TUE.. - 4ICIGtAfI PAILY" Bluebook Ball Will Provide Relief from Exam Worries Campus Rules Are Clarified By Women's Judiciary Council 1icini& 6tgcwementi] Twice a year when final exam- inations are close at hand the Union holds its traditional Blue- book Ball; this semester the dance is being held from 9 p.m. to mid- Panhei To Hold Meeting Today. For Rushees Panhellenc Association will hold a brief compulsory meeting for all prospective rushees for the spring semester at 8 p.m. today in Rack- ham Amphitheatre. "Attitudes Toward Rushing," will be the topic of a short talk by Mary Stierer, president of Panhel- lenic Association. She will ex- plain Panhellenic and its relation- ship toward rushing. The attitude of the sorority and the rushee will be discussed also. Christine Blair, rushing secre- tary of Panhellenic, will explain details of the Michigan rushing system. Contact rules will be ex- plained, and eligibility rules clari- fied so that there will be no ques- tion as to what will be required at rushing registration. Miss Ethel MacCormick, social director of the League, will also speak. Rushing handbooks will be distributed to all those present at the meeting. All prospective rushees wo are unable to attend the meeting are asked to pick up handbooks in the Under- graduate Office of the League. This handbook has been pre- pared so that coeds may under- stand the rushing system more fully. Any questions which are not answered by this booklet will be discussed at the next meeting, ac- cording to Miss Stierer.. The second and final meeting for rushees will be held at 8 p.m. , Wednesday, Feb. 9, in Rackham Amphitheatre. Details of the rushing schedule, and clothes for the parties will be discussed. Money Well Spent MADISON, Wisc.-Private ex- penditures for industrial research rose from $116 million to $240 million during the thirties, while governmental investments on re- search climbed from $24 million to $69 million. night Saturday in the Union Ball- room... Some may ask, "Why such a gay affair at such a 'blue'' time?" The Union Council believes that students require and deserve re- lief from long study hours and shattered nerves. A few hours re- laxation on the dance floor should be the perfect remedy. * * * DECORATIONS will follow the usual theme with a huge blue- book placed strategically above the bandstand. Walls of the ball- room will be covered with replicas of the traditional classroom black- board. Smaller bluebooks, like good or bad omens, will be hung across the ceiling from white crepe-paper streamers. Prize quotations and courses only dreamed of in college curricu- lums will be captioned on their covers. Coeds will receive miniatureE bluebooks for favors. This custom has been observed for many years and has now become tradition, as has the dance itself. * *.* AN ADDED attraction at inter- mission time will be the distribu- tion of prizes. The lucky indivi- duals whose bluebooks carry the big letter "A" and those whose grades are way down in the cellar will be rewarded. Frank Tinker and his Union orchestra will provide the neces- sary music to keep dancers on their toes and carry thoughts into realms other than those of study. Those familiar with Tin- ker's style will have no doubt of his capacities in either direc- tion. Tickets for the affair will be the same price as those for the usual weekend Union dances. General chairman of the dance is Ted. Smith. Assisting him will be Irv Barill, Richard Cossitt, Robert Graham, Robert Greager and William Race. 'Silver King' Clue "Secretary, President, 'Silver King,' Football and Washington are the thing. Persons submitting the first five correct answers will each receive silver dollars: Answers may be addressed to: "Silver? King," 1830 Hill. - -II SONG-WRITING STENOS-Sue Thomas (left), Tacoma, Wash., and Ruth Wallace, Washington, congressional employes, hold musical scores on steps of U.S. capitol. Their first song, "Who's To Blame," already has been published. ...'i U((11 DONALDSON Two clarifications have beent added to the Campus and House Regulations Rule Book, according to Pat 11annegan, president of Women's Judiciary Council. The additions state that closing hours shall continue in effect1 until the house is officially opened in the morning and that make-up time may be deducted from the 12:30 a.m. closing hour only. Both regulations have long been as- sumed, but they have never been included in the rule book. The procedure for passing any such rules requires a three-fourths vote of the League Council, three-x fourths vote of the Assemblyt Board, three-fourths vote of Pan-c hellenic Board, three-fourths votek \of the House Presidents and the approval of Judiciary Council and the Dean of Women. * IN ORDER to make the rela-t Women May Repay Bids For J-H op Climaxing the inter-term round of social events will be the an- nual "Pay-Off" dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Satur- day, Feb. 12 in the League ball- room. The "Pay-Off" dance, as sig- nified by the name, is the oppor- tune occasion for coeds to repay their J-Hop dates with an invita- tion to a girl-bid informal ball. Under the sponsorship of Mor- tar Board, senior women's hon- orary society, the dance has be- come a traditional "thank you" gesture for women students who attend J-Hop. Proceeds