FEB. 18, 1937 T E MICHIGAN DAILY AGE FM 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ". +i'" ^ '. T Ti E YM I U H u W n 1 sN n A I T .L PAGE flV~ Guests Named By Commit-tees For Caduceus1 Five Medical Fraternitiesj To Hold Formal Dinners PrecedingDance Betty Lyon Reaches Korean Graduate Student Tells Badminton Finals, n , 1'_ Guests of the committeemen for the fourth annual Caduceus Ball tc be held tomorrow night in the Union Ballroom were announced recently. Mark Coventry, '37M, general chairman, will have Betty Servis of Detroit as his guest. Ben Van Zwal- uwenberg, '37M, chairman of tickets, will attend with Mrs. Zwaluwenberg Other committeemen and their guests are Grosvenor Root, '37M, and Elizabeth Ann Barthel, '37, Arthur Benedict, '37M, and Margaret Dwyer of Muskegon, John Warren, '39M, and Mary Jane Frye, '38. Root, Bene- dict and Warren are members of the ticket committee. Gelmar Van Noord, '37M, chairman ofadecorations will attend with Mrs. Van Noorf, while A. Jackson Day, '38M, a member of the decoration committee will have as his guest Betty Sinclair, Grad. J. Robert Wil- son, '37M, also on the decorations committee will attend with Mrs. Wil- son. Five fraternities have planned for- mal dinners to precede the ball. Those entertaining are Alpha Kappa Kappa, Phi Chi, Phi Rho Sigma, Nu Sigma Nu and Theta Kappa Psi. Dr. and Mrs. Gayle Mehney will be theachaperons for Theta Kappa Psi while those for Nu Sigma Nu will be Dr. and Mrs. Cameron Haight and Dr. and Mrs. Russell Malcolm. Phi Chi will have as its guests Dr. and Mrs. William Perham and Dr. and Mrs. Donald Kerr. Chaperons for Alpha Kappa Kappa will be Dr. and Mrs.- Robert Gesell and Dr. and Mrs. Max Peet, while those for Phi Rho Sigma will be Dr. and Mrs. Jack Tolan. J. .P. Interviews Continue Today r a 1 1, e i :, , urj wancoti a tudlent Li e Betty Lyon, '39, won the semi- ge fen finals of the women's badminton tournament last night when she de- Miss Kim Is Impressed By able to attend the football games and feated Jean Gourlay, '37, 11-6, 11-8 Many Gi the Choral Union concerts. in Waterman Gymnasium. Adatgs en Opportunities Appreciated Miss Lyon, who is the women's Students At Michigan The women of Ewha are very badminton manager, used her hard earnest and sincere in their attempts hits and service in such a way that By MARJORIE TILLINGHAST to demonstrate gratitude for their her opponent's placements availed The grandeur and size of the build- educational opportunities. Miss Kim her little. Miss Gourlay's wrist ings, the completness of the equip- took pride in relating how they sing movement made her smashes un- ment and the marvelous opportuni- in the choirs and teach Sunday usually effective, ties for education which are offered School classes in the churches of The match took place during the to young people have especially im- Seoul. A few of them even go into weekly Wednesday night mixed pressed Miss Shinsil Soonie Kim of the neighboring country where they double period. Seoul, Korea, who is doing graduate conduct the entire Sunday service. work in the department of physical Most of the graduates of Ewha . . education for women. College enter fields of social service 30 R otin g Lit tle Miss Kim has been in charge of work where as high school teachers1 physical education at Ewha College, 'and mission workers they find their Pranks tersSeoul, Korea, since 1930. She was careers. A few are now entering the Besiege graduated from Oberlin College, Ob- fields of medicine and business, al- Ch ldren's Theatre erlin, Ohio in 1926. Directly follow- though Miss Kim particularly stated ing her graduation, she taught physi- that a large percentage of them cal education at the Korean School marry soon after leaving college. I By BETTY BINGAMefl I at Honolulu, Hawaii. Miss Kim is studying here for two! While the goddess of peace flapsI.h Student Life Differsj years on a Barbour scholarship. Music Section Plans Program Of Gypsy Airs, The music section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet at 8 p.m. today in the home of Mrs. Arthur Smith. Mrs. A. J. Eardley, who is to have charge of the program for the eve- ning, has announced that the enter- tainment will be made up of gypsy music, and will be called "On the Gypsy Trail." A number of original gypsy themes will be played and gypsy songs will be sung by members of the group. Those who will take part in the meeting will be Mrs. Mischa Titiev, pianist, Mrs. Arthur Smith and Mrs. John Bugher who will sing, and a quartet made up of Mrs. E. M. Hoo- ver, who will play the viola, Mrs. Lewis M. Simes, cellist, Mrs. Warren Good and Mrs. E. French, violinists. At the opening of the program Mrs. Nelson Smith will give a history of the gypsies. SCA To Hold First Dance Of Semester The first in a series of dances this semester for all students on cam- pus will be held by the Student Chris- tian Association from 9 to 12 p.m., Saturday at Lane Hall. Jacobs and his Wolverines will ~ play for the dance,William G. Barndt, '37, general dance chairman for the S.C.A., announced yesterday. Jacobs orchestra also played at the last S.C.A. dance before the end of the first semester. Plans have been proposed to hold dances this semes- ter every other Saturday night. Tickets to the dance, which is open to all students as well as members of the S.C.A. will be 25 cents. f l e a u A! ., v Begin the new semester with a