SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1928,,- THE MICHIGAN, D ,A I L Y _, ... . ,. 1 y L ly T W.+1. 1t 3--'1 IA:. VDa-1 1.y' *s_______ 14' ALU MN A S PEL5Inlander Includes Many Famous Names an Its List Of Contributing V Inlander, campus literary maga-i have contributed to the TO oine, which is bringing Carl Sand- Lawrence H. Conrad,s burg, noted American poet, to Ann instructor in rhetoric at Arbor on December 7 for a lecture,l versity, and who was has on. its roster of contributors I elected president of the many famous names. !Author's Association, was 0 N __s contributors has been Robert this magazine during h Among the most famous of the graduate days at Michiga "CTOLLEGE TRAINING GIVES Frost, the New England poet, some A resident of Ann Ar LE ETAINVNG G I of whose verse has appeared in Ruth Bacon Buchanan PERSPECTIVE TO - this University publication and buted a one-act play to JOURNALIST who acted as judge of the poetry) issue this fall, which is t contest held by the Inlander last duced by one of the can "GET JOB AND HOLD IT" spring. matic organizations. Whe Another national figure, Stewart Pierce Baker, teacher o Margaret Sherman, '27, Is Women's Edward White, the California and O'Neill and founder of the Editor Of Pittsburg former Michigan novelist, was, "47" workshop, read thi 'Post-Gazette' during his undergraduate days at wrote a letter of praise t Michigan, a member of the editor- thor, offering her an op I - a - - - - - - - - - - - - - r Writers Inlander. formerly the Uni- recently Michigan editor of is under- an. rbor, Mrs. , contri- the first o be pro-- mpus dra- en Georg- f Eugene e Harvard s play he o the au- pportunity tic class. ntributors, tned more nces Jen- utler, '29, by poems ithwaite's Verse for! NURSES G1IEMUSIC AND DRAMAPROGRI Choral Club, Dramatic Club, Couzens Hall Orchestra Give Joint Program PRESENT ONE-ACT PLA Members of the Choralc Dramatic club, and orchestra Couzens hall presented a j program recently in the Hall a torium. The program was op by two selections by the Ch club, which has recently been ganized and is being directe Miss Thelma Lewis of the fa of the School of Music. The s were "Ceribiribin" by Pastalc and "At the Tea House" by Ma. Two one-act plays were pres ed by the Dramatic club. T were "Lima Beans" and "Wil The Wisp." The Dramatic club organized in September, its ac ties being the reading, study, production of plays. Georgiaf ler, '30, coached the two playsl sented at the program.- Between the plays a string q tette chosen from the member the orchestra played "Andante Tschaikowski and "F a mc Waltz" by Brahms. LAST GAME OF SEASON BRINGS SCORES ANN ARBOR; SOCIETY IS UNUSUALLY The last game of the season has Friday evening. Decorations were drawn many guests to the sorori- yellow mums and tapers. ties this weekend. Mrs. Preston James, Mrs. F. H. Chi Omega entertained yester- Croft, Mrs. Thomas Diamond, and And day Mrs. J. A. Cochran of Detroit, Mrs. Upham, patronesses of Phi Miss Lois Blakely of Grand Rapids, Gamma Mu were entertained for Miss Elizabeth Young of Albion, dnner by the chapter Tuesday and Miss Leora Jarecki of Grand night. As Rapids. Mrs. Edith Auch was a Sigma Kapa announces the visitor of Chi Omega last weekend. pledging of tmily Seymour, '30, of Two guests of the Ohio State Sault St. Marie, Canada. club, Rho chapter are being entertained Pi Beta Phi gave a faculty din- a of by Phi Sigma Sigma this weekend. ner Thursday. The guests were joint Mrs. Anna Ellingham of the Dr. Harvey A. Haines and Mrs. udi- Kappa Delta house entertained Haines, Dean Wilbur R. Humph- ened Miss Alice Fox of Grand Rapids, reys, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. horal and Miss Anne Mitchell of Ann Riggs.Ahd Sor- Arbor at dinner Wednesday eve- Zeta Tau Alpha entertained Dr. u by ning. The sorority will have eleven James H. Hodges and Dr. Clare E. cults guests this weekend. Griffin and Mrs. Griffin at dinner >ongs guIstisweed on Thursday. ong Alpha Chi Omega entertained o hrdy ozza, M J Bha Chiago, Kappa Alpha Theta gave a for- rker. Mrs. John Burnham of Chicago, mal dinner for some members of aent- Citv this week. A buffet luncheon the faculty last Wednesday. Among "The wdman graduate of jour- nalism possesses something that many newspaper men old in their work never have had and never will-that is perspective." Such was the main point of the speech delivered to the Michigan Press convention last Friday morning by Miss Margaret Sherman, woman's editor of the Pittsburgh "Post- Gazette" and graduate of the Uni- versity of Michigan school of jour- nialism, class of '27. Miss Sherman attempted to Dhow that the graduate of a jour- nalistic school has a much wider comprehension of all the various departments of a newspaper than the man or woman who enters the profession without previous train- Ing. Referring todthe woman in jounalism, she said, "She reali?' $he is but a part of a great organ- ization, and that the other depart- inents are just as important or as indispensable as her own. Because of this widened vision she is more apt to recognize opportunity