THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDA" tip University Women r i#+. ' " Upon the Campus of a Woman's College ONLY ONE WOMAN TO SIT IN CONGRESS Four Republicans Precede Democratic Member By Edmarie Schrauder always thought that the West was iventional but the West seems more conventional than the says Anne Cllbreth, '26, a r Smith college woman who ed the University this fall. h girls can wear flannel shirts ass if they desire and go about ampus whistling and yelling; no- would think a thing about the r. Such action would be im- >le here. At Smith one always luces friends by their first le Miss Gilbreth was unwilling aw any comparison between the ve merits of a woman's college a co-educational institution, she ll about the women's activities nith where there are as many nts as there are women at Michi- and left the comparisons to be i by the Michigan women them- I. lith college has a well organized nt government. The first differ- one notices on Michigan's cam- s that non-student government is so strict," said Miss Gllbreth. ents are much harsher with one er than are members of the .y and it is hard to take punish- from one's friends. All dis- tary uses go to the, student 11 and the judiciary board fixes enalty. ith girls live in houses each imodating between 20 and 60 nts. The closing hour is 10 k every night and any infringe- of the rule is reported to the at councileeitherby the offen- ir by a ,friend who is at liberty port; the house matron does not f the breaking of any rules. In cases the penalty is a severe robably compelling the offender in the house at 9 o'clock every ig for a period of two or three ere are hardly any men seen d the campus during the week t the week-end the place looks co-educational institution. Of e the social life is very different. ly Saturday evening dances at tudent's building begin at 7:30 k and end at 9 o'clock; an or- *a of college girls furnishes the . The one big general social ont of the year is. an informal beginning at 2:30 o'clock in the toon and lasting until 9:30 k. The junior prom which only s may attend, likewise, begins afternoon with a garden party he prom proper is over at 1 k. cause th social life is somewhat d, the students spend many of Ak-ends away from the campus. men are permitted six week-ends tr, while upperclass women are 3j as many as they can take Lt overcutting Saturday classes. body has Saturday classes but g classeais a esimpledmatter:C ts pr, year are allowed .each it while the student with a B e may cut whenever she a. The list of students with a rage is posted regularly for that connection with athletics Miss tl remarked on Michigan foot- prit. "No eastern college ever o carried off its feet by football. pnearly oversome by the pep ig. One does not find that spirit East. A professor leaving town ursday to attend a football game unheard of situation there. never reaches such a pitch over) allege contest; once Smith girls hieering for Yale and the next for Harvard, depending upon riliation of one's escort at the4 ular game." mbership in clubs at Smith a a great deal," Miss Gilbreth1 . "Besides having a high schol- astic standing the student elected to membership must have done some-! thing for the college; thus the liter-I ary clubs might require the publica- tion of some literary work. Mostj girls get into three clubs but no one," can belong to more than that number." Three publications appear on -the Smith campus. The Weekly, a news- paper, contains only college news; The Monthly, contains the literary efforts of the women; The Campus Cat appears, at irregular intervals in the form of a "take-off" of some kind. Tryouts and meetings for this maga- zine are secret and the authors and editors remain unknown until the endj of the year. An official bulletin similar in nature to Michigan's Daily Official Bulletin is issued every Sun- day and posted in all the houses. A community Chest has been estab- lished at Smith to care for all chari- table contributions. Each student pledges $12.50 and pays the subscrip- tion on regular installments at stated times. This general appropriationI budget is favored by the women be- cause it saves the annoyance of pay- ing money constantly. Sororities are not narrowing in- fluences, not nearly so narrowing as1 unorganized groups generally are, this student from a woman's college maintains. "Cliques," she says, "are inevitable anywhere. But sororities get new members and cliques do not. A clique