SUNDAY, JAN. 17, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE PAGE FIVE Union To Hold First Of Buffet SuppersToday Affair To Be Social Hour For Faculty Members And All Students Campbell In Charge Ballroom To Be Furnished As Lounge; Game Halls To Be Open To Women The first Union buffet supper will be held from 6 to 7:30 p.m. today in the main dining room of the Union, according to Howard M. Campbell, '38, chairman of the supper. Special invitations have been is- sued to fraternities, sororities and faculty members but all students have been urged to attend. The sup- pers are being sponsored by the Union to afford a Sunday evening social hour and a place to get to- gether for supper. The scholastic end, while important, is not being stressed. Men are urged to bring dates. Ballroom To Be Open The second floor ballroom will be open after the supper and will be furnished as a lounge for the use of all guests. A radio will furnish entertainment for those who wish to spend the evening there. During the evening all game rooms will be open to women as well as men. The supper will be served buffet style and all food will be placed on a long table in the center room. Wait- ers will be stationed in the dining room to serve coffee and dessert. Dinner Will be 50 cents per person. The plan for the weekly suppers was proposed by the Student-Faculty Relations Committee and will require active cooperation of faculty and stu- dent body to make it a success. The idea was adopted from the same plan which has been successfully worked out in other clubs. Several instances of this are Houston Hall, the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, Todd Union, the University of Rochester, the Hart House, the University of Toronto. Monday Meetings Supplement These Sunday evening buffet sup- pers will be supplemented by a group of coffee hour discussions to be held at 4:30 p.m. each Monday. These discussions will be very informal and Frederick V. Geib, '38, co-director of the meetings with Burton S. Well- man, '38, hopes that students will feel free to introduce themselves to each other. The meetings will be or- ganized along the lines of a "big bull session," and will be free. Spanish Influence { Reflected In Hats Of Various Styles, By VIRGINIA VOORHEES Freedom, even folly, is the keynote of hat fashions this season, with the1 Spanish influence dominating the scene. No two hats are alike- crowns are high, and crowns are low; they are peaked and they are square. Brims may be wide and straight, or 1 they may be rolled, and yet many are coming in without any brims at all. Reflecting the exciting, adventure- some life in Spain are the sombreros with their straight, wide brims and their high square crowns, the tor- eadors which remind one of bull- baiting tournaments, the tambou- rine-like models, and the flower-pot chapeaus on the crowns of which bloom silly flowers. In addition to these styles, there are postman's raps, pill-boxes, magi turbans, berets falling over one eye as well as rest- ing on the back of the head to pro- duce the halo effect, and the ever popular fedoras. Colors are as extravagant as hats, for one sees creations in red, green, purple, purply-blue, yellow, and even in pale greyish pink. A new orangy shade is striking when combined with navy-blue or black. Mrs. Kennedy Gets Alumnae Council Post, Panel Discussion Is Held On Fellowships Led By Dean Lloyd Mrs. James Kennedy of Detroit vas yesterday elected a member of he board of directors of the Alumnae 'ouncil at one of the mid-year meet- ngs of that body which have been jeld for the last two days in Ann Features Puff Sleeves Mrs. E. E. Slosson Recalls Experiences As America's First Woman Chaplain r- - f l -I,1 By HELEN CAYIAv - The old organ wheezed to a whis- per and stopped. If you had been there, you would have found your eyes wandering over the faces-of the double quartet that had just finished an excellent rendition, pausing a minute to look at the monceled young tenor on the end and then traveling on to gaze at the slight feminine figure in front who directed them. It was a scene in the Wyoming; State Penitentiary, Laramie, Wyo., in the 1890's-the slight figure of Mrs. E. E. Slosson, the first woman prison - chaplain in America, who described her experiences in an interview yes- terday. 