P trTTF:.qt 1AY_ 7AWITARV 13. 1931 THF MTCHIGAN D A I LY P'AGE FIVE !1?TWTA A~TTP ~1~ VTF M C 1 ~ '. N F A I /AfJ.J..Z JCVS~JVC A. 1Z , 4t1LJA. Z } 1 lA ii \. _ , _, .. , 4f NM-MMMVAVA M U M U A vil & MWO I aws, Iq - -:.5 - e.-ki j CABARET RECEIPTS REGISTER INCREASE OF MORETHAN $1001 Chairman Announces Total Gain of $290.52; Money Goes to Undergraduate Fund. LEAGUE LOAN IS REPAID Committee Members Praised by Margaret Ferrin for Cooperation. Showing a gain of more than one hundred dollars over the profits of last year, the Sophomore Cabaret cleared $290.52, according to a statement made yesterday by Mar- garet Ferrin, '33, chairman of the finance committee. Receipts Listed. The total receipts, including the money from admission tickets. dance tickets, and food amounted to $427.73, while dues collected from members of the sophomore class amounted to $331.00. A loan of $100, which was advanced by the Wom- en's league, was returned, togethert with the entire proceeds from the Cabaret. S"I would like to thank every) woman who worked on the finance! committee," stated Miss Ferrin, "for without their co-operation, all the work which was necessary to make the Cabaret a financial suc- cess would never have been accom- plished. Each woman did the $est work possible in her individual capacity, and whether the tasks were large or small, they were all performed well." Committee Named. The committee was composed of 19 members, and included, besides1 the chairman, Mary Barnett, Fran-) cis Clarke, Helen DeWitt, Betty Eaglesfield, Margaret Fuller, Ruth Gilliam, Estelle Goldstein, Erdine Griffith, Virginia ;Johnston, RetaI McOmber, Pauline Milbourne, Kath- erine Moore, Anna Neberle, Evelyn Neilson, Parrish Reikert, Betty Stein, Jane Thalamond, and Sus- anna Wood. LEAGUE OFFICIAL RELATES HOBBIES Photography, Life in Outdoors, Appeal to Eleanor Cook. "No, my hobby is nothing like collecting stamps or learning all the words of every popular song that comes along, "Eleanor Cooke, '31, president of the Women's League, declared yesterday. "My hobby might be called just observ- ing the outdoors as it is around me." MLLE. COTOPOULI PLA YS IN AMERICA! I ntramural - - -NEWS Schedule of Games Today 4 o'clock -Delta Delta Delta vs. Jordan 1; League VI vs. Mosher 2. 5 o'clock -Alpha Phi vs. Helen Newberry; League 2 vs. Betsy Bar- bour House. Results of Monday's Games. Alpha Xi Delta 18, Mosher-Jor- I dan 24. In this game, neither team was ahead of the other until the very end of the game when Mosher-Jor- dan, by some fine playing, managed to get ahead of the Alpha Xi Del- ta's. Delta Gamma 23, Alpha Gamma Delta 18. The Delta Gamma's and Alpha, Gamma Delta's played a moderate, game yesterday. It was not very fast and there was quite a bit of fouling on both teams. Kappa Delta 50, Alpha Delta Pi 0. Gappa Delta outplayed Alpha Gamma Delta in practically every respect yesterday in the game at 5 o'clock. Dancer's Lameness LIVIA KADAR CREATES ORIENTAL Slightly Influences SPIRIT IN FIELD OF MODERNART Successful Career Czechoslovakian Etchings Give of spiritual atmosphere it becomes Unusual Effects of Color little more than a pretty picture. Dancing as a cure for curvature and Contrast. The method which Madame Ka- of the spine is a remedy which, to dar uses in finishing her art is the r say the least, is comparatively un- Among the artists who represent direct reverse of the usual method. known in medical circles today. Yet Czechoslovakia in the field of etch- Copying her work from a previous an intensive study of the terpis- ing and also named among the pencil sketch, she draws the most chorean art was what lead to the promising modernists of the world, prominent part of the composition first and immediately etches that ultimate success of Grace Christie Livia Kadar challenges the recog- with acid; then she continues to of Utah, according to an article in nition of the artistic centers with add the other objects according to a recent issue of a popular maga- her peculiar style. Reminiscent of their decreasing tone subjecting zinc. the composition to acid after eachI Doomed to be shoved into the oriental arts in its mystic quality, ngle drawing. Thus the lighest background by poor health during of Byzantine decorative design in i tones which are etched last