no matter where it comes. Armed with a theoretical knowledge of every phase of newspaper work, ;he is not a wandering babe in the Noods-no matter what depart- ient she finds herself in." "Even the college graduate who :as not studied journalism is in a better position to work on a news- paper than the woman entirely without college training," says Miss Sherman. "She has a back- -round of culture which will be invaluable to her. If she has en- gaged in extra-curricular activities while in college, so much the bet- ter. They will give her an indis- pensable poise. "The woman applying for a newspaper job needs both intelli- gence and persistence," declared bMiss $herman "After she gets her job, comes the task of holding it, and this can be done only by hard work. A woman journalist has ,n excellent chance to make her 4wn job, for there is little estab- lished precedent. But she must ,ork. Persistence helps, enthusi- psm lightens, willingness wins ap- yroval, but without hard work, s( has the marks of a genial but scarcely extraordinary newspaper person." The day is gone when women in ournalism had to confine them- pelves solely to "sob stories." "The !eeling that women couldn't handle big jobs was universal. There was no more unfair, because undiscriminating, assumption," as- terted Miss Sherman. "However," she continued, "in the past ten or fifteen years, men employers have been giving women their chance, and, more important, women have been making good." Moreover, Miss Sherman thinks that men editors are inclined to be generous with women reporters. She says that they think twice be- fore sending women on many of the stories that men are ordered to cover. They are not relegated to "pavement pounding," at the same time that they are usually 4tarted at higher salaries than their cub brothers. This last fea- ture does not long continue, how- ever, according to Miss Sherman. the says, "Women may get away with murder, but they don't, even yet, get away with anything like *n even break in pay-checks. As a friend of ours phrased it with bitter wit, 'Women get equal pay for more and better work'." But the day is coming, she believes, when women journalists '411 bo appreciated, and paid accordingly. "Until that time," Miss Sherman concluded, "you will find that the women who do the work on news- papers are doing so because they love it, because they would never be happy working at anything ial staff of the Inlander. In a re- to come into his drama cent letter to the editor of the Two undergraduate cot magazine, he stated that he felt who have already attai: he had received his literary start 1 than local fame, are Fra on this campus publication. nings, '29, and Louisa B The names of Mrs. Clarence Lit- who are to be presented tle, Robert M. Wenley, professor of'in William Stanley Bra philosophy at the University of Anthology of Magazine Chicago, appear among those whi-j 1929. "PHILOSOPHY TENDS TO HUMANIZE,"I SAYS MEMBER OF THAT DEPARTMENT "Philosophy tends to humanize on life and he is not confined to a person," said John Kuiper of the the consideration of any one small department, of philosophy, "and field of learning as is the scientist does not, as most people think who necessarily must specialize in tend to isolate an individual from one branch of knowledge. The others of his group. man who studies philosophy, how- "Factual knowledge for itself ever," Mr. Kuiper continued, "is alone is not one of its chief aims usually interested in the relation but rather the determination of of his own subject to science, art, the value of worth of those facts," or poetry and therefore automa- Mr. Kuiper stated. "Thus the tically widens the scope of his philosopher has a broad outlook' knowledge. 1 "Of coursebynphilosophy, I do IWIP Shot mean just one branch of the study but rather a broad general term including logic, aesthetics, metaphysics and other related subjects," Mr. Kuiper explained. The person who, because he has included ahfew courses in philo-, For highest honors in." scholar- sophy in his curriculum, thinks ship attainedtin the second semes- that he is necessarily a philoso- ter of the academic year 1927-28, pher is far astray, according toI William J. Watkins, SofM '29, wasI Mr. Kuiper, for our greatest philo- awarded last Monday evening, the sophers, Aristotle, Plato, Kant, did scholarship cup granted semi-an-Inot achieve their greatness by su-' nually by the Symphonic League, perficial study but by the most an organization of School of Mu- profound thought and concentra- sic Women students. The occa- tion. sion for the presentation of this "Philosophy, as a means of men- cup was a supper served to the tal discipline is also helpful to the members of the faculty and the average person," Mr. Kuiper said, student body of the school by the "for through such studies as logic Symphonic League, at which near- whose natureis precise and clear, ly 100 persons were present. the mind is sharpened and the in- Watkins is .a candidate, for the .tellect made more alert." degree of Bachelor of. Music in When asked how he accounted Education, and