THE MICHIGAN DAILY CHIGAN WOMEN PLAN BUILD] 1 I FERRED BY LACK NIZATION TO BE CALLED NIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LEAGUE GOAL AT $1,000,000; IIN CAMPAIGN OCT.28 iae Council Report Shows Total 'f $12,881 Now on Hand for Building By Katherine Montgomery) nnae and undergraduate women University of Michigan are definitely accepted and are being used merely as a working basis. The thing under consideration at present is the location of the building and this de- pends largely on the University build- ing plan. Plans Complete Ptovision has been made in the plans, which have been submitted by Pond and Pond, for a kitchenette, club rooms for women's organizations, com- mittee and dining rooms, and an as- sembly room which will accomodate from 600 to 700 couples dancing, or will seat more than 1000 within sound of a speaker's voice. More than 1700 persons can be served at one time from the kitchen and serving rooms. The lounge and conservatory with the intervening corridor will offer a' gathering place for women while the reading room above will give a quiet' place for study. Offices for social and business administration will be on the first floor while offices for clerks and stenographers will be in the basement Women Went After Gym In 1896--- And Got It; Now The League Plans New Home And Needs Assistance (By Marion Kerr). Did you ever see a girl walk into Waterman gymnasium with her gym bloomers under her arm? Well, you ought to have been here back in 1896 when the girls "didn't have no gym 'r nuthin' o' their own." They took all their weekly, or weakly, calesthenics right down where the boys did, only at different times, of course, and lots of times the poor girls could- nt get into their lockers after gym class, and they'd be scared for fear- well, for fear they wouldn't get out in time. A lady told me one time that she couldn't get her locker open at all and had to go all the way home in her gym bloomers. It was cold, too, that day, she met a lot of people on the way home she didn't want to meet. All in all the girls had a pretty hard time. Women Rise But' by and by they raised a riot, credit in the University will be eligible for membership and any woman now enrolled may sign the pledge and upon payment of the first installment of $10 in February, when thenecessary 15 hours of credit have been earned, will receive her membership. The Alumnae Council has made a removed the curls from the front of their ears, dropped their crochet work and started in. They'd build themselves a little gym all their own where they could take all the calesthenics they wanted to, every single week, they wouldn't have to have all their parties in the land- lady's parlor where the claw legged davenport.jhad tufts of hair protruding. They wanted a place where they could do some minuets and things that girls did then. "Not Much Money" They didn't have any money to start on but that was all right. They had pleity of bright ideas and other people had the money-and a fair exchange is no-robbery. It wys a fair exchange all right-a dance, and 1896, divided by four, meant leap year. The treat was on the girls. They spread out their dear (Continued on Page Nine) report showing a.'otal of $12,881.20, cash and pledges, now on hand for the proposed building of which Mrs. Charles Baird made a subscription of $500 and Betty tarabee one of $250. Women of the class of '22 enlarged the fund by $800, the result of last years Junior Girls play, "Selina Sue." REFRESHMENTS IN U HALL, NEW PLAN Hot dog! doughnuts, hamburgers, lemonade, pop, peppermints, and chocolate in sticks, bars, drops, or nice fat squares, the kind your old girl used to make you on Sunday nights. Sounds like a circus in the fifth di- mension,, doesn't it? Or a small boy's dream, or the orphan asylum's idea of Christmas. You're all wrong, it's bet- ter'n that. There's going to be a bulg- ing booth perpetually full of susten- ance for that 9 o'clock starvation peri- od-or, why limit the period to 9 o'- clock. The booth will be placed in Uni- versity hall, in the women's room and beginning within the next few weeks will dispense with the above mention- ed goodies, and others as per request. It is expected that the booth will not only add to that 8 o'clock attend- ance but will relieve acute pains gen- erally felt by the breakfastless during the 11 o'clock session. Men will be cordially welcomed in the invitation to partake of said sus- tenance and for that purpose may, grace the women's room. The booth is another device for acquiring money for the new Women's League campaign.' Start Drive For Womens Building With Big Bazaar Hey, everybody, c'mon over! We're gonna have a big time in a couple o' weeks. Remember all the pecks of popcorn balls and peppermint drops and great big pieces of fudge you used to get at the church bazaar, to- gether with all those fancy-work pil- low cases and crocheted yokes and things you gave away for Christmas that you never had time to make and wanted people to think you did? The whole big "shebang" with real, hon- est-to-goodness plays and a great big auction, too, and lots of other nice little things, sare booked for the Wo- men's League parlours Friday and Saturday, Dec. 9 and 10. The bazaar wil open Friday after- noon, and will close Saturday even- ing with a big auction, where you may be able to buy some of the things you couldn't afford to own before. The general, admission of 10 cents will be turned over to the Women's League building fund. Women's League booths will have popcorn balls and candy, Ann Arbor churches will combine to furnish fancy work booths _ f , - '7 s 1 * _-. .- (N fwR THE WO nAr! StrnJ.L AT Tit UNf.thSrY fo ChIGAK AT AN 4 ARBO1R ?JIS'O, AR