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August 05, 1939 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1939-08-05

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LUWAY, AU*. 5, 1" THE MI CHIGAN DAILY
cVlUtion Of Dance To Feature Gala Floor Show At Union T(
______ .1

PAGE THRE'
nigh]

Earl Stevens
And Orchestra
Furnish Music
Harriet Thom Chairmans
Big Affair; Dick Fuller
To Present Monologue
Jitterbugs, songs and dramatiza-
tions will be featured in the gala
floor show at the regular Saturday
night dance tonight in the Union
ballroom.
Rollicking rhythms will be fur--
nished by Earl Stevens and his 10-
piece orchestra. The dance will last
from 9 p.m. to midnight.
Big attraction in the floor show
will be the evolution of the modern
dance by Adeline Shannahan and
Bill Rowan. Beginning with the tap,
they will dance through the Charles-
ton, Lambeth walk, big apple, up to
the jiterbugs. Rowan and Miss
Shanahan have danced at the Union,
Barton Hills and in Adrian and have
been featured in Roy Hoyer's'show,
"Juniors on Parade."
A silent dramatization of a small
town big-shot seeing the World's
Fair for the first time will be en-
acted by Dick Fuller, former Univer-
sity student. Fuller has been starred
in Roy Hoyer's shows and was active
in Ziegfield Follies several years
ago.
Two musical selections will be sung
by Clarawanda Sission, former Mich-
igan coed.
In charge of the dance and floor
show is Harriet Thom, Saturday
night dance chairman of the League
Council.

Susan Hayward (above), 22-year-
old movie starlet, dropped in from
Hollywood to say hello to Walter
Thornton, beauty model impres-
sario, in New York, and promptly
was served with a summons for a
$100,000 suit charging breach of
contract. Thornton said "I made
her famous, got her a contract in
Hollywood,-and she forgot us."
Susan said she'd fight the suit.
Michigan Postmasters
Nominated By Roosevelt
WASHINGTON, Aug. 4.-(P)-
President Roosevelt today nominated
the following Michigan postmasters:
Centerline, Edward Kott; Pigeon,
Frances A. Bureker; Tekonsha, Bert
Shedd; Utica, Isla M. Messmore.

Prof. Merriek
To Give Exhibit
Of Oriental Art
Carvings, Paintings, Slides
Feature Tea And Display
To Be Held Tomorrow
Art of the Orient will be displayed1
at a tea and exhibition tomorrow at
the home of Prof. and Mrs. Howard
B. Merrick at 928 Church St.
The exhibit which will be on dis-
play from 3 to 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. is open to members of the
Far Eastern Institute and any others
in Ann Arbor interested in seeing
art of the Orient. The purpose of
this exhibit, according to Mrs. Mer-
rick, is to give the people of Ann Ar-
bor a greater knowledge and appre-
ciation of art of the Orient.
Prof. Y. Z. Chang of the Oriental
languages department will show col-
ored lantern slides of China in the
evening. The slides were taken by
the Merricks in China and were made
by Chinese workmen who are more
accurate in coloring them than are
Americans, Mrs. Merrick said.
A large number of Chinese objects
will be displayed including paintings,
carvings, embroidery, tapestry and
other hand-made goods. China is the
only country in which the tapestries
are perfect on both sides, according
to Mrs. Merrick. China also has the
largest number of different types of
art, she added.
Art works of other countries will
also be exhibited. These include Ja-
panese, Javanese, Persian, Indian,
Egyptian, Philippine, Russian, South
American, Mexican, European and
works from the Holy Land.
Some of the articles will be sold af-
ter tomorrow to add money to the
fund for the ambulance for China,
Mrs. Merrick said.
so, skirts are being worn now as they
should always be worn and that is
fitted at the waist by tailoring and
not a belt. After studying your out-
fit, be sure your nails and hands are
well-groomed and then you'll be al-

