184 - TIlE MICHIGAN VAILY Assembly To Give Fortnight Show; Begins Plans for Recognition N\ight i _4 Event To Feature Skits, Specialties "All Aboard," the Assembly Portnight show, will climax the two-week program designed to ac- quaint independent women witl their campus organization, at 7.:3C p.m., Tuesday in Lydia Mendels-, sohn-Theatre. Each dormitory will be repre- sented in a brief skit, and there will be community singing. A spe- cialty skit will be given by the office of the Dean of Women and 'housemothers of independent .ampus residences. Gladys "Gigs" Martin will be the official M.C. for the show. Coeds will be seated according to house groups. Coeds May Apply For Committees Coeds,-interested in serving on committees for IRecognition Night, given annually by Assembly in honor of outstanding independent women, may enter their names on the list posted in the Undergrad- uate Office of the League. Women are needed to help with refreshments, decorations, and publicity skits and posters. , Choice of committee members will be made according to prefer- ences listed when signing up. If a coed wishes to work on a com- mittee but fails to sign up, she should notify her house president before Wednesday. Soph Cabaret EnlistsCoeds Soph Cabaret will hold a mass meeting for all sopho- more women at 4 p.m. Tues- day in the League Ballroom. Central committee members will outline the plans of their respective committees and will invite eligible coeds to assist them. Members will be chosen as nearly as possible according to preference by Joyce Atchi- son, general chairman. Sophomores in all schools and colleges are invited to at- tend, according to Shirley Kall- man, publicity manager. Assist- ing in an advisory capacity on Soph Cabaret is Mrs. lone Hen- drian, assistant social director of the League. The Cabaret is annually presented during the fall semester. You Can Lose Unwanted Pounds and Inches just where you want them off; no diets, drugs, medicines or back breaking exercises. Harold M. Baskin Physio Therapist 8 N. Normal St. Phone 2410 YPSILANTI Read and Use The Daily Classifieds Coeds To Enroll For Fol Rushing. k .. -1 FALL FASHION Coeds planning to participate in informal rushing, may register from 2 to 5 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in the Undergraduate of- fice of the League. Nine sororities will hold infor- mal open houses from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday, for all prospective rushees. Those houses participat- ing in informal rushing include, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Eta, Alpha Xi Delta. Collegiate Sorosis, Alpha Gamma Delta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Zeta Tau Alpha and Sigma Delta Tau. Rushing Period Rushing will begin Thursday and continue until Monday, Oct. 28, when all bids will be due. Pledging will be held Tuesday, Oct. 29. A rushee may not stay longer than two hours at any house func- tion to which she is invited during the rushing period. A house may ask a rushee to pledge after she has attended three functions of that house. Accepting Bids If the bid is accepted, a member of that house will take the rushee to the Undergraduate Office of the League. In the event the rushee is inter-I ested in some other house, how-} ever, she does not have to ac- cept the bid immediately. Rushees may withhold answers to bids until they have decided definitely in view of other bids they may receive. Rushing Requirements Eligibility rules for the infor- mal rushing period, according to the Panhellenic Board are as fol- lows: 1. A woman student who has been admitted to the University with at least 15 hours of advanced credit earned at another college or at the University may be in- itiated during her first semester of residence. 2. A woman student who has completed 15 hours with a "C" average or better, with no "E" grade may register for rushing. 3. A woman student who has taken less than 15 hours at the advice of Health Service or an Administrative Office, but who has earned 25 honor points may reg- ister for rushing if she presents her excuse and her grades to the registration secretary. 