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January 27, 1942 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1942-01-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

TUEgDAY,JANITAitk 27, 1942

THEMICHTIGEAN fDAILY

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Committee

fnnounces

Patrons

Guests

For

J-Hop

ecl

Van Wagoners
Will Head List
Of Hop Patrons
Dance To Be Held Jan. 6, 7
At Intramural Building;
President, Deans To Be Present
Gov. and'Mrs. Murray D. Van Wag-
oner and President and Mrs. Ruthven
will head the list of patrons and pa-
tronesses for "The College Dance of
the Year," the 1943 J-Hop, Rosemary
Mann and Leonor Grossman, patrons
chairmen, announced yesterday.
Others who will be present in the
same capacity are Vice-Pres. and
Mrs. J. D. Bruce, Vice-Pres. and Mrs.
S. W. Smith, Vice-Pres. and Mrs. C.
S. Yoakum, Regent and Mrs. J. J.
Herbert, Regent and Mrs. Earl L.
Burhans, Regent and Mrs. D. H.
Crowley, Regent Esther and Mr. L.
V. Cram and Regent and Mrs. Alfred
B. Connable, Jr.
List Continues
The list continues with Regent and
Mrs. H. G. Kipke, Regent and Mrs.
J. D. Lynch, Regent and Mrs. E. C.
Shields, Hon. and Mrs. E. B. Elliott,
Dean and Mrs. E. B. Stason, Dean
and Mrs. W. I. Bennett, Dean and
Mrs. R. W. Bunting, Dean and Mrs.
I.C. Crawford, Dean and Mrs. S. T.
Dana, Dean and Mrs. J. B. Edmonson
and Dean and Mrs. E. H. Kraus.
Dean and Mrs. A. C. Furstenberg,
Dean and Mrs. C. E. Griffin, Dean J.
A. Bursley, Dean M. E. Cooley, Dean
Alice C. Lloyd, Dean and Mrs. W. B.
Rea,. Dean and Mrs. E. A. Walter,
Dean and Mrs. A. H. Lovell, Dean C.
T. Olmsted and Registrar and Mrs.
I. M. Smith.
Bands To Play
Dr. and Mrs. Louis A. Hopkins, Dr.
and Mrs. H. B. Lewis, Dr. and Mrs.
E. V. Moore, Dr. and Mrs. W. G. Rice,
Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Sink, Dr. Frank
E. Robbins, Prof. and Mrs. L. M.
Gram, Prof. Rhoda F. Reddig, Prof.
Carl G. Brandt, Mr. and Mrs. H. G.
Watkins, Mrs. Byrl F. Bacher, and
Miss Jeannette Perry.
The dance will be held Friday and
Saturday, Feb. 6 and 7, at the Intra-
mural Building, with Orrin Tucker
and Jimmy Lunceford playing Friday
and Les Brown taking the baton Sat-
urday.

New Course
To Be Added

c";

.j

Training Will Emphasize Group
Work In Camps And Industries
Expanding their curriculum to in-
clude courses which may be of vital
help in national defense, the Depart-
ment of Physical Education for Wo-
men will introduce a new course sec-
ond semester, in co-recreational lead-
ership training-which will be open
to both men and women.
Training in leading mass recrea-
tional groups such as one they may
be called upon to do in industry, in
camps and in the community will be
emphasized in this work, with stress
on this aspect because of the demand
for mass work and mass recreational
games.
Lectures Are Offered
Lectures and practical work wilfbe
given from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on Wed-
nesdays for eight weeks. Students
will be given an opportunity to ac-I
quire actual experience in leading
and mixing groups in such activities
as games for social recreation, for
air-raid shelter periods, in country,
and ballroom dancing, story telling
and community singing.
Registration for this course will be
in Room 15 of Barbour Gymnasium
for women, and in Room 5 of Water-
man Gymnasium for men, by Wed-
nesday, Feb. 11. Miss Marie Hart-
wig and Dr. Elmer Townsley will be
in charge.
Keep Physically Fit
In addition to this course, are the
body conditioning and recreational
leadership programs which will be
of additional value in keeping physi-
cally fit and being able to lead effic-
iently. Mrs. George Miller of the
department will lead the work in cor-
rective gymnastics for the purpose of
general muscle toning through rhyth-
mic exercise and games.
Recreational leadership will stress
the work of the leader in relation to
camp and community work, teaching
games, community singing, drama-
tics, folk-dancing and how to mix
a group of people via a recipe for
fun! Application for this course must
be made in Room, 15 of Barbour
Gymnasium.

