SUNDAY, MAY 19, 46 THE MICHIGAN DAILY AT HOME AND AWAY: Filipino Student Flnds Many Sinilarities in University Life By 'ALCE CARLSON shocked until she realized that it Many of the institutions and tra- was only in fun. ditions which mean much to Michi- "Our term" she explained, "began gan students are also familiar to in June and ended. in March, with a students at the University of the beki coe ewe eetr. Philippines, Dalisay J. Aldaba ex- break in October between semesters. plained in cmDasinJ.AedrnativeThat is because our seasons differ school life to that found on an Am- from yours. We also have a summer erican campus.session lasting six weeks." Miss Aldaba, who is studying for When asked how she learned to her master's degree in voice iri the speak English, Miss Aldaba said that School of Music, left the Philip- although Tagalog was their nation- pine Woman's University when it al language, English is the official was reduced to ruins by the Japan- language and is taught from the ese. Her parents have lived in Mo- grades up. Spanish is spoken fluently lolos, Bulacan Province, since the all over the islands, for their fathers war, but until that time they had and grandfathers were educated in resided in Manila. the Spanish system. Pre-war life at her university, Miss The condition of the University Aldaba related, was very much like of the Philippines is far from what that at Michigan with a Law School it was when Miss Al daba was a Ball and a Junior Prom. Their Stu- student there, she said. The music dent Council was similar to the Con- school is holding classes in a stor- gress-Cabinet here. Adding that the age room. The other schools are Filipinos are very fond ofpolitics, practically non-existent, except she told how the students cam- for the medical, engineering and paigned for campus positions with nursing schools, she explained. the enthusiastic support of the stu- "Because all their equipment has dent body. been completely destroyed, the med- "We also had honorary sorori- ical classes are forced to use the ties and fraternities, whose ini- facilities of the hospital." She indi- tiations were very entertaining." cated that one could have no ideal Often, she related, the boys were of what the Japanese have done to told to make love to a girl passing the school unless he were unlucky by, and at this, the girl was quite enough to have seen it for himself. One of the youngest of her class, +. , Miss Aldaba graddated from the Con- E'ngishi H1ousewiVes servatory of Music at the University . of the Philippines where she later Ask Re merataught voice culture. She has had extensive experience in radio con- LONDON, May 18-(R)-Speakers cert work as well as in instructing before a joint conference of the Mar- at other Philippine schools of high- ried Women's Association and the er learning. Prior to her departure Women of Westminister declared to- she was feature soloist at weekly day that "we loathe housework" and USO concerts presented by the Man- asked some "monetary recognition" of ila Symphony Orchestra for the ser- their labors in the home, vice men in the Pacific area. - - Towers Are LI'md1iutarks . T*) ll fI '' Cmps By MIRIAM LEVY Designers of University buildings have recognized the validity of the cft-quoted maxim that college stu- dents dwell in ivory towers. High-minded individuals casting glances at the numerous towe's, tur- rets -- even belfries - surmounting campus buildings have upheld the fact that architects have been defin- itely tower-minded. The green dome rising above the now-decadent "U" Hall was the first of such structures. It was erected in 1869 to make the building a more imposing sight when viewedefroml State Street and adjoining areas. CARILLONNEUR RETURNS-Prof. Percival Price returned to Ann Arbor Thursday after an extensive tour of Europe gathering tonal and archaeological data on some 25,000 bells and aiding committees of Euro- pean governments to retrieve bells seized during the war. WPAG PRESENTS University of Michigan VS. ETROIT TIGERS MONDAY, MAY 20 3:25 P.M. PLAY-BY-PLAY 1838 Journal Sees Joy, Ldove In Education "Education is peculiarly and truly a labor of love and good will," in- forms the 1838 edition of the Journal of Education, now on display in the Michigan Historical Collections ex- hibit on "Public Schools in Michigan." William H. Payne, prominent Michigan educator and editor of the Journal in 1866, wrote in the flyleaf of his book: "Complaint has been made that I am not working my students hard enough." Yes, those were the good old days when Eliphalet, Josiah, Emmaline and Abigail gaily tripped five miles to the little Red Schoolhouse, a Flint teacher's record books, of 1876, also on display, reveals. Classes were a family affair then, for out of 21 stu- dents only four were not related. An eight-year old's report card from an Albion school, is prefaced by this note: "Pupils who fail to pass their year's studies will find their promotion certificate not made out". The certificates were very* daintily appliqued with a flowery border. According to the floor -plan of an Ypsilanti schoolhouse of 1859, the library was as big as the apparatus and clothes rooms. One school in 1868 paid more for a shovel and