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SPLAY DAY PAR TICIPANTS WIL MET
;Captais. Draw at Dinner For ied the visitors. She was followei
Opponents And Time of by Dr. Margaret Bell, who in turi
P1 called upon Miss Halsey, who spok
aying. on "Social Aspect of Sports." Fran
ces Sackett. '30, acted as Masters o
COLORS MARK COLLEGES Ceremonies, and introduced, first
'I Dora Vandenberg, '30, male lead o
sLast Year's Junior Girls' Play last year's Junior .Girls' Play, wh
Provs Sorce orang "Right Out'of Heaven."
Provs Surce ForSeniots Present Two Guests.
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AVIATION GROUP WOMEN SELECT PHARMACY IS FAVORED VOCATION
TO HAVE DINNER STUDENT LEADER OF FILIPINO WOMEN, STUDENT SAYSUUI LU
Growp to le Meibmer of National
Women's Aeronautical
Association.:
Michigan women interested in;
d forming a society having as its aim!
the promotion of aviation for wom-
en met Thursday night and signed;
.a petition .asking permission from'
f the Board of Regents to organize'
such a society.
Since the ultimate aim of the:
society is to become formally affi-
liated with the national Women's
Aeronautical Association, Bertha
i
b r.AncrraILIRIL. A duet, from the same source,
"Yodel for Me," was sung by Claire
p ain or shine, Play Day will startI Sims, '30, and Helen Harter, '30,
± at .9 o'clock this morning. If thei who were "Oswald" and the Swiss
weather is fair the participants I cookrespectively.
will meet at Palmer Field House, Hera, Grabowsky, '30 Ed., and
regardless of the' sport in which Fra Saktky, pred ad
they are participating. If there is rances Sackett, '30, presented a
±r aheavy rain, only the golfers will tap dance arranged for "Paris
meet there, while tennis and hock-Bound, also from the Play. The
ey players will come to Barbour program was concluded by Irma
gymnasium. Kroft, '31, who sang two Negro
spirituals.
At the Cabaret dinner, which! At the luncheon today, a repre-
took place last night, the various, sentative of each college will speak.
s captains drew for opponents and swit thy of e actigaspak,-
t~im ofplayng.Accrdin tothewith Dorothy Tlou1ff acting as toast-
time of playing. According to the mistress. The seating arrange-
results ,at nine this morning thei ments for the luncheon have been
University of Michigan juniors will so planned that every woman will
play the Battle Creek School of come in with her opponent of the
I'Physical Education, while on ans- morning's games.
other field the Michigan State pun- -_g;me_- _
a fors will oppose the Michigan State I
Normal College seniors. At the Dancing Classes to
Y same time, on the tennis courts, I1Prpre Women for
¢t the Battle Creek contestants will
play the University of Michigan JuniorPlay Tryouts!
women, and the Michigan State,
Normal tennis players will meeko For the purpose of giving a pre-
the Michigan State entrants. i linminary workout to those women
h} Two hockey ,games will also be who are intending to try out for
conducted in the afternoon, when this year's Junior Girls' Play, anc-
7 the Michigan State seniors will th se sJwi r Ghld'evey, danes-
play the Michigan State .,Normal 1ng classes will be held every Tues-
""0p0hoMores,: and the Battle Creek 'day and Thursday beginning this
"B" team will oppose the Univer- iwee~k. This system has been used
- ilty of Michigan' freshman team. for the past two years in order that
The archery tournament will, be stretching exercises need, not be
1 run off beginning at 2:30 o'clock a part of the chorus work when
also.. the cast. has been chosen, and to
'Golf Schedule Incomplete. make it easier for women to be
T'he golf matches which will take at their best when they try out.'
E place at Barton Hills Counry Club This year the classes will be in
in the morning will be played be- charge of Clara Parkinson, '31.
tween Battle Creek and Michigan There will be two classes on each
State while the University of Mich- of the two days, one from 4:15 toI
ai will play Michigan State, Nor-5 o'clock and one from 5 to 5:45,
mal college.. Because - one of the o'clock. The classes will be held in.
