TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1946 THE PMICHIGZAN DnATIy - 11 E 111\J 11VL11\ /J 11L1 JrMtXih [' i Y l:i Assembly To Hold Show At League Independent Women To Witness Skit Contest, Housemothers' Version of Tasks The Fortnight Show, which was initiated by Assembly last year, will be presented for independent women at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre of the League. The program will include a skit contest between several women's dor- mitories on campus. They include : Mosher, Jordan, Stockwell, Martha Cook, Helen Newberry, Betsy Bar- bour, and Adelia Cheever. Each skit will be limited to five minutes and all who are participants must attend Representatives Survey Camp On Thursday, September 26, a group of representatives from various organizations on campus, accompan- ied by Miss Ethel McCormick, social director of the League, and Mr. Wil- liam Morris, director of the Univer- sity of Michigan Fresh Air Camp, made a pilgrimage to the Camp. The purposes of the trip were to in- vestigate the facilities and needs of the camp in preparation for a pro- gram which might possibly include utilization of the grounds for student recreational activities. Thursday's visitors included: Jeanne, Clare, president off Assembly; Phyllis Petit, project chairman; Allene Golinken, vice- president in charge of league houses; Audrey Weston, vice-president in charge of dormitories; S'ue Smith, so- cial chairman; Margaret Gage, presi- dent of Panhellenic Association; Bet- ty Prichard and Louise Patrick, vice- presidents of the Association; Bill Krebs, secretary of Interfraternity Council; and Bill Short, Larry Zel- man and Bob Hoffman. The Fresh Air Camp was adopted by Assembly last spring as its project, and initial funds were raised through Tag Day solicitation; student coop- eration during the drive was very successful, and funds collected far surpassed the original goal. Plans are already underway for additional As- sembly affairs, the proceeds of which will go to the Fresh Air Camp fund. rehearsal for the show at 7:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Ushers To Clown The carnival theme of the affair will be carried out by decorations and entertainment, and ushers will be dressed as clowns. In keeping with the central idea, Assembly has adopt- ed as its slogan, "Hop on the Assem- bly Merry-Go-Round." In addition to the skit contest, sev- eral other events have been scheduled for the evening. Jeanne Clare, presi- dent of Assembly Association, will give a short speech of welcome to new coeds on campus, and Audrey Weston will act as mistress of cere- monies. A novelty skit will be pre- sented by a group of housemothers, expressing the problems they meet in guiding the dormitory life of col- lege women. The program will con- clude with audience participation in group singing of college songs. Show to Familiarize Traditions Assembly Fortnight was inaugur- ated to familiarize independent wom- en with the projects and traditional activities of Assembly, as well as the functions of the League and its or- ganizations. This year, the Association plans to extend its period of orientation until the presentation of Recognition Night. Members of Assembly will vis- it various residences for independent women and discuss more fully the workings of their organization. All independent women are cor- dially invited to the Fortnight Show, and freshmen and transfers are par- ticularly urged to attend. Tutorial Help Needed A mass meeting will be held at 5 p.m. today in the League for all wom- en interested in working on the Mer- it-Tutorial Committee. Coeds are needed to work in the information booth, and to help with filing, publicity, interviewing, and other aspects of the committee. It is a good chance for women to get a start in League activities, according to Judy Rado, chairman of Merit- Tutorial Committee. Crop and Saddle Club To Hold First Meeting A meeting will be held at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in the W.A.B. for all coeds interested in trying out for Crop and Saddle Riding Club, and for all old members of Crop and Saddle and University Women's Riding Club. Coeds need not be expert riders to try out, but some riding experience is necessary, according to Karen Lar- sen, president of Crop and Saddle. Tryouts will be scheduled for a later date. University Women's Riding Club, formerly a separate club, is now a member of Crop and Saddle. The club will be divided into three or four sections this year, each group riding once a week. "We hope that all coeds who are interested will tryout as we want to have a large club this year," The Women's Glee Club will hold an informal get-together af- ter rehearsal today in the League The purpose of the meeting is to acquaint the new members with each other and with the old mem- bers. YWCA Jobs Open to Coeds Assistant Advisors Required For Local High School Work All eligible coeds who are inter- ested in working with young people are needed as assistant advisors for the Young Women's Christian Asso- ciation Clubs in the Ann Arbor high schools, according to Miss Janet Boynton, director of the YWCA teen age program. . Those women working on this project will be asked to spend two or three hours per week helping to plan programs for these clubs on per- sonal relations, health, vocations, religion, current affairs and the arts. All those who are interested in this activity should contact Miss Janet Boynton, 2-2581, immediately. Interviews for coeds petitioning for League Council and other League posts will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. to- day and tomorrow and from 2-4 p.m. Thursday. All interviewees will be required to present University eligibility cards signed by the Merit-Tutorial Com- mittee of the League. Revised System To Be Initiated By Tennis Club 'Challenging Improvement' is the keynote of the WAA Tennis Club's fall plans. A different kind of contest will re- place the usual elimination tourna- ment. This new system is called a ladder tournament. A large board will be put up with tags in ascend- ing order. At the initial meeting of the club the members will estimate their ability and be placed in a cor- responding place on the ladder. Each member may challenge any- one within three steps of her. The match will be played off at the con- venience of the players and the un- predictable weather. If the chal- lenger wins, she changes places on the ladder wtih the defeated player. From this new position she may as- cend to even greater heights. This type of tournament has defi- nite advantages. No member is sub- ject to the dullness