T-HE MICHI G A N ID A I LY tus Ainounceinent Of New W. A.A. Board Is Made Ex-Officials Combine With Present Officers To bssie Appointments Appointments to the W.A.A. board made by senior members of the ol board and the new officers, Brenda Parkinson, '36, president; Jean Gour- lay, '37Ed., vice-president; Elizabeth Howard, '36Ed., secretary; and Dor- othy Shappell, '36, treasurer, were announced today by Miss Parkinson. Kate Landrum, '37, was selected from the house athletic managers to act as Intramural manager. Adele Gardner, 37, will take over the posi- tion of point recorder while Edith Frederick, '37, will report on the American Federation of College Women. Elsie Pierce, '37, will take charge of publicity. The following will act as sports managers: Martha Bragg, '37, arch- ery; Louise Paine, '36, badminton; Bessie Curtis, '36, basketball; Thel- ma Peterson, bowling; Julia Wilson, dance; Grace Gay, '37, fencing; and Louise Nack, '37, manager of golf. Further appointments are: Angie King, '37, ice-hockey manager; Jane Reed, '35, ping-pong manager; Betty Greve, '36, riding manager; Harriet Kanouse, '37, rifle manager; Mary Montgomery, '37, swimming manag- er and Jane Quirk, '38, tennis man- ager. The old and new board will meet at 5 p.m. today in the lounge of the Women's Athletic Building. The early appointments make it possible for the old members to assist the rew, orienting them to their new positions. Speech Groups To Hold Debate On Munitions Adelphi and Alpha Nu, national speech societies, will hold their annual debate between freshman teams at 7:30 tonight in the Alpha Nu room in Angell Hall. The Alpha Nu freshmen will uphold the affirmative of the question "Re- solved: That the Several Nations Should Declare Government Mono- polies on the Manufacture and Sale of all Combat Instruments of War." This team is made up of Lowell Kreig, '38, John Clark, '38, and Clarence Kresin, '38. The Adelphi team debating the neg- ative is composed of Bruce Johnson, '38, Eugene Gressman, '38, and Harry Shniderman, '38, with Dragon Mit- rovich, '38, as alternate. Mr.Carl Rob- inson, coach of the Ann Arbor high school debate team, will give the de- cision. Dance Recital To Raise Funds F o r Teachers "Juniors On Parade" will be pre- sented April 24 to 27 under the spon- sorship of the King's Daughters of the State to raise funds for the two teachers at the school for the children at University Hospital who are paid by this organization. This will be the third time the show has been produced. As last year, over 250 children will take part, all being trained in the studio of Roy :foyer, who has written and will di- rect the production. Last year more than $1,100 was made. Mrs. Max Goldman will serve as general chairman again this year. Assisting her will be Mrs. J. M. Nick- elsen, Mrs. Caniel G. Meikle, Mrs. Frank A. Mickle, Mrs. Walter Walz, Mkrs. C. L. Starbuck, Mrs. Arthur Schlee, Mrs. Harvey Rettick, Mrs. Russell T. Dobson, Jr., Miss Florence Goodrich, Mrs. Claude Gill, Mrs. George Gill, Mrs. R..H. Kingery and Mrs. Clifton Dey. All members of the King's Daugh- ters and others who are interested in assisting in sewing costumes for the performance, will be welcomed. Students To Design Dance Decorations Over 100 students have been se- lected to compete in the design of the decorations for the Architects' Annual Dance to be held at Grangers, May 10. The students selected are from the classes of drawing, paint- ing, sculpture, and architecture in the College of Architecture. This contest gives promise of great originality and creative work among the students, George Narovec, '35E, chariman of publicity, said. The decorations are to be a feature of the "Architects' Cartoon" Ball which will take the form of a masquerade. President Of W.A.A. Brenda Parkinson, '36, newly elect-I ed presiajer, of W.A.A., has an- ncunced the members of the board fu 19395-36.1 Informal Tea Gown Features Both Filmy And Tailored Types A combination of the flimsy and the tailored may seem a bit strange, but it is this effect that the designers have achieved in the latest informal tea gowns. Gauzy, mysterious, flimsy mate- rials are being used almost exclusive- ly. Chiffons, nets, and laces are combined with contrasting touches of organdie and pique to continue the contrast of the severe and the feminine. Contrast With Collars Black and navy blue are the most popular colors, but are most out- standing when combined