WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2930 THE MIC14IGAN DAILY WEDNESAY, NOEMBER 0, 190.THE.....G.....L 26 Women Are' Elected to Positions on All-Star Hockey Teams AWARoS GIVEN FR0 W.A.A. POINTS AT 1AHfMFN', RAMOIIFTi THE SOPIHISTICATE By Margaret Hapgood, '31. Accessories are those seemingly WOMAN STARTS AVIATION GROUP (|HK [N S ALUMNAE ATTEND HOMECOMING PARTIES, DANCES, OPEN HOUSES, TEAS, AT SORORITIES AFTER FOOTBALL GAME Pledge Dances, Patroness Teas Collegiate Sorosis honored the urday at Open House. These guests SSupply Entertainment, following members of the faculty were present: Jean and Roberta S._. '7-"frl+Hazard, Three tivers; Ruth Kim- s J ~ v rzt ofU L/ YJ V LI unimportant details on which the true smatness of one's appearancel Seventy - Five are Present at s bse may be wearing a isbsd. One myb ern Annual Hockey Banquet most chic ensemble but unless the in Field House. hose, shoes, gloves, purse, and other CUP PRESENTED KAPPAS details match in spirit the whole effect is ruined. Nearly everyone' Students Win Numerals realizes nowadays that just be- Thirty tcause a hat or a pair of shoes hap- For Playing on Teams pens to match or harmonize with During Season1 the color of a frock or a coat does Seventy-five people attended the mean that it can be worn with it. hockey banquet last night in the Just because that lovely beige hat lounge of the Women's Athletic jIwith the drooping plume that you building, during which the all-star bought to wear with your lace dress' hockey teams for the present year happens to match your camel's hair were announced, and awards given _ n)t ?tl (in not moan that for W. A. A. points. Those in the forward line of the first all-star team are Sarah King, Jean Botsford, '32, Olive Dawes,, '34, Margaret Healy, '32Ed., Helen Brenner, '33Ed., Elizabeth Whitney, '31, and Dorothy Birdzell, '32. Eliz- abeth Cooper, '34, Corrine F. Fries, '34, Beatrice Olmstead, '34, goal guard, Esther LaRow , '32, Clara Grace Peck, '33, and Helen Domine, '31, were elected to positions on the back field. Second All-Star Team Announced. On the second all-star team are Alice Goodnew, '34, Ruth Kurtz, '34, Pauline Brooks, '34, Alice Lynch,; '34, Dorothy Davidson, '33, Dorothy Felske, '34, Nell Hagedornb '31, Hel- en Thompson, '33, Dorothy Dunlap, '33, Grace Mayer, '34, Gladys; Schroeder, '33, Clara Parkinson, '31, and Jeans Bently, '32. Awards were given by Dr. Mar- garet Bell, adviser of women in physical education, to the following people for having earned 300 W. A. A. points; Jane Fecheimer, '33, Louise Petersen, '33, and Jean Bent- ly, '32. These were the highest awards given at the banquet. Five women won hockey sticks, Jane Fisher, '33, Rebecca Gaber, '33, Anna Neberle, '34, Louise Peter- son, '33, and Rosalind Caley, '32. Hockey sticks are awarded to wo- men who have won numerals in some other sport, and who played their first year of hockey. About 30 students were awarded numerals for having played on a hockey team during the last sea- son. Faculty Members Speak. j Other speakers at the banquet included Miss Laurie Campbell, Dr. Mabel Rugen, and Miss Marie Hart- wig of the physical education de- partment for women. Audrey Cal- lander, '33Ed., spoke for the under- graduates. Miss Alice Lloyd, dean of women; also attended the ban- quet. An important feature of the eve- ning was the awarding of the in- tramural cup to Kappa Kappa Gamma, winners of the Intramural Championship. The tables were arranged in the Lounge in the form of a U, and yel- low chrysanthemums and roses were used for decorations. Mary Elizabeth Dunn, '32S.M., pianist, provided the music. 1I. coe.A, exac my Js II they're to be worn together. Accessories can make so much difference, and yet it' so difficult when you see just the duckiest lit- tie belt or the most becoming scarf marked down to practically noth- ing, to restrain yourself sternly and ask, now just what would I wear with that? This year when practically every frock has a definite waistline, belts a r e important. Matching belt,j shoes and purse always look well. Patent leather is good this season, and adds life to a dull woolen frock. A belt to be worn with a dress that betrays its Russian or medieval influence is of gold fili- gree with stones set in every other link. A belt to add swagger to a sport coat is of calf with a large semi- circular buckle of ridged silver. A more formal belt is of flat silver links that would look especially well worn with matching silver jewelry. A belt to be worn on an evening dress is of tiny seed