PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY JAN. 31"1987 1937 ?AGE FOUR SUNDAY, JAN. 31,~ 1937 Foreign Lands Claim Students For Vacations Europe, South Seas Lure Many; Faculty Will Tour Abroad Next Semester Obsessed by a desire to get away from it all, 10,000 students are plan- ning to do anything but study in the few days of vacation between semes- ters. Faculty members are also plan- ning a respite. While the majority will stay here, many are planning in- teresting trips. One of the most ideal of the latter is the one planned by Winston Smith, '37, who receives as a graduation gift a trip to the South Seas. He will leave San Francisco Feb. 28 and will spend six months cruising. among the fa- mous islands. Betty Le Blanc, '38, will leave Feb. 20 from Vancouver, British Columbia, bound for Honolulu. Miss Le Blanc expects to remain there fortan indefi- nite length of time, living at the Roy- al Hawaiian Hotel and attending the University of Hawaii which is located in Honolulu. Sails For Central America Robert VanderPyl, '39, will sail from Philadelphia with his mother and sail for Central America. He lands first at Guatemala and plans to remain down there for two weeks before returning to Ann Arbor about March 2. Last year he spent his vacation in Mexico. Europe lures more than its share of Michigan students this spring. Sail- ing Feb. 10 from New York will be Al Ricker, '38, who will travel to Eng- land on the "Bremen." He will re- main there in order to witness the coronation in May and then cross to the continent for a leisurely bicycle trip. Also leaving New York Feb. 10 will be Carl Pletscher, '37, who em- barks on a Mediterranean cruise with his parents, to be followed by a tour' of the continent. Later he will visit Zurich, Switzerland, where he plans to remain for several months. The Sorbonne will claim as trans- fer students Jane Lewis, '38, and Dorothy Cloudman, '39. They sail from New York Feb. 20 and plan to study French at the famous Paris University. Student To Visit Philippines Emey Moore, '37, wiji take the "Empress of Canada" out of Van- couver on Feb. 20 with her mother. Her first stop will be the Philippines and later she plans on visiting the in- terior of China and Japan. She will return in three months. Jack Otte, '37, plans to leave as soon as his ex- ams are over tomeet friends in the East and accompany them to Ber- muda, sailing from New York Feb. 6 and remaining as long as possible before the second semester starts. Foreign lands are not the only at- tractions for there is a group believ- ing in seeing America first. James Morgan, '38F&C, forsakes Ann Ar- bor Feb. 4 to spend 10 days in Hol- lywood, Florida, before resuming his studying, while the other sunny state, California, lures Edmund Andronik, '38, and J. J. Scherr, '37. The latter two will not return for the second semester. Many Plan To Travel East Many students are traveling east. Dorothy White, '38, will the week of Feb. 8 witness Junior Week at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. While there she will attend the Junior Prom. Betty Basse, '37, will pass her va- cation in New York and will attend proms at both Amherst and Colgate. Jeane Stone, '38, plans to take in a round of eastern colleges in her trip. After seeing the Dartmouth carnival, she will visit Smith College, Prince- I ton and Amherst. Melville Hyatt, '37E, and Rodney Eshelman, '37E, intend to be taken through the Du Pont plants in Charleston, W. Va. Another pair who plan to cut into flood territory are Bernard Schweid, '39, and Rob- ert David, '39, who will hitch-hike. Bob Holt, '39, will spend his vacation in Wyoming. A large group are going to the frozen North for winter sports, among whom are: Charles Coe, '39; Joseph Osburn, '39; Charles Evans, '39E; Kenneth Bradford, '37E; William Forcey, '37; Carlton Cummings, '39; Ross Curtis, '37, and Robert Mueller, '38. Members of the faculty too are planning extensive tours, and Europe is the main attraction. Prof. and Mrs. Walter A. Reichart will sail Feb. 16 and will remain one month in Italy before leaving for Breslau, Germany, where Professor Reichart will do some research work on the Shake- spearian influence in Gerhardt's "Hauptmann." A Persian Miniature To Re On Display In San Francisco Three Decades In Engineering School Related Mrs. Camilla Green Tells Of University Changes In Her Years Here1 By BETTY STRICKROOT In her memories of 30 years of service here, Mrs. Camilla B. Green, assistant secretary of the engineer- ing college, finds tha't handling the records of students whose fathers she knew in their "salad days" interested her most. Monday will be the an- niversary of three decades of workl for Mrs. Green. During her early years at the Un.iivers ity Mrs. Green did practically cvecry thing for the entering students; met them at the desk, assisted them with their registration, and generally helped them to adjust. Now these duties have been passed on to others, but in over 20 cases in recent years she has handled the records of stu- dents whose fathers she was well ac- quainted with in years gone by. Few Typewriters Used Then "Thirty years ago," Mrs. Green said, "there were only about a dozen women employed in University of- fices. There were very few typewrit- ers and everything had to be written in long hand." Her first office was in one of the oldest buildings on campus. It was erected in 1841 on the site now occupied by the Clements Library. "01 course, I have seen many changes in curriculum and the stu- dcnt body since I first came to work." Mrs. Green stated. "The school was first a department of the literary col- lege, known as the Department of Engineering, then it became the De- partment of Engineering and