with con- trasting collars and cuffs. One gown which has attracted much attention is of black marquiset with pink quilt- ed satin collars and cuffs. Another, a navy blue chiffon gown, has a nar- low, white organdie collar. Shirring and tucking are an out- standing feature of the best-selling gowns. One black net dress is char- acterized by shirring the full length of the skirt and a completely shirred cape.sTucks and smocking are be-. ing used to soften the more harsh lines of the tailored styles. Shirt-Waist Top Goo Variations of the shirt-waist top are being used to a great extent, but not in the usual "tomboy" fashion. The collars are slightly larger and are tucked or smocked in front and in back. A powder blue chiffon dress has been displayed which uses this combination of the sport style and the dainty. The sleeves in the spring tea-gowns are almost all of a type. The full, flowing sleeve with a tight wristband can be seen on almost any fashion plate. The sleeves are varied some- what by cording and novelty tucking, but as a whole, they flow, and are full length. Elbow length sleeves are being shown, but whatever the length, th9fy must be full. Tunic Is Featured The short tunic will continue to play an important part in the styles, but it will be a tailored tunic. A black net gown which is popular has the tunic style, but the tunic is open in front and is cut on square lines. Pique collars and cuffs add to the tailorei style of the dress. And, when speaking of the tea gown, one must not forget to mention the popular blouse back. This style Pas been varied, too, with shirrs and tucks. Fullness Emphasized The most important thing, how- ever, is that the dress must be full. From top to bottom, in waist, sleeves and skirt, the dress must hang limply in order to be up with the latest mode. Other tea gowns than flowing chif- fons are being shown if you are quite certain that you can't be yourself in one of the gauzy creations. Starched organdies are going to be worn. One which is on display is made of a bright plaid material, featuring the enormous puffed sleeves and full skirt. Michigan Dames To Hold Group Meetings Today The child study group of the Mich- igan Dames will meet from 3 to 5 p.m. today at the home of Mrs. E. A. Gilchrist, 1911 Packard St., for the March birthday party for the chil- dren. Transportation may be ar- ranged by calling 6690. PHI ETA SIGMA MEETS At the regular Sunday meeting of Phi Eta Sigma, national freshman honorary society, held at the Union, delegates were chosen to attend the society's convention to be held April 22 and 23 at Norman, Okla. T--ri (Cox. 47R. and 'Berth'vfnuit. Faculty To Be Feted Tonigbt By Newberry Dormitory Residents Plan Affair; Miss Wojtowicz Heads Committee Several members of the faculty have been invited to be guests at the Helen Newberry Carnival to be held at the dormitory tonight. The central committee, headed by Har- riet Wojtowicz, '35, assisted by Betty Hill, '35; Margaret Cutler, '36; Ruth Friedman, '38; Helen Schwartz, '35; and Mary Jane Bratherton, '37, has planned the activities. Dinner will be served at small and large tables in the regular dining room. Balloons and confetti will dec- orate the room, andi there will be programs and paper hats at the tables. During the dinner Margaret' Campbell, '38, and Marian Iddings, '38, as cigarette girls will distribute their wares' Byron Hildinger will play the accordion, and Shirley Redding, '38, will give a tap dance. A program will be presented in the parlors after the dinner. This will consist of a Midget show, a presenta- tion of Romeo and Juliet, and a big magician act. The latter will be given by Arthur Cutler, '37. There will also be regular carnival booths in the main room. These have been planned by Ruth Clark, '37; Jean Schmitt, '37P; Betty Newman, '38; Ruth Fried- man, '38; Florence Freeman, '38; and Beth Bazant, '38. These will include an animal show for which prizes will be awarded, a weight-guessing booth, and fortune telling. The faculty attending include Miss' Dorothy Beise, Prof. and Mrs. Henry Adams; Prof. and Mrs. Louis Karpin- ski, Prof. and Mrs. Arthur Bromage, Miss Irene Field, Prof. and Mrs. J. G. Hays, Mrs. Martha Ray, Prof. and Mrs. George M. Stanley, Prof. and Mrs. Peter Okkelberg, Miss Kathleen Hamm, Dean Alice Lloyd, Miss Byrl Bacher, Miss Jeannette Perry, Missi Dorothy Ogborn, Miss Ethel McCor- mick, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Power, Miss