1 I 2 krbor, Mrs. Lucille B. Conger, execu- ive secretary of the League, an-I xounced last night. The vacancy, which Mrs. Kennedy illed was caused by the resignation >f Mrs. Stuart Weaver of Monroe, Ars. Conger said. A panel discussion on "The Value >f Fellowships and the Need of Them it Michigan" was conducted at the norning meeting by Dean Alice C. .loyd. Participating in the discus- sion were Miss Clara Roe, a teacher >f history at Flint and a former Ilumnae Council fellow who is work- ng on her Ph.D.; Miss Marion Siney >f Muskegon, who recently returned prom Europe where she spent a year n research work as a fellow of the Social Science Research Council to ,omplete her doctorate here under he Rackham Foundation Fund; and Miss Violet Wu, a Barbour Scholar t Michigan. Miss Roe explained how difficult it s to attain a graduate degree with- >ut at least a year of free undirected work which a fellowship provides. Miss Siney, who is interested in the ,ause of neutrality, gave a talk which centered about her studies in Europe and of the value of fellow- ships in permitting people who wish to achieve a higher education to do so without financial worries. The value to oriental women of scholarships and fellowships was pointed out by Miss Wu. PLEDGING ANNOUNCED Collegiate Sorosis announces the pledging of Joan Hanson, '40, of Minneapolis, Minn. For semi-formal evening wear this emhrodered-net frock, reflect- ing the newest spring accents, is just the thing. The roomy puff sleeves are most flattering to the shoulders and arms, and the full, flaring skirt falls in extremely graceful lines. The demure collars and cuffs and the row of tiny but- tons from neck to hem add thel finishing touches to this attractive model. epm Wedding Plans Are Announced Israel Wepman of Grand Rapids has announced the engagement of his daughter, Dorothy Fern, '37, to Cyril Bernard Rill of Grand Rapids, son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Rill of Winnipeg, Manitoba. Mr. Rill is a graduate of McGill University where he was affiliated with Pi Lambda Phi. The wedding will take place in July. A party was given in honor of the couple from 9 p.m. to midnight yes- terday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Coffman of Ann Arbor. It was in the form of open house. Mr. Coffman is a senior in the Law School. Ruth V. Uren, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Uren of Ann Arbor, will be married to Charles Lawrence Pace of Detroit, at 8 p.m. Feb. 11 in the League Chapel. Mr. Pace is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Pace of Saginaw. She attended the University before graduating from the Michigan State Normal College. Lives With Son Mrs. Slosson now lives in Ann Ar- bor with her son, Prof. Preston Slos- son of the history department. Her white hair belies the length of the intensely interesting life she has led and her twinkling eyes as she related the episode of fulfilling chaplain's duties for five years at a state pen- itentiary made it seem as if it were only yesterday. Asked how she had received the po- sition, she went on to tell how short- ly after she and her husband, then a professor of chemistry at the Uni- versity of Wyoming, had moved to the small town of Laramie, she had been requested to lecture at the pen- itentiary by the chaplain. Upon rec- ommendation of the state, the pris- oners had' been deprived of their oc- cupational work such as rope-making and carpenter work, so the chaplain felt it his duty to furnish something to help the men keep busy. He de- cided to invite a group of lecturers to give a series of talks in which the men might be interested. Mrs. Slos- son lectured twice to these men, both, times on literature. Interested In Books "It was a little surprising how in- terested they were in books, she said. "The prison had a small li- brary, the books in which were worn to a frazzle by steady use. The pun- ishment the men dreaded most was the deprival of their library rights by taking away their cards." A short time later the chaplain left and the warden, a hardy Scotchman, decided to set a precedent by asking the prisoners which one of the town ministers, who had formerly offered their services to them, they would prefer for the next chaplain. To his surprise the spokesman for the pris- oners requested Mrs. Slosson. It was only by repeated urging that the warden decided to ask her. "I told him I wasn't a minister," she said. "The only thing I had ever done along that line was an oc- casional sermon or two for the Con- gregational minister who held serv- ices in a small town near where I used to visit my uncle. 