pok- er than it did for its library. CHAS. HOGAN'S BAGGAGE Phone 2-1721 TRUNKS, PARCELS Small Move Jobs INSURED 11 1 1 Girls Guessing If college girls think they are be- ing mistreated by the men now, they should consider the plight tf the Michigan women of twenty years ago. At that time, engineers particular- ly believed women students were in- truders in college life, and expressed their feelings of superiority in an unusual manner. During lunch hours or warm after- noons, engineering students reclined on stone benches which they had placed on either side of the diagonal near the Engine Arch. Women stu- dents taking walks past these bench- es found themselves the subject of careful scrutiny. The male students even went to the extent of arranging a group of signals, the secret of which has since been lost. This system made the pre- dicament of the women even more embarrassing, for they were unable to discover whether they were being condemned or praised. No one can explain whether the engineers practiced this art purely for amusement or with the hope of promoting a finer strain of woman- hood. Whatever the case, this prac- tice of rating continued for several years, until University officials, dis- covering the disastrous effect it had on the morale of the women, re- moved the benches from the walk. Perhaps the engineers missed the old custom and perhaps it was the engineers, deprived of this simple pleasure, who inaugurated the habit of whistling at women. Eat Less, Give WIhdt You Save The architects were over-enthus- iastic, for the dome, which was all of 347 fret, in diameter and rose 60 feet above the building, seri- ously threatened to cave in the auditorium beneath. As one stu- dent phrased it, "To sit beneath it was definitely damaging to the body." It was torn dcwn in 1899 and replaced by its "copper-cov- ered diminutive and bubble-like" iron successor with a windowed minaret. Today there are many mighty and minute domes to be viewed from afar. The two bell-shaped towers above the engineering arch, the square-shaped clock tower of the en- gineering laboratory and even the five-foot tower of The Daily are ex- amples. One could even try to as- cend the apparently functionless, steeple-like turret above Romance Language Building, or he could cross the street and climb the medieval turrets that distinguish Newberry Hall. These vantage points were appar- antly considered insufficient by the architects, as they constiucted the Union in 1919 complete with its own square tower. Conforming to sacro- sanct tradition, rules explicitly state that the tower may be entered by men only, save that one day a year when women may gaze upon the world through its sacred portals. It remained for the Architecture Building to have a tower as its main motif, surrounding the stairway to the upper floors and rising two stor- ies above the building itself. A seat- ed figure at the base of the tower called "Mother Art" is a symbol of the purpose and significance of the structure. The greatest recognition of the ivory-tower tradition came with the erection in 1936 of Burton Me- m~orial Tower. It was erected as a separate structure onlyrafter all other proposed sites for the clock and bells, such as the Union Tower or the ton .of Angell hall, had been rejected. A reinforced concrete shell faced with limestone, rising 212 feet in the air, Burton Tower has become the king of towers, reminding residents, students in Arboretum 143, canoers on the Huron, and all others of a migratory nature that tl'y can't forget the University as long as Bur- ton Tower can be seen and heard. Hey,Bossy Bossy.' Before the Civil War, the campus IM0d vas surroflnded by a fence, farms ad On the w ay to classes, students h t betyn h a d to b a ttle th e ir w a y th r o u g h s R I NGE turnstiles to get on campus. Metal ^ posts at the ends of the diagonal kept the cows from taking a short- 717 North University Ave. cut.- -- --y n -.-o AWedding Announeements I Pand Invitations ... Personal Cards and Stationery ] FINEST QUALITY - MODERATE PRICES F] See Our Samples OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 South University Phone 4436 F] fSUDSI! A CREAM * Because T E'fLLIS i t t s I Lr it Lr4k E leaves no dulling film on the hair. It sudses profusely; rinses readily with warm water only. N ~~ A *So EASY to use-and it leaves your hair so radiantly clean, 'frcx grant, soft and manageable. It's the PERFECT SHAMPOO that assures a PERFECT HAIR-DO. ON STATE AT THE HEAD OF NORTH UNIVERSITY with BOB UFE Dial 1050 I I I ... __ __ -- ----- -os of the on FOR THE COLLEGE STUDENT WITH AN INTEREST IN CURRENT BOOKS T-o Secret by RALPH fNGERSOL $3.00 Thi~s House g fait lhis ouse by VINCENT SHEEHAN $3.50 "Then and Nowv by W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM $2.50 by MARY JANE WARD $2.50 I for SUtinrep .f>'BRUNCHC O TS $795 Instantly you'll notice a "material" difference in these color-bright brunch coats made to fit right into the act ve life you lead. They're simple to get into-flambouyant in color- beautifully finished- figure flattering and you won't have to pamper it in the hottest weather. >y Sizes in your favorite sleeve length. Sizes 10 to 16. /0' 1 / *\ T T TA T (" it II 11 1