grows up with a class and maintains itself rigidly until the pass- ing of that class; it is harder to get into than any other kind of group be- cause a clique is not looking for new members." "I think that every single girl who goes to an -eastern school, ought to come out here just to get the different viewpoint," said Miss Gilbreth. "There is something different about it. I felt it the minute I got off the train. You know the girls in eastern schools are brought up to think that there isn't anything. west of the Atlantic states; that all western universities are insignificant institutions; and that1 all the good colleges are in the East." As a final word Miss Gilreth added, "While I believe that every eastern girl should spend a year in the West I likewise believe that every girl who lives in the West should spend a year in the East that they, also, may ob- tain the different viewpoint." Among the guests at the Zeta Tau Alpha house over the week-end of the Northwestern game were: Mrs. J. M. Collins, '21, of Wyandotte, Mrs. I. J. Turnbull, Miss Marjorie Stewart, Miss Margarette Downs, and Miss Latta Peters, of Port Huron; Mrs. Anna Mason McPherson, Miss Adelia Hobbs, '20, Miss Dorothy Mickleborough, Mrs. A. W. Harper, Dr. V. J. Allan and Mrs. Allan, Mr. and Mrs. Joyce Sted- man, classes of '21 and '24, Betty Forsythe, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moore, and daughter Amanda, Miss Cornelia Thompson, and Miss Edith Cooper, all of Detroit, Cauldron SOCIAL NOTES (Continued from Page Eleven) t 1tI A good idea of how spectacular. a race may become is.afforded by a review of the individual performances Prof. G. W. Patterson. assistant Pi Beta Phi entertained with a tea Mihineawin out innexcteSaturday's dean of the College of Engineering, Tuesday in honor of Mrs. Arthur T. race. Last year this particular and Mrs. Patterson entertained memn- ndrs.therosmopolnttanlubatmem~String, representative of their Grand runner ran against M. A, C. at Ann bers of the Cosmopolitan club at tea; o, Arbor and about a mile from the last Sunday at their home, 2101 Hill Council, and editor of the Arrow, finish nose trouble which had been street. the Quarterly of Pi Beta Phi. Mrs. fnihe tro e ih radubeed ________bothering him for some time resulted Amy S. Hobart, and chaperones and in partial blindness. Two of his team- Alpha Chi Omega held formal in!i-I presidents of all sororities were in- mates noticed his trouble and running tiation Sunday afternoon.. The follow- vited. by his side managed to keep him in the ing girls were initiated: Elizabeth] -- course for the remainder of the race. Kennedy, '27, Royal Oak; Blanche Mrs. James F. Bourquin and mem- On the final stretch he was ready to Barton, '26, Ogden, Utah; Dorothy bers of the Detroit chapter of Delta sprint for the finish and only the el- Spencer, '26, Jackson; and Virginia Omicron, national professional music bows of his teammates who realized Royce, '27, Ann Arbor. sorority, were hostesses to a gropp of his predicament kept him from doing school of music women at a tea given so. If not spectacular, this exhibition One of the most brilliant affairs of Wednesday afternoon at the Barton was certainly one which could only the fallHsseason was the ball given at il t club be seen once in a lifetime. the Michigan Union Monday evening by Dr. U. J. Wile and Mrs. Wile. A buffet luncheon was served to about 500 guests. cxtaWVIty UL. Delta Delta Delta entertained ten girls from Northwestern Saturday,: Nov. 8. Among the guests were Gladys IV . O. MXVI .40 U O Y I A" , Willabelle Harper, '26, Phyllis I Koetae, and Mathilda Blacker, of Turnibull, '25, Barbara Allan, '26, Grand Rapids, Janet Mowry, of High- Kathryn Miller, '25, and Frances land Park, Kathryn Geesey, of Archi- Stark, '28, of Zeta Tau Alpha were bald, Ohio, and Louise Frieberg, of guests of the Ohio chapter of Zeta Tau Wyandotte. Alpha, for the Ohio game. Kappa Alpha Theta entertained with Mrs . Archibald W. Dyack has re- a faculty dinner Wednesday. The ently become a patroness of Pi Beta tguests were Prof. William F. Hobbs Phi. and Mrs. Hobbs, Prof. Bruce M. Don- aldson, Prof. Jesse F. Reeves and Mrs. Delta Gamma announces the pledg- Reeves, Prof. Fred N. Scott and Mrs. ing of Vera Johnson, '28, of Chicago. Scott, and Prof' Harley Bartlett. ---- The same runner, entered in the triangular race at Columbus a week ago lost a shoe when he was still four and a half miles from the finish. He kept in the race