Senator Taft Announces Candidacy

Senator Robert A. Taft, son of the late President and Chief Justice
William Howard Taft, is shown here in his Cincinnati office after an-
nouncing his candidacy for the Republican nomination for President in
1940. He commented that he thought recent congressional action "Has
knocked out of the window any chance of a third term for Mr. Roosevelt."
Old-Time Social Worker Fades
Before Modern College Graduate

DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
(Continued from Page 2)
violinist, will give a Graduation Re-
cital, Monday evening, Aug. 7, at
8:15- o'clock at the School of Music
Auditorium, on Maynard St. The
general public is invited.
Final Doctoral Examination of Mr.
Andrew Jackson Green will be held at
9 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 8 in 3223 Angell
Hall. Mr. Green's field of specializa-
tion is English Language and Litera-
ture. The title of his thesis is "Rob-
ert Bridges: Studies in his Work and
Thought to 1904."
Professor W. G. Rice as chairman
of the committee, will conduct the
examination. By direction of the
Executive Board, the chairman has
the privilege of inviting members of
the faculty and advanced doctoral'
candidates to attend the examination
and to grant permission to others
who might wish to be present.
C. S. Yoakum.
Alma College Graduates and form-
er Alma students. There will be a
get-together at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,
Aug. 8 in the West Conference Room
of the Rackham Building. About 25
Almanians have already promised to
be there. If you have not been noti-
fied previously, please consider this
notice an invitation.
Duplicate Bridge. The Tuesday night
duplicate bridge tournaments will
continue at the Michigan League.
Speech Students: tA Symposium on
the field of Argumentation and its
relation to debating will be held on
Wednesday, Aug. 9, at 4 p.m. in Room
1025 Angell Hall.. All undergradu-
ate students contemplat4ng advanced
work in this field and all graduate
students who are emphasizing this
field in their graduate study should
attend this conference.
Speech Students: A Symposium on
the field of Dramatics will be held
Thursday at 4 o'clock, Aug. 10, in
the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All
undergraduate students contemplat-
ing advanced work in this field and
all graduate students who are empha-
sizng this field in their graduate
study should attend this conference.
French Banquet. The annual French
banquet will take place Thursday,
August 10, at 7 in Room 316 of the
Union. There will be dancing after
the banquet. There is no charge for
members of the Cercle Francais. Oth-
ers may come by paying $1.25. Every-

one expecting to attend must give
his name before Tuesday evening to
Mlle. Winifred Cardner, 1414 Wash-
tenaw, phone 2-2547.
"Psychology Master's Comprehen-
sive Examination" will be given Sat-
ur'day, Aug. 12, at 2 p.m. in Room
3126 Natural Science Building.
Teacher's Certificate Candidates:
Any students in the School of Educa-
tion, College of Literature, Science,
and the Arts, College of Architecture,
and Graduate School who wish to be
candidates for the teacher's certifi-
cate at the close of the Summer
Session and whose names do not ap-
pear on the list posted in 1431 U.E.S.
should report to the Recorder of the
School of Education, 1437 U.E.S., at
once.
Public Health Nursing Certificate:
Students who wish to be candidates
for the Public Health Nursing Cer-
tificate at the close of the Summer
Session and whose names do not ap-
pear on the list posted in 1431 U.E.S.
should report to the Recorder of
the School of Education, 1437 U.E.S.
at once.
Colleges of Literature, Science, And
the Arts, and Architecture; Schools
of Education, Forestry and Music:
~Each student who has changed his
address since June, registration
should file a change of address in
Room 4 U.H., so that the report of
his summer work will not be mis-
directed.
Colleges of Literature, Science, and
the Arts, and Architecture; Schools
of Education, Forestry and Music:
Summer Session students wishing a
transcript of this summer's work only
should file a request in Room 4, U.H.,
several days before leaving Ann Ar-
bor. Failure to file this request will
result in a needless delay of several
days.
Candidates registered in the Bureau
of Appointments who are leaving at
the end of the six:-week session of.
summer school should report changes
of address where they may be reached
after leaving Ann Arbor.
201 Mason Hall; Office Hours: 9-12
a.m.; 2-4 p.m.
University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Infor-
mation.
Ypsilanti Boy Drowns
While attempting to swim from a
boat in which he had been riding
with his sister, Dorothy Cox, 20 years
old, and Bert Smith, George Stewart
Cox, 15 years old, Ypsilanti, drowned
at 3:30 p.m. yesterday in Whitmore
Lake.