.?.
_

136 Invitations
Are Received
By Prom Quests
One hundred and thirty-six people'
received special invitations issued by
the 1943 J-Hop committee to attend
the two-night affair Feb. 6 and 7 as
guests.
Recipients of such invitations were
Dr. Margaret Bell, Dr. and Mrs. John
M. Sheldon, Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Blake-
man, Dr. and Mrs. Leonard E. Him-
ler, Col. and Mrs. Wm. Ganoe, Capt.-
and Mrs. R. E. Cassidy, Lieut.-Comm.,
and Mrs. Robie E. Palmer, Lieut. and
Mrs. Leonard W. Peterson, and Lieut.
and Mrs. K. E. Shook.
The guest list also includes Prof.
and Mrs. Edward L. Adams, Prof.
and Mrs. Ernest F. Barker, Prof. and
Mrs. David Mattern, Prof. and Mrs.
E. D. Mitchell, Prof. and Mrs. J. K.
Pollock, Prof. and Mrs. William D.
Revelli, Prof. and Mrs. Henry A.
Sanders, Prof. and Mrs. Preston W.
Slosson, Prof. and Mrs. Arthur E.
Wood, Prof. and Mrs. Herbert O.
Crisler, and Prof. and Mrs. Leigh J.
Young.
Guests Are Named
Prof. and Mrs. Chester Slawson,
Prof. and Mrs. Clarence Kessler, Prof.
and Mrs. Waldo Abbot, Prof. and
Mrs. Bennett Weaver, Prof. and Mrs.
Claude Eggertsen, Prof. and Mrs. Ju-
lio del Toro, Prof. and Mrs. Ray S.
Fisher, Prof. and Mrs. Henry M.
Moser, and Prof. and Mrs., Hardin A.
Van Deursen.
Prof. and Mrs. Arthur Van Duren,
Jr., Prof. Robert Craig, Jr., Prof. Wal-
ter J. Gores, Prof. Thor Johnson,
Prof.- Catherine B. Keller, Mr. and
Mrs. Stewart G. Armitage, Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace A. Bacon, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald B. Gooch, Mr. and Mrs. James
T. Harper; Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Hatch, Mr. and Mrs. Lester E. Hew-
itt, and Mr. and Mrs. A. A. James.
Mr. and Mrs. John Johnstone, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom H. Kinkead, Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin C.Kuenzel, Mr. and
Mrs. Matthew Mann, Mr. and Mrs.
Marion E. McArtor, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert 0. Morgan, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Munn, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
N. Riskey, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.
Spooner, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Hawley T.
Tapping, Mr. and Mrs. Richard E.
Townsend, and Mr. and Mrs. Stan-
ton J. Ware.
List Continues
Mr. and Mrs. Emil. Weddige, Mr.
and Mrs. F. T. Sharp, Mr. and Mrs.
F. I. Barth, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Begle,
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Burstein, Mr.
and Mrs. M. P. Christa, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Crossman, Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
Knapp, Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Mullin,
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Poyser, and Mr.
and Mrs. B. G. Renaud.
Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Snodgrass, Mrs.
G. C. Bartlow, Miss Ethel McCor-
mick, Miss Genevieve DeArmond, Mr.
Harry K. Martin, Jr., Mr. James C.
O'Neill, Mr. Max W. Crosman, and
Mr. George E. Hay.

i rls Live Democratic Principles

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I

Thompson-Brough
Wedding Announced
Vows were exchanged by Jeannette
hompson of Detroit and Louis'
ough, son of Mrs. Earl Brough
Doty Avenue, at a wedding held at
a.m. yesterday in St. Thomas Cath-
ic Church. A wedding breakfast
as served at the home of the bride-
oom after the ceremony.
Mrs. Brough is a graduate of the
niversity School of Nursing in the
ass of 1941. Mr. Brough, a gradu-
e of St. Thomas High School, is
pharmacist on the University Hos-
tal staff.

Women desiring to compete in the
winter Inter-Collegiate Archery Meet
which is tobe held from Feb. 8 to
Feb. 22 must sign up in Barbour
Gymnasium by Wednesday. Prac-
tice has already begun for those in-
terested, and another session is to
be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday when
the Archery Club is to meet.
This club is designed for all cam-
pus women who have an active in-
terest in the sport. A great deal of
experience and skill are not re-
quirements for membership; only a
fundamental knowledge and a few
arrows are necessary to attend prac-
tice. No instruction will be given

Wednesday, but those with any ability
at all are urged to come out.
Each week of the tournament, the
women with the four highest scores
at practice will be entered as the
Michigan team. In this way there
will be a greater chance for each per-
son to shoot in the national tele-
graphic meet, which will have its
headquarters at Oregon State Col-
lege.
Zeta Phi Eta, Women's Honorary
Speech Society, served coffee and
cookies yesterday to the casts of the
four one-act plays which were pre-
sented.

