8 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ^AGENNKT D l CL'9 T 1L,f~ V1-)l 1 , AW °T D almst possible to et very snt: Gay Scarves To Briguen Y ds City Wa Le' Improvemlentl Pai ental about the whoe thing nt S 7 JOURNEYS ----_-". perhaps, soeone mentions the dif .-LimitsRushing Conversation, tance to the stadium. S.F /IkT TFR..% _,,:\Everyone Walks in Ann Arbor N i- i, When one hears the tales of the summer vacations in which Michigan students indulge themselves, their subsequent reunion in the forests of Ann Arbor in the fall seems more amazing than ever. From all reports, each summer finds Europe more thickly strewn with Michiganders than ever. Bob Cooper, Mary Gies, Louisa Penny, Al Bently, Mary and Frances Henderson, Harry Muhol-, land, Louis Stauet,* Paul Nielsen, Harriet: Heath, Ed Lebes, Rudolph Potochnik, Stan" 1 /t Leavitt and Morris Lichtenstein all spent some time ratting around the high spots abroad. ,r C Fred Janke, beajning football captain of 'Y the campus, spent the summer at Camp Algon- quin in Northern Michigan counselling all the youthful campers, but he also managed to make a fishing trip to Thessalon, Canada.- Maxine Blaess spent another season in North- ern Michigan singing with a dance band. This time it was at Houghton Lake.r Jenny Petersen In Denver_ Jenny Petersen, Mortar Board president, had a good time as delegate to the Mortar Board convention near Denver, Colo., ;after which she came home and played tennis like mad. Esther Baker went to California and Harriet Thom trekked far away from her home to sojourn in Wyoming. Jane Holden was another in the sumaner camping group, and Chase San- derson was. tennis coach at good old Camp Chikpi. Art Staebler returned from a north- ern camp last week, and according to \ his reports, drove all the way from Burt / Lae to AnArbor withhis pet crow \ -- >perched on the steering wheel. Just *,_ / .call him Corrigan Staebler. Greta Holst - was in Birmingham, Ala., and Chuck and Al Darling worked at Pleasant .Lake. ', Marian Smith ran up from Hicksville, O., to spend a few days with Marian Baxter in Detroit, and Elaine Jacobs visited for some time with Elsie Jane Burkett, while Frances McLaughlin ,was ensconced in Mr. Hudson's tore in Detroit. Wally Hinkle spent several scorching weeks at Camp Custer ii the ROTC unit there. . Summer School-No Glamour Of course, glamorous vacations or no, there are always a goodly number of students whq stay on to struggle through summer school. Jack Brennan, Becky Bursley,, Barb Heath, Nance Seibert and Margaret Tichenor were here, and not to be outdone, so were Bob Mueller, Ham Morris, John McFate, Bill Canfield, Don Siegel, Bob Angley and Jack Pedigo. Interesting news about the affairs of Michigan' men and women for this winter have been pouring' in from all sides. Joanne Westerman, who was make-up chairman for J.G.P., has changed schools and plans to attend Ohio State University at Colum-. bus this year, and Addie Mason has switched to Goucher .College in Baltimore, Md. Betty Gatward has left, and all alone, 'too, for Geneva, Switzerland, to study fine arts, archaeology and similar subjects for a year. Angel Maliszewski has returned to Ann Arbor this fall to work at her e-_-- new position of assistant director to Mrs. Ray at Mosher Hall. Mary Jane Mueller is at present enjoying a stay in Seattle, Wash., and intends to re- main in those parts for six weeks. W hite Popular For Social Work Hope Hartwig, ex-pres of the League, is running around the corridors of the University Hospital in a snappy white outfit while she does social service work up there. Mary Johnson has already departed for River Rouge to take up her new job as teacher in the high school. Betty Strickroot is working in her father's office in Detroit, and Ernie Jones, who business- ' managed the Daily last year, is reported to be the business manager of a Polish newspaper in ,i . . . ,' ..:. the same town. I :. Marian Gommeson is slaving at the Michi- gan Bell Telephone in Grand Rapids, and Wayne University in Detroit will welcome a couple of alumnae working for their teacher's certificate -some are Janet Karlson and Ginny Krieg- hoff. Bill Spaller is a reporter or editor or some- thing on the Trenton Times and Bob Weeks is at present employed by a printing and litho- 1\N graphing company. grg Currywill be at the League tns year. Of course, some people DO get married. Margaret Ferries is to be married some time this winter, and Nancy Kover was a bride a couple of weeks ago. Prof. and Mrs. Everett S. Brown have come back from a trip around the world. Professor Brown, of the Political Science department, has been vacationing during his year's sabbatical leave. Norah Kennedy, '39, traveled in Europe this summer. Miss Kennedy is a member of Collegiate Sorosis. Jimmy Fisher, '42M, traveled abroad this summer. Professor Sink, of the School of Music, also made a tour of Europe. Tyrol Snapbrim