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April 22, 1921 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1921-04-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Stanley's Twenty-Eighth
and Last Festival

IARECIA BORI

Soprano

(Metropolitan Opera Company)

)SA PONSELLE

Soprano.

(Metropolitan Opera Company)

ALIEN BLOOD- REVIES
DYINGHAIIA RACE
AMERICANS, PORTUGUESE AND
SPANISH,
AID
(By Associated Press)
Honolulu, T. H., April 21.-The
Hawaiian race, which with the Poly-
nesians in general, has been regarded
as a dying people, is being re-born and
re-invigorated by infusion of alien
blood, according to statistics just
compiled bir Louis R. Sullivan, of the
New York museum of natural history,
now attached to the Bishop museum
in Honolulu.
Mr.. Sullivan has just completed
analysis of 14,569 marriages in the
islands, selected at random, and his
findings in some cases have been sur-
prises to science.
Americans Intermarry
According to the tables, more Amer-
ican men in the territorymarry wom-
en of blood foreign to their own than
marry American or British women.
The Japanese are not, as has been sup-
posed, the most prolific race in the
islands, but are surpassed in this re-
gard by Portuguese, Porto Ricans,
part-Hawaiians and Spanish. Of
American women, more than one in
every six living in the islands marry
Hawaiians, part-Hawaiians and others
of blood strange to their ancestry. Of
all the racial groups the Korean wom-
en represent the only one which re-
fuses to mix blood, not a single case
of a Korean woman marrying a man
other than a Korean having been dis-
covered.
Hawaiians Consolidate
As a wholei the tables indicate, the
part-Hawaiian group has a tendency
to consolidate, rather than scatter,
since the Caucasian-Hawaiian males
who marry, 32.7 per cent marry back
into the full-blooded Hawaiian strain
while only 13.8 per cent take white
wives and the remainder, either in-
breed among their own kind or marry
at large. Of Asiatic-Hawaiian males,
46.4 per cent.mar y back into"the
Hawaiian strain, only 4.3 into the
Asiatic strain anda negligible propor-
tion into the Caucasian strain.
The result, so far as the Hawaiian
race is concerned, is said to be a new
recial group, found to a high degree,
still abnormally susceptible,. to civil-
ization's diseases, but with much high-
er resistant powers than the old
Hawaiian stock and visibly adding to
its numbers.

,ORENCE HINKLE

What's in a Name?
ever try TUTTLE'S
when you wanted a
nice lunch?
Conveniently located just one-
half block south of the "Maj"

Courteous and satisfactory
TREATMENT to every custonr
er, whether the account be large
or small.
Tbe Ann Arbor Savings Bank
Incorporated 1869F
Capital and Surplus, $625,000.00
Resources........$5,00,000.00
707 North Tniversity Ave.
Northwest Cor. Main & Huron

AT ANY TIME
Open from 11 am, to 12 p.m.
Pot of hot tea and bowl of ric
PLAIN CHOP SUEY
15 CENTS
CHINESE and AMERICAN Style
Short Orders

|

-fl -

°Qxzang Turg Lo
613 Lfbartv St- E

Soprano

LACE JOHNSON KONOLD
Soprano
RENA VAN GORDON Contralto

(Chicago Opera Association)

RLE ALCOCK

Contralto

Saturday Special
I8
111I tll til 111111 .
Orchi Coragei
rn~
This .Week Only
9tlllill111111

-IARLES MARSHALL
(Chicago Opera Association)
RVILLE HARROLD
(Metropolitan Opera Company)'
XMBERT MURPHY'
(Metropolitan Opera Company)

Tenor

Tenor

Tenor

THUR MIDDLETON
(Metropolitan Opera Company)

Baritone

City News

HEODORE H ARRISON Baritone

FIASE SIKES

Baritone-

OBERT McCANDLISS.
rUSTAF HOLMQUIST
[ARIAN STRUBLE

Baritone

Bass

Violinist

ANNIE BLOOMFIELD ZEISLER
Pianist
JNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION'
ALBERT A. STANLEY, Conductor
HICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHES-
TRA

The Ann Arbor Masonic band of 40
.nieces will give the first concert of
the season at the Majestic theatre May
10. The band is directed by Fred
Lewis.
The concert will be divided into two
parts, one at 7 and the other .aat 9
o'clock. Motion pictures will be shown
in connection with the musical pro-
gram, the band sharing the proceeds
with, the theatre. A small admission
will be charged.
The Masonic band was organized
last fall with 18 members. There a4
now nearly 40 members enrolled. A
series of both indoor and outdogr con-
cert's are planned for the summer
season.'
No action was taken at the meeting
of the local union of sheet metal
workers Tuesdayoevening in regard to
the proposed 20 per cent reduction of
wages by local employers. No fur-
ther developments were reported from
any of the other unions and the in-
activity of the tinners bears out the
statement that both sides have adopted
the policy of watchful waiting.
Local employees of the D. U. R. have
been notified that a 20 per cent reduc-
tion would take place May 1st. The
union officials met at Detroit Tuesday
and agreed to submit the reduction di-
rectly to the branch unions without
any recommendations.
The 1921 convention of the National
Highway Traffic association, of which
Prof. A. H. Blanchard, of the engineer-
ing school is president, will be held i'n
the abbey of the Detroit Athletic club
Friday, April 29. Prof. E. H. Riggs
will present one of the reports of the
evening.
The regular meeting of the physi-
cians of Washtenaw county was' held
at the Washtenaw Country club last
night, beginning with a dinner at 6:45
o'clock.
A meeting will be held at the Ar-
mory, Ann street and Fourth avenue,
at 3 o'clock this afternoon to form a
women's auxiliary to the American
Legion. To be eligible a woman must
be the mother, wife or sister of any
man who served in the World War,

JfOR YfoUlthesN
FOR YOU:NG MEN

"A Perfect Fit for EVERYr Man

'0

They're great values--bet-
ter than we've been able
to offer for several sea-

sOns.

See this particu-

FREDERICK STOCK, Conductor

JARGE CHORUS OF SCHOOL
CHILDREN
GEORGE OSCAR BOWEN, Conductor

larly interesting group at
$35, $40 and $45
The finest line of Caps in the city
at popular prices
Big shipment of the nevi campus Shirts
13 1-2 to 17

A Limited Number of Course Tickets Still Available at
$4.50, $5.00, $6.00, $7.00
CHARLES A. SINK, SECRETARY
UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN

Tom

Corbett

$t

116 E. Liberty St,
"Where Fitform Clothes are Sold"

IL-.--

4;

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