THF, MCHI2GAN DAILY right Colors, Smart Gowns Ad lendor 'To igt fSoph r Mark Annia. Entertainm en Wne Neimarnn And i Ropal Oak Gluest vl, Grand March The Soph Prom last night w bright with colors and brilliant witi metallic accents. The grand marc a real fashion parade, was led l Miss Ruth Judson, Royal Oak, ar Wencel Neumann, chairman of tli committee. Miss Judson were whi novelty silk crepe with a cerise bo on each shoulder and a belt whi crossed in front and fastened in th back with a large rhinestone buckl Sue Thomas, committee woma escorted Eby George Lawton, wo. pink heavy crepe with a silver bead top, a cowl neckline in the back ar a short train. Miss Grosberg In Pink Jean Grosberg, committee men' ber, also wore pink. Her gown w of satin, made on princess lines, an featured a wide rhinestone belt. Mi: Grosberg was escorted by Gerso Harwitz, Detroit. The other committee women wei Bernice Reed and Florence Harpe Miss Reed wore a long sleeved foi mal of black moss crepe with cor flowers about the neck, with whic she wore coral jewelry. She was ac companied by Parke Sager. Miss Harper, who was escorted b George Van Vleck, was dressed i: pink crepe which featured a bib ef feet in front edged with pink mara bou. The marabou also trimmed th V-shaped decolletage in the back. Also vell to the fore in the gran march were the committee men Among them were Rupert Bell wh escorted Marsinah Pierce. Mis Pierce wore white velvet with a sil ver sequin jacket. Catherine Mc- Naughton, who attended with Russel Walker, also chose white. Her gowr was trimmed with green satin whic- lined the short cape sleeves. Ostrich-Feather Trim Bill Milne, also a member of the committee, escorted Ruth Sandusky who wore a black crepe gown which featured crossed straps with beading on the shoulder. Frances Schoen- holz, escorted by Joel Newman, was gowned in black, too. Her velvet dress was trimmed with red ostricli feathers around the neck. The new popularity of prints was evidenced by Suzanne Johnson's for- mal. It featured drop shoulders and a flounce around the hips, carrying out the quaint effect. Miss Johnson was escorted by Robert Atkins. Bob Merrill, another mmeber of the committee, brought Jane Arnold, who wore blue crepe trimmed with mink tails. Her jewelry was brilliants and her slippers silver. With Class President Joyce Black attended with James Cook, the president of the sophomore class. She wore a simply cut dress of aquamarine crepe, with a strip of the material encircling the neck and going down the center of the back. Other prominent sophomores at- tending were Julie Kane, who wor a purple gown with flowers decorat- ing the shoulders; Elizabeth Rich ir peach rough crepe featuring a draw- string neck, rhinestone decollete anc a train; and Jane Haber, whose gown was periwinkle blue satin with a belt of American beauty velvet. Red Popular Red was a popular color. It wa worn by Ann Timmons, whose velvet gown had a clever girdle which crossed in the back, by Martha Steen, whose frock featured black fur cuffs and also - by Gertrude Sawyer and Mary Potter. Marie Abbott, male lead for the forthcoming Junior Girls Play, ap- peared in a charming pale yellow crepe. Orange was an excellent choice for Mary McCarthy for it con- trasted well with her brown hair. Virginia Cluff, also prominent in junior class functions, selected a pale green gown with a silver beaded band at the neckline. Harriet Heath was gowned simply in a smart black sat- in, while Winifred Bell's red gown featured rhinestone straps. Two red-heads, Betty Anne Beebe and Judy Trosper, were present also. The former wore a becoming brown dress, but Judy preferred the con- trast of white as was shown by her velvet gown and its matching white velvet hat. Peggy Connellan's blue velvet had an unusual bodice of a lighter ma- terial trimmed with a clever bow at the neck. Pauline Voorhies, Detroit, attended with Russell Runquist, committeeman, and she wore a black lace wvith wing sleeves. A white lace top with a matching lace cap set off Janet Jackson's black dress. Elizabeth McCoy appeared in a pink beaded satin and we noticed Elizabeth Blood's pink brocade with a T strap back. Louise French, Mary Bursley, Betty Greve, and Barbara Spafulding all were dressed charm- lDeai Lloyd Tells (if Training Which P recede(I Presenm Ofpie LDITORns NO i: T ii s ' 'i , public h&Ith nus n,, but nobody a series c ri chs c o i t i uv 01 prominent i Wo( iL We _: i {'t. wanted her, or so she says. "At least," - -she remaiker, "they said that I need- In spite of the fact that for three ed soine other special courses for that years she has been Dean of Women, and I thought that after four years few people know the steps that led of college and three years of nursing, to Dean Alice Lloyd's position. A I had had enough courses." So she nurse's training, and work in the went to work in the Children's Court Detroit Children's Court would seem in Detroit, where she worked in the odd prieparations or a deanship. Yet "neglect" and the "delinquent" de- Miss Lloyd had both of tnese. partmenis. After two years there, she She was born in Ann Arbor, and I again had the opportunity to go to I attended the schcols here through Europe, this time with her sister. her sophomore year in high school. Upon her return, she was asked by when she left Ann Arbor to attend President Little to act as one of the Milton Academy, Milton, Mass. three advisors to women. This was After leaving Hathaway House, as during the period when there was no the boarding school was called, she official Dean of Women. 