is preparing him- for the fact that no women have self to become a teacher of Instru- been noted among the really great mental Music and a conductor of philosophers of history, Mr. Kuiper orchestras and bands in the high laughed and said that perhaps it schools and colleges of the coun- was because women'srinterests haa try. This is the first time that always been so far removed from male student of the School of Mu- such subjects in the past that they sic has ever won highest honors in had not been given a chance to scholarship. really philosophize a great deal. "However," Mr. Kuiper said in else, no matter how much the conclusion, "with the entrance of money involved. Pay envelopes so many women into all fields aid sink into insignificance in the full, professions, who knows but that rich, thrilling life of - the alert our next great philosopher will be newspaper woman." a woman."I They) l 'O was tivi- and Hos- pre- uar- rs of " by o us SCora Opines My dear, I'm positively so thrilled about going to the Pan- Hellenic ball that I can hardly wait, I mean I actually am. I think it's going to be just tor exciting for words. And do you know, I never could understand why the men on this campus aren't more appreciative of the honor it is for them to be invited. Brit then menI are difficult to understand any- way. You can't tell me that a wo- man is more of a puzzle than a man, at least than a good many men. And, my dear, when I heard about the decorations for the ball, I was more thrilled than ever. I think they are going to be posi- tively gorgeous. There's going to be Spanish moss dripping around from places and there's going to be an orchestra pit, and there's go- ing to be a booth all decorated up for the chaperones, and every- thing. Oh, yes, and on the panels of the ballroom, there ar going to be prefectly huge yellow mums with maple leaves, and that will be beautiful, too, don't you thing so? Actually,my dear, I thing it will be too romantic, what with all that moss, and the colored lights they are going to suspend from the balcony, and the spot light, dances and everything. I really think the atmosphere wil be inspiring. Men do look handsome in "tuxes," you know, and there will be some dreams of gowns there too, of course, and all in all, it ought to be quite the scene of gayety. Subscribe for the Michiganensian now. It costs only $4.00. f .:...... ......... - ....------------- j ly il W C . . IU1 t ~~i1~~ was served at the chapter house the guests were Prof. Robert Wen- yesterday for the guests. ley and Mrs. Wenley, Dr. M. T. Til- Alpha Phi gave a faculty dinner ley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Beale, and Thursday. Among the guests were Mrs. Frayer. Dean Effinger and Mrs. EffingerI Mrs. John Lawrence and Mrs. Ruth Effinger, Professor Irving D. Woodbrige, two patronnesses of Scott and Mrs. Scott, Prof. Arthur Kappa Alpha Theta, are being en- Cross and Mrs. Scott, Prof. Arthur tertained for dinner today at the tapers and a centerpiece were chapter house. used as table decoratioons. Delta Gamma had a faculty din- Alpha Phi gave a pledge formal ner Wednesday in honor of Prof. Friday, chaperoned by Mr. and Aubrey Tealdi and Mrs. Tealdi, Mrs. Percy Dunsworth and Dr. Prof. James M. O'Neill and Mrs. Harley A. Haines and Mrs. Haines. 1O'Neill, Prof. Arthur Cross, Mr. The house was decorated with Robert Carson, Prof. J. A. C. Hild- bronze tapers and bronze and yel- ner and Mrs. Hildner, and Mr.and low mums. Mrs. Anton Napoli Guests of Alpha Phi at a tea Nancy Bassett and Mary Dun- given after the game yesterday nitan, both of Detroit, are guests were Evelyn Jordan of Sandwich, of Delta Zeta this weekend. ' OtaioBetyCampbell of Gouch- Mrs. Carl Borland of Chicago, a Ontario, Betty a mbey of Glint- national officer of Gamma Phi er College, Jane Trembley of Flint, Beta, was the guest of the chapter Helen IMorrill of Grand Rapids. this week from Sunday to Wednes- Kappa Phi gave a tea Tuesday day. A dinner was given for her afternoon in Wesley Hall. The guests of honor were the pat- ronesses, Mrs. Junious Beal, Mrs. The Styles Horatio Abbott, and Mrs. J. J. Travis. Alpha Xi Delta announces theWhen You pledging of Marion McDonald, '30,hn of Detroit. At dinner last Sunday, Alpha Xi THANKSGIV] Delta entertained Prof. Albert Crittenden, Mrs. Crittenden, and ON DI Faith Crittenden, and Prof. Franklin Shull, Mrs. Shull, and Elizabeth Shull. Monday, Tuesdaj Couzens Hall is to be the scene of an informal Thanksgivinga G dance Tuesday night, Nov. 27. ates oves About 75 couples are expected to be present, and the resident facul- ty of the School of Nursing will! act as chaperones. Alpha Omicron Pi entertained the Ann Arbor alumnae at dinner RAMONA Beauty Shop Special for November Finger Wave or Marcel including a Shampoo with Lemon Rinse, $1 Open Evenings Phone 21478 625 E. Liberty i --- --- * - Silk Scarfs pleated- an Exclusive Swiss Creation cleaned and pleated-35c to 75c Now is the time to get your party gowns revamped and cleansed in Energine - the wonder cleaner. 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