Sloppy Appearance Inexcusable
In OpinionOf Fashion Writer
By MARTY GRAHAM morning and just before you go out
Neglecting to straighten your on a date you should be especially
stocking seams and allowing your careful to be well dressed from head
to foot. Wear your hair in the most
slip to hang below your dress are two becoming style, and apply your make-
of the most unforgivable sins that up carefully. The fad for dabbing
you can commit in the eyes of both on tomato colored lipstick and literal-
men and women. And for an out and ly caking your face with white powder
out sloppy appearance, there is noth- is definitely passe as the recent trend-
ing like a soiled collar and cuffs and is towards a youthful, unsophisticated
unkempt hair. appearance. Rouge when properly
Tf vnu dnn't have a full length mir- applied will bring out the colors in

By FRANCES McMAHON
The day of the old guard social
worker with the pineapple hat, flat
shoes, twitching nose, and a mission
in life is dead and buried. In her
place is the young college graduate
seething with gray matter, economics
and sociology, ready to meet CWA,
ERA, WPA, aid to dependent chil-
dren, old age pensions, straight un-
employment relief. She must be a
combination walking encyclopedia
on government legislation, assistant
to the local vice squad, and nurse-
maid for wandering children.

case on record that isn't getting a
fair deal is the worthy little woman
they sent down last week, who is
getting a combination of unemploy-
ment insurance, part-time relief, old
age pension, and aid to dependent
children in the family but who has
a cousin living with her that wants
extraallotment for eye glasses or a
wooden leg.
When the judge decides that the
notorious wife-beater living on your
district who has been on probation
for the past 10 years has finally
beaten the little woman up once too
often and decides to send him away
for a sojourn at the state's expense,
he corrals the social worker, not
from a sense of justice finally being
done, but from the fact that the so-
cial worker's records will probably,
have enough data to hang the man.
A man's home is his castle, but a
social worker's office is often a meet-
ing place for the dead beats who
want more, the applicants who aren't
eligible for relief under any cate-
gory except their own crust, and the
helpless creatures who can't get any-
where unless some one takes them
by the hand and leads them.

li

MMOMM MMM

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THE MICHIGAN UNION
Sunday Dinner. . .August 6

Fresh Fruit Coupe
Cream of Chicken Soup
Jellied Madriliene
Branch Celery Mi

Fancy Crab Meat Cocktail
Chilled Grape Juice
Consomme Celestine

xed Olives

Sweet Pickles

0

I.

Breaded Michigan Frog Legs, Shoe String Potatoes . .$1.25
Calves Sweet Breads, Mushrooms, Virginia Under Bell 1.25
Stuffed Alma Duckling, Dressing, Spiced Crabapple.. 1.25
Roast Club Sirloin Steak, Fresh Mushroom Sauce . . . 1.00
Union Favorite Combination Grill,
Baked Stuffed Tomato....... .............1.25
Cold Breast of Vermont Turkey, German Potato Salad 1.25
Union Special Steak Dinner ..................... 1.50
Tenderloin or Porterhouse with French Fried Potatoes
to order.

!I

11

Cbndied Sweet Potatoes
Potatoe
New Peas in Butter Cor

French Fried Potatoes

s en Cream
n on Cob

Baby Carrots Glace

Lettuce Hearts, Russian Dressing
Fresh Fruit Salad

Poppy Seed Cake.

Blueberry Pie

Strawberries and Cream Lemon Pineapple Ice Ceam
Imported Roquefort Cheese and Wafers
Fresh Peach Parfait

Hot Rolls,
Tea

French, Rye, Graham, White Bread
,Whole Wheat Muffin
Coffee Milk Buttermilk

Spechs i

11

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