ZDAY, 10, 1928 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ~DAY, 10, 1928 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAO~ A '.-L a s C= ,, r, . %j l _ % =- LEAGUE BAZAAR WILL HAVE, FASHION SHOW AS MAIN ATTRACTION SHOW WILL BE STAGED BY CROWLEY-MIILNER OF DETROIT W e A. A. Organized In Specialized Way Importance Of Sunlight Is Urged SCHED UI E OF HOCKYAMERICAN AND CHINESE WOMEN E AOflhIPKfY ALIKE, SAYS CHINESE STUDE[ Cora Opines I I JNT1 (Edit ond of plain of the tion.) n o mum foster igan v tic asc STUDENTS TO BE MODELS g executi ager fa Most Popular Songs And Stunts e p From Junior Girls' Play are ele To Be Included for the This As a feature of the entertain- Smithe ment of the Women's .league and vice-pr Inter-Church bazaar, a fashion '30, sec show will be given this year, Hilda '30. tre Mary Evans, '29, general bazaar with t chairman, has announced. The sports, show will be staged by the Crow- boardt ley-Milner company of Detroit, of W. A and, will be presented immediate- recorde ly following the performances of publicil the Sophomore circus. The show mer, '3 itself will be preceded and fol- ager, D lowed by the most popular songs membe and stunts from the Junior Girls' Thei Play, "For the Love of Pete." sportsa "Tom," "Sally", and "Peter" will anyone participate in this. sport m Only sports clothes and acceso- subject ries will be modeled and demon- '29; ba strated. Coats, jackets, sweaters, basebal skirts, and jewelry will be iielud- ing, Eli ed, and models will be on display chesis), during the whole bazaar. The fecing clothes are being purchased in ael, '31 New York by Miss Jane Singleton, '31; ou buyer for the sports wear depart- riding, ment of Crowley-Milner's, and IreneC former proprietor of a shop here Zauer,' in Ann Arbor, especially for the son, '3 women who are to model the Eamon, frocks... Although sales will not be will be made at the time of the fashion about t show, orders will be taken at that are in time. The women modeling are all University students, and the money U paid for their services is given to the League, as are the proceeds from. the. show. Those modeling IL areera Johnson, '29, Margaret F Bush '30, Frances Whipple, '31, Margaret Eamon, '31, Catherine Beardsee, '30, Florence Watch- Sring Pocket._29, Josephine Welch, '29,.spread Hilda Mary Evans, '29, Ruth Bish- mended op,30, Roberta Reed, '31, Martha a recen -Peters, Margaret Arthur, '29, fti fllorence Frandsen, '31, and Marie of this al SIartung, '29. abilitie Tickets for the show will be on make ti sale in advance and are priced at mittee 450 cents. general p might bi Notices The% 14 i. iterest The American Association of 1october ' University Women will be the much guests of Dr. A. G. Ruthven and time o the Museum i staff on Saturday. A he :rogram beginning with a tour of the me the building at 2:30 o'clock will be numero followed by an address by Dr. the wor Ruthven on "The Museum: Past, remains 4.)Present,. and Future." All women reason t eligible to membership in the or- if the ganization are invited to be pres- spring ten will be M ak & Co. 161 a q tor's Note: This is the sec- a series of articles to ex- the organization and work Women's Athletic Associa- rder to strive for the opti- in athletic activity and to social activity among Mich- tomen, the Women's Athle- sociation is organized in a specialized way. Besides the ve officers, there is a man- or every sport in which wo- participate. These officers cted in the spring to serve ensuing year. Year the president is Betty r, .'29, Dorothy Touff, '30, esident, Frances Sackett, retary, and Arliehe Heilman, usurer. These officers, along he managers of the various make up the executivej through which the business . A. is conducted. The point r, Gertrude Smith, '30, the ty manager, Marjorie Foll- 0, and the intramural man- 7orothy Griffith, '30, are also rs of the board.' names of the managers of are here listed in order that who is interested in any may get information on the . Hockey, Marie Hartwig, sketball, Jessie Church, '29; 1, Helen Wilson, '31; bowl- zabeth Wood; dancing (or- Jeanette Saurborn, '29; and archery; Janet Mich- golf, Katharine McMurray, tdoor, Frances Whipple, '31; Dorothy Lyons, '29; rifle, Cook, '29; swimming, Ann '29; tennis, Margaret Ohl- 30, and track Margaret '31. Any of these officers glad to give information heir sports, many of which progress now. "The Dr. sJa:is I:GA ES "The importance of sunlight in! replacing deficiencies and thereby maintaining a normal mineral Final Gam metabolism, can not be overesti- Be P mated," was the contention of Dr. Oth Katharine Jarvis when she spoke before therWomen's Research club BAN UE at its last regular meeting on Nov. BNU 5. Dr. Jarvis said in part, "Among Interclas the many functions of calcium in second ro the human body are those of pro- will be p ducing normal bone and tooth de- dates, acc velopment; maintaining nervous '29, manag excitability and muscular contrac- Tuesday, N