3colleges brought' only one golf the Barbour gymnasium, and all
player, the afternoon schedule has women who .enter' them are re-
not yet been decided upon. quested to wear bathing suits.
Besides these official games, In order to enter the classes itk
there is .-entertainment planned is necessary to sign up at the tables
for the participants, in the form in University hall any day next t
of a campus tour, after luncheon, week between the hours of 9 and;
which is at 1 o'clock, a tour of the 12 and 1 and 3 o'clock. Dues will
League from 11 to 12 o'clock, and also be collected at this table. It is"
bowling for those women not tak- necessary to have a receipt fort
ing part in an activity in the morn- these dues when trying out for theu
ing from 10:30 to 11:30 o'clock, and play, but not for the preliminary i
frohi 3:30 to 5:30' o'clock in the af- I classes. Dues are one dollar,
ternoon. -
Women. Identifled by Tags. The graduate student body of [
Upon arriving at the Field House 'Radcliffe College has representa-
for the Cabaret dinner last night, tives from 83 colleges and univer-'
every woman was given a - square sities of the United States. Those4
pasteboard upon 'which to write sending the most students are Red-
her name and college. Green
squayes were. given to Michigancliffe itself, Wellesley, Smith, yas- 1
State Normal representatives, red sar, Mt. Holyoke, Boston Unver-t
to women from Battle Creek, yel- sity, Pembroke, Jackson, Oberlin,
low to Michigan State, and white I'State University of Iowa, Trinity
to the University of Michigan. Pro-,
grams, whih'h were placed on -the college, University of California,
tables, were colored to match the and Wooster College in Ohio.t
pasteboards, and in order to keep
the" dance floor from being over-
crowded, a' colored light was used".
to denpte which people were to \
dance. N\
*;Dorothy Touff, '30, 'president of \ N 0 W
W. A. A., as toastmistress, welcom- "
Flo, 31, acting chairman, read
J from the national by-laws and
year book. It was moved and car-
ried that a committee be appoint-
ed to draw up a modified version o
,the constitution which will be more
suitable for a university society;
and yet which will be in strict ac-
cordance with the national rulings
when the group here is attached
to the Women's Aeronautical Asso-
I ciation as the Universtiy of Michi-
,an unit.
It was further decided that asso-
ciate memberships be given to Ann
Arbor women who, though interest-
ed in aviation, are not students in
the University. These member-
ships wouldientail no payment of
jiues and give no vote in the or-
ganization. Officers for the present
will be limited to the president,
vice-president, secretary, and treas-
urerfi these four acting as the
board of directors.I
A letter from Mrs. Orra Heald
Blackmore, president of the De-
troit unit, wished the organization
success and added that the mem-
bers will- be extended invitations
.o the Aeronautical Ball in Detroit
Jan. 4.
Although the original intention
was to keep the meeting bi-weekly
it was thought advisable until the
grolp becomes better acquainted
to have the business carried on at a
dinner, the members meeting in
the cafeteria of the League Build-
ing next Wednesday night at 5:30,
Women who wish to make reserva-
tions and who were not at the iI st
meeting are requested to call Emily
Grimes at 9502.
Seven Colleges Aceept
Mortarboard Invitation
Acceptances have been received
by Mortarboard from the univer-
sities and colleges to which invita-
tions were sent for the sectional
conference of that organization,
which is taking place Friday, Sat-
urday, and Sunday, Nov. 15, 16,1
and 17 ,at the University of Michi-I
gan.-Chapters which are sending,
r epresentatives to the conference
are those at Ohio State, Ohio Wes-
leyan, Miami University, Carnegie
Tech, Pittsburgh University, and'
the: University of West Virginia.