are her childhood in Salt Lake City, the its formality of intricate patterns, submitted only once to the acid. girl became moody, and refused to of Cathedral symbolism, and of a The usual process is to complete mingle with children of her own Beardsley tinge, still her art stands the drawing and then block out age, spending most of her time with as something unigue for its own these parts which are to remain her books. daring power. Many of her works lighter than the rest. Graduation from high school suggest the delicacy and the cur- marked a milestone in Miss Chris- ious scroll of a Chinese silk tapes- MUSICAL SORORITY tie's career. She informed her as- try.ILP tonished parents that she had de- Her effects although confined to cided to journey to New York City a small space for the most part are- to study dancing. Upon their indig- broad in general conception. She Hu Phi Epsilon Organizes New nant refusal, she became so ill that creates much in a compact unit Group at Michigan State she was put to bed, where she without producing a crowded pic- stayed for a whole year. Finally ture. Much of her peculiar fascin- College, her exasperatcd parents decided to ation depends upon paradoxical ~~~ -- humor her whim. and she began combinations: one finds the sym- W,n Mnt Phi Epsilon, national CHAHIRMN REQUEST REIPORTSOF SALES. Tickets for Basketball Spread May be Obtained From Managers. Those selling tickets for the bas- ketball spread to be held at 6 o'clock Thursday, Jan. 15, in the Women's Athletic building, are asked by the chairmen in charge of the affair to report immediately on the number of tickets sold. The spread is being sponsored by the Women's Athletic Association, and is the first event of its kind to be given on this campus. Marion Gimmy, '31, intramural manager, and Elizabeth Loudon, '32, W. A. A. basketball manager, are making ar- rangements for the spread, and tickets, which are priced at 50 cents, may be obtained from them or from the interclass basketball managers, s a n Manchester, '32, Frances Manchester, '34, Helen Wilson, '31, and Louise Peterson, '33. Members of intramural basketball teams are especially invited, but any women students interested in basketball will be welcome. Team managers are asked to see that their teams are present. Those who intend to come to the spread are asked to make their reservations immediately. PARI i,\A C& OPOULL r Actress Brings Art of Native Country to New York Stage Bringing with her the pride of an ancient heritage, because her an- cestors were men who created an art and culture which even now is considered the most perfect in the world, Mariki Cotopou li has arrived on Broadway from her n a t i v e Greece. fhe is the first actress to come out of modern Greece, and perhaps is the first great actress of her race, beca.iuse in the golden past of Greek drama, when men were "strutting their hour upon t h e stage," in the plays of Euripedes and Sophocles, all the roles were played by men. This new Electra, a small dark person with flashgin eyes and beau-' tiful expressi4e hands, is playing in a theater bearing the typical Broadway name, the "New Yorker," in the modern versions of Hugo von Hofmannsta hl's and Goethe's "Elec- tra" and "Iphigeneia." Although she plays them in modern Greek and consequently most of her hear- ers cannot understand a word she is saying, her audience generally agrees on one thing-an apprecia- tion of the beauty and dramatic significance of her postures and movements on the stage. Like the figure on the Greek vase she is ef- fortless, unstudied, graceful. The idol of her people, she plays dramas of all ages and times at her theater in Athens. At present she is studying English because she wants to take back to Athens some current drama. Eugene O'Neill's "S t r a n g e Interlude" andrElmer Rice's "Adding Machine" are the plays she has selected. She is one of tne most ardent CALENDAR Tuesday 2:30-Play Reading Section, Faculty Women's Club, League building. 2:30 - Pan-Hellenic, meeting, League cave. 7:30-Zeta Phi Eta, fourth floor, Angell hall. 7:30-Sigma Alpha Iota, League building. 7:30-Newcomers club, Faculty Women's Club, League cave. 8:15-Theta Sigma Phi, League building. 