4. No woman student who has taken less than 11 hours is elig- ible to register for rushing. In special cases where crowded schedules have prevented register- ing for the appropriate courses, or courses have been dropped too late to elect another, a student may register if she presents a written excuse from her academic coun- selor. Petitions Due For WAA Club Managerships Petitions for the managership of the WAA Table Tennis and Fencing Clubs are due at noon to- day in Betty Eaton's box in the Undergraduate Office of the Lea- gue. Applicants may obtain the peti- tions in the Physical Education Office in Barbour Gym. Coeds applying are requested to sign for interviews at the time of sub- mitting the petition. Interview- ing will be held from 2:15 to 5 p.m. Monday and from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday in the WAB. Only eligible coeds may petition for the positions. Club managers co-ordinate the activities of the club and act as a member of the WAA Board. Activities sponsored by the WAA include Rec--Rallies, Lantern Night, and Michigras. Committee Asks Tutors To Enroll Students who wish to tutor dur- ing the fall semester Are urged to register as soon as possible with the Merit-Tutorial Committee in the Undergraduate Office in the League. Three to five tutors are needed for each course being given in the University, it was announced to- day by Donis Murray, chairman. There is a special need for stud- ents who are eligible to tutor chemistry and economics. Tutors are required to have either an A in a course or a B if it is in their field of concentration. <. ORIENTAL ARTS & CRAFTSQ CombiniuzgBea'auty . . . Utility . . . Charin WE would like to have you see our distinc- tive merchandise, selected to satisfy your gift and home-beautifying needs. LINEN AND LEATHER GOODs, IvORY AND WOOD CARVINGSDEMITASSE CUPS, BUTTONS ... JEWELRY - ALL IMPORTED. 00 ^ Across from the Arcade - 330 MAYNARD STREET ,.<""G">'Y<-""">0<""0""" < "><--->'---> <-"">U -->C< '"> Opening Games of Vol leybal Tournament To Be Played Monday: Sorosis vs. Stockwell I and Gamma Phi Beta vs. Stock- well II at 5:10 p.m.: Barbour II vs. Newberry I and Stockwell III vs. Zone IV at 7:20 p.m.; Zeta Tau Alpha I vs. Zone III and Couzens III vs. Zone V at 8:15 p.m. l Tuesday: Delta Gamma I vs. Alpha Epsilon Phi and Alpha Delta Pi I vs. Stockwell IV at 5:10 p.m.; Martha Cook vs. Stockwell VI and Chi Omega vs. Stockwell VII at 7:20 p.m.; Stockwell IV vs. Zone VII team II and Mosher III vs. Zone VII team III at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday: Cheever vs. Stock- well X and Kappa Alpha Theta I vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma I at 5:10 p.m.: Alph Chi Omega vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma II and Stockwell XI vs. Alpha Xi Delta IT at 7:20 p.m.: Couzens II vs. Zone VIII at 8:15 p.m. Thursday: Delta Delta Delta I vs. Kappa Alpha Theta II and Stockwell XIII vs. Gamma Phi Beta II at 5:10 p.m.; Kappa Delta vs. Stockwell XIV and Zone I vs. Alpha Eta at 7:30 p.m.; Couzens I vs.Gamma Phi Beta III at 8:15 p.m. I E/izaleiL Dkllo S40P 'round the corner on State 1 GOOD NEWS ' /I .i for RADIO LISTENERS in WASHTENAW COUNTY . Look at This Lineup of A Feat res: * Detroit Symphony Town Hall of the Air Henry Morgan Show Greatest Story ever Told A Greatest Story Told A Bing Crosby A Paul Whiteman A' Breakfast Club Tom Breneman Betty Crocker Dick Tracy Lone Range r A The Fat Man Theatre Guild on Air Theatre Guild on the Air Abbott & Costello Harry Wismer Ted Malone I Deal in Crime Your FBI Elmer Davis Jack Paar Walter Winchell Drew Pearson Hear these, and many others, with 'Local Station' clarity over Station WHRV, ANN ARBOR, Member American Broadcasting Company Network, Goes on the Air SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5th! UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred Scheips, Pastor (The Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Mis- souri, Ohio, and Other States) Saturday, 4:30-5:30 P.M.: OPEN HOUSE after the game. 9:45and 11:00 A.M.: Services, with Holy Communion. Sermon by the pastor, "Spir- itual Anchorage." 4:00 P.M.: Sunday afternoon discussion hour. 5:30 P.M.: Supper meeting of Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. Wednesday, 7:00 P.M.: Chapel Choir prac- tice. Thursday, 4:15 to 5:15 P.M.: Coffee Hour. Friday, 6:00 P.M. Dinner and Social Evening for Married Students. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL and REFORMED CHURCH 423 S. Fourth Ave. T. R. Schmale, Pastor C. R. Loew, Assistant Pastor Kathryn Karch Loew, Organist 9:30 A.M.: Church School. 10:45 A.M.: Observancehof World Commun- ion Sunday. No Sermon. 5:15 P.M.: Student Guild. Supper, singing, fellowship, reports from members who visited various Ann Arbor churches Sun- day morning. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division at Catherine The Rev. Henry Lewis, S.T.D., Rector The Rev. John M. Shufelt, Curate The Rev. John H. Burt, Student Chaplain Miss Maxine J. Westphal, Student Counsellor Mr. George R. Hunsche, Organist and Choirmaster 8:00 A.M.-Holy Communion. 11:00 A.M.-Junior Church. 11:00 A.M.-Holy Communion. Sermon by Dr. Lewis. 5:30 P.M.Canterbury Club Supper, Epis- copal University Center. Speaker: Prof. Bennett Weaver. Subject "Personal Ad- justment in College." Reservations 2-4097. Wednesday, 7:15 A.M. - Holy Communion (followed by breakfast at Center. Reserva- tions 2-4097.) Friday, 4-6 P.M.-Open House, Episcopal Uni- versity Center. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Ministers: James Brett Kenna and Robert H. Jongeward Music: Lester McCoy, director Mary McCall Stubbins, organist Student Activities: Doris Reed, director director 9:45-12:00 A.M.: Church School. 8:00 and 10:45 A.M.: Communion Service. Meditation by Dr. Kenna. 5:30 P.M.: Wesleyan Guild. Student Panel Discussion. "The Christian Student on Campus," Prof. J. L. Brumm, moderator. Supper and social hour at 6:30. 1600 Kilocycles ... 1000 Watts - Day & Night R ADIO LISTENERS in Washtenaw County have extra enjoyment in store beginning Sunday, October 5th. For on that day, Michi- gan's newest and most modern radio station-WHRV-aunches its regular program schedule, broadcasting on a wavelength of 1600 kilo- cycles with 1000 watts of power, and on unlimited time. MEMBER OF THE ABC NETWORK STATION WHRV is a member of the American Broadcasting Comn- pany chain-the network whose programs have been staging tremen- dous gains in popularity all over the United States. The headliners in the adjoining box, plus many other top features both network and local, will reach you powerfully, distinctly, over WHRV. EQUIPMENT THE LAST WORD WHRV's equipment is the most modern obtainable anywhere today., Its transmitter and antenna system are of the very latest design. Thus, perfect transmission combines with high program quality to assure the kind of listening you can relax and enjoy. Be sure to tune in-at the top of the dial-this Sunday, and from then on! FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Edward H. Redman, Minister I 10:00 A.M.: Unitarian-Friends' Church School- Adult Study Class. "Gen. Chis- holm and Religious Education." 11:00 A.M.: Service Broadcast-WPAG. Ser- mon by Mr. Redman: "How to Read the Bible." 6:00 P.M.: Vesper Service-"1947 Social Action in 1947." 6:45 P.M.: Unitarian Student Group-Sup- per, Discussion, Social. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION For National Lutheran Council Students 1304 Hill St. Henry O. Yoder, pastor 9:15-10:00-Bible Hour at the Center. 10:30 A.M.-Worship Service in Zion and Trinity Churches. 11:00 A.M.-Worship Service in Christ Lu- theran Chapel, Willow Run. 5:30 P.M.-L.S.A. meeting in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington St. The Rev. Henry O. Yoder will speak on "Lu- theran Student Work at Michigan." 7:30 P.M. Tuesday-Study of the catechism at the Center. 4:00-5:30 P.M. Wednesday-Tea and Coffee Hour at the Center. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw W. P. Lemon, D.D., and James Van Pernis, Ministers Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, Director of Music 10:45 A.M.-Morning Worship Service. World 512 East Huron Rev. C. H. Loucks, Minister 10:00 A.M.: Student Class, Guild House. Sub- ject, "The Background of the New Testa- ment." 11:00 A.M.: Church Worship. Subject, "Con- sider the Church." 6:00-8:00 P.M.: Guild Meeting, Guild House. "Christian Motivation," Rev. C. H. Loucks. INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH SERVICE West Court, Willow Village Rev. Edgar Edwards, Chaplain Mrs. J. Larson, Choir and Sacred Music 10:45 A.M.-Divine Worship. World Wide Communion Sunday - Holy Communion. Joint Service with North Community Church. Nursery and Primary Church School at Church Hour. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets 9:30 and 10:45 A.M.-Church School. 10:45 A.M.-Public Worship. World Wide Communion Service. Dr. Parr's subject, "Saluting the Church." 5:30 P.M.-Ariston League in Pilgrim Hall. Ray Steiner will speak on "Ariston League -What It Can Do." 6:00 P.M.-Congregational-Disciples Student Guild supper in the church parlors. Rev. John Burt will speak on "Personality, Plus or Minus." MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) E 1 ' I I I III