Henrietta Scranton, Mrs. Henry Doug- las, and Arthur Cutler. RUMMAGE SALE Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music sorority, held its annuall rum- mage sale Saturday, March 23. The sale was held in the Marchese Build- ing on South Main Street. Miss Vida Patten of Chickasha, Oklahoma and Miss Gladys Schultz of Ann Arbor were in charge of the sale. Henry Moser H Students Wi By DR. HEREWARD PRICE ] "A Midsummer Night's Dream,"'1 everybody agrees, was written for3 some nobleman's wedding. That is; why there is so much music and dancing, and why Shakespeare was able to make such large use of the' fairies. There is no doubt that the play was performed with the utmost splendour of which the Elizabethans were capable. The last scene, espe- cially, with the dance of the fairies, through the dark house, was effec- tive, and nowadays calls for resource- fulness from a modern producer. The play is epoch-making as it settled once and for all what fairies were go- ing to be in European literature. All fairies in Western literature, since "A Midsummer Night's Dream" became known to Europe, owe something to Shakespeare. The play is a perfect example of thakespeare's art of construction.1 You have numerous couples on num- erous levels or "planes" in love with one another. You have an absolute mix-up of all this love making, but you never have a confusion in the spectator. Everything is kept clear and brought to the expected conclu- sion. This may sound like the idolatry of Shakespeare which is so much out of fashion, but there really is no other example in dramatic literature in which so complicated a plot is constructed with such a firm and clear line. Furthermore, it is the supreme ex- ample in literature of the power of evoking a landscape and the whole spirit of the mood of Nature. The Midsummer's Night is in all Euro- pean countries, a famous night in which girls meet their lovers and there are all sorts of spells in the air. Shakespeare has ciptured the spirit of this wonderful time and brought it onto the stage. The art by which he has done this is as won- cerful as his skill in construction. It is all a matter of implication - di- ,ect description, there is none. His 3hief difficulty, of course, was to make the fairies alive on the stage. Other dramatists, when they bring such supernatural creatures into the thea- ter, keep them too far removed from our lives for them to be effective. Shakespeare, by a bold stroke, asso- iated a queen of the fairies with the thickest numb-skull and the clumiest blunderer of all the humans, and at once the fairies are real to us. Further, of course, the fairies take glds Class For ta Speech Defects an interest in human love affairs, and both Oberon and Titania are very human in their own love affairs. The result is that with all this 'mixture of interest, the play never drags for a moment. The dramatic interest is keen and intense from the first word to the last. Shakespeare, of course, carefully calculated his values and we must not forget that music, song, and dance were aql essential part of the play from the beginning. Two European Art Exibitions In )etroit Now Two free exhibitions now showing in Detroit offer a rare opportunity to view both the sculpture and the original drawings of modern European artists. An exhibition of "Contempo- rary European Sculpture" opened this week at the Society of Arts and Crafts, and the Detroit Institute of Arts is showing an exhibit of "Modern Ger- man Sculpture Drawings." Many critics believe that the mod- ern age will be remembered longer for its sculpture than for its painting. At the Arts and Crafts the carved figures of man and animals illus- trate the modern trend toward strong, clear cut, cubic shapes. Unlike the Expressionists, modern sculptors pose their models naturally. Their works possess a peaceful, lyric quality. This same feeling characterizes the simple, bold drawings at the Institute. Both exhibitions include the work of such great sculptors as Gerhard Marcks, Wilhelm Lehmbruck, Ernst Barlach, Ewald Matare, George Kolbe, Renee Sintenis, Ernesto Fiori and Richard Scheibe. The Arts and Crafts, 47 Watson Street, is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Shakespearean Play Set Status For Fairies In Our Literature I To flush red with embarrassment every time one speaks - to fight a battle in order to push out the simp- lest words, and to be weak with ex- haustion