PAGE SIX--SECTION TAIRES THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUE SflAY, SEPTEMIBER 24, 1940 Assembly, Panhellenic Will Offer VariedPrograms Durin g Year Independents Will Sponsor League Booth Group For Disseminating ASsse ily information Planned For Freshmen A-embly's information booth will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day from today through Saturday in the League to answer any and all questions that freshmen and trans- fers may have concerning its oper- ation and activities. This year Assembly's information booth is under the supervision of the Ann Arbor Independents, which is one of the three independent groups on campus. Patricia Walpole, '41, president of Assembly will be on hand to coordinate all activities. Assembly's Purpose Defined Miss Walpole, summing up the pur- pose of Assembly, stated that "the Assembly Association is the organiz- ation of non-affiliated women formed to stimulate the interest of these women in social and scholastic activ- ities on the campus, and to promote the unification of sorority and non- affiliat d women." Assembly is made of the executive board, the dormitory group, the Ann Arbor Independent group, the League House group and Beta Kappa Rho. The executive board includes the four officers of Assembly, which are elected each spring, and one delegate from each of the eight dormitories, elected last fall, the president and secretary-treasurer of the Ann Arbor Independents, the League Houses and Beta Kappa Rho. This board meets weekly and assembles all of the in- formation which should reach the independent women on campus, and relays it back to their respective groups. Anyone petitioning for a job in Assembly must be interviewed by this board. Officers Are Listed Officers for Assembly this year in- clude Miss Walpole, as president, Betty Lyman, '41, vice-president, and Betty Hall, '41, secretary. For every ten women in a dormitory, there is Assembly President Information About Sororities To Be Offered ByPanhellenic Rules Must Be Observed 7. From 9:15 u.m. on Wednesday, RT~ AllC o UT . ! tober 9 until 9:00 p.m. on Friday, PATRICIA WALPOLE one representative in the dormitory group. These members will be elected this fall. The delegate to the executive board is the chairman of each group. Assembly sponsors the Independ- ent Fortnight which takes place each fall immediately after sorority rush- ing, in conjunction with Senior So- ciety, honor society for non-affiliated women. Through this two weeks' period, Assembly hopes to acquaint independents with its activities and organization. Climaxing the Fortnight is the Assembly Banquet. Informal Dance Given At the Banquet, awards are given to representatives of the sophomore, junior and senior classes having the highest scholastic record for the pre- vious year. Dormitories and League Houses having the highest academic average are also honored. Before Christmas, there is an in- formal dance (last year called the "Capricorn Capers") and at the be- ginning of the second semester, As- sembly Ball is given for all inde- pendent women and their dates. Freddie Martin played at the last Ball, which was held in the League Ballroom. Dy mj,-itu ent women During Rushing Week (Continued from Page 3) Open Houses must be purchased from Panhellenic. No other forms may be used. 2. Invitations may be delivered to the mail boxes of the dormitories or to the front, doors of the League Houses starting at 9:00 a.m. n Fri- day, September 27. No active may talk to a rushee at this time. (Fine B) 3. With the printed tea invitations may be enclosed a sorority card ask- ing a rushee to a party at the begin- ning of the week: she may be given her choice of one of several parties. 4. Rushees need not reply to the printed tea invitations, but they are told in their booklets that they must accept or refuse any other invitation enclosed, at Open House Saturday or Sunday or by telephone Sunday evening before 11:00 p.m. Rushees May Attend All Teas 5. Rushees are told in their book- lets that they must stay no longer than three quarters of an hour at each Open House, and that they may go to all of the initial Open Houses for which they have received invitations. 6. A rushee may attend only one of the initial Open Houses at each sor- ority; and no dates but these may, be split. 7. A sorority may not have more than four dates with one rushee (in- cluding the Open House) (Fine C) 8. A rushee may be asked for a sec- ond date by enclosed invitation as de- scribed above, during the tea, or by telephoning. She may be asked for a third date during the first date. (Fine C) 9. A rushee may not be asked to a formal until during the second date except in the case of a sorority being unable to make an engagement with the rushee until late in the rushing season or in the case of the rushee entering school late. 10. A rushee may attend only one formal by each sorority. (Fine C) 11. Each sorority shall turn in a list of the girls they have dropped every morning between 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. to the Panhellenic Booth, begin- ning Mon. Sept. 30 through Mon. Oct. 7. (Fine C) No Rushing At Trains D. Contact Between Independent Women and Sororities: 1. In order to avoid rushing at trains, prospective rushees rhay not be met by sorority girls with the exception of sisters. (Fine A) 2. No sorority women except moth- ers and sisters who are not active may be in the dormitory. They may not communicate with other girls. 