theya Women interestect in playing pendent Movement. She greatly wanted it to be English and not basketball and who are not affili- admires their spirit and courage Hindi. ated with a dormitory, sorority, or saying, "it is much more difficult Tells of Feminist Movement. league house should report to Miss for them to take off their fine When Mrs. Fisher attended then Hartwig at Barbour gymnasium by jewels and silk stockings in order National Congress, it was presidedf 5 o'clock Monday. Club teams are -------- - -Iover by a woman and English wasv being formed. Rushn Dinners and used at the meeting. This is alson ______ a significant fact in the feminist All women wishing to play on Pan-Hellenic Ball movement there. She has been intramural teams who have not keeping up a correspondence withc had a physical examination this Enliven Past .eek the women in the Far East and shev year must have a heart and lung is now arranging for an All Asiaa test before going out for practice. Women's Congress to be held in In-1 ---- Thanksgiving week is not a pop- dia in order to discuss affairs ofC Two-court basketball is going to ular one for social activity, and womanhood. Japan has alreadyr be played. In the past the court consequently, breakfasts after the accepted.I has been divided into three parts Pan-Hellenic Ball were almost the Mrs. Fisher has learned to love( and players were confined to their only form of entertainment spon- India and its institutions. The two own section. The floor this year will sored by the sororities this week. books which she has written on1 be divided in two and the playing Alpha Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Al- India are "Freedom," which is a-1 space will be larger. This will afford pha Epsilon Phi, Sigma Kappa, Al- bout its religions, and "The Top of1 greater range of possibilities in the pTha Xi Delta, Phi Sigma Sigma, the World." From these books may development of definite formation and Alpha Omicron Pi all gave be learned many more of her ex-1 plays. breakfasts after the Pan-Hellenic periences and ideas gained from; --Bali last Friday night. life in the Orient. Instruction for dormitory, league Alpha Omicron Pi entertained house, or sorority teams may be seven rushees at dinner last Tues- NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY obtained during practice if desired. day night. -Women students here recently Alpha Xi Delta were hostesses petitioned that they be granted CORNELL UNIVERSITY - "Re- during the week to Agnes Reigart, smoking rooms in campus build- solved: that women should have '28, of Cleveland, Ohio. Miss Reig- ings.1 '~~~~~~~~ - .---'_-l --.-_t____ --- . - !narn712-ntT n_~~lal1t A1 ...-._ Miss Ethel McCormick to Supervise Work Committees. iOPHOMORES NAME CABARET ASR Associated Press Photo Florence Melchert, Kansas State Agricultural College freshman, who is earning her way through college, by working in the home of an instructor, was named "girl most outstanding in 4-H club leadership." - FORMER STUDENT Chosen of STRESSES ADVANTAGES Since her appointment as advisor to the Sophomore Cabaret, Miss Ethel A. McCormick, assistant pro- essor of physical education, and social director in the office of the dean of women, has been acting in the capacity of supervisor of the central committee, meeting with them once a week to consider the general problems. The committee consists of Bar- bara Braun, general chairman, Jean Botsford, assistant chairman, Margaret Ferrin, chairman of fin- ance, Margaret O'Brien, chairman of publicity, Catherine Heesen, chairman of decorations, Margret Schermack, chairman of entertain- ment, Virginia Taylor, chairman of food, Aileen Clark, chairman of waitresses, and Adele Wooley, chair- man of costumes. Cabaret Offers Opportunity. "I feel, that this is an unusual opportunity for the Sophomore women to make the contacts that are the essential part of any col- lege woman's life," stated Miss Mc- Cormick. "Working in the Sopho- more Cabaret, in any capacity whatever, whether the job be large or small, is one of the best possible methods of making friends, and the work itself is so interesting that it well repays the efforts spent. I only hope that every eligible sophomore will realize this, and that every womaY will be repre- sente& in some phase of the Cab- aret." The Cabaret will be given five times a day, December 5 and 6, and will be held in Sarah Caswell An- gell hall of Barbour gym, in con- junction with the annual League bazaar. work, and secondly, either junior j standing, second semester sopho- more standing, or second semester junior/ standing, with no participa- tion in any other Junior Girls' Amelia Igel to Study Psychiatric Play. Social Service at Western Dues Paid in University Hall. Reserve University. Tables will be located in Univers- ity hall from 9 to 12 o'clock and Amelia Igel, '21, of Pittsburgh, ,from 1 to 5 o'clock Wednesday, Pennsylvania, has just been award- Thursday and