8:00-Athena meeting, fourth floor, Angell hall. 9:00-Faculty Women's Dance, Union. Wednesday 3:00--Music Committee, Jun- ior Girls' Play, W. A. A. Office, League building.' .:0CT-University Girls' G 1 e e Club, League committee room. 8:00-Studio Club, Russian Tea room, League building. Thursday 3:00-Program committee, Junior Girls' Play, League build- ing, Concourse. 7:30-Freshman Girls' G le e Club, League building. 7:30-Iota Sigma 'Pi, League building. 7:45-Black Quill, L e a g u e cave. Friday 4:00-Women's League party, League ball room. Saturday 3:00-American Association of University Women, League ball s'oom. working several hours a day in var- ious New York studios. Years of effort and c o n s t a n t struggle with difficulties resulted in the final realization of her goal. She battled financial troubles by teaching dancing herself while un- dergoing the severe discipline to which a dancer must subject her- self. Opportunity was not waiting just around the corner, for three years of effort, perhaps the bitterest of all, were necessary before she got her first Broadway engagement, but she won immediate favor with au- diences, and a five-year tour in London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, and Australia resulted. Today she is a frequent expnent of dancing as an art conductive to poise and relaxation, and she feels that rhythmic expression and in- terpretation may go far to aid oneI in acquiring self-possession. Her New York studio is a mecca for ac- tresses, artists, business, and pro- fessional women. SICKNESS REPORTS ARE EXAGGERA TED Only 15 Scarlet Fever Cases Reported in City. A s a correction in regard to the prevalence of Scariet Fever, Dr. Margaret Bell says that Dr. Wessin- ger of the City Health Department reports only fifteen cases in Ann Arbor. "There is no need for alarm, but there is need for good judgment in prevention,", states Dr. Bell. "The Dick test for susceptibility to Scarlet Fever was given at the high school yesterday for the pur- pose of finding out which children are susceptible to Scarlet Fever," continues Dr. Bell. bolical sketched besides the realis- tic; hints of the Early Christian nmozaics influence in contrast to unexpected modern quirks. All of her background is woven in for- malistic design and most of her. floral or tree sketching carries the same tint of sheer decoration, and yet in spite of this quality she seems never to lose the sense of reality in nature. In fact her pat- tern ized scenery often catches up the mood of the entire composition. All throughout Madame Kadar's work we find present an excellent understanding of compositiion. Her arrangements are well thought out and varied. Dominant in all of her work a quiet solemnity pervades her etchings, and yet accompany- ing this same repose and calm one often finds splendid interpretations of ecstacy or exultation as is rep- resented in the etching, Dawn, where not only the central figure of a girl with upstretched hands conveys the general mood of exu- berant joy, but even the scenery seems to be experiencing its first dawn. The Madonna and Child is a daringly modern interpretation in its departure from the traditional. The figures are haloed in an arbor and seated on the bench of an English formal garden. It is too beautifully quiet to be a taunt at re- ligion, and yet with its utter lack TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All snakes of machines. Our equipment and per- s on n e are considered among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 - - - - - - - - mem ers an alumnae of u amma_ chapter, and members of the fac- Graduates of Michigan ulty cf the School of Music, as well E *c * as residents of Ann ArborEngin m Actiortie Mrs. R. K. Brown, president of Mayhie R. Curtis, '05, AM, '08, the Alumnae chapter, Mrs. John PhD, '13, is back from a trip to Worley, Miss Dorothy Paton, na- IEvrope, during which she spent tional treasurer of the sorority, three weeks in Russia. Elizabeth Searles, '31SM, president Virginia Lee Hosmer, '25, AM, '27, of the active chapter, Miss Juva is living in Detroit and is taking an Higbee, Virginia Hamister, Spec., active part in the College Club Thelma Lewis, Ruth Reimenschc- there. neider, Edna Weifenbach,m31-M, tlizabeth Wellman, '29, is study- Vera Johnson, Alice Manderbach, ing law this year at Ohio State Uni- Grad., Mrs. Percy Danforth, and varsity, and 'her mother, Blanche Edith Koon, Spec., made up the Gardner Wellman, was a graduate group which went to Lansing, of the class of '04. 