Eupplements Classic Bowler For Campus - _ _4_ New Yam Hat Guaranteed To Tickle Date; High Headgear Ismart A variation on the traditional bowl- er will be very popular on campus this year. Its name is the Tyrolean Snapbrim and comes in the latest fall shades. Local stores are featuring the hat in teal blue, dregs of wine, and that new warm brown shade called creole tan. Matched or in in- teresting contrasts, this smart new hat goes wonderfully with fall suits or dressy wools for the games or classes. A comforting thing about this hat is the way it clings to' one's head in a high wind. Besides being made in regular smooth felt the manufactur- ers have mixed in a soft bunny's wool that gives an angora effect to the material. Another hat that is destined for gre'at popularity with the fall and winter spectator is the suede or ante- lope number with a tall feather and a high peaked crown something on the order of the seven dwarfs. Dressy hats appear only for teas and dates and are ultra smart like the trick little doll hats that sit on one's forehead . and can't be seen from the rear. The yam is another saucy chapeau made mostly of feath- ers and guaranteed to tickle any date. Fifth avenue is all agog over the "Vanities" purse that comes fitted with everything a 'co-ed could possibly want. Besides the usual gadgets it has a cigarette case, key holder and little pockets for lipsticks and com- pact and comes in teal blue and wine dregs to go with the hats, and then a lush new shade called portico plum or black purple. A State street shop is featuring doe skin gloves to match the purse in this shade as well as in creole tan. - There were three new bags that particularly fascinated us; the first one was a pouch-like number with a goose neck opening that folded over and fastened with a rhinestone clasp. Another was deep and roomy and stood up in shopping bag fashion with a kettle bottom. One campus shop is featuring a very chic little cocktail purse that is just large enough for compact and hanky. It comes in fab- rics and looks like a tiny pouch. All this talk of accessories reminds us of gloves which are in suede cloth embroidered in bright yarn for cam- pus wear this fall. Later on brilliant mittens either in angora or those, heavy wool affairs that are imported from Switzerland will be seen on cam- pus for classes arid to the games. And white angora for evening always makes a hit. To complete Milady's accessories a silk print should be tied around one's neck in knot or ascot style. By ANNE HAWLEY . f Warning, freshmen women. Rush- v ing conversation has been seriously r depleted this year and there is only s the City of Ann Arbor to blame. All i this trouble is due to the fact that 1 the city has installed a water soften- i ing plant. No more can rushees and actives discuss the pros and cons of drinking water which tastes like weak glue. A discussion of rushing "dribble" must necessarily include a discus- f sion of Ann Arbor weather. Know your weather report, freshmen. Be able to turn on disgust or enthusiasm at a moments notice, and you are sure to make a hit. What is even more, if you can fve a scientific ex- planation of the weather man's activi- ties around these parts without be- coming dull, you may be pledged on the spot. Weather stands first in the1 list of eligible rushing conversation, so cooperate when your hostess men- tions the fact that the wind is from the northeast. Limit To Conversation Freshmen women find that this is the limit of some rushing conver- sation, but if their hostess is par-, ticularl fluent and apt as a con- versationalist, she .may begin to fire ,hese questions-"Where do you live, here in Ann Arbor, I mean?" "What courses are you taking?" "Don't you tike your social director?" Or she may say, "Why yes, I lived on the fifth floor of Mosher. Isn't it fine up there; such a nice view of the Bell Tower, Carillon, I mean." The object of all this talk is to find out if the rushee can answer intelligently. At least that is supposed to be the means by which the rushee is drawn into the conver- sation, according to most sorority women. Of course, the active with whom the rushee dances, will apologize when she accidently trips her partner, but aside from that dancing conversation at' rushing parties is more limited than usual. According to approved standards, it is not even necessary to talk when you dance. Books Are Good Topic Books (if you ever read during the summer), the theatre, and hobbies open another field for conversation. A freshman may mention the fact that she spent the summer abroad, but bragging is taboo. Try to be interest- ing and sincere is the general rule. Registration and classification is a confusing business, and that is an accepted fact. The hostess may make such a declaration, but it may. be consideredonly a clue for the rushee to tell of her experiences in Water- man gym. 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