3. Beginning with the Monday of Orientation Week, there must be no contact between possible rushees and sororities except as stated in the rules. (Fine A or C) 4. No alumnae may communicate with a rushee during the intensive season. 5. Only three calls may be made up- on a rushee by each sorority. A call shall consist of a telephone message or a mailed invitation on the written form. There shall be no calling in person on any rushee. (Fine B) 6. No rushee is to be called for or taken home by the sorority or any- one connected with the sorority ex- cept in the case of formal engage- ments when the rushees may be tak- en home but not called for. (Fine B) October 11, there shall be absolutely no communication with any rushee. Silence period between sororities and those who have received bids shall end at 9:00 p.m., Friday, October 11. Silence period between sorori- ties and girls who have not accepted bids shall extend to Sunday, October 13 at 9:00 a.m. (Fine B) 8. The status of unaffiliated trans- fers and pledges will be that of act- ives; pledges are allowed to partici- pate in rushing. 9. No rushing is allowed outside the house premises. (Fine C) 10. There shall be no informal bid- ding. (Fines B and C) Expenses Are Limited E. Expenses: 1. No sorority may spend more than $25.00 for flowers and decorations for the entire intensive rushing sea- son. An expense account shall be turned in to the Panhellenic treasurer by Friday, October 21, by each soror- ity. 2. No paid musicians may be had except for an orchestra limited to four pieces during the two formal dinners. (Fine C) 3. Not more than three courses may be served at the formal dinners. Demitasse is not a course. (Fine C) 4. No favors whatsoever may be given. (Fine C) 5. Entertainment at the parties may consist of dancing, songs, skits, games, provided by members of the house. F. Bids and Pledging: 1. Rushees are told clearly in their booklets that an invitation to a for- mal does not necessarily mean a bid. 2. There shall be uniform bids. 3. Lists shall be preferential. 4. Lists shall be typewritten double spaced on full sized typewriter paper. Names shall be alphabetically ar- ranged, correctly spelled and with addresses. Write on one side of the paper only. 5. All clerical work shall be done at the Office of the Dean of Women. 6. Each rushee who has been in- vited to join a sorority willbreceive a preference slip on Thursday eve- ning, October 10, which she should fill out and return to the Office of the Dean of Women before 12:00 noon on Friday, October 11. There will be a box in Barbour Gymnasium for her slip. 7. Pledge day shall berSaturday, October 12. It shall start at 3:00 p.m. 8. Pledges shall present themselves at the sorority rather than be called for. Flowers may not be given to them until they reach the house. 9. A rushee is bound for one cal- endar year to the sorority on her list which has bid her and for which she has designated her preference. Pre- ference slips may not be withdrawn. 10. A pledge shall consist of a written statement, witnessed and filed with the sorority, in addition to the wearing of some sort of badge. 11. One calendar year must elapse after breaking a pledge before an- other invitation for pledging shall be extended. HAUTZEL'S ANN ARBOR Candy Sales Help Provide Scholarships Candy and scholarships-an un- usual combination but one made practical in the set-up of the League candy booth committee. This com- mittee which operates candy booths in University Hall, Mosher-Jordan Halls, Helen Newberry Residence and this year for the first time in the newly opened Stockwell Hall, turns all profits into the League scholar- ship fund. , Under the chairmanship of Beth Caster, '41, the organization of the committee will begin with a mass meeting of all women interested in giving service. This year a new ex- ecutive committee will be formed consisting of the heads of each of the booths and the general chairman. This committee will meet once a month to discuss sales, advertising, publicity, and equipment. New means of advertising the work of the committee will also be introduced this year by use of posters on all dormitory bulletin boards and posters around campus. Some of these will explain the need for stu- dent and faculty patronage as the money goes for scholarships. Fur- ther an extensive campaign will be carried out in the residence halls to acquaint women with the supplies of the booths and to help secure their patronage. Women in charge of the individual booths this year are: Eva Etkin, Mosher-Jordan; Nancy Wolfe, Helen Newberry and Beth Caster, Univers- ity Hall. The Stockwell Hall booth chairman will be named at a later date. Campus Projects Raise Money For Women's Swimming Pool By FRANCES MENDELSON 1 A swimming pool 12 yards in length and only five and one-half feet deep seems rather inadequate i4 a school where most facilities