PAGE r P^ T T T" R R Ti-A T I T IN A XT T 'A T i %7 WEbNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1930 __HEM___ CH___G__AN___ A___LY 4'Q w GROUP IS FORMED TO FUR THER THEA TRICALS DIRECTORS PERMIT SORORITIES GIVE N FUNCTIONS DU In the past week sorority rushing reached its height with many novel, dinners, luncheons and breakfasts. FUTUREPROGRAMS originality and the result was par- ties of all descriptions. Cabarets, Basis of Choice Is Interest in fortune telling parties, and Dutch, Phases of 'TheatricalChinese and Japanese dinners were Phase of heat calpopular. Production. Kappa Kappa Gamma enter- tained at an Owl dinner given AIM IS USE OF THEATRE with owl decorations and place cards. Sunday morning they held a Pullmann breakfast using train' Membership in Group Is 25% decorations. But Number Will Increase Kappa Delta announces the ini- as Year Progresses. tiation of five members, Leonore Snieder, '33, Ellajean Bowen, '31, Offering a real opportunity for Dorothy Schwartz, '31, Wilena 25 arbitrarily selected women stud- Kalmback, '32, and Marjorie Lin- ents to sponsor the future activi- coln, '31. Among their entertain- ties, entertainments, and achieve- ments for rush week have been a msentrfthinentyiaMndelsshinChinese dinner, with lanterns and ments of the Lydia Mendelssohn cherry blossoms as decorations. theatre, the Board of Directors of Last night the house was trans- the Women's League voted last fasmeditheahouse wath me- Saturday at their regular meeting, formed into a cabaret with mem- to permit the organization of such bers of the sorority doing tle spe- a group. ialty dances. A party on shipboard with the. Women interested in all phases S. S. Delta Zeta was the motif of of theatrical production w e r e a novel party given at this house. selected by a committee composed Modernistic and Chinese dinners of faculty and administration and are some cf their other affairs. were notified of their selection dur- Mrs. Wilbur Humphreys poured at ing the summer vacation. a tea Sunday which the following 25 Will Not Form A Club. Detroit alumnae attended, Misses Although the group will not form Sirley=King, Jean Ransey, Lauyne a club, their number will probably Budge, Helen Fox, Katherine Wash- increase as the year progresses and, ington, Elizabeth Hamel, and Elea- as those women interested in the nor and Hilda Harny. project to make further use of The feature of the Chi Omega the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre, as cabaret dinner, Monday night, was a part of the Michgian League, a raid by the Ann Arbor police volunteer their services. There is force. Surprised sorority members already a waiting list for member- and rushees both were routed out ship in this group. from what apparently seemed a The formation of such a group respectable party when the bar at was suggested by the League in one end was searched. Sunday order that the theatre wing of the morning the Chi Omegas had a League building be used still more French student dinner. FOVEL RUSHING L RNL] RING PAST WEEKII 'LL ROGERS SAYS FEMININE PEDAGOGY WEAKENS SYSTEM OF. EDUCATION Alpha Epsilon Phi held a sport dinner Friday night. Golf sticks, riding boots, tennis racquets, and polo sticks formed the decorations. Sunday breakfast was served cafe- teria style with "help yourself" the slogan. Miss Margaret Dow, of Toronto, Canada is spending the week at the Alpha Gamma Delta house. Miss Dow is national inspector of thiss sorority.F Japanese and racketeer partiesr were two 'of the outstanding din-A ners of the past week at the Thetat Phi Alpha house. A novel luncheon was given and called the Earth- quake lunch. The first course was dessert and the affair finished upE with soup, decorations were car- ried out in the same topsy turvy j manner. Julia Kirwin, and Ruth and Margaret Brady spent the week end at the house.- Dr. Emmeth Schutz, new physi- cian at the Health Service, is to be guest of honor at a dinner Thursday night at the Alpha Ep- silon Iota sorority house. Alpha Delta Pi announces the, initiation of June Slate, '33. Their parties for the past week included a football dinner after the Mich- igan State game where the color decorations were Yellow and Blue with a miniature football field in the middle of the table. Delta Delta Delta entertained Miss Winifred B. Chase of Detroit and Miss Malfroid of Flint at the chapter house on Monday night. Committee for Junior Girls' flayWill Meet There will be a meeting of the central committee for the Junior Girls' Play at 3 o'clock tomorrow in the undergraduate office at, the League building. At this time the remaining members of the sub- committees will be chosen, and a date will be set for the reading of manuscripts. Woman Student Made Member of Law Review' Because of Fine Record. WOMEN SELDOM CHOSEN Because of her unusually high scholastic record last year, Mrs. Florence Frankel, '31L, was recently made a member of the "Law Re- view" staff, the official organ of the Law school. Last year, she re- ceived only one grade below 'an A, ' and that was a B, the first sem- ester. Mrs. Frankel is a graduate of the University of Illinois, in the class of '27. She majored in French there, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in her junior year. She took her first year of law at Western Re- serve college, Cleveland, Ohio. This nonor is one which is sel- dom accorded to women, but Mrs. Frankel's consistently high average was taken as a proof of her ability. Chauffeuring, as well as other forms of employment, has been provided for many women students at the University of Hawaii. Professor Robert E. Rogers, of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, recently attracted nation- wide attention by saying that women teachers are largely respon- sible for many of the defects in our educational system. The speech which caused the disturbance was in part as follows: "Our boys and girls have not been taught to think. They are interested in applications, n o t principles. They have had no fundamental instruction in ethics and conduct, in the problems of society and government, in genuine science as opposed to tinkering. They reach maturity ignorant of these things and unable