tion; and exerting an antagonistic iors; sop3 action to certain other inorganic Thursday, irons in the tissue fluid. The sophomore. study of calcium metabolism isTuesday, . carried out by the production of nen; junio rickets in laboratory animals with The fina an appropriate diet and investi- first round gating the factors which cure this 4:15 next condition. The importance of sun- seniors an light in this connection can not with each be overestimated." clashing w 4:30 the 1P'AV will play club. The mes in First Round layed Off Tuesday; her Dates Named Will' T DATE IS NOV. 22 ss hockey games for the und of the tournament layed on the .,following ording to Marie Hartwig, ger of the tournament: Nov. 13-seniors vs. jun- homores vs. freshmen; Nov. 15-seniors vs. s; juniors vs. freshmen; gov. 20-seniors vs. fresh- ors vs. sophomores. l series of games in the d will be played off at Tuesday afternoon, the d freshmen contending other, and the juniors with the sophomores. At freshman second team the Ann Arbor hockey game that was played the freshman second d the Motley club this which was not com- is counted as a victory otley club. 110 IifIUII ILU i. "Chinese girls are just as giddy and talkative as American women," said Miss Lucy Wang, Barbour felb Sow from Foochaw, China, who is working here for her Ph.D. degree. in education. "I thought when I came to the United States for the first time, that the American girls would be different perhaps, but I laughed to myself, soon, for I found that they are just the same underneath as they are in China, Miss Wang con- tinued, "and they like fun just as well." Hwa Nan college, a school for girls in China of which Miss Wang will be president when she returns next year, is one of the two wom- en's colleges in China, and the only one in southern China. It offers a senior high school course of three years and the regular four-year college course terminating in an Supper To Ge Given By School Of Music I TO FEATURE MEETING "Where But in America" by Oscar Wolfe is the one-act play selected by Mummers society, to be given at their next meeting Thurs- day, Nov. 22, at Martha Cook building. Helen Workman, '30, will direct the play. The cast will include Mr. Efpen- hayne-Dora Vandenburg, '30; Mrs. Efpenhayne-Jeanette Dale, '31, and ,Hilda-Florence Frandsen, 31. Katharine Burt, '30, will head the costumes committee, with Nina Lindborg, '30, as assistant. Blos- som Bacon, '30, is chairman of the properties committee, and she will be assisted by Leone Lee, '29, and Virginia Trowbridge, '30. At the last meeting held Thurs- day afternoon at the Gamma Phi Beta house, a program of two readings and two short plays was presented by the new members and a discussion' of "Porgy" was l held. Apples Are For Sale I At Hockey GamesI between squad an week, but pleted, wa for the Me Tickets for the hockey banquet on Nov. 22 will be on sale this coming week. They should be ar- ranged for through Marie Hartwig, or Helen Wilson, '31. They will cost one dollar. o 0 Interclass Hockey Standings I Won Lost Tied Seniors......3 0 0 I I Juniors .......0 2 1 I I Sophomores . .1 1 1 I Freshmen ... .1 2 0 I 0 0 TOPAZ IS NOVEMBER GEM The topaz is your birthstone if you were born in November. It is the emblem of strength and friendship, and its strength was supposed by the ancients to in- creased with the increase of the moon. The ancients also believed that it banished the terrors of the night and protected the wearer from communicable diseases. The supersitition has been hand- s .1 As the first combined social event of the year, the Student Council of the School of Music is sponsor- ing a supper party for both men and women students to be given from 6 until 10 o'clock on Nov. 19 on the mezzanine floor of the School of Music. A buffet dinner will be served, after which there will be tables for cards in the smaller rooms, and dancing with orchestra music in the main hall. At this party also, the student who received the highest grades for last semester's work will be awarded the scholarship cup which is presented semi-annually. ed down that a topaz, engraved with the figure of a flying falcon, will gain the favor of important personages for the wearer. Like many other precious stones, the topaz was long credited with healing powers. St. Hildegrade rec- ommended it above all other stones as a remedy for blindness. Its greatest virtue is told in the fol- lowing familiar lines : "Firm Friendship is November's and she bears True love beneath the topaz that she wears." A. B. degree, according to Miss Wang. Hwa Nan was founded in 1921 and at present has a student body of about 104 in the college and 116 in the high school. "I myself, became a member of the freshmanbclass when Hwa Nan was first opened," Miss Wang stated, "and when I and another girl left to come to the United States to school, there were only three students left in the class to graduate, so you can see that at- tendance has increased a great