SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 1931 THE MICHIGAN DAI- PACE FM 1. SUNDAY, 3AN'UARY 18, 1931 THIS MY~HTGAN DAILY PA~ FTVE ............. UMVA*VA= U UWAVAMM M. . . frn r 1r IAIAUA. IIVILL VOID FIRST LADY OF LAND \ [ \H 0|| FIRST LADY OF LAND III ij AT LUNCHEON BY FIRST OPEN HOUSE. THURSDgYi A ENTERTAINED SENATORS' WIVES TRYOUTS FOR CAST' OF PLAY WILL BE JUDGED TOMORROW' Choruses to Begin Rehearsals in League Committee Room Tuesday. ROLL CALL TO BE TAKEN Bowling Tournament and Rifle Exhibition to be Main Attractions. ALL STUDENTS INVITED Intramural Bowling Tournament Will be Continued Until Tuesday Night. Open house will be held by the Women's Athletic Association for the first time this year from 7 to 9 o'clock Thursday night, Jan. 22, in the Women's Athletic building, and all women students are cordially in- vited by the organization to attend. The class bowling tournament and a rifle exhibition will be the main attractions of the evening, and refreshments will be served. Jean Perrin, '32, bowling chair-1 man of W. A. A. is making arrange- ments for the event. Adria Parks, '33, is in charge of the rifle exhibi- tion. Members of the executive board of W. A. A. will act as host- esses. Invitations Have Been Issued. Approximately 40 invitations haveI been sent to faculty members, members of the League board, and chairman of League houses. Those who are to participate in the tour- nament may ask any number of additional guests. Eight students will take part in the rifle exhibition, and will shoot in groups of four. Marjorie Ells- worth, '32, Celine Smith, '32, Violet Canberg, '32, Eleanor Kimball, '32L, Maxine Fisphgrund, '33, Loraine Larson, '32, Phoebe Mitchell, Grad., and Betty Cady, '34, are the stu- dents who will shoot. Tournament To End Tuesday. The intramural bowling tourna- ment will end Tuesday night, Jan. 20, instead of last night, as was pre- viously announced. On Wednesday, Jan. 21, the two or three students having the highest scores will be selected from each class to form the class team, and the interclass tour- nament will be played off Thursday night. W. A. A. Board To Be Hostesses. Members of the W. A. A. executive board who will act aq hostesses are Helen Domine, '31, president; Jean Botsford, '32, vice-president; Mar- garet Eamon, '31, secretary, Dorothy Ellsworth, '31, treasurer; Elizabeth Whitney, '31, Elizabeth Loudon, '32, Marion Heald, '33, Jean Bently, '33Ed., Marion Gimmy, '32, Frances Beuthin, '32, Constance Giefel, '33, Marjorie Hunt, '32, Miriam Carey, '32, Helen Moore, '32, Agnes Gra- ham, '32, Jean Perrin, '32, Audrey Callandar, '33Ed., Adria Parks, '33, and Esther LaRowe, '32. SORORITY EVENTS MARK PAST WEEK1 j Chairmen of Will bei Five Dance Cc in Charge Choruses. mmittee of COLLEGE ART ASSOCIATION EXHIBIT T T TT INCLUDES WORK OF SEVERAL WOMEN JI|ULIIIJ|I1III Lucille Douglas Offers Unusual entered here are entirely different Etching Entitled eYoung in their manipulation of the shade Sea Pines'. and light. In one entitled Evening, the artist almost pulls her figures Prof. Paul Douglas of Chicago By Cile Miller. I out of the heavy background as if University Calls College Among the artists who are exhi- she were carving the shadows into Conference in Detroit. biting prints under the sponsor- forms. In the other contribution, ship of the College Art association entitled, Cats at Window, the figures To discuss the problem of unem- in the North and South gallery of have the appearance of being ployment among students, four Alumnae Memorial hall, several affixed to the white background, al- women have submitted works of most as if they had been cut out women are attending the Student commendable worth. In considering and pasted on. Unemployment Conference which is the entire exhibit which is on the In her one contribution, Interior, being held in Detroit January 16, whole of an excellent caliber the Victoria Hurson has molded her 17, and 18. This meeting will be work of these women artists would light effects into a starchiness perhaps not stand out as the most which admirably catches the stiff- under the direction of Professor striking offerings of the show. How- ness of the colonial home. She at- Paul H. Douglas of Chicago Univer- ever, Lucille Douglass who exhibits tains a good sense of the third sity. The women who are attend- an etching entitled Young Sea dimension. ing are Ruth Unsworth, '33, Eliza- Pines, has contributed a piece of