however and running with one foot badly bruised by cinders and stones he finished fourth in the entire field 'and first among the Michigan runners. Any team which can produce such per- formers certainly deserves the sup- port of its school. Foreign Subscriptions $4.00- pay- able now. This very simple idea -better portraits I BULOVA I Above: Miss Alice (obe'am, 3Mr' 'nhmi Masn jick. Center Mrs. Mary Norton. Below: 3 -a Jei efte Rankin, Mrs. Mae Nolan. By John T. Lewing, Jr. gress convened. She later became a Central Press Correspod;ih'euf! candidate for the Senatorial nomina- Washington, Nov. 15-Surprise is tion froni Montana, but lost her fight. being expressed in political circles The next woman Representative that only one woman was elected to was Alice Robertson of Oklahoma, the congress which will begin to sit who w'as defeated for re-election in in March. In view of the success 1 9"" which 'women candidates met wih Ii The third was Mrs. Winifrec Mason generally throughout the country, in ruck, representative-at-large from city and state elections, it was be- Illinois, chosen to serve the balance lieved that the next congress would j of tl e term of her father, Represen- have a number of women in its per- tative William E. Mason, who died in sonnel. - office. Mrs. Huck failed to get the The lone women member of the new nomination for the next term. congress is Mrs. Mary Norton of New The fourth was Mrs. Mae E. Nolan, Jersey. Ironically, she is a Democrat. Republican-Labor, of California, who She is the fifth woman to sit in was chosen to serve the balance of the. the Lower House. No woman has term of her husband, Representative ever actually been a member of the John I. Nolan, who died in office. United States senate. One woman,, Mrs. "Nolan was not a candidate for Mrs. Felton of Georgia, was a p- the renomination. pointed, but congress was net in session during her term of office and Delta Zeta entertained ten mem- she was never officially seatei. hers of their Northwestern chapter The four women who precedled rs.I Saturday, Nov. 8, with a buffet dinner Norton in the House of Representa- after the game. tives, all of whom have now passed out of. that body for one reason or Delta Delta Delta entertained Mrs. another, were all Republicans. Etlie Danforth McAfee, '94, at dinner Jeanette Rankin of Montana was Saturday, Nov. 8. Mrs. McAfee told of the first woman to sit in the House, her many interesting experiences in taking her seat on April 2, 1917, the the near East where she has been day that President Wilson's War Con- traveling. Silk Lingerie Dear to a Woman 's Heart Give Lingerie this Christmas-and you'll be giving some- t f I I =1 I. 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With 15 jewel movement and BinovA uality White Filled $2750 Case..........."0 SC HLANDERER AND SEYFREID Main Street i Portrait Photographer Studio: 319 E Huron Phone: 961-M oo w CORRECTION TI hrough an error intthe an- ticle, "Traditions in the Life { of Michigan Women" published in the issue of Sunday, Nov. 9, the gift of Palmer athletic field ( was attributed to George Herbert. Palmer. The purchase of the field was made possible through a donation from Thomas Wither- ell Palmer, '49, who was United I States senator from Michigan from 1883 to 1889, United States minister to Spain during the years 1889 to 1892, and presi- dent of the Worlds Columbian I commission from 1890 to 1893. He made many other public gifts, including Palmer park to the city of Detroit. { i . . 41 i !. I # I I i DRtTqS. I SODAS . ONCE AGAIN CHERRY PARIS "RT flR~qXfl I thing every woman loves. What feminine heart doesn't rejoice in a bit of silken loveliness, its daintiness emphasized by lacy trimmings and delicately tinted ribbons? Step-in sets, nighties, vests and chemises in lovely pastel shades, illustrating Fashion's newest conceits in smart Lingerie, are here for Christmas giving. There are also trim Underthings in clever tailored style, to make delightful gifts. t 4 HAS ) .a~ 1.av.v.'V L SPOKEN Fashions New Mandate- In The ULTRA SMART SET Vanities By NOW is the TIME to Begin SAVING BUY A CASH CARD 10% SAVE HAND WORK 10o A Message- MOE LAUNDRY Main St. Phone, 2355 1 This store ever since its es- tablishment has maintained a policy of high quality merchandise at moderate prices. As the new goods arrive they are marked with prices as low as is consistent with their worth. t , C / ) ,a,. 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