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March 03, 1932 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1932-03-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHICAN DAILY ~_

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Freshpuan

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HIloilmen I Choose

d arginia

Salisbury as Pageant I

ESTELLE STAIISIHER:
SIX OTESSELECTED faoOFIE

Cluff, Bates, Sabin, Sutherland,
Diebel, Bradner,. Chosen {
for Central Committee.
MISS PERRY GIVES TALK
Sally Ensminger, Chairman 9f
Judiciary Council, Presides
at Meeting.
Virginia Salisbury was elected to
the position of general chairman of
the Freshman Pageant, yesterday
afternoon when first year women
chose the central'committee for the
first big project of their college ca-
reer. Mary Wood was chosen to be
her assistant and Estelle Standish
was made chairman of finance. 3
The remaining positions on the
central committee will be filled by
Virginia Cluff Barbara Bates, Mary
Sabin, Nan Diebel, Ruth' Bradner,
and Barbara Sutherland,
Sally Ensminger Presides.'
Sally Ensminger, '32, chairman of
the Judiciary Council, presided over
the meeting. It was opened with a
short address by Miss Jeanneitte:
Perry, assistant dean of women,
who explained they position of- the
pageant among the campus tradi--
tions. She urged each freshman to
accept this opportunity to meet her
classmates and stressed the import-
ant part this activity plays in
teaching one the art of getting
along with people. She asked that
each woman take part in the pag-
eant some way whether it was in
dancing or serving on a commit-
tee.
Due to the illness of Miss Ethel
McCormick who has directed the
pageant in the past several years,
Miss Perry will act as director this
year.
- Tells of Program.
Miss White, of the department of
physical education for women, told
somethi,,g of the program last year
and presented the. same theme,
"The History o f Music Shown
Through the Dance," as a possible
sugges~tion for this year. She point-.
ed out that it could be worked up
in an entirely different manner and
that work on it would be educa-
tional as well as, recreational. She
gave a brief outline of the history
of music naming the most import-
ant periods which could be express-
ed by dance, the primitive period
when only the -tom-tom and drum
were used, the Greek period when
melody was first introdtced and the
flute was used with the tom-tom,
the rennaissance period when har-
nony began to be a factor and the
religious ritual which was the most
important expression of the day,

NOTICE
Following is a schedule of re-
hcarsals for "No Man's Land"
for today:
Choruses 1, G, at 4:30 o'clock.
A practice will be held at 4
0,(lOck today for all principals
and choruses inr Act 1, Sen .
Sam and the girls will meet at
7:15 o'clock tonight and at the
same time Frank and Earnest
wifl practice. At 8 o'clock the
boys and the show girls will hold
a. rehearsal.'
According to Margaret Ferrin,
assistant chairman, it is n&es-
sary that all junior women in
the play sh'ould pay two dollars
by the end of this week. This
sum will be returned unless there
are fines for absences and tardi-
ness. -

Women Will Debate
Northwestern Friday
University of Michigan varsity
women's debate squad will meet
Northwestern University women's
team kin the second conference de-
bate of the season at eight o'clock
this Friday night in the Methodist
church.
The question to be debated will
be: Resolved, that India should be
granted immediate independence
from Great Britain. Michigan will
uphold the affirmative side of the
proposition. The women who will
debate for Michigan are: Dorothy
Davis, '33; Eleanore Maxine Gil-
more, '33; and Alice Gilbert, '33.
This will be the only conference
debate to be held in Ann-Arbor this
year, consequently it will be the
only opportunity for the majority
of Michigan students to hear the
women's squad debate. Michigan
has two such conferenceedebates,
the other one having been held
previously. In the first debate,
Michigan .met the Indiana women
on the same Great Britain-Indian
question, and held the negative po-
sition. Indiana won by a judge's
decision.
The judge of the debate to be
held with Northwestern will be Miss
Ann E. Lindbloom, coach of wom-
en's debate at the Western State
Teacher's College.

Scores Telegraphed From Six
Colleges; Receive 494
Out of 500 Points.
Michigan's rifle team defeated all
six of its opponents in the inter-
collegiate telegraphic meet held
this past week.
Michigan, with a score of 494 out
of a possible 500, bettered the Uni-
versity of Illinois with a score of
492, University of South Dakota
with 489, the University of Maine
with 485, University of Missouri
with 493, Michigan State with 475,
and the University of Kentucky
with 476.
The women who shot for Mich-
igan were Ruth Lovejoy, '34, Alice
Harrison, '35, Celine Smith, '32, Pa-
tricia Woodward, '35, and Marjory
Elsworth, '32. The first four shot
a 99 and the fifth women shot a 98.
Two other women who also fired
high but whose score did not count
in the meet, were Cecilia Green, '34,
who shot a 96, and Mary Marshall,
'33, who shot a 95.
The rifle team will hold a party
in the form of a rifle shoot Friday,
Mar. 4, at the Palmer Field house.
Shooting on range at moving ducks,
rabbits and other dummies will be
done. Prizes will be given for the
best shots.
NOTICE
Practices for interclass basket-
ball are continuing this weedS
with freshmen and sophomores
meeting on Monday and Wed-
m esday and juniors and senirs
meeting on Tuesday and Thurs-
day. All women interested are
urged to come out at once as
there is still a chance to make
a class team. Anyone desiring
information may see Jean Ber+-
ridge, '33, interclass basketball
manager.