Friday, Dec. 10, 11, ed a fellowship under the Common- and 12. At the same time and place, wealth Fund of New York to study the dues of one dollar which each in the School of Applied Social eligible junior is expected to pay, Sciences of Western Reserve Uni- will be collected. This is for the versity, Cleveland. convenience of those who are try- Miss Igel will study psychiatric ing out for the Play, since a receipt social work. This field has devel- for the dues must be presented at oped since the war, and excellent tryouts. opportunities are offered in it for The time which has been sched- workers trained for psychiatric uled for tryouts is from 3 to 6 clinics and other medical social o'clock Thursday, Friday and Sat- agencies. urday, DecF. 12,13, and 14, inathe From Carnegie Institute Miss Igel Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. The received her master's degree. She type of performance which will be has done field work for the Family requested by the central committee Welfare Association of Pittsburgh, from women who are trying out and was at one time superintend- will be announcedaat the class ent of the Pittsburgh Bureau for meeting Thursday, as will the dates J'ewish Children, and has worked for the American Red Cross as a of second tryouts. disaster relief worker, and also as Classes Meet Twice a Week. a medical social worker in the Alle- The limbering and stretching gheny General Hospital in Pitts- classes, which have been conducted burgh. for the past four weeks in Barbour gymnasium, will practice Tuesday GREEK MAGAZINES UNITE and Thursday of this week in the Committee room, on the second Eleven sorority magazines have floor of the League building. With pooled their circulation, which is tryouts in the near future, 'Lynne about 62,000 for the purpose of en- Adams, who is taking charge of the couraging national advertising, ac- classes, requests that those who cording to an article in the current wish to enroll do so immediately. issue of Banta's Greek Exchange, a There are two hours of meeting, Pan-hellenic journal, published in the first from 3:30 to 4:30 and the the interest of the college fraternity second from 4:30 to 5:30 o'clock. world. should be made immediately. Three Churches to Have Booths. Faculty wives and women inter- ested in the church booths are re- quested to make their reservations early likewise. The churches inter- ested in the bazaar this year are the Episcopalian, Unitarian, and Baptist. Mrs. D. M7. Lichty is gen- eral chairman of the church booths. The entertainment committee headed by Elizabeth Osgood, '32, is seeking talent for the bazaar. Any- equal opportunities with mnen in ar new n one who is able to ell fortunes, -e either by palm reading orwith business and professions" was the while in Ann Arbor. cards, is invited to help in the for-I subject of campus debaters recent- Alpha Chi Omega entertained, tune telling booths that the enter- ly. "What we need is a good old- Mrs. Louis Nack, of Gayland, Ill., tainment committee is sponsoring, fashioned girl who can make good and Mrs. Marie Stuefer Schaffer, of It is not necessary to have profes- biscuits" was the contention of the West Point, Neb., as house-guests ._ 1sn eesr eaietast Monday and Tuesday. sional training in order to volun- negative team. o teer services. Only a knowledge of__ _________- cards is necessary. StDD Tuesday is Final Day.. SER The final date for submitting ar- ticles to the bazaar is from 3 to 5 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at Bar- bour Gymnasium. At this time all the articles assigned to the various houses on campus must be turned in. Mary Margaret McClure, '32, chairman of the articles commit- tee, will be present to check the articles submitted and she has an- nounced that Tuesday is absolutely the deadline for turning in articles. is: - --- - - -- - - - _ _ l It I Di-C amonds, Watches, Clocks, Je High Grade Repair Servic wet Try 'e F $30,000 Display and Sale a 3 G i " ,;, . C11 . } __ / , , , . r ' , ,4 . / l Women's League and Interchurch Bazaar Gift Suggestions Are Numerous EAT AT THE "TOYLAND TEA ROOM" LUNCH AND DINNER BARBOUR GYMNASIUM of Iil 1 1 III 11 .Fine Furs Monday- Tuesday We will have with us for these two days only,' a representative from one of the largest New York fur houses presenting for your ap- proval beautiful coats of I !h/ i A1 small doposit will hold your coat. Liberal i c r m s arranged. Jap Mink Lapin Hudson Seal Broad Tail A necklace of two-strands of pearls or colored stones with gold, will contribute just the right touch to the costume. $1.95. Muskrat Raccoon Caracal Beaver Otter Crepe With Lace for "Bright'n' Light" Sunday Night Frocks A yoke of lace to flatter . . . . a bright or light shade of crepe . . . . a dress to dream about! Dresses with intricate sleeve treatments and long, grace- Squirrel Friday Dec. 5 1 Q D M Saturday, Dec. 6 QAQ-P M- 11 '"I I"I ID o o t t 1 l/a f! r 11 III '_ III M I I I II III I