1#I nm usical sorority, installed its Phi Eta chapter at Michigan State Col- lege last week, twelve women from Ann Arbor attended the installa- tion. In this group were active fl, pb dwr l nl ,, -A of GCCnmmn A' Jani nary Sale continues Miss Cooke spends all her sum- Hellenists in the world today. She mers in the North where she swims, has made pilgrimages to the site hikes-she particularly likes to take of ancient Troy and to Mycenae, over-night hikes-and goes canoe- from whose hills Clytemnestra, the ing. She spends practically the wife of Agamemnon, leader of the whole day on the water. Greeks, and mother of Electra and "I like to play with a camera, Orestes, watched the reflection of too," she continued, "taking snaps the burning city of Troy in the sky. of quite a few scenes I wish to re- This young actress believes that member. I like to have the pictures Shakespeare got his idea of aveng- as reminders of some of the hiikes ing Hamlet from the Greek Electra I have taken. who made herself the symbol of On her walks Miss Cooke says she fury in her wild longing to avenge watches constantly for wild flowers her father's murder. which she takes home for her wild--- flower garden. Of all the plants Daughter of Governor she finds she particularly likes Weds Young Attorney ferns, to which she devotes a large space in her garden. (, sa , h~ "I am interested in any form of Richmond, Va., Jan. 12.----Virginia outdoor activity. I like winter now must share the residence of sports, too, but I don't participate her first lady with the nation's in them to any great extent. I do capital. enjoy living outdoors more than That partnership is the result of anything particularly the cooking the marriage of Miss Suzanne Pol- and sleeping. lard, daughter of Governor Pollard, "I don't like it because it is heal- and Herbert Lee Boatwright, young thy, inspiring, or for any of the Washington attorney. They will be other hundred and one reasons at home in Washington after the which are usually given for a taste first of February. like mine. I like it because all the Robert, chauffeur at the execu- time something interesting is hap- tive mansion, says he anticipates a pening all around which is quite Lusy year bringing "Miss Sue" from capable of intriguing you to such her domestic duties to those of of'- an extent that you even forget to cial hostess at the old grey man- go home for .dinner." siorm. !fl Mrs. Belmont Provides Woman's Party Home (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.-Money flowing from the French chateau of Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont has pro- vided the historic home just dedi- cated here by the National wo- man', party. The white-pillared brick man- sion is pronounced by architects to be amonor the finest examples of Georgian brick in the country. Our I 1 uutstanding Values We are cutting our prices to benefit everyone For MON., TUES., WED. only of each week. I [E&BUHA ROGRSSIrow4the AGES -4 WHEN CHARLES DICKENS WAS A REPORTER VTEN CHARLEs DICKENS was % rcporter on the London Morning Chronicle, the task of a newspaper- man was an arduous one. Often they were called upon to travel great distances by coach, transcrib- ing their notes as they jogged over the roads. TODAY NEws REPORTING is a high- ly developed profession. Speed and accuracy arc the fundamentals of its efficiency. In The Associated Press these two factors have been devel- oped to the superlative degree. Read the timely dispatches of -Important Reductions, --Substantial Savings on Women's and Misses' Cloth Coats- Dresses--Accessories REDUCTIONS COATS 3tol2 of their original price Sales Priced $15.00 to $98.50 FALL all WINTER GOWNS Originally Priced from 19.75 to 9.00 Are Now Reduced :1/4 to 1/2 Sale Priced $9.45 to $29.75 Accessories 1/4Of f of their Original Price Odds and Ends This Ad Is Worth 20c to You Shampoo and Finger Wave .. .1.25 To Introduce Our Ne/v Special Ho tFudge Sundae The Treat is on Us Ias# w L . l 61T &M- A -- . . 'A 44.. t.~ f lk Shampoo and Marccl $1.25 Hair Cuts (all styles) . 50c ' Also special priceI on Permanent Waving. I I