new hairdress. You will be satisfied with any work our operators do for you. , her snowy wings over parleys and student gatherings, a bloody feud is raging in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre and environs. It's a fight to the finish between the Paul Street Boys and the Red Skins, but the question is who's going to be finished first, the boys or Director Sally Pierce, or for that matter the theatre. One and perhaps more are doomed to an early end, by the looks of things. When Director Pierce first gath- ered her little lambs around her to rehearse for the next Children's The- atre production "A Place To Play" which opens tomorrow afternoon in Lydia MendelssohnTheatre, she may have had an inkling of what the fu- ture held in store, but it is doubtful. Of course she had come unscathed through "Hans Brinker" and "The Little Princess," but then the female element in the cast had been enough to keep everything in control. Now the males have it-30 of them and every one exceptionally healthy and full of original ideas on how to occupy spare time between acts. The Lab Theatre was the first vic- tim. The fly balcony there holds no terrors for this cast. Several mem- bers were seized with the fascinating idea of scaling the ladder leading up over the stage. There they dis- covered a nest of pigeons, peacefully meditating on whatever pigeons med- itate on, and secured them for fu- ture entertainment, tucking them in- side their shirts. A little later Miss Pierce was presented with a pair of wild-eyed fledglings as souvenirs. Director Pierce, being a person us- ually prepared for anything rose gracefully above the situation, but a little later she made the mistake of coming on stage during a battle in the third act and nearly brought her directing career to a speedy close by forgetting to call off an attack of sand bags scheduled to occur at that moment. Such is the life of a Chil- dren's Theatre director. + A very unassuming and quiet in- dividual, Miss Kim said that she does not feel any amusement or strange- ness toward American life. American culture is so different from Korean that no part of it has caused her any particular surprise. "The most strik- ing difference," she said "is the com- paratively great amount of freedom which women students in particular and all students in general have in this country." Ewha College was founded in 1886 by the foreign missions board of the American Methodist Church. Thel only college for women in Korea, it offers curriculums in literature, music,! home economics and kindergarten- primary training. The students, num - bering about 300, come from all parts of Koreaand Manchuko. Describes College Life Miss Kim described the life of the women at Ewha College, stressing the appreciation and seriousness with. which they regard their chance for a higher education. Although they are allowed to wander at will around the college grounds and the town, every woman must be in the dormitory by 7 p.m. daily. Social functions are few anddating is not as common as in American Universities according to Miss Kim. Although there is a college for men within 10 minutes walk of Ewha Col- lege, dates are made mostly for lec- tures, meetings, and occasional par- ties. Tennis and ping pong matches with mixed teams performing are a favorite amusement. Miss Kim mentioned that one of her biggest pleasures here was to be PHI SIGMA SIGMA Dean Alice C. Lloyd and Mrs. Byrl F. Bacher were entertained last night at an informal dinner held at Phi Sigma Sigma. Sally Leavitt, '37, so- cial chairman, was in charge. Preuss Speaks R uth Uren Is Wed About Foreign In League Chapel The marriage of Ruth Valentine Wa r Dealings Uren, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam J. Uren of Ann Arbor, to Law- The position of the United States rence C. Pace, son of Mr. and Mrs. in the matter of the Spanish civi William B. Pace of Saginaw, was inr the matterfnthen Spanishtci performed Thursday in the chapel of war and the functions of interna- the Michigan League. tional law in the conflict were dis- M . and Mrs. Pace are spending a cussed by Prof. Lawrence Preuss of week in Chicago after which they the political science department in will make their home in Detroit. Both a talk given yesterday at the grad- attended the Michigan State Normal uate luncheon in the Russian Tea College and the University of Mich- Room of the League. igan. The precedent established by the United States in regard to pastcivil wars in Latin America has largely been followed by foreign powers in FURS made up and re- the present crisis, Professor Preuss modelled, repaired, relined, said. The Havana Conference of cleaned, glazed, stored. 1928 provided that foreign powers Prices reasonable. may ship armaments to legal govern- ments but not to insurgents unless& they are prepared -to recognize a state of belligerency. In the present crisis, governments are forbidden to E. 1. Greenbaum ship arms to either side, Professor 448 Spring Street Preuss added. Three legal results of insurgency Phone 9625 were explained by Professor Preuss. Italy, Germany and the countries of Central America have recognized the Spanish insurgents as the official government too soon in his opinion, since there is still a possibility that the loyalists may reestablish a strong r a central government, he said. 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