Invitations which have been sent
to alumnae of the Michigan chap-
ter of Mortarboard are being en- I
swered with a great deal of. en-
thusiasm, according to Margaret
Ohlson, '30, who is general chair-
man. Members from other chapters
of _\Iortarboard. who live in Anne
Arbor are also being invited to at-
tend the conference.
1:
"Pharmacy, or pharmaceutical
chemistry, is the favorite profes-
sion among Filipino women," stated
Maria Pastrana, Grad., a rjharma-
^ist herself, ad a Fellow from the
University of Phillipine. "It seems
that pharmacy appeals to the Fili-
pino woman's home-loving propen-
sities, for it can be practised in her
home or near it." she continued.
"It is quite common to find only
one or two men in the graduating
class in pharmacy, and there are
more women than men in the pro-
fession. Although a woman phar-
macist starts her business by work-
ing for someone else, she eventu-
ally establishes her own drug store
business.. Medicine, nursing, and
teaching'are their other favorite
professions
Miss Pastrana is a Barbour
scholar from the Philippines and is
working for a Ph.D. In speaking of
the Phillipine schools, in which she
expects to teach, she said, "The
Mrs. Vander Velde is not charac-
terized by the conventional femi-
nine touch and would rarely be
recognized as the work of a woman.
The paintings have been placed
in the corridor of the third floor.
the Kalamazoo, and Alumni rooms
respectively. "Purple and Gold"
was awarded the Arts Club prize
for the best painting in 1926.
Foundatizrn Committee
Position Given Morrow
Pastrana believes. This deprives There is a check room on the flr t
them of holding elective offices in floor which is for the use of. men,
the government, but some of them -although women may use it at any
succeed in becoming judges, clerks, other time than on nights of
secretaries and treasurers, and dances. The check room on the sec-
there are many indications that be- ond floor is reserved for the women
fare long they will have the right on dance nights, but will not be open
of suffrage also. Due to the co-edu- at other times unless for special
cational training, Filipino women occasions. Men are not permitted
have entered all of the professions, to use the second floor check room
' and in the state university, the col- at any time.
lege of engineeringbis the only one In many cases, advantage has not
whic nobeen taken of the check room priv-
.we.'ileges during the day, and as a
Organized athletics is of recent I result there -has been considera-
introduction, being less than 30 ble damage done to the rugs and
years old in the affairs of the Fil-Erniture of the building from wet
iiogirls. However, basket-ball fwrnituredofmthebldins om.
and indoor baseball are becoming n
papular, and "whereas formerly
the greatest ambition of the Fill- Sigma Alpha Iota Gives
'pinio women was to be a Rnlgil,
a term used to denote aCgirl who Foreign Music Program
goes to private school and is trained--
to be a 'lady,' to study music, em, Sigma Alpha Iota, national musi-
broidery, and the household arts, cal sorority, entertained at a de
the modern Filipino woman wants Il ghrfrte tedned ate-
to.nter a profession, to travel
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study in English from the kinder-
garten up to the time they go to
college. Spanish is taught in the
high schools and colleges with
other foreign languages, but in the
private schools Spanish takes a
large part in the curriculum and is
usually the 'campus' language."
The fact that women do not have
the right of suffrage is due to the
fact that the great majority of
them are contented without it, hiss
Men Use Check Rooms on First
Floor, Women on Second
Floor, Dance Nights.
Use of the check rooms in the
League; especially during periods of
bad weather, by everyone who is to
remain in the building for any great
length of time, is a point stressed
+ by the recently created House Con-
mfittee of the building.
majoity of t e P inlbnerchoo, H Un Um U t r
are co-eductional, anUthe student
Alice Love Armstrong
0f Ashland, Va., is president of;
the student body at fandolph-Ma-
con Women's college at Lynch-
burg.
ianny Vander Velde,
i
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. L I 1I LLr s IjIWn , MEXICO CITY, Nov. 1.-Ambas- abroad and to e
Paintings t o League sador Dwight W. Morrow has ac- tivities in which
cepted an invitation to be a mem- ters are intereste
Mrs. Hanny Vander Velde, an1 ber of'the Mexican selection com- concluded.