Women To Sign Up For

Archery

Highlights from GOODYEAR'S

(Downtown
Store),

YEAR-END and AFTER-mINVENTORY

leara'l

ne

,

1

S

Now in

Progress ... Through Saturday, January 31st

All Sales Final . . . No Returns, Exchanges, Telephone Orders or C.O.D.'s

SPORTS SHOP CLEARANCE
ALL SKI SUITS
and SKI WEAR SEPARATES
20% LESS
Gabardines . . . wools . . . wind-proof, water-proof poplins
included in the styles now on sale. Ski suits were 16.95
to 39.95. Jackets were 8.95 to 16.95. Pants were 6.50 to
10.95.
Odd Lot Skating and Ski-Wear
2.98 to 7.98
A group of jackets, skating skirts and dresses, a few ski suits.
Styles in wool jersey, challis, corduroy, gabardine.
TWEED COATS and SUITS
10.98
Youthful styles: plaid and tweed mixture suits, belt-back
reefer coats. Misses' and junior sizes.

AFTER-INVENTORY CLEARANCE OF
DRESSES
32 Dresses, 6.98 each.
Rayon crepes, lightweight wools for dress and casual wear.
Also a few formals. Misses' and junior sizes.
34 Dresses, 10.98 each
Misses', juniors' and women's half-sizes. Dressy and tailored
styles in rayon crepes, lightweight wools.
44 Better Dresses, 14.98 and 19.98
Mostly French Room Dresses. Dressy rayon crepes.- Softly
tailored wools. Black and colors. Misses' sizes.
30 Formals
10.98, 14.98 and 19.98
Misses', women's and junior sizes. Dinner and strictly formal
styles in rayon crepes, nets, chiffons, mousseline de soie, rayon
jersey. Black and colors.
IN THE SHOE SHOP
297 Prs. of Shoes
Suedes . ...gabardines . .. patents .

Mary Porter Weds
John Gwin Sunday
Mary Eleanor Porter, daughter of
Mrs. George A. Porter of Coronado,
Calif., and John Powers Gwin, son
of Mr. and Mrs. George Gwin of Pit-
man, N. J., who following graduation
from Temple University, has been
studying here for his doctor's degree
in educational administration, were
married at 4 p.m. Sunday in the
chapel of the First Methodist Church.
Mrs. Gwin is a graduate of the Uni-
versity, having a bachelor's degree in
piano and a master's degree in or-
gan. She is a member of Sigma Al-
pha Iota, national music sorority,
and has been elected to Phi Kappa
Phi honor society.

At

Western College, Oxford, Ohio

By SHIRLEY RASKEY
In this greatest threat to democracy
for many years, much has been writ-
ten concerning the values of a self-
governed people. Nestled away in the
small town of Oxford, Ohio, is a liv-.
ing example of these theories of al
representative government, as grand
as that of 1776. This place is West-
ern College, founded in 1853 by one
of the first groups to believe in wo-
men's education.
The creed of this college is cen-
tered in the ideals of individual rights
and freedom of thought. For nearly
a century it has fought for, and suc-
ceeded.in attaining these principles.
Although this school is not alone in
using this system, its features are
more clearly recognized than in large
universities.
Honor System Practiced
The responsibilities of government,
which has as its underlying principle
the honor system, are shared by the
* students and the faculty members.
The use of this honor system is shown
by unproctored examinations. The
women of this college believe that
their efficiency is increased by this
method, and abhor any idea of cheat-
ing. From these examination rooms,
the faculty believes. will come wo-
men trained in the ideals of freedom
and practiced in making good use of
this freedom.
The town-meeting is employed in
all matters of interest to the stu-
dent body. The government presi-
dent of the school conducts the meet-
ing, while open discussions come di-
rectly from the floor. All women at-
tend these meetings and are not
afraid to voice their viewpoints.
House Meetings Conducted
House meetings are carried on in
this same way, with the students de-
ciding measures for the group. All
problems of the dormitory are turned
over to the house chairman, who in
turn presents then to the women.
The problems are theirs and they
must settle them. In the meeting,
freedom of speech is assured every-
one.
* Every organization " has been "all
out for defense" since the beginning
of World War II. For many months
they have been knitting for British
Relief and have recently begun knit-

way-of-life which they will remember
for the rest of their lives. They have
learned to care for themselves, to
settle their own problems, and what
is more important, to fight for the
ideals they love.