Anne Goldthwaite offers a Christ- beth Norton, '33, Albertina Maslen, work that can stand on its own in mas type of thing in the etching '33, and Folly Place. the total sum of the showing. entitled, Polo, Mabel Dwight and A varied program has been plan- In this etching the artist has Pamela Bianco, the last of the ned for the conference. Friday eve- achieved a bold composition made group of women exhibitors offer ning Mayor Frank Murphy will ad- up almost entirely by the sheer prints which although fair in their dress the group. A sight-seeing visit verticals of the lithe pines which is execution show no great individ- will be conducted Saturday after- emphasized by the one horizontal uality. noon by Professor Douglas to such of the sky line. The uplift of these points in Detroit as the Unemploy- slim verticals creates a sense of OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY-A ment Bureau and the Public Wel- striving and reaching out as if the recent debate between the univer- fare headquarters. On Saturday small pines were trying to attain sity and the Cincinnati university evening and Sunday P r o f e s s or a greater height. Lucile Douglass forensic squad was broadcast by Douglas will lead a discussion on also exhibits a print entitled Bud- station WLW. unemployment in general. Assocated Press PhotaJ Mrs. Herbert Hoover (center) was the guest at a capital luncheon given by the wives of senators. On the left is Mrs. David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania, and on the right is Mrs. Hiram Bingham, of Connecticut. Abundance of Vitality a Necessity to Women Entering Medicine', Says Dr. Bell Long Hours and Much Work Make Physical Vigor Necessary. "If a woman desires to enter the medical profession," said Dr. Mar- garet Bell, "she should have above all else an abundance of vitality as1 this is a strenuous course requiring long hours and much hard work."E In the army all men were dividedI into three groups; those who had to be carried back to the base hos- pital from the field and were a lia- bility to the government; those who were just barely able to make it back by themselves, and those who would come running back ready toj go out again. This same classification hold true Pegasus Club to Hold Extra Meeting Tuesday Pegasus riding club will hold an extra meeting at 5 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, Jan. 2J, in the Women's Athletic Association office on the main floor of the League building, according to an announcement by Ruth Babbitt, '313, president of the organization. All members are asked to attend, as the prints for the Michigan- ensian picture will be decided upon. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS- The Illinois Athletic association is building an artificial skating rink for the use of Illinois students. Costing approximately $300,000, the buiding will accommodate 500 ska-1 ters and 2,409 spectators. The build- ing will be open the entire school year. in other forms of life and the ones who succeed in medicine belong to the last class as they can come in at the end of the day ready tol spend the evening studying further! into the subject. Generally it is physical vigor over other qualities which makes great men arid women in any profession and this is particularly so of medi- cine. It is probably due to this that there are more great men than great women in this field. There are three other qualities which a woman must have if she would succeed as a doctor. One is a financial backing which will be certain enough to relieve her of any worries. The others are adequate intelligence, personality and char- acter. If a woman has these traits, there is no reason at all why she should not enter medicine and become a great su-ccss in it. Choice of a cast for the 19311 Junior Girls' Play will take place after the tryouts for parts, which will be held at 4 o'clock tomorrowl in the committee room at the League building. All women who are to attend these tryouts werel notified last week.I Choruses will begin meeting this week, also, starting with the mem- bers of Chorus A at 4 o'clock Tues- day, in the committee room at the meet at 5 o'clock Tuesday in the League building. Chorus B. will same place.I The members of Choruses C and D will meet at 4 and 5 o'clock, re- spectively, on Wednesday in the committee room at the League building. Chorus E will meet at 4 o'clock Thursday in a pace which will be announced later. The