at the end of a speech - it is no wonder that stuttering causes its victims more agony, perhaps, than any other defect. Yet most of us glib talkers never realize what it means to stutter. A recent survey estimates that 52 per cent of college freshmen have defective speech, blurred articula- tion, rasping or strident voices, if not actual stuttering. It is to help these people, particularly the stutterers, that Henry Moser, instructor in speech, is conducting a corrective class, and the departments of speech and linguistics are doing laboratory research into the causes of stuttering. Stutter When Embarrassed All of us stutter in embarrassing situations, Mr. Moser says, and the stutterer has a double handicap to overcome. His defect has made him so sensitive that embarrassment takes away what little voice control he has when he recites or gives a speech. Before rythmical exercises can do any good he must become accustomed to talking publicly and lose all sensitive- ness about his defect. It is this com- plex built up from the attitude of shame which has tortured the stutter- er all his life that Mr. Moser finds so hard to change. Many feel their lack so keenly that they will submit to C's and D's rather than expose themselves by talking to what they feel is the ridicule or pity of the class. Left-Handedness A Cause Recent discoveries show that left- handedness and stuttering not only run together in families but that most stutterers started life left-handed and were made to use their right hands in school. Several experiments in the speech laboratory show that stut- terers have a different correlation of their hands than normal. If a right- handed person writes simultaneously upon a blackboard with both hands, his right-hand figures will be legible, his left-hand backwards and unread- able. The stutterer almost always shows tendencies instead to make the left-hand pattern the legible one. Graph Nerve Impulses Another experiment explains the theory. Electric graphs are made of the nerve speaking impulses on each side of the jaw. The stutterer has two different nerve messages to obey that fight for dominance. The result battle, while a normal speaker has a uniform nerve impulse, showing that one side of his brain domin- ates his speaking. When a left- handed person has been made ambi- dextrous, he incidentally develops both sides equally, so there is no long- er a smooth nerve path, and he often becomes a stutterer. Although almost all of Mr. Moser's cases exhibit a history of left-handed children being made right-handed, there are other factors in speech de- fects, such as impediments of the speech organs, malnutrition, and ill- ness when a child is learning to speak. Stuttering has many baffling and contradictory aspects that make every case individual. Some talk perfectly in conversation, but go to pieces on the platform, while for others debat- ing is simple, and talking impossible. Mr. Moser tells the story that he once walked into a room where one of his cases was giving a speech in great oratorical style, but that when the boy recognized his surprised face, he immediately began to stutter. League Style Show To Be Held Today The latest spring fashions will be displayed at the style show, to be given at 3 p.m. today in the League. The whole second floor will be opened to the public, and the models will par- ade through the ballroom, the Ethel Fountain Hussey and the Grand Rap- ids rooms. The show is sponsored jointly by the League and a Detroit apparel shop. No admission charge is made, but tea may be ordered for 15 and 25 cents. Proceeds go to the Under- graduate Campaign Fund. Miss Ei- lene Yeo, a University graduate, is assisting in arrangements for the show. Models include Harriet Heath, '37, Betty Ann Beebe, '37, Ann Osborn, '35, Jane Servis, '36, Mary Stirling, '35, Mary Garretson, '36, and Louise French, '36. University Alumni Announce Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Kunkle, Ann Arbor, have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Esther, to Stanton J. Ware, son of Mr. Elmer E. Ware, Detroit. The engagement was announced at a dinner dance at Oriole Terrace, Detroit, Friday, March 22. Both Miss Kunkle and Mr. Ware graduated from the University in 1934. Mr. Ware was affiliated with Phi Kappa Psi. No plans have been made as yet for the wedding. -l I. '11 I1 1 ;r 11 I April First Presenta tion of CINEMA HAS,$5 II III ..~i~;"*~ - - I I i