pearls and colored bugle-beads in a sim- ple design. Evening handkerchiefs are still being carried; however if the pop- ularity of the fan continues to in- crease and everyone starts to carry them the handkerchief wvill slip back again into its sphere of mere- ly being useful. At present the fan is not seen very frequently, but the spirit of charge is beginning to be felt, and I venture to suggest that in a few years feminine hands will again have acquired the art of weilding a fan. Scarfs are especially welcome in this kind of weather. This year they are worn most often tied un- der the chin, ascot fashion. Match- ing scarf and hat are a practical combination to be worn with a fur coat on campus. Especially if it is a print or a plaid combining many colors, it can then be worn with almost any colored dress. If one has a scotch ancestor it would be particularly clever to look up the clan plaid and have a scarf and beret made of it. Paris has featur- ed scotch plaids extensively for this winter, so even although you should have no ancestral rights to any plaid, you have fashions approval. i Dr. Bell Stresses Advantage ofI This Occupation for I Occasion for entertaining alum-1 I Woen.nae was presented last week-end omen.a by the football game, and the sor- E HERE GOOD orities responded with all forms ofl EQUIPMENTopen-ouse entertainment, includ- ing tas and homecoming parties, "For women desiring to enter the while a touch of variety was sup-1 field of earning a living, I can sug- plied by the pledge dances and1 gest no better occupation than patroness teas which also took Physical Education," said Dr. Mar- place. ae e " t ptw a Theta Phi Alpha gave an alum-j garet Bsho. of the psemous nae homecoming tea last Sunday statistics hafternoon for forty out-of-town1 crease in wage earning women. alumnae guests, Ann Arbor alum- ? aesAlong with this has come in the nae, and the sorority patronesses.r MRS. LYLE BURNS STEEVER new line of gymnasium instruc- Mrs. John P. O'Hara, of Detroit, Widow of a World war aviation assisted by Mrs. John McGee, also officer, who organized the Eagle tion, and sport's coaching for of Detroit, presided at the tea Wings Flying Club of Young Wo- women, table. Last Friday night Theta Phi men which has become so popular "Physical education should have Alpha gave a formal dance for theiri that several men have joined it. an especial appeal to all young pledges. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hamil, women who ever plan to get mar-' of Ann Arbor, and Mrs. Maude FACU TY W MENThompson were chaperons. FACUL TY WOMEN ried, as there is no teacher among Tappa Delta Honors Chaperon. WILL BROADCAST the educators who understands the Last Thursday night Kappa Delta child as well or is as able to get honored their house chaperon, Mrs. Increase Is Noted in Number into the confidences of the very Anna Dillingham at a formal din- Speaking Over Radio. young. You will become a part of ner, at which the sorority patron- the nation-wide desire for body esses were guests. "There has been an increase this development, and you will be doing Kappa Kappa Gamma are giving year in the numbers of women muformal dinner tQnight in honor of yerading the um sUniversity more than your share towards the the following members of the fac- broadcasting from the Unihealthy growth of the country," ulty: Prof. C. D. Thorpe and Mrs. Station," said Prof. Waldo Abbot, she stated. Thorpe, Prof. O. J. Campbell and the director. "In 1925 one woman "If anyone is interested in Phy- Mrs. Campbell, and Prof. Arthur S. spoke and last year there were six. sical education, if you see in this Aiton and Mrs. Aiton. The faculty women of the School I profession possible life-long satis- Alpha Delta Pi gave a tea for of Music have been very generous faction and sufficient stimulation their alumnae and other guests for progress, you must think of last Sunday afternoon. in giving their help towards mak- I yourself as a possible candidate. Alpha Phi gave a tea after the ing the programs successful." I You must have robust health and football game Saturday, at which Dr. Bell, of the Health Service, full vigor. You should train your- Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Van Horn, of and Miss Edith Thomas, of the self to have enough physical ability Sturgis, Mich., and Mrs. Oscar Library Extension Service, have to be a leader in all sports," con- Hanson, of Grayling, Mich., guests ' cluded Dr. Bell. of the house, were present. already spoken this year. Next Monday Miss Orma F. Butler, pro- fessor of