1 -U The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 27, 1981-Page 7 Justice O'Connor- prepares From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Her place in American history secure, Sandra Day O'Connor gets down to work tomorrow, her public notoriety as the first woman on the Supreme Court giving way to the private, workaday life of her eight fellow justices. Sworn in Friday as the high court's 102nd member, she will meet with colleagues in a week of closed-door deliberations in anticipation of the Oct. 5 opening of the 1981-82 term. EVEN BEFORE she joined the court, Mrs. O'Connor told reporters she ex- pected to become "very busy, very fast" in trying to master the 102 cases scheduled for full study and decision. In addition, the court on Oct. 5 is ex- pected to issue orders - most of them grants or denials of review for appeals left pending last, July or those that arrived during the summer recess - in as many as 1,000 cases. Mrs. O'Connor inherits three law clerks who have spent most of the summer previewing those cases. The three young lawyers, selected nearly a year ago to spend the coming term working for now-retired Justice Potter Stewart, will work for Mrs. O'Connor. She has hired a lawyer from her husband's Phoenix law firm to be a fourth clerk. MRS. O'CONNOR also inherits some direct responsibility from the man she succeeds in the lifetime post. She will serve as circuit justice for the sixth federal judicial circuit,- handling emergency matters from Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee. As the first woman justice, she could take an interest in several important sex discrimination cases on the court's docket. The court will hear oral arguments this fall on a key challenge to the Education Department's power to bar sex discrimination in hiring at colleges receiving federal aid. OTHER CASES involving women in- clude a 10-year fight over Trans World Airlines' policy, of grounding stewar- desses who bear children, and whether a giant pharmaceutical firm that manufactured allegedly dangerous bir- th control pills can be sued after a cer- tain cutoff date. She will work in the chambers used until recently by Justice John Paul Stevens. At the same time, she is moving into one of Washington's most private public .jobs, where she likely will be shielded from the more deman- ding aspects of being a national symbol. Mrs. O'Connor, appeared relaxed, perhaps even relieved, through the long day of posing and shaking hands Friday enough so to accept an invitation to a rump reception hosted by reporters or work who cover the court. In brief, off-the- record repartee at that gathering, she and her husband, John, displayed keen wit. BUT MOST of Friday offered pomp and ceremony. In the marble and mahogany courtroom, a six-minute proceeding swept away two centuries of tradition.- President Reagan, whose nomination of the former Arizona appeals court judge broke a 191-year, all-male tradition at the zenith of the federal judiciary, was among 500 guests looking on. Joining him were Attorney General William French Smith, FBI Director William Webster and many judges, senators and legal scholars. But none was more proud than Ada Mae Day, who with husband Harry traveled from the family's cattle ranch in Arizona 'to watch their 51-year-old daughter swear her allegiance to the Constitution and promise to "faithfully discharge the duties of my office." * STUDENTS INVITED * HEALTH CAREERS' NIGHT Wednesday, Sept. 30--7 p.m. Michigan Union (2nd Floor)- . "'4 r a w X ri ",' .}a t1 at I Pendleton Room TMIC: "1EA1i4 CAREER PATHWAYS ANDPERSPECIVES" PRESENTING .. . #< MEDICINE (MD) Dr. Errol E. Erlandson Assistant Professor of Surgery University of Michigan DENTISTRY Dr. Robert A. Bagramlan Professor of Dentistry University of Michigan MEDICINE (DO) Kay White, Ph.D. College of Osteopathic Medicine Michigan State University VETERINARY MEDICINE Jeanne Bunch Preveterinary Advisor Michigan State University PUBLIC HEALTH Margaret J. Wolin School of Public Health University of Michigan . ALLIED HEALTH PHARMACY V Ictoria Asmar Assistant Director of Admissions Wayne State University r I i PHYSICIANS ASSISTANT Lawrence Kramer Mercy college A NAME WORTH REPEATING STEVE SMITH RUNS the ball downfield against Navy in yesterday's 22-16 Michigan victory. Sororities seek new members during Rush SEE WHY... SUBSCRIBE NOW! (Continued from Page 1) much the same way the rushees evaluate the houses." After 25 minutes the rushees left Alpha Sigma Phi amid cheers, songs, and choruses of "Nice meeting you," and "Hope to see you soon." The doors' ofo the first house barely closed before the group pressed on to the second. Outside, the rushees com- pared their reactions. Some rushees wondered if Alpha Sigma Phi, which has mostly Jewish members, would ask them back even though they weren't Jewish. "NO SORORITY discriminates because of race, color, or religion," ex- plained Mary Beth Sieler; Panhellenic Adviser. "All houses have a diversity of girls, so there is no one-type of girl in a house."& "How can you get 100 different people together and label them 'one-type'?" added Maureen Delave, Panhellenic programming chairwoman. The next house, Delta Delta Delta, followed similar procedure with the ad- dition of various edibles, including a granola mixture with the most natural sounding of names, gorp. ON THE WAY to the third house, Pi Beta Phi, the women were more relaxed. Some were amazed that they were actually going through rush, especially when many of the women said they previously had been anti- Greek. "Ou of the .774 women who came to the mass meeting, only about 500 of them will actually pledge," Sieler said. Seventeen percent of all female un- dergrads are involved in the sorority system on campus. There are some who don't like it. But these are usually the girls who joined for the wrong reasons, such as 'just a place to live.' Girls should join a sorority for the people, and realize there is a time commitment involved." Toward the, end of the evening the rushees complained of sore, cold feet SCHOLARSHIPS - GRANTS.- LOANS $3 Billion Computer Data Bank Available Computer will match your qualifications with a minimum of 5 funding sources or your processing fee will be completely refunded. ACT TODAYIII Send coupon for information. or call (313) 278-3871 Nome Address -t t City State ________Zip , Send to: ACADEMIC FINANCIAL SERVICE PO Box 134 (MD) Dearborn, Ml 48121-9134 and chilly cheeks. "I'm all small talked out," said LSA freshwoman Jayne Kundtz. "If anyone asks me what my major i one more time, I'll punch em.r As the group shuffled up to the last of the eight houses, Kappa Iappa Gam- ma, some rushees blurted out, "Which house is this?" "Isn't this Kappa Kappa Gamma?" "Yeah, they are suppose to have a reputation for wealthy, pretty; girls." "Don't even listen to that crap, act yourself... can I borrow your hair- brush?" 769-0558 k ti r i' r i 'r' ' 'r' OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. . i ANN ARBOR GOLD AND SILVER EXCHANGE 216 S. Fourth Ave.-996-9059 PiA1M IREcoG OWE BUY AnyItem Morked10t kt k18 k WATCHES DENTAL GOLD FOREIGN GOLD GOLD METALS CLASS RINGS , WEDDING BANDS EYEGLASS FRAMES GOLD COINS GOLD PINS GOLD CUFF LINKS BROKEN JEWELRY a DIAMONDS GOLD WATCHES SILVER We purchase any cut any shope GOLD CHAINS Cons " Sterling .Flotware any color stone Tea Sets * Jewelry 0 Industrial 17 r s 2 4' * .. . t f',, / . ' We pay by weight lHours: Mon. thru Sot. 9:00 AM,5:00 PM State certie~d rnI,. 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