of playing with someone much below her in skill. The less skilled player does not have to play with someone who so sur- passes her in skill that she becomes discouraged. Sally Ware, club manager, urges that anyone who can hold a racquet come out and play. By SHIRLEE RICH Dickens, Thackery, Thurber, and Forrester never realized the healing powers that lay in their pens. Through their works, they have been responsible for cheering many pa- tients at University Hospital. The reading services are designed to keep the minds of the patients off their own misfortunes, by stimulating their imaginations with stories of the outside world. Varied Material Donated All the books and magazines on the University Hospital library shelves are constructed by organizations, families, or individuals. However, in spite of the fact that all the material is donated, the reading matter is varied enough to suit the interests of any type of individual. Often, gifts of subscriptions to contemporary literary clubs are given to the Hos- pital, allowing the patients to keep up with the latest books. The services of a teacher librarian are available for planning the read- ing programs of the patients. The li- brarian often finds it in her power, not only to entertain the patients through her suggestion of material, but to widen their interests. A pa-' tient may start his reading career with fast moving romances and de- 'U' Hospital Library Services Offer Recreation for Patients tective stories, but soon, under the librarian's guidance, he learns to ap- preciate more thought provoking literature. Patients Made Comfortable To be effective, this reading ther- apy requires that the patient be com- pletely comfortable while digesting the literature. Therefore, every possi- ble facility is used to allow the pa- tient to expend the least amcunt of energy. Reading racks are set up, equipped wtih iron pieces t) hold back the pages of the book or maga- zine, so that it is possible for the patient to read in a recliningposi- tion for hours at a time, in perfect ease. But the greatest energy saver and an innovation in the Hospital, is the ceiling projector that flashes mi- crofilms of books on the ceiling of the patient's room. The machine is simple to operate. It is placed on a movable iron stool next to the pa- tient's bed, and can be worked mere- ly by the use of one hand. The two projectors, as well as all the films used were endowed to the Hospital. The films are of all types including picture books, such as collections of famous paintings, and cartoons, as well as mystery stories, westerns, and works on science and history. WITHAM DRUG CO. 601 So. Forest - Corner So. Forest and So. University QANACINTA BLETS 39 .50" 5/Z6 0 BUBBLE BATH PKG6. S AND B/LE CAROID ABLETS-/I9SS/ZE 89 DRENE "OHA 49 ENVELOPES "E"25 7 FORHAN'S' Z7f'" 39 GLYCERIN2"E ''16( Q HIND"* 50fH/ONEY AND g~ ALMOND CREAM INGRAM'S A 39 '/.00 807E 79 Q JERIS jA oN/CE79 * KOLOR-BAK %rnr E LiFEBUOY C"EAV 29 O MERCUROCHROME I14 0 ODORONO O^ANT 59i * PEPSODENTPOTH 39c i/(;a By LOIS KELSO THERE IS NO DOUBT in my mind, none at all, as to what constitutes America's chief contribution to world culture. Posterity may look in vain for originality in our literature, music, or painting; but in one field our creative imagination calls - nay, shrieks - for attention. We may not be able to paint, write, or compose, but boy, can we advertise! Nowhere but in America would the "flow of a vital digestive juice" be broadcast to a waiting world in an effort to sell liver pills; nowhere but in America would perfume ads be able to say things the cinema can't; nowhere but in America would symphony orchestras and choral groups of 120 join in a "happy little washday song." BEHIND THESE inspired flights of genius, this relentless campaign to force on a stupefied public things it doesn't particularly want and very probably should not have, there must indeed be masterminds - men of a truly unusual calibre. The "business autobiography of one of America's great advertising writers," one Claude C. Hopkins, reveals what advertising men are made of. This work is running serially in a trade journal devoted to advertising and selling, and honestly, I can hardly wait for the next issue to see what Claude sold in 1928. At the age of seven he was writing sermons and setting them up in his father's printing office. A little later he was defeating the minister in con- tests to see who could recite more Bible verses. The summer after his high- school graduation he taught school during the week, preached on Sunday, and gave piano lessons in his spare time. His grandfather, obliging old soul, nicknamed him "Mr. Stick-to-itiveness," and wasn't it sweet of Mr. Hopkins to tell us about it? THE FIRST BRAINSTORM which marked him as a real advertising man was his inspiration to popularize carpet-sweepers as Christmas gifts. This was followed by an even better idea-that of making carpet-sweepers of vermillion wood, and putting them over with a red-hot advertising cam- paign involving convicts, elephants, and the Ganges. Here he encountered a little opposition from his employers, who, as he scornfully remarks, "had perfected a new dumping device." They, starry-eyed dreamers, believed that the public wanted carpet-sweepers which would sweep carpets. As Claude so rightly puts it, "What folly! One might as well discuss the Einstein theory with an Eskimo." Right here we will leave Claude, if nobody minds. His career seems to have reached the turning-point. He has developed the two most impor- tant characteristics of an advertising man--a lofty disregard for the intrinsic worth of his product, and that familiarity which breeds con- tempt with the weaknesses of his victims, the American public. -DAY SERVICE can DRY CLEANING IFBROUGHT IN TO EITHER OF OUR STORES ON MONDAYS, TUESDAYS OR WEDNESDAYS. 6goil i fin lc z30P fimmeciiate Zelivery Your Official University of Michigan Ring These are the only official University rings the manufacture and distribution of which is controlled by the University of Michigan. THE SIGNET SPINEL STONE SET men's - - . . $22.50 . 14.00 men's . . $34.00 ladies' . . ladliesp.,W 21.00 (All prces plus federal and stagte axes) You need no longer wait six to eight weeks for delivery of your official University ring. We have just received hundreds of finished rings in all sizes and for all years for immediate delivery. Our years of experience in both the manufacture and distribution of fine rngs is your assurance of perfect fit and pride in ownership. See them today at your "Balfour" store To M AND MEREDITH SUCKLING II -...., I 4 - om .INO I ii i i