for sports are abundant, and yet, if it were not for the cooperation of the Michigan Union Board, that is just the sort of pool the women of the University would have to use. In 1897 this undersized, tiled pool was constructed in Barbour Gym- nasium. Today it is used only when the large pool in the Union, where the women's physical education class- es in swimming are held, is over- crowded. Organizations Aid Project For a number of year various cam- pus organizations have been cooper- ating with WAA in its projects to raise money for a new pool. The University of Michigan Alumni Asso- ciation has already contributed; $5,000 to the fund and hopes to be able to contribute more. Other groups which have been actively aid- ing the women in their campaign to raise money for a new pool are the Michigan League, the Michigan Un- ion, the Men's Dormitory Committee, the Varsity Swimning team, J-Hop committees and Frosh Frolic com- mittees. Authorized plans have been drawn up in the Office of the University Plant Extension for a new and ade- quate swimming pool. There awaits now only the completion of the col- lection of the necessary funds before the pool is actually built. To Sponsor New Effort In former years, many projects have been sponsored in an effort to raise this money, but there is still a great deal to be done before theI dream of a swimming pool will be- come a reality. Last year WAA brought Jan Savitt to the campus to give a "swing concert." Many women also sold balloons at the Yale- Michigan game. This year, it is expected, WAA will continue its efforts to raise money, and it is hoped that all cam- pus women will assist them in every way. Ci~vic 'teatre SProject Plants Fall Program By JANET hIATT The Children's Theatre, one of the few Civic projects undertaken by the League, and panacea for would-be play producers and the stage-struck alike will raise the curtain on the first of its play series with the pro- duction of a fairy tale play. As in former years this theatre group will present four plays: the fairy tale adaptation, an original, and a dance pantomine in conjunc- tion with the University Dance Club. The technical parts of the produc- tions will be handled by the students on the Theatre Arts committee while the casts of the plays will be made up mainly of town children. The hope of the committee this year, Chairman Jane Pinkerton, '41, has announced, is to bring the Chil- dren's Theatre into a more promi- nent place among campus entertain- ment, thereby to increase the patron- age of the plays which heretofore has been largely restricted to the children and their parents. "The University boasts of one of the finest Child- ren's Theatre projects in the count- ry," Miss Pinkerton stated, "and we have received the full cooperation of the Ann Arbor schools. It has made great progress in the last few years- a fact which we hope will become a tradition." Class Times Established University regulations start classes officially at seven minutes after each hour. Tradition permits teachers to be eight minutes late, and at 15 min- utes after the hour students. leave class rooms. But they must wait through the entire hour set aside for the class if the professor is the head of a department, the tradition continues. M1ore~ Free 4dvie To)FroJ. Now that another year of school is about to begin, let us be your source of supplies for your 'Gift" needs in .. . WfgT C HES ... SILVERWARE JEWELRY... RINGS J4. 'F IDLER 69ewc4 Offered ,By By RHODA LESHINE Not meaning tobe trite by bringing up the many freshman "don'ts", we do sympathize with the Class of 1944, and so to them we dedicate this spilled ink. Instead of the incessant reminders of what not to do and what definite- ly will prohibit them from becoming the glamour gals that they are cer- tain to turn into if they follow the carefully turned outtfreshman in- structions on what to avoid, here are a few "do's". Dawdle Over Cokes Please Do dawdle over a coke and learn how to make it last until class begins. It's painful to gulp it down the first two minutes and then to be forced to poke the ice at the bottom of the glass for the next 28 minutes. Please Do wear comfortable shoes on campus. It's disconcerting to the Prof to have the leg thus exposed when the shoes are freed from the foot in the middle of his lecture. Laugh At Campus Jokes Please Do laugh at the campus jokes. We admit their antiquity, etc., but we enjoy them and so must you. Upperclassman And please Do stare at the cam- pus celebrities. What's the fun of being a BWOd or BMOC without )eople noticing you. So, freshmen, ive them their fun, for someday, you, too, may attain their heights. Then, too, please Do be brave enough to show your individuality by daring to refuse a coke date to keep your 10 o'clock class. Experi- ,nce has shown that Mater and Pa- ter, while not insistent on Phi Bete, do appreciate some showing of that I. Q. which the local high school claimed you possess. 1i I I I I I s" . ?" r; .: r -.... ;;-{..: ' :; - 308 SOUTH STATE - Established 1904 I mmIm", G LLG D ti5 THIS EXTRA STURDY kT4j ZIPPER NOTEBOOK Is A Great Classroom Help! 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