'T'here was took a fifteen month tour of Europe little difference in the organization, with her family, and returned to Ann however. That was in 1926; from that Arbor to attend the University. Her time until 1930 there was no Dean father Alfred H. Lloyd, was at the of Women. In 1930, Miss Lloyd was time that she was in school a profes- offered that position. Miss Lloyd is T sor of philosophy. He was later now living with her mother; she has chosen Dean of the Graduate School two brothers and a sister. and served in that capacity until his She is anxious to know the women death in 1927. in a social as well as an official way. Prominent on Campus She has never been known to refuse Alice Lloyd was as we would call an invitation that will enable her to it a "big shot" on campus during meet the students socially unless cir- her four years of college. Besides be- cumstances made it absolutely impos- ing a Phi Beta Kappa, she was a sible. i - I' i E C 3 t member of Wyvern, junior honorary society, of Cercle Francais, and Deut- scher Verein. And here's a bit of news, she was leading man in the Junior Girls Play of 1915. The play then, she said, was more of a class function, and a great deal less pro- fessional. NowaReplaced rIY One of the highlights in the win- ter program of the Faculty Women's Club will be the recital given Tues- day afternoon, Jan. 23, by Mrs. Ma- bel Ross Rhead, associate professor of piano at the School of Music. The1 recital will be held in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All members of the club are invited to attend, and each member is entitled to bring one guest. The program is a well-chosen one, including a variety of interesting se- lections and composers. Two num- bers by Bach-Busoni, "Ich ruf' zu dir, Herr," and "Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme," will open the program, followed by two Scriabine selections, "Sonate-Fantaisie Opus 19," and "Andante Presto." Chopin's "Noc- turne Opus 27 No. 2" and "Ballade gp. 52"; "Feaux Follets" by Liszt, "Jeux d'Eau" by Ravel, and Dohnan- yi's "Capriccio, Op. 28," will com- plete the program. Mrs. Rhead graduated from the University in 1904, and has been as- sociated with the teaching staff of the music school ever since. On sev- eral occasions she has spent extended periods studying abroad, and has tnade a name for herself in local musical circles both through her public concerts and her work with orchestras. Tea will be served after the pro- ;ran Tuesday, with Mrs. James Clover, Mrs. Charles Sink, Mrs. A. ff. White, and Mrs. Samuel T. Dana pouring. They will be assisted by sirs. Wassily Besekirsky, Mrs. Ar- thur Hackett, Mrs. Earl B. Moore, and Mrs. Walter Colby. Acting as ushers in the theatre will be Mrs J. C. Bugher, Mrs. L. N. Holland, Mrs. Willard C. Olson, Mrs. Duane Carr, Mrs. Benjamin March, and Mrs. John Eaton. I iz i l "When I was in college, there were Pe " ~only 900 women as apposed to the Perhaps it's the new hats, perhaps (tu only00w wmenas posedy tote it's because we're tired of curls in v( 2,000 now, which probably accounts tecifrbttenwhi rm for many of the differences," Dean the coiffure, but the new hair trims M Lloyd said. The primary distinction were much in evidence at the Soph- ye and Wencel Neumann, Delta Tau between school then and now is that omore Prom last night. More and U st night at the Soph Prom. it was a little less highly organized, mere the serried rows of curls which a ---she said. Women had more time, for we all have adapted are giving way ltinstance, to sit around the living the natural hairline. m I 1 Gr ti room for a while after dinner and hfa. chat. Nothing is abrupt or shingled about fa At d C ] Graduating from the University in these trims, but the hair is gradu- we Attends ~ome. 1916, with an A.B. degree, after tak- ally thinned out until a smooth and ar ing a regular literature course with rather pointed finish reaches the a Club Prodiction the major emphasis on history, miss neck. The wave then follows in a Jr Lloyd spent the next two years teach- -lanting fashion from ear to ear. he ing a very interesting "private" And with the spring frocks high on ni "The Last of Mrs. Cheyney," pre- school. The school, of which she was the neck, the cmbination escap es sented by Comedy Club last night in the only teacher, was organized by th tl'5oy look of"too much." iti LydiaMendelssohn Theatre, was at- Mrs. S. Lawrence Bigelow in order to ha ts of course arc now worn far y provide private istructioni for her co the back of the head and friamen tended by a large number of faculty child. Classes were held, for the most the face, so that while the ringlets i and campus notables, part, on the sun porch of Professor are merely in the way, the line about La Dean Alice Lloyd was attractivelyI Bigelow's home, and the students, the in. 'emust on wit th i- ' gowned in black chiffon accented y ranging from six to ten years old, ow peak is suited