Latin and Curator of the Archaeological Collection will dis- cuss, "Our Inheritance om the Past." She will speak on the value M onth EndSale of Archaeological discoveries in their relations to present day life. OF On the following day, Miss Bar- bara H. Bartlett, Professor of Pub- lic Health Nursing, will speak upon "The Field 6f Public Health Nurs- F oC s andVOW11 ing." During the World war, Dr.11d Gw &f Bartlett conducted a survey of in- fant mortality for the government and later taught at the University of Washington. $14.75 and $10.00 Dr. Martha Colby and Miss Kath- erine B. Green, of the psychology $25.00 and $16.75 Values department, Miss Lillian B. Smith of the Department of Health, and Miss MarieR. Rasey of the Teach- Jerseys, Tweeds, and Knitted Fabrics for the colder ers College Department will all weather as well as Flat Crepes, Chiffons, and New Prints speak in the future. "I will be glad to give a program in the usual Collins Shoppe Modes. to the women at the same time as the Junior Girls' Play," said Prof.Aats Regardless of Former Price Abbot. I wish that there were more women on the faculty to speak. A * majority of the mail comes from the women and they are very in- teresting and also amusing, such as the fond wife asking what may be done for her husband's eczema." One woman felt inspired to write E. LIBERTY AT about the soul and another re-- c ef/te marked upon the value of the -- speeches to a busy housemaker. 1 - -- - - - -_ - -- _--1_ I.' with a formai dinner last Tiuesday I evening: Prof. Walter B. Pillsbury and Mrs. Pillsbury, Prof. Rene Tala- mon and Mrs. Talamon, Prof. Arthur S. Aiton and Mrs. Aiton,C Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Wheeler, and Mrs. Fielding H. Yost. Zeta Tau Alpha entertained their pledges at a formal dance Saturday night in the lounge of the Women's Athletic building. Mrs. Mary E. Tuller, Mr. and Mrs. Clarke Sim- mons, of Detroit, and Mrs. Seymour, of Chicago, were the chaperons. Mrs. John Webb Willmott, of San Diego, Calif., was a guest of honor at the house at dinner last night. Miss Alice Dow, of Barton Hills, entertained the active chapter of Delta Omicron, national musical sorority, at a bridge at her home last week-end. Alumnae are Entertained. Members of Chi Omega Sorority entertained their alumnae on Sat- berly, Detroit; Lucy Austin, Ruth Fowler, and Elsie Mathewson, De- troit. Alpha Gamma Delta entertained the following alumnae on Saturday: Genevieve Campbell, Ardith John- son, Andrina Iverson; Mrs. Roland Lyons, Katherine Burt, all of De- troit, Katherine Hagitorn, and Elsie Hauschild, Cleveland, and Francis Fisher, Mansfield, Ohio. Delta Delta Delta gave a tea Sun- day afternoon, in honor of their province deputy, Mrs. Edward Haan, Evanston, Ill. Patronesses and members of the alliance were present. SOMETHING DIFFERENT TO EAT? I Try our attractve and well balanced fify cntluncheon at HAUNTED TAVERN TEA ROOM 1 Served from 11:30-1:30 The Mode of Molded Lines Goes On-- You have to be oh so careful about your figure lines this season. They must be so smooth; absolutely unbroken. New molded frocks and coats prohibit the slightest tendency to bumpiness. Nemo-flex seems to be able to give more control with less weight and boning; yet it isn't heavy at all. It's surprisingly light. New Styles jirn f fI I -.1 ."Id at Special prices $3.95 $4.95 Regularly $7.50 Regularly $10:00 Second Floor P h o n e 4 1 6 When North Winds Blow Wear A Quilted Robe i IIII . . - _ Ili THE HARMONY CAFETERIA 508 East William Street $1095 y WILL SERVE THANKSGIVING DINNERS Roast Turkey with Cranberry Sauce, Dressing, Vegetables, Salad and Pastry, Coffee, Tea or Milk. 85C _':: _ __ _ i ---__- -- ---- -- - i I . I! FOR THE Pan- Hellenic Ball A SELECT ASSORTMENT OF FORMAL DRESSES Chicken Dinner Complete 75c Roast or Steak Dinner Complete 60c $16.75 to $75.00 11:30-2:30 1111 ALSO L ast ay Today! YOUR UNRESTRICTED CHOICE OF HUNDREDS OF OUR I Ii G i ,,.... 1 ' ,Y~ '1 . . dt' - 11 I;i EXCEPTIONAL VALUES FOUND IN OUR FRENCH ROOM SALE Kj rt4 Your loveliest under- They're light and soft and warm . . . and perfectly gorgeous! They're made of smooth satin in lovely pastel colors. things need Values Values Values cost no to $25.00- $19.75 to $45.00- $29.75 to $65.00- $3975 more than $2.95 and $3.95 They're the kind that make per- fectly grand Christmas presents. Made entirely by hand, with bind- ings and appliqued designs in con- trasting colors. Chemise, step-ins, dance sets. ,ti ,-F' $5.00-$7.50-$10.00 HATS AND IN THE $16.75 SHOP THE ENTIRE STOCK IS NOW III