S[By Elsie Feldman].

(Editor's note: This is the first of ,I
a series of articles on the outstand-
ing women members of the Univer-
sity faculty.)
Shortly after the organization of'
the School of Business Administra-l
tion, Prof. Margaret Elliott carme to
the University as an associate pro-,.
fessor in 1925 and at first devoted
most of her time to research work
in that school. She was later ap-r
pointed associate professor of eco-1
nomics and personnel management1
in the business school and in 19311
was advanced to the rank of pro-1
fessor. She is one of three women:
of the faculty who has the distinc-
tion of holding a position in a;
school where women have been
hesitant to enter, let alone teach.
Last week Professor Elliott re-
turned after a senester's leave of.
absence during which she traveled
in the Orient, visiting China, Japan+
and the Dutch West Indies. She
will continue instruction in both the
School of Business Administration
and in the economics department.
That Professor Elliott has had an
interesting and a brilliant career
has been ascertained from her col-
leagues, her friends, and the follow-
ing data on her life. Her rise was3
somewhat phenomenal. She receiv-,
ed her Bachelor of Arts degree in
1914 from Wellesley where she had,
majored in English and astronomy.
For a year she taught mathematics
at Abbot academy in Andover,
Mass. td
When the war came she wvent
into a factory and operated a lathe
e

for an apprenticeship. From this
work she went directly into war
work in the Industrial Service sec-
tion of the United States Ordnance
department. In this capacity Miss
Elliott was stationed at the Water-
town arsenal, in charge of the work
of introducing women into the
shops.
At the end of the war shegbecame
director of personnel in a large fac-
tory in an eastern city. Leaving
this work, she returned to Radcliffe
to receive her M.A. and Ph.D., the
latter really conferred by Harvard.
In competition with other graduate,
students she was awarded a schol
arship for a year's study in Europe
where she was engaged in research
in the problem, of unemployment
in England, France, and Germany.
She then came to the University.
Duinring her recent trip to the
Orient, Prof. Elliott was a member
of the American delegation at the
Institute of Pacific Relations, which
met in Shanghai last October and
November. This organization meets
every two years somewhere on the
Pacific coast to consider interna-
tional problems in the Pacific area.
She was in charge of the Michi-
gan personnel conference here last
spring and recently. served on a
University committee which con-
ducted a clerical survey of all the
office employees in the University.
(Continued on Page 6.)

Famous Faculty Women
PIROFESSOR MARGARET ELLIOTr

ELECTIVE R11
CLASSESTO
Women interested in
diate elective riding cias
meet at 4:15 o'clock evt
and Wednesday may cal
Burr, instructor in phys
tion at Barbour gymna
class will meet Mr. Mull
gymnasium who will ta
the stables. Later in sp
for absolute beginners v
Open practice for Bad
be held at 4:15 o'clock
gymnasium. Coaching
en by Miss Burr. Fron
tices it is hoped to hold
matches and a _ tourna
faculty, students and t]
bor Club.
Remember that t
someone's birthday.
own, send your
'flowers. Show you
ciation of the love
she has given you.
The Univer
Flower Shop
606 E. Liberty Pi
They will be pleased u
the selection.
They have a choice se
all the season's blooms
Funeral arrangements.
Flowers delivered throt
world.

flF The question to be debated is one
SO L !of vital importance at the present
time and has been the cause of
long-standing controversy between
Great Britain' and India,
PLNSL SSocieties Plan Party
Although there will be another for Wytern Members
League .tea before April 1, Enid
Bush, '33, social chairman of the Mortarboard, senior honorary so-
League,is announcing the special ciety, and Senior Society, honorary
Leaueis nnoncig te secil Iorganization for independent sen-
attraction of 'a style show for the ior women, will jointly entertain
former date. The newest fashions members of Wyvern, junor honor-
in spring models will be presented j ary society, and the faculty advisers
by a prominent shop, whose iden- of the three organizations at a
tity is being withheld. bridge party at,7:30 o'clock Thurs-
The tea will be the event on the day . in the cave of the League
series of monthly League affairs, building. A joint meeting of Mor-
and will be open to all women on tarboard and Senior Society to be
campus, including graduate stud- held at-7:00 o'clock in the Cave will
ents and faculty members. It will precede it.
be held in the League ballroom. at i -----

a
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