SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1928. THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE TH MCIGNDAL PAGEFIV WOM[N'S LEAGUE IIADeferred Rushing Causes Unfriendly Relations Among Houses At Hillsdale SOCIETY AVIATRIX' SEEKS NEW HONOR LAST FAMOUS SOONG SISTER MARRIES, ONCE REJECTED MARSHAL CHIANG From China comies the announce- Dr. Sun Yat-sen, "sainted" founder ment of the marriage of one of the of the Nationalist movement. She is AVPEMII IIUN rAHnI! Friday The Thirteenth Furnishes Motif For Yesterday's Entertainment The REFRESHMENTS SERVED The following women were guests at the party given by the Women's league yesterday afternoon in the parlors of Barbour gymnasium: Miss Grace Richards, Miss Alice Lloyd, Miss Ione Johnson, Mrs. Louise Van Sickle, Miss Ethel McCormick, Dr. Margaret Bell, Miss Ruth Figge, Miss Annis Hall, Miss Lauri Campbell, Mrs. Elizabeth Woodward, Miss Doro- thy Ogborn, and Miss Ella Rawlings. The party was called a "Supersti- tion Party" because of the date be- ing Friday, the thirteet. Guests on entering found themseves walking under a ladder. Going further into theparlors they saw posters on the walls with mystic inscriptions and superstitious bugaboos printed there- on. Miss Velma Johnson provided en- tertainment with a specialty dance. There was dancing for all with music by Edna Mower's four-piece orches- tra. Afterwards there was a "Bread and Butter" grand march. Refresh- ments were served at the end of the afternoon. Hostesses were members of the entertainment committee of the Wo- men's league. Arrangements were in charge of Jean Dow, '28, who was as- sisted by the members of the enter- tainment committee. Fields Of Service In HospitalAre Varied According to Miss Dorothy Ketch- am' of the Social S'ervice Department of the University Hosital, this de- partment is composed of three divi- sions. First, there is the school di- vision, second, there is the occupa- tional therapy, and third, the social case work. The school department deals with children who are in the hospital for treatment, and who are missing their school, work at home. The school di vision has trained teachers, with stu- dent assistants, who teach the child- ren. The work is supported in part by the King's Daughters and partly by the University Hospital. Workers Have Degrees Workers in the occupational thera- py all have college degrees with spe- cial training later at either occupa- tional therapy schools or the Univer- sity Hospital. This work occupies the patient while he is in the Hospital. Training has a two-fold purpose: first, the training of the muscles, and second, occupation of the patient's time. One man, who learned basketry while a patient, earned over $300 aft- er he reached home, by making bas- kets. Social case work deals with the ad- justment of the patient to his dis- ease and to his environment. Many persons who enter the Hospital for treatment arenot fitted to go back into work they were formerly em- ployed in. So the Hospital social ser- vice fits them for some other em- ployment and helps to find work. Have 50 Workers There are about 50 workers in the department, including teachers, sten- ographers, and workers. All work- ers must be fitted and trained for the work they are doing. College degrees and continued study are necessary. The workers wear yellow, the occupational therapists pink, and the case workers wear green. "Were is a great opportunity for women in social service," concludes Miss Ketch- an. Such a delightful three-layer brick of ice cream as this will meet with your favor! "That deferred rushing makes for unfriendly relations among sororities has been reported as thesexperiences of Hillsdale cqllege," stated Mrs. Waldo M. Abbot, patrone'ss of Pan- hellenic. Mrs. Abbot pointed out that the sororities under the plan of second semester rushing would be rivals the whole first half of the year and that there would be the constant suspi- cion that rules were being disregard- ed if any indications of acquaintance- ship between freshmen and upper- classmen were observed. That the two weeks period of con- centrated rushing has great disad- vantages since it places a strain up- on the entering women just when they should get acquainted with the uni- versity classes and do well in their studies during the first weeks when first and often lasting impressions are made upon the professors, was the opinion of Mrs. Abbot. A 'shortened period of rushing to be completed be- fore the official opening of school work was the plan recommended rather than deferred rushing. Margaret Breer, '28, former presi- dent of Pan-hellenic, said that accord- ing to the experiences of other cam- puses with deferred rushing as re- vealed by discussions on the subject at the Pan-hellenic convention last GROUP I DEFEATS SORORITY 26-15 In an exciting game yesterday) afternoon Group I defeated Alpha ) Omicron Pi 26-15. The play was rough and fast, with good team- Swork and fine spirit on both teams. The group did excellent j playing in the center. Much shooting was done on both sides, Margaret Stahl of the group1 team displayed good work--as did June Davis for the sorority I team. LINEUP: Alpha Omicron Pi Group I. Davis ........ RF ........ Zauer) Knox......... LF ........Stahl Hough........ RG .........Neyer Boninee ...... RC .........Urban Sackett....... LG . ... Treadwell Jacton ........ C ........Neyer 'spring it had not been successfully carried out except in small schools. ThedUniversity of Pittsburgh has adopted second semester rushing but the problem there would not be as complicated as at Michigan which has a larger number of women students. Deferred rushing was voted down at the University of Minnesota, and while given a trial by other schools, has generally been abandoned and the former concentrated rushing period reinstated. One reason for the reported suc- cess of the method at Leland Stanford in addition to the fact that the plan was given three years in which to be- come organized, has been that the university was in a position to make concessions to the sororities to assist them in meeting the practical diffi- culties. Florence Holmes, '29, president of Pan-hellenic, stated in referring to second semester rushing, "While there are many points in favor of the plan, the arguments against its prac- ticability at Michigan outweigh them. The suspense of rushing would be ex- tended through the first semester and the present friendly feeling among sororities would be strained. Two weeks of rivalry do not destroy this feeling, but a whole semester of ten- sion might do so." JUNIOR GIRLS PLAY T POSTER CONTEST IRequirements for the Junior Girl's Display poster contest are' as follows: The posters are to t be 12 by 18 inches in size; must be done in 3 colors includingj Sblackon a white ground; and must contain the name of the play, "For the Love of Pete." The contest ends Saturday noon, Feb. 11, and the posters are to be judged and sent away Feb. 13. For further information call j June Marshall, 9517. Society Girl Plans To TakeUp Flying Following a 100 mile an hour flight from New York to Miami which is the first non-stop flight between these two places, Miss Ruth Nichols, Rye, N. Y. society girl, plans to go into the flying business. Accompanying Miss Nichols in the Fairchild pontoon monoplane were Harry Rogers, president or an air- line in Miami and Major M. K. Lee, retired business man and an amateur pilot. Miss Nichols is the only woman holder of an international seaplane pilot's license and has been flying for five years. This non-stop flight was her second trip by air from New York to Miami. The previous trip was made in short hops with an aunt as a passenger. On the non-stop flight Miss Nichols was at the controls for five consecutive hours and for two shorter intervals. "Flying," she says, "is the only real way to go any ap. preciable distance."- CLUBS NUMEROUS AT TEXAS SCHOOL There are 53 recognized organiza- tions of women students at the Uni' versity of Texas, according to records kept in the office of the dean of Un- iversity women. There are about 671 famous Soong sisters to the defeated but honorably esteemed Marshal Chi- ang Kai-shek, resigned generalissi- mo of the now scattered Nationalist armies which, under his leadership, once conquered half of China. Chiang appears as the most matri- monially romantic of n'odern Chinese conquerors, because he has openly persisted in wooing a lady known to have refused him at first. Such a re- fusal in China causes the suitor to 1. "loQ "loseface," a disgrace so terrible that, many Chinese have committed suicide rather than endure it. The use of intermediaries for conveying the pro- posal usually circumvents this con- tingency; but Chiang Kai-shek has been obliged to risk his "face" be-! cause his fiancee was that intensely Westernizedn"modern woman," Miss Muth iehOl1 kSoon; Meiliug. N. Y. society girl, who plans In China "the three Soong sisters" newlares fteratin a n tlaurlstafter an ssare ladies of polite renown. The first on the first non-stop flight! Miss Soong is the wife of 1-I. H. Kung, now reported married to her late husband's co-worker, Chen Yu-jen, until recently Foreign Minister to the' defunct Hankow Nationalist govern- ment. Last of the sisters is Mei-ling, Wel- lesley, '15. Like her brother, T. V. Soong, Harvard, '15, she has been closly identified with the Hankow Na- tionalist Government in which he was Finance Minister. In person the lady is charming, in mentality alert, in speech sometimes caustic. Observers, knowing her passionate Nationalist zeal, are wondering if she married Chiang Kai-shek with intent to rousel him from retirement to renewed lead- ership of a Nationalistic military force. FACULTY MUST INCREASE ~HONEST GRADES IS BELIEF That instructors are not justified in expecting honesty in college students Rye, to seek co-pilot MICHIGAN NIGHT WILL FEATURE G(EE CLUB Broadcasting over WWJ, the Uni- versity Girl's Glee club under the di- rection of Miss Nora Crane Hunt, will present a group of songs as a part of the Michigan night pro- gram to be given in the University broadcasting station on Jan. 20. "Varsity" will be sung by the club at the request of Fred Lawton, an alumnus, the author of the words. Lawton, who lives in Detroit at pres- ent, asked the club to sing his song for him, stating that he would be listening in at his home. The program to be presented is as follows: 1. Songs. Laudes Atque Carmina ..Stanley Varsity Arr. by Florence Shir- ley, '24; words by Lawton. Lindy Lou ........ Strickland 2. Songs. Where The Bee Sucks (Shakes- peare .... Arr. by Dr. Vincent Wings Of Night ... Wintter Watts Love's A Merchant..Molly Carew Marjorie Chavenelle, '28, Detroit 3. College Songs My Girl At Michigan .. Wuerthner When Night Falls . . .Roy Dickin- son Welch Soloist, Dorothy Marsman, '30, (Grand Rapids) Come On Dad . .Phil Diamond, '21 Glee Club Wynken, Blynken, and Nod, Nevin Soprano Obligato, Carolyn Slepicka, '28, Traverse City Glee Club 5 Years Ago At Michigan .Junior Girl's Play, 1914 From Eight In The Morning.... Junior Girls' Play, 1927 Michigan Memories ..Brown, '22 Yellow And Blue ..........Gayley The accompanists for the Glee club are Grace Glover, '28, Bay City, and Frances Morehouse, '30, Jackson. INDIANA.-"How to Succeed in College," is the title of a new book published during the Christmas vaca- tion by Dr. William A. Book, head of the psychology department. to Miami, Fla. a gentleman whose august destiny is 1 I, (f +, l t , c t 1 t suinmed up in the fact that he claims until more specific honesty is given to be a lineal descendant of Confu-;i FRius. The second of the sisters was grstl internationally known as the wife, -Fenton, University of Ohio, as the re- and later as the revered widow, of sult of tests he conducted there re- CHUHU TOHELcently. Denver W omen Dress The experiment showed that 63 per Final tryouts for chorus positions Cheaper Than Iost i cent of a class of women received aid for the Junior Girls' Play will be 'of some sort during the examination.I held from 9 to 12 o'clock this morn- How much (oes the colege woman These students either consulted their ing in Sarah Caswell Angell hall of pay for her wardrobe? A surve taken notes, askingkneighbors for infora- Barbour gymnasium. This will com- j at the University of Denver, recently, tion, or looked over on another's reveals that the women attending thatsWt plete the selection for the entire cast intuion of learning spend on an the room 31 per cent cheated, when of the coming production. Women se- ;isiuo flann pn na y m r. average of $480 yearly. e was out of the room, 39 per cent lected for the speaking parts and cio- A reporter for the Denver Clarion and when he left them on their honor rus selections today will be notified has concluded from the details of for a short length of time 45 per cent by telephone, so that the entire cast this survey that the greatest differ- received assistance, Fenton observ- may be present at a meeting at 4 ence between the college woman and ed. any other girl her age is in her dress. Close connection between class o'clock Monday afternoon, in Sarah The ' former, as a rule, wears more work and honsty in examination was Caswell Angell hall, when a rehear- clothing though the total bill for her shown. None of the A grades cheat- sal schedule will be announced, tho wardrobe is less for the whole year. ed, 33 per cent of the B grades, 80 author introduced to the cast, and She buys one comparatively expens- per cent of the C grades and 75 per plans laid for imirediate inaugura,- ive costume while the wom'an in the cent of those in danger of failing tion of earnest work. world of industry buys three or four cheated in some way. Only five of all Tryouts are asked to arrange for of poor quality which together cost these students had been under the some means by which they may re- more. honor system in high school. ceive telephone notification, if they Interviews with several types of will not be in town over the week girls on the Pioneer campus revealed end. The play, sailing under the ti- that the average college woman buys tie, "For The Love Of Pete," will ten pairs of stockings each year, Velvets make its appearance in March. ranging in price from $1 to $3. She or 4 pe cen oftheapproxim'ately pays $50 f r underwear and $15 for JU L L ors$0f9 udrerad$1 o 16 43 per cent of the aprxmtl negli goes, Eto. She pays $125* for JU IL L I 1561 women enrolled in the Universi- coatse$s,0 fo. portpays $fternoo ty who are members of these or- coatresses, and $60 for evening gowns. 342 ganizations.drssad$0freeingws. The greatest numb nr of organiza- Her coats cost her about $40 a year, her shoes $30, and she pays $15 for Nuts Sa L tions of one type are social sorori- hwrs as, and sherpas ors ties, of which there are 15. Seven -11, -1;_ - - 4-- :...,.. 4i, - 1 1- ... les I if : Delta Zeta defaulted to Kappa Delta the game which was to be played at 4 o'clock. PLANS TO ITRAVEL BEFORE BLINDNESS Miss Carol Hovius, '20, former Uni- ver'sity of Wisconsin student, is now going to travel so that she may see all of the world that she can before she goes blind. Miss Hovius was graduated from the University with honors and she taught school for a year in Iowa. When she wa's troubled with her eyes, she sought the advice of specialists who told her that nothing could be done for her and that she would be en- tirely blind within a year. She told no one 'of her affliction and keeping the entire situation to herself she set out for Europe after finding a companion for herself. She plans to travel until darkness sets in and then she will return to the United States and attend a school for the blind where she will learn a useful occupation. Toasted Sandwiches ERET'S . State ted Daily athletic organizations, three class, one debating, one dancing, two dor- mitory, one dramatic, three executive one discussion, one home econom- ics, seven honorary, three language clubs, five literary, one music, and two religious organizations are in- cluded in these campus organizations. 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