Archi- tecture, and now it is called the Col- lege of Engineering. In the begin- ing five different degree programs were offered, and now we have 18." Mrs. Green has worked under three different secretaries, two deans, and about four assistant deans. Collects Old University Pictures At present Mrs. Green is assisting Dean Mortimer E. Cooley of thecEn- gineering College, retired, in com- piling a history of the University. She has collected pictures and prints of the early days of the college and has had them rephotographed. They are filed in chronological order, and even- tually will be published with a writ- ten history of the University. Three NYA students are aiding her in her search for materials. Many of the prints are reproduced from stereo- scopic views which Mrs. Green's mother had. They were taken in the 70's and 80's when the Univer- sity was still very young., Posts Kept Stock Off Campus One picture shows the entrance to the diagonal with the posts still up to keep stock off the campus. There was a very decorative gate on the corner of State Street and North University where Haven Hall stands now. Mrs. Green first came to live on campus when she was 10 years old. Her mother was matron of the Homeopathic Hospital which stood on the site now occupied by the Nat- ural Science Building. One- very interesting fact was brought out when Mrs. Green showed her pictures of University Hall in the early days of the college. The sec- ond floor of this building was orig- inally an auditorium where all the :z aduation ceremonies were held. At either end of the room were two beautiful paintings by Gari Melcher, JThe Arts of Peace" and the "Arts of War." When the new library was constructed these pictures, which were done on canvas were taken down. They are hung now at either end of the main reading room on the second floor of the library. "There really isn't much opportun- ity for women in the engineering pro- fession," said Mrs. Green. "Although I have seen several enrolled at dif- ferent times in the college." She pointed out one girl in the graduation picture of the class of '95, Marian Sarah Parker. Miss Parker got a very excellent job aiding in the con- struction of the Flatiron Building in New York. At present there is a scholarship available for women in the engineering school which was presented by Miss Parker's mother. h Bridgea Luncheon Sets Reduced 25% Less You will find 36 x 36 cloths with four napkins and 52 x,52 cloths with six napkins! Bridge sets regularly priced from $1.00 and up and Luncheon Sets from $2.00, now 25% less. GAGE LINEN HOP No. 10 Nickels Arcade mm, mmmmw i I .. 1 11 cl l University Cooperates In Art Exhibit CHARLES of the RITZ EDITOR'S NOTE: This article was written for The Daily by Peter Ruth- ven, Grad., son of the President and an authority on Near Easterb art. The University is cooperating with the De Young Memorial Museum of San Francisco, Calif., in one of the most important exhibitions of Islamic art ever held in America. The cat- alogue has been compiled in the Re- search Seminary of Islamic Art under the direction of Dr. Mehmet Aga- Oglu who selected the 250 rare ob- jects to be shown. These include illuminated manuscripts, miniature paintings, carpets, textiles, metal- work, carved wood, glass and pottery pieces from thirty-five public and private collections including the Louvre, Muee de Cluny, Musee des Arts Decosatifs, the Eumorfopoulos collection in the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Bachstitz Gallery at the Hague, the Metropolitan Museum, the art museums of Brooklyn, Chi- cago, Cleveland, Kansas City, St. $I, I Louis, Detroit, the Textile of the District of Columbia, Art Museum, University of Museum the Fogg Pennsyl- vania Museum, the Pierpont Morgan Library. * To Open Feb. 20 Among the private collectors to lend objects are: Myron C. Taylor, Clarence Mackay, Mrs. George D. Pratt, Mr. and Mrs. Edsel Ford and Eustache de Lorey, former director, of the French Archaeological Insti- tute in Damascus who will come to Ann Arbor sometime next semester to give a lecture. Besides objects from the University's collection several pieces will be sent from the private collections of President Ruthven, Peter Ruthven and Mrs. Aga-Oglu. The exhibition will be opened Feb- ruary 20 in San Francisco with a series of lectures on Islamic art by Dr. Aga-Oglu who will comment on the rare pieces lent for the occasion. Included among the many important monuments of decorative art is thel large lion of turquoise blue, a rarel example of Persian ceramic art of the thirteenth century, loaned by H. Kev- orkian of New York; six pages of the famous "Demotte" Shah-Name, the most important example of four- teenth century Persian miniature painting; and several miniatures and rugs which were exhibited in Ann Arbor in the spring of 1936 under the direction of the Seminary in Islamic Art. 'Coronation Carpet' Included Among the many famous rugs to be shown are an Egyptian carpet of the seventeenth ventury with a geo- metric pattern in blue and green, lent by the Textile Museum of the Dis- trict of Columbia; a sixteenth cen- tury medallion rug of floral motifs owned by Mr. Myron C. Taylor; and a magnificent Safavid medallion and animal rug belonging to Mr. Clarence H. Mackay. The latter rug, some- times called the "Coronation Carpet" as it was lent for the coronation of Edward VII at Westminster in 1901, (Continued on Page 6) Rejuvemescence Cream SPECIAL USE IT ONCE and you will wonder how you ever managed without it. Marvelous as finish- ing cream, bringing new soft- ness and loveliness to the skin. $6.00 JAR for $2.0 Sorry ... this special cannot be extended beyond one week. 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