to criti- cize in any but the most superficial way. "The faults I have been speaking of are the faults of women teach- ers: preoccupation with method, interest in details, insistence on discipline, disinclination for poli- tical, mathematical, and philo- sophical thinking; an inclination to insist on abstract beliefs to be accepted docilely, rather than the free give-and-take of criticism. "Man knows that truth is a plural kind of thing, capable of containing, and even sustaining, many inconsistencies and contra- dictions . . . Woman is a monist. She likes to mold and shape things over-her husband, her sons, her community .." "I call your attention to the key words here: 'leadership,' 'inspira- tion,' 'great moral issues,'-the old, old line of goods that during two generations our schools have been selling instead of the hard facts and tough thinking we need so badly. Incomplete Platonists all of us, living in an imperfect world that exists in perfection only in our minds." Miss Ruth Yap, instructor in the University of Hawaii mathematics department, recently acquired some early mathematics findings. She found that the Chinese used cubic equations a thousand years before Carden, and the Horner method of approximating roots centuries be- fore Horner was born. PRESIDENT G I V E S PICTURETO DORM Martha Cook Receives Portrait of University Head. President Alexander G. Ruthven has presented his autographed por- trait to the Martha Cook Building. His picture, which arrived Tuesday morning, will be hung in the Presi- dent's Nook, where it will be in the distinguished company of the por- traits of former presidents James Burrill Angell, Harry Burns Hutch- ins, Marion Leroy Burton, and Dr. Clarence Cook Little. "The residents of The Martha Cook Building are very glad to add to its little gallery, this picture of its noted neighbor," said Miss Mar- garet Ruth Smith, social director of the Martha Cook Building. COLLEGE BEAUTY SHOPPE We Offer SHAMPOO AND FINGER WAVE ................ ..... $1.00 SHAMPOO AND MARCEL.......... . ..... . .... $1.00 OR MANICURES ............... .50 FACIALS ...... ........... .......-... $1.00 By Expert Operators Open all Evenings Phone 22813 i completely than it was last year by the women students themselves. The real purpose of this newly created organization will be to offer varied opportunities to those women, who are interested in the theatre as a recreation. The group definitely will not enter into campus dramatic compe- tition, but will endeavor to put the theatre to the best use. Among the projects suggested for activity have been a series of plays for children, to be presented on Saturday morn- ings, a marionette theatre, and the backing of certain artistic produc- tions offering opportunities for ex- periment in publicity and theatre management. Start as Unprecedent Project. In order to start the group as an altogether unprecedent project, care must be taken that its early presentations be successful and therefore the first entertainment which the members will undertake to present will be a play for chil- dren to be given Saturday morn- ings in November. Nine children will b.e included in the cast for the prologue and wIl be chosen from the Tappan School Players, who have offered to co-operate with the new group in theit projects for children. The 25 womenselected for mem- bership in the group will meet for the first time at 4 o'clock next Mon- day afternoon in the Garden room of the League building. G . Name Members of Group. Those who have accepted the in- vitation to join the newly selected group to further the activities of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre as essentially a woman's theatre are IF YOU ARE ECONOMIZING SHOgES We are featuring, excep- - I 'First Lady' of Canada Is Sister of Minister Miss Mildred Bennett, sister of the prime minister of Canada, the Hon. Richard Bennett, is "first lady"' of Canada, because of her brother's bachelorship. Prime Min- ister Bennett and his sister are of the ninth generation of the family on the American continent. Miss Bennett is said to be one of the most charming women in Cana- da, and an able and eloquent speak- er. She materially aided her broth- er by her speeches in his campaigr to defeat the former premier, the Hon. Mackenzie King. a r f f 1 B - as follows: Lynne Adams, '32, Blossom Bacon, '31, Louise Breakey, '32, Vivien Bullock, '31, Betty Car- penter, '32, Eugenie Chapel, '32, Kathleen Clifford, '31, Anne Daven- port, '31, Jane Fecheimer, '33, Elizabeth Gerhard, '32, E m i 1 y Grimes, '31, Margaret Hapgood, '31, Miriam Highley, '32, Erma Kropp, '31SM, Olive Matthews, '31', Mar- jorie McClung, '31SM, Ruth Mc- Cormick, Albertina Maslen, '31, Anne Robb, '31, Jane Robinson, '31, Hermine Soukup, '31, Alice Sund- erland, '31, Hadie Supe, '32, Eleanor Walkinshaw, '32, Janet Woodman- see, '31, and Jane Yearnd, '31. The plan for the use of the thea- tre by social groups has nothing to do with this plan, as the theatie will merely be loaned to the former as separate and distinct groups, this neW organization under the League will be a permanent body. You will get more out" ofyour Uniersitye ca- reer if you are able to thmsandtheses. Your notes will be much full- er if you take them in shorthand.tHundreds of Michigan students have learned typewriting and shorthand at Hamilton Business College. Many have used it to earn money on the side or (luring vacation. You will also find it very valuable in your career after graduation. Typewriting Shorthand Accounting Secretarial Training ENTER AT ANY TIME DAY AND EVENING CLASSES HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE State and William Streets I I i I I j I it Y r I The French Room Presents A White Eyeing Dress in CHE GRECIAN SI1 LHOU ETTE For the Rushing Formal and the Football Dance $ 17s A Hip-Length Velvet Wrap In Black and White ond Floor- 11 "---- -. -=--- -- Orr, I.o I' i . .H.. BEAUTY SHOP Our Specialty Permanent Waving Personalty Hair Cutting and Artistic Finger Waving We give hot oil treatments and facils and every kind of work in the beauty line. DIMATTIA BEAUTY SHOP tional values in newest r .... .... 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