'Aren't you a were admitted. One mild little c good Christian?' he retaliated; so I ture had been with her husband w: accepted, and after some hesitation he was shot down by an enemy embarked upon my unknown position the cattle men-sheep men war t with some trepidation." was so common to that part of Selected As Chaplain West. She had picked up the; At that time, even a masculine that her husband dropped as chaplain was an experiment and the slumped and shot his opponent. duties differed somewhat from those husband lived but she was sent of today, Mrs. Slosson explained. prison for life. However, petit When asked if she ever had to 'walk soon brought about her release. down the last mile,' probably the Supported Woman Suffrage most familiar of a chaplain's duties to the average person, she replied in Mrs. Slosson was born as May P the negative. Her only obligation ton in Ilion, N. Y. in the Moh was to hold services every Sunday valley. At the age of 13 she afternoon. These services she con- came dissatisfied with her I ducted herself, informally, in the school work and was permitted chapel for Catholic and Protestant enter Hillsdale College. She was alike. Usually on Wednesday and on probation to see if the exp frequently at other times she held ment would be successful and a visiting hours and soon grew to know was proved so, was allowed to each of the 200 men. ish her college course there. A -ne oher graduation she transferred Her friends warned her to expect Cornell University where she all sorts of denials of their guilt fromC.i.r the convicts, but in all her experience cialized in literature and philos she received only. one. Many of the and walked up in June, 1880, at cases were life imprisonment. Many age of 21, to receive the first P] of temen, sheae ain, were well as far as is known, granted t of the men, he exlaine , wwomanllin the United States and educated and had committed only whain tewrd one offense.h-w One a University Graduate Although there had been some "The young man who sang tenor pleasantness connected with so vigorously," she recalled, "was a presence of women in co-educati graduate of the University of Penn- schools a few years previous, t sylvania who was sentenced to prison was none at Cornell when she for forgery shortly after he grad- there, she stated. There wer uated." girls in an enrollment of 5,000 "The men as a whole were inter- the professors and male stud ested in anything we suggested and seemed to want to help them entered into programs and holiday along. The president, Dr. An celebrations with vigor. One in- D. White, was very kind and allc mate who entered while I was there none of the professors to mak was an Indian who could speak no English but who was sentenced for the murder of his squaw. I don't believe his expression changed more- than five times during his entire sen- tence. I remember one Fourth of July celebration particularly, his first in the prison. A pageant had been arranged and the boys decked him in native attitre and placed him among the decorations. During the entire ceremony he didn't move an inch and one visitor even inquired as to where we had picked up the wooden PRINTS Indian." In five years only three women ,ea- hen y in that the gun he Her t to ions res- awk be- high d to put eri- as it fin- kfter to spe- ophy the 'h.D., to a tper- un- the onal here was e 50 and [ents get idrew owed ke it ] UTZEL Main at Libert, IS 'p any harder for the girls ;n an effort to discourage them. Soon afterward she married Dr. E. E. Slosson, a young professor who, had received his M.A. in Chemistry at; the University of Kansas and later. obtained his Ph.D. at the University; of Chicago. After twelve years at. Laramie, the Slossons and their two small sons moved to New York City where Dr. Slosson became a professor at Columbia. Later he became asso- ciate editor of "The Independent" and the author of, among other> books, the familiar "Creative Chem- istry",and "Great American Univer-. sities." Born In Ilion, N.Y. Smilingly she confessed that while her husband lectured at Columbia, she herself lectured considerably in vigorous support of woman suffrage. "American women have just about everything they want now," she said. From the home in New York her son Preston pursued his studies and received his Ph.D. in history at Co- lumbia. After graduation he became, for a time, literary editor of "The Independent" and the author of sev- eral books, among them "The Decline of the Chartist Movement." "I enjoy history, of course," she said, smiling in the direction of her son who was buried behind a "Na tional Geographic," "and