deal since then. "All except a small number of women are housed in dormitories at this college," Miss Wang went on,'""and they participate in much the same extra-curricular activities as one does here. For instance, there is a Patriotic club, organized since the Nationalist movement to further the growth of loyalty to the new China. Also," Miss Wang said, "there are the Y. W. C. A. and the student Government societies." Regular courses and the study of Chines literature are most col- monly taken by the Chinese col- lege woman student, according to Miss Wang, though a few years ago, the study of the standard language was also included because of the variety of dialects in China. How- ever, today, through the spread of education, ' a knowledge of the standard speech is taken for grant- ed and the study of Chinese in col- lege is confined to the written language which, though used all over 'China, has never undergone any great change. In com- menting on the dialectical differ- ences in China, Miss Wang said that among all the Chinese stu- dents on the campus here, only two speak her particular dialect. "No matter how slow the pro- gress may seem to be," she said in conclusion, at least I am sure that there is some advance being made by women of the present genera- tion." Get Acquainted With Well, my dear, now that a few trivial and unimportant details and events are over with and taken care of, such as soc mid-seme- sters-what an exam!-presiden- tial elections, and very personal affairs, I can return to my job and the defense of my sex. No, Lark is not the offender this time, but one of my dear-oh very dear professors, who more or less maliciously maligned the feminine sex the other morning in class. Among other things, he said he would not go across the street to hear a woman speak, though he did admit that women usually had the last word. But he didn't go so far as to acknowledge that it was either because they had something vitally important to say or because the masculine half of the argu- ment is too squelched to say any- thing further anyway. I must give the man credit, though, for saying that he owned something to his mother. That is the least he could do, of course. T'd like to know where these high and mighty men would be if it were not for us women. They couldn't get along at all without us, and they know it, though they won't admit it. We inspire them to noble deeds, we console them for the mistakes they make even when we know that a woman of any intelligence at all would never dream of doing some of the stu- pid things they do, and we-gen- erally speaking that is-feed the brutes + Did yau_ aver see aflyth° more helpless than an untraine man trying to get himself some thing to eat, even out of a can And yet some men are so lacking i the proper appreciation of thing that they declare themselves ca: able of managing without us. E ,ARLY ELECTIO N lEADSOF SPREAD g election of the Freshman committee will be recom- to the women of the an class, it was decided at it meeting of the members year's committee. If there' ck of knowledge as *o the of the women so as to he election of definite com- members impractical, the and assistant chairman be chosen. sophomore women actively ed in the spread held in found that there is too fork to be done in the two that elapse between the f the committeeelections e date of, the spread, since nbers are interested in the us fall activities and often rk of carying out the plans for a few women. For this the sophomores believe that elections are held in the for next year's spread it more successful. I Hello Boys! I am lochted at 607 Church In order to cary out the famous axiom, "An apple a day keeps the doctor away," and to have things in keeping with the spirit of fall, W. A. A. is now selling big rosy apples of the Jonathan variety at the interclass and intramural hockey games every night. Eliza- beth Woods, '31, of the executive board has been appointed to have charge of the sale of the fruit. Players in the games are not al- lowed to buy the apples until after the games are over. b Ii s :,i; rY r .: ImESERV ATIV N i, For All mportant Lake and Ocean Lines 'Tou rs. Crie Indepedent Travel E. G. Kuebler Gen. Steamship Agency 601 A. Huron Ph. 6412 Schaeberle & Son MUSIC HOUSE For Everything in Musical Instruments and Supplies Radiola and Atwater-Kent Radios 110 So. Main St. I stil do First Class Work Cleaning, Pressing Remodeling 50 Years at the Trade Louis Lindemann i ANN ARBOR iI Ladies' Dressse Go- E ,D S...... (Up to 10 plaits)" Cleaned and Hand Pressed $1.25 "Cash & Carry" No better work anywhere I Extra Money! Only a few of us are lucky enough to have all the money we want when we're at school. The big things take so much of our allowance money that there is seldom any left for the little things. But by buying at Mont- gomery Ward & Co.'s store you can actually save quite a bit from your weekly allowance. 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