t .h A6F t 43 .. a t1j, t t n t i /r l w smrrai a russr rrrrr Mr e 2 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPT. 26, 1939 PRI4 CE FIVE Freshman Mixerse Will BeHeld For All New Students This Week; resents ports Exhibition Tomorrow And Thursday Are Dates For Dances At Union And League Attendance Limited To Class Of 1943 Freshmen men and women will be given a chance to become acquainted at the two freshmen mixers to be given from 4 to 6 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday in the League and Union Ballrooms respectively. The mixers are being sponsored by the orientation committee. Henry Ford's orchestra will supply the music, and Mr. Benjamin Lovett, dancing instructor for Ford's square dancing classes, will teach various square dances to the freshmen. The old ,fashioned dances are so designed to break down formality and facili tate getting acquainted. Attendance Limited Only the freshmen and women and their senior and junior advisers may attend. As all the advisers can be recognized by the central commit- tee, any upperclassmen not 'on the orientation committees will be re- fused entrance, Patricia Matthews, '40, chairman of orientation, an- nounced. Tickets for the mixers have been distributed to the advisers who will apportion the tickets among their groups, half to attend on Wednesday and the other half on Thursday. This distribution is necessary because of the limited capacity of the ballrooms, Miss Matthews continued. As it is, with the increased enrollment over last year, the ballrooms will be quite full. Mixers Originate Recently Freshman mixers originated last year under the direction of Marcia Corinell, '39, and Don Treadwell, '40, last year's chairmen. The idea proved so popular with the freshmen that it has become a regular part of the annual orientation week activities.' Groups will meet with their advisers and attend in a body. Already freshman enthusiasm for the mixers is so great that the mixers promise to become a permanent in- stitution, Miss Mattherws said. Women's Staff Tryouts Meet At 4 P.M. Today Eligible sophomores and second semester freshmen interested in trying out for The Daily women's staff will meet at 4 p.m. today on the second floor of the Student. Publications Building. Tryouts, during the year, write. stories for the women's page and assist on night desk work, writing headlines and copyready. Appoint- ments to the women's junior staff are made from the group in the spring. Orientation week now being a thing of the past . . . we won't say what kind of a past, as The Daily is not allowed to print lurid details . the local frosh have at last lost some of that verdant ireshness which made them such a delight to the eyes of the Garg salesmen. Most of the class of '43 is now settling down to that daily routine of poly sci,. poly sci, and : *English I, which has always made dear old A2 the favorite stamping grounds of profes- sors, rofessors, and instructors. But all is not work. Wednesday night, the transfer lads and lassies : had themselves a dance at th.e League ballroom, and we hear tell that the circle two-steps and robber dances created a highly enjoyable furor. Just before the battle, moth-er, Mary Lou Finney, Shirley Fishman, Ann Winters and Hilda Van Tyle were seen doing a grand job decorating for the dance . . . one slight little brainstorm being a map of Ann Arbor, adorned with pictures of the smiling NEW FACES of transfer coeds. Before the evening was half over, most of the pictures had disappeared . . . wonder how they came out on 'phone numbers? Shooting the bull, favorite campus indoor sport, has also occupied a goodly portion of freshman time . . . subjects ranging all the way from "how to impress the SISTERS" to "should I be true to the man (small "m" now) I left behind me?" Your columnist took the liberty to break in on a couple of, sessions at Jordan Hall to ask the lassies what they thought of the new system of hav- ing an exclusively freshmen dorm. Upperclassmen last year predicted they would go sadly astray without having a voice of ex- perience just around the corner to turn to. (Mich. f 0 t Daily, May, 1939?) But according to Florence, Wright, Eleanor Feldrappe, Josephine Blow (no re- lation to Joe), Mary Lou C-urran, Nancy Stock, and Dorothy Wineland, everything is JUST LOVELY. When pressed hard enough, one of them finally admitted that seeing as they'd never had upper- classmen around, maybe they didn't know what they were missing. Another group, which prefers to remain anony- mous, expressed the opinion that their worthy seniors might be useful in certain situations after all, one must ask someone if the Phi Delt one met at the Maj is an all-right guy. A new idea for freshman mixers, which threatens to be sponsored with a vengeance, was introduced Thursday afternoon when a group of fellows and girls who live right decided to have an inter-orientation coke date. Sounds complicated. but the gist of it is.that two men's orientation groups invited one women's group to sip the amber liquid at the League grill, and afterwards the whole gang, including Joan Logan, Barbara Johnson, Betsy Orr, Ivan Schaffer, Chan Pinney and Bill Condon, went on a tour of the new men's dorms. Add to your list of boners of the week: two freshmen men standing at the entrance of the State Street bank asking Patsy Matthews, orientation chairman, where Nickels Arcade was. (You don't suppose they got it mixed tip with Nichols Arboretum, do you?) And then, there was the gal who stopped at the Assembly information booth and wanted to know where the Michigan League was. Seen dashing thither and yon (mostly thither) about the League were Jean Thompson, Jean Van S -, Raalte, Hilda Van Tyle and Helen Carter ,transfer advisers. who were trying to get together in the Coun- cil Room . . . Mary Rodgers selling copies (?) of s ... } hat inhin pnsa(Rdv) J.Th n Tg'nof~lru rlin'r confirmed reports that all three wom- en had been taken to Glasgow on a rescue ship and that they intended to sail Sept. 19 for New York on the "Orizaba." The steamer is scheduled to dock tomorrow morning. However, a letter from Miss Outh- waith's family suggests that the refu- gees may not return as expected. "She (Miss Outhwaith) is due on the "Orizaba" sailing from Glasgow to- day (Sept. 19)-but that doesn't mean she as-aboard," he mother's reply to The Daily telegram read. Miss Wood has been commissioned, according to her father, to write her experiences for the Associated Press, and to broadcast them over WHAS, a member of the CBS chain. She will return from New York to Louisville, Ky. with her parents, and will remain there for a few days before returning to the University. I R Pcistr tinn Fn~t-r R iby v