*Month-End Sale
BECAUSE-It is our policy to close out all merchandise
at the end of every season.
BECAUSE-Early spring fashions are claiming our floor
space and our attention.
BECAUSE-We've marked down all our remaining winter
apparel for
IMMEDIATE DISPOSAL
Regardless of Former Price or Cost
DRESSES
Crepes, wools, rayons - Jacket dresses - Casual dresses
Dressy dresses - Evening dresses . . . former values to
$35.00 . . . sizes 9-17, 12-44.
$5 $10 $12.95
(One group of odds and ends in crepes, wools,
corduroys at $3.48)

I

CABLEKNIT
ACCESSORIES
For Winter Sportswear
Colors include bright red,
green, yellow, white.
Sweaters, 3.98 to 5.98
Hoods, 1.98
Toques, 98c
Long Ski Socks, 1.98
Skating Soeks, 1.49
Mittens and Gloves, 1.49
8 Casual Coats; I Less .. .
man-tailored styles in tweeds
and wools. Were 19.95 to
45.00.
6 Handmade Sweaters; 7.98
. Short-sleeved cardigans
with embroidery trim.

Jackets and Skirts; 2.98
each . . . An odd lot in-
cluding tweeds, velveteens,
corduroys.
Table of Better Sweaters,
Blouses, Shirts; 98c to 3.98
. . . Dressy and tailored
blouses in rayons, wool jer-
sey, challis. Classic and nov-
elty sweaters.
All Evening Skirts and
Blouses; % Less . . . The
balance of our winter stock.
Blouses were 3.95 to 14.95.
Skirts were 8.95 to 14.95.
Sioivrs Siio. -
T JIR) Fioott

smooth calfskins . . . alligator-grain
calfskins . . . combinations. Shoes for
wear now and all through Spring in-
cluded in the sale. Styles for street, dress
and casual wear. Black. . . brown
wine . . . green.

pair

Fur-Trimmed Coats
39.95 to 149.50
Silver fox dyed black Persian . . . mk.
squirrel . . . leopard . . . sheared beaver . . used in
fashionable ways on these quality fabric coats. Black,
brown, a few colors. Misses', women's and junior sizes.
10% Federal Tax ExIr
Three-Piece Tweed Suits
Now 12 Price

1
2
1

Brown Herringbone Twccd, Size 9 . . . Was 59.50
Spice Brown Tweeds, Sizes 1. and 14, Was 59.50
Spice Brown Tweeds, Sizes 10 and 14, Were 59.50

10 COATS
Casual styles, smaller sizes.
2 Teen Coats, 8 and 10 sizes

$10
$5

Cream and Brown liaid Tweed, Size 16, Was

98.50

Entire Stock of
FU-R COATS
NOW 1/PRICE
Forer values from 69.50 to 450.00
1 Grey Siberian Squirrel Coat, Size 16.. . Was 450.00
2 Grey Siberian Squirrel Coats, Sizes 14 and 18..
Were 395.00
1 Sable-Dyed Squirrel Coat, Size 18. . . Was 395.00
1 Grey Siberian Squirrel Coat, Size 16 ... Was 350.00
1 Baum Marten Dyed Skunk 32" Jacket, Size 14.
Was 295.00
1 Sable-Dyed Australian Opossum 32" Jacket, Size
14 . .. Was 295.00
1 Fisher-Blend Raccoon 33" Jacket, Size 14
Was 275.00
I Hudson Bay Sable Blended Muskrat Coat, Size
12.. . Was 295.00
2 Golden Sable Blended Muskrat Coats, Sizes 12 and
16 . . . Were 250.00
1 Mink-DyedMindel Marmot Coat, Size 12. . . Was
225.00
1 Natural Rare Silver Opossum Coat, Size 14
Was 295.00
1 Naural Rare Opossum 32" Jacket, Size 16 .
Was 250.00
2 Natural Rare Opossum 32" Jackets, Sizes 14 and
16... Were 225.00
1 Natural Grey Chinese Kidskin Coat, Size 16
Was 235.00
1 Natural Grey Chinese Kidskin 32" Coat, Hat and
Muff, Size 13 . .. Was 198.50
1 Natural Grey Kidskin Fitted Coat, Size 14 ... Was
175.00

J

10- PIECE SUITS.
Sizes 10-18 ..$648..$1295

Three Groups of Hats

I 3-PIECE SUIT
with raccoon collar ...
size 12, $59.95 value at
$29.95

2 3-PIECE SUITS
at $25

$1

$3

HOUSECOATS and ROBES
Sizes 12-40, $7.95 and $10.95 values at $5.00
$5.95 values at $2.98

The balance of our winter stock of hats. Dressy
and tailored, styled for women and misses. Qual-
ity felts, fabrics in black, brown and colors.

FUR-TRIMMED HATS

ODDS and ENDS
Bluses, skirts, purses, gloves
and Jewelry.

One Group of
ANKLE SOX

1/2 Price

Softly
styles.
group.
3.48 to

KNOX HATS
1/2 Price
tailored and dressy
Just a few in this
Black, brown. Now
o 9.75.

Furs include black Persian,
mink muskrat, heaver. leo-

4

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