three chairmen of the dance committee, Lynne Adams, ballet, Winifred Root, critic, and Lois Sandler, tap dancing, will be in charge of these greoups. The assis- tant chairman's comrnittce, under Jane Inch, is responsible for taking attendance, since members of the cast and chorus are expected to attend every rehearsal, unless they have some valid excuse for not be- ing present. OHIO S T A T E UNIVERSITY- Longer liberty hours are being sought by the student senate here, following an investigation commit- tee. ha's Tower Leans On Emptiness, but the title in its picturesque language is more of a creation than the picture itself. For here the artist uses a shoddy amalgamation of conventionalism. Peggy Bacon a Connecticut artist who also has contributed several pieces demands attention more for story-telling lines than for her mastery of composition. As an illus- trator she is excellent for her every line is expressive of a human atti- tude. Never is her work sheer beauty of line, for her curves and the like always demand a qualifying adjec- tive. They are disdainful, churlish, or mocking. As an example of what Wanda Gag can do in this field of etching the prints chosen for this exhibit, only two in number, are confusing. Either the artist is versatile in the mastery of her medium of expres- sion or else her style of approach is not yet fixed. For the two pieces _ .._ . I ; Shampoo, Finger Wave, Arch Marcel, SPECIAL Manicure, Facial, Hot Oil Any A An ^ 7I Any $1 No Etra One C Two i5C Three $4-L Carge. - -~ - ..Waveoline Systezm 201 . Liberty St. Phone 241a BEALTY SIOPL.-- { r I I kw u ; k r r 1 p 4 I T~here's Many a Slip To wear beneath the new evening and after- noon frocks. True, they're not the petticoats of the days of the Gibson girl . . . they've changed for the better! lie - - ice III / e ' od ste Shoppe L'Ideal Parisi Designed for al Alterations-He Dial 2-1129 en Modes I occasions emstitching 620 East Liberty Street ATTENTION Mosher Jordan Girls Lodge Beauty Salon in Observatory Lodge Apts. now under MICHIGAN BEAUTY SHOPPE MANAGEMENT For Appointments and opening prices DIAL 22147 III E 'II I li Initiations at Head and Banquets Placed of Social Functions. _____ I , ----------- ---_--- -=-- _- --- i III Entertainment of varied types has occupied the social calendar of the campus sororities during the past week. Formal initiation ceremonies and banquet marked the high-point of activities at one house, while oth- ers have been busy receiving out of town guests and sponsoring parties. Gamma" Phi Beta is holding its formal initiation this afternoon for five women, and a banquet tonight in their honor. Those being initi- ated are Elizabeth Dusseau, '33, Monroe; Esther Emery, '32, Grand Rapids, Helen Finnegan, '32, Mar- quette, Elizabeth Hert, '32, Roches- ter, N. Y., and Miriam White, '32, Detroit. Pink sweet peas and matching tapers will decorate thel tables for the initiation banquet. Sigma Kappa gave a formal dance Friday night at the Women's Ath- letic building. Chaperones for the affair were Mrs. J. M. Holt, Mr. and Mrs. Carter Goodrich, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis I. Hopkins, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Drury. Merrick Heirloom HANDMADE CHINESE RUGS New Shipment ARRIVED TODAY DIRECT FROM CHINA Due to the continued low price of Chinese money I am able to price these rugs lower than I was able to price them way back in 1924 when Chinese rugs were at their cheapest. Sunday, 4:15, Jan. 25-Mendelssohn Theatre SCHOOL OF MUSIC TRIO Wassily Besekirsky-Hanns Pick-Joseph Brinkman Violin Violoncello Piano No Admission Charge Tuesday, 8:15, Jan. 27-Hill Auditorium American Violinist 0 I Slips with evening decol- letage . . . all white with white lace . . . tearose with cream lace. $5.95 Fitted slips that are made to fit without a wrinkle beneath the frock. Cut with the care and pre- cision of custom made garments. $2.95 to $5.95 a. /D ,. t In Choral Tickets: $1.00, Union Series $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 11 Monday, 8:15, Feb. 2-Hill Auditorium PAUL ROBESON Negro Baritone In Choral Union Series Tickets: $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 Tuesday, 8:15, Feb. 10-Hill Auditorium SERGEl ACHANINOFF Russian Pianist In Choral Union Series Tickets: $1.00, $1.50. $2.00, $2.50 New A rrivals in EVENING FROCKS that are just made to dance at the "HOP" Priced $16.75 to $49. 75 III III I II . Mo-mu._ - --- - ---