also poetry and fiction. She does not enjoy mod- ern poetry as a whole but admires Robert Frost along with John Mase- field, W. W. Gibson and other Eng- lish poets. Amy Lowell she classes as excelling in nothing but the de- scriptive. ~TAT E ITREET JEWELER WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING Never mind the calen- dar ! Flowers are all in bloom on these new prints. Big, no - doubt- about-them flowers, gay- ly splashed on dark back- grounds to make their colors stand out richly. ive_________ LJJ I I !, i 3 1 Shampoo, Wave and Color Rinse 60c STATIONERY 100 SHEETS& 100 ENVELOPES Printed with your name and address THE CRAFT PRESS 305 Maynard Street Phone 8805 Shampoo and Wave, Mon-day and Tuesday 30c For Remainder of Week 40c Beatrice Beauty Shop Dial 3544 305 South State Yy What a lift they'll give your wardrobe right now, and how smart you'll look in one of them all spring. ry .1 " a S . Theatre: Michigan: "One in a Million" with Sonja Henie; Majestic: "Polo Joe" with Joe E. Brown; Whitney: "Penniets From Heaven" with Bing Crosby and Madge Evam'; Wuerth, "Old Hodge" with Wallace Berry; Orpheum: "Stage Struck" with Joan Blondell and Dick Powell and "End of the Trail" with Jack Holt. Dancing: Michig Inn. Exhibitions: Paintings by the Chapin Family, Alumni Memorial Hall. Prices begin at Sixteen Seventy-Five 1 I, I gKAto'37 i I I I The GfiD-fBOUT . 1 0 0PrtY Of failery A4IChjlgan Daiy Advertiser For Information - Call MISS JONES at 2-3241 '1 CRAMMING is about to play a prominent part in this jolly circle of ours, but one that isn't alto- gether "book-larnin'." Naturally there will be a good bit of that well-known practice of learning the semester's work in one eve- ning, but I rather suspect that there will be more cramming a huge amount of fun into a limited space of time--not a bad idea, I say, not bad! ACCESSORIES to having fun, my fine friends, as you know only too well, are the secrets of looking well and feeling that you do, too. (You see, I've guessed it!) And the secrets for looking well can be found if you don't know al- ready) within the portals of the ELIZABETH DILLON SHOP. Pastel wools are being featured there right now to give you that springy feeling that seems to in- vade us all after the holidays. The styles are simply adorable - and you know it's never too early to be thinking about that new spring wardrobe. Then darling spring prints in silks and satins are appearing-Oh! and there is one that you simply can't miss -it's a black satin with accents of red and white in polka-dots and cute short puffy sleeves that looking well - remember our little agreement about looking well and having fun? - so put yourself in the hapds of MRS. DIMATTIA and her super super co-coiffuriers and there will be no doubt about the results. A new permanent will certainly do the trick and just think how long you will look lovely -guaranteed, you know! Your hair certainly doesn't NEED to look fuzzy -it's probably just that you need a new permanent - one that will retexture your hair (now there's an idea- let's have a retexturing campaign.) Just think how lovely everyone will be - the name of the Mich- igan Coed will go down in history! A LITTLE ITEM, but an im- portant one, is that of the per- fume that you wear when you get all dressed up for the fur that is to be crammed into such limited time. And incidentally there will be plenty of good times after finals (horrible word) so why not prepare now at CALKINS- FLETCHER'S. Schiaparelli has two new kinds - "Soucis" and "Salut" which are grand - and sweet! And Bourjois introduces "Kobako" tending on the oriental nrl cfl%1 ft - flanti nhc*'4 .. ni i~*1 S A LE Nemo Sensation Girdle F YOU'RE YOUNG, slim and trim, you'll love this gay, dashing Sensation step-in gi- die. Sensations do nice things for young curves, yet leave you incredibly free and unham- pered. Made of two-way-stretch material with one-way-stretch band around the waist to give a snug, trim waistline. Will not creep up or roll down. Simple to launder-no hooks. Sizes 26 to 32 $5.00 Value at $3.50 i' is in the advertisements of the MICHIGAN DAILY. Everyday the Ann Arbor merchants advertise values. Take advantage of them by patronizing the DAILY advertisers. The MICHIGAN DAILY itself is concerned with the advertisers' problems and the students' needs and constantly seeks new ideas. The Special Value Section appearing today is but one example of . the DAILY'S progressiveness. $7.50 COMBINATIONS, $5.0 Sizes 36 to 38 00 1 1 I 1111 Jil I !1