artist of Detroit, has loaned three mittee of the Guggenheim Memor-!
of her paintings, "Purple and; ial foundation, which will pass on
Gold", "Grey Day" and, "Flowers in appications of Mexican students NOT
Blue Bowl", all of which have re- for Guggenheim fellowships for Freshiman1, an
ceived first prizes in ar contests, study in the United States. In addi- i ClaSS hockey to
to the League building o1' an it-ion 1.0oAmbassador Morrow, the uled to participt
definite length of time. committee will include Secretary of activities this
.Ie l p s g Communications Sanchez Mejorada, teams should be
one of her paintings to ,'the Lcague ecretary of Education Moises 9 o'clock. All tea
mrnembership there. She al Saenz, G. P. G. Conway, president in Play Day are i
forherof the Mexican Power Light Co., eon at the Field
hopes to later exhibit miore of her and Carlos Contreras, architect.
pictures in the foyer of the Lydia -
Mendelssohn theatre.
Mrs. Vander Velde, a 'native of
the Netherlands, is a member of
the Detroit Society :;df Women
Painters and a member of the Na-
tional Association of'!Women TAKE AD)
Painters and Sculptorswith ex-a
hibiting rights of her own. Shy -
graduated from the Rotterdam ,
Academy of Fine Art after an I
eight year course in both fine and -
decorative art. '-'
In the years that flowed she '
worked and studied alone,y culti-
vating a personal 'i aste and - -
technique which are evident in the -
striking individuality otlher work.
According to critics, the work: of ,
t o e n t e r a u roV V n v l 4 I
ogage in the ac- noon at the League in honor of
Aer western sis- their patronesses and founders.
:d," Miss Pastrana Miss Odina Olson, teacher of music
RCE. ,e
id junior inter-
ans are shed-
ate in Play Day
morning. The
on the field at
ams taking part
nvited to lunch-
house.
in the University high school, en-
tertained the group with several
!Swedish songs and was dressed in
Swedish costume.
Miss Fldrence Boycheff, holder of
th6 Ouillard scholarship and a
pupil of Prof. Theodore Harrison pf
the School of Music, also' enter,
tained the group with a repertoire
of Russian folk songs and native
artatsie::.
ii...-..- ir wow."nius - i.- -'- - .. .. -.
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VANTAGE
of this
DRESS
SP ECIAL.
Reduced to
a,
Accordng-tocritis h..work.of
Moderne
Modes
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MV
$795
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"Drizzle,
drizzle
. .8 . '
IT'S bound to rain sometimes,
even in the best regulated cli-
mates. 'But don't let that make
any party of yours a fizzle..
A Fish Brand Slicker is a
comfortable, chummy sort of
garment> that makes good
times possible regardless of
storms and showers.
You care buy a genuine Fish
Brand Slrcker al'nost any-
where for the price of a couple
of theatre tickets. A. J. Tower
Company, Boston, Mass.
OMNI
..,:'':
. LIKE THESE MADE OF
-" DAINTY MOIRE RUBBER
5 \ Paris created
N these infntely rmar t
5Iende' fine boots
to accomodare the_
widths and heel k
lengths of the new
1 1 G - n
fil shoes . made-
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100 of
marked dawn
to
$7.95 for a special
selling. Th ey in-
elude silk crepes in
black, brown, wine,
red, and many more
1 esirable winter
our higher
dresses
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.
.
shades, silks in
tweed designs,
satins, georgettes.
If Its Fashionable
to be Economical
Then Choose
at $16.50
Dresses with the new, fuller,
longer skirts, the higher nipped
in waist lines, the intricate
Conies
in early tdo'
ing the princess line
and the soft outlines.
Colors,
too,
se e m
VI
obtain the widest
possible selection
from these extra-
ordinary values.
more especially than
ever designed to flat-
ter feminine charm.
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