of the affair will go toward the Mortar Board scholar- ships awarded annually to juniors on the basis of activities and scholarship. Heading the committee for the 1949 "Pay-Off" will be Ruth Sights, assisted by Rose Marie Shoetz. Other committee chair- men are Barbara Jo Ream, deco- rations; Patricia McKenna, pub- licity; Marjorie Zaller, finance; Nancy Hess, tickets; Patricia Baumgarten, Music; and Betty Estes, patrons. There wlil be an executive board meeting of the Air Force Officers Women's Club 8 p.m. today at the home of Mrs. Ar- nold T. Phillips, 810 N. Pros- pect, Ypsilanti. tionship between the Student Leg- islature and Women's Judiciary Council more tangible, it has been announced the Women's Judiciary Council will now be hearing cases involving women under Student Legislature rules. Up to this time, Men's Judi- ciary Council handled all cases involving Student Legislature rules concerning both men and women. Now Men's Judiciary Council will hear cases for men only, and a Judiciary Committee of four members of the men's council and three members of the women's council will hear cases involving both men and women. Another step in unifying student government is being taken in the working of a plan whereby three senior women on the Student Leg- islature, who will have the power to veto, will accept all petitions for the interviewing committee of Women's Judiciary Council and will interview all candidates ap- plying for positions on the coun- cil. Freedman-Shevin Mr. and Mrs. Louis Freedman of Detroit have announced the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Rissel, to Herbert Law- rence Shevin, son of Mrs. Maurice Steingold of Detroit and the late Mr. Irving Shevin. Miss Freedman is attending Highland Park Junior College. Mr. Shevin is attending the University and is a member of Sigma Alpha Mu. A June wedding is planned. *' * * Weig-Mann Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Weig' of New York City have announced the engagement of their daughter, Martha, to J. Robert Mann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Mann of Nunda, New York. Miss Weig is a senior in the literary college where she is study- ing medical technology. She is a member of Alpha Xi Delta. Mr. Mann is a graduate student in the School of Business Admin- istration and will receive his Mas- ten's degree in June. He is affil- iated with Theta Xi. Plans are being made for a June wedding in New York City. Trosper-Sleeper Mr. and Mrs. H. Peter Trosper of Ann Arbor have announced the engagement of their daughter, Pa- tricia, to Lewis A. Sleeper, Jr., son of Mrs. Ray Fauber of Manville, C., and Mr. Lewis A. Sleeper of Chicago. Miss Trosper attended Wheelock College in Boston. Mr. Sleeper is a student in the University School of Business Ad- ministration and is a member of Alpha Sigma Phi. The wedding will take place Jan. 28 in St. Andrew's Church. Utility Prices PHILADELPHIA--Private elec- trical systems were valued at $9 before World War II. Municipal systems were ap- praised at $400,000. . t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THE THRILL of a lifetime comes for about 60 youngsters in the three to four year age group three days a week, when the Uni- versity bus, taken off its regular schedule, stops to pick up the co- operative nursery pupils. A morning run is provided Mon- day, Wednesday and Friday and an afternoon trip Wednesday, Thursday and Frida.y. ' Three mothers accompany tuIe driver and each child is met at his stop on his return by his or her own par- ent. LOUISE Odrz.vwo ka hleads the planning committee for the dance from 8:30 to 12:30 p.m. Friday at *West Lodge. The affair is in hon- or of women living at the dorms and will be their last social event before moving into Ann Arbor. No women students will be living in West Lolge rooms after the end of the prsent semester. The affair is sponsored by the Lodge recreation department and a three-piece orc!estrai will pro- vide the irmsic. The (jane is open to the public andfirmner residents of West Lodge now liing in An Arbor are especially mviied. EGiJNNING imnmediathly and1( cot linui Lt e 11 111a.u Ih th ei eUiamtl calendar, a room or studying will be set aside each night at the University Comnmunity Ceier The "quiet" room for the i eve- ning will be noted on the map di- rectory in the entrance hall. Be- cause of meeting commitments one room cannot be used for the entire period. SI'i(' i i stri .ctot 3-}z. I ( Ionjor- dinner, 6 :)t_ pnm .M [it h:an Utl - io. l all ihates are mlvix'1'. La jp'tie ('alU'4('tfe : 3 t:3() p.m., Grill l-)n, Iva'lmigau I GL lG at nr U. of M. Rle ub: eMetingto German Coffeetir:r., Ju discuss national and club matches; 14, 3-4:30 p.m., Michigan League i:30 p.m., ROTC range. Soda Bar. All stucidni s and fa(- Sigma Delta Chi: Initiation ulty members irI itc'. Roger Williams Guild: Openl house, 8:30 p.m., Fri., Jan. 14. it 1 9 LuA Liberty Phone 7900 ' F, ' For Your Next Dance Have Music as YOU like it! CHUCK MEYERS and his Orchestra Phone 5805 The Official Michigan Ring ..._ _. . _._®_._.____,®m. ® ___.._._ head corn button classic Jacok son>L Exclusively ours by Duchess Royal suit ding souih now, ing north later. 11 Save yourselves time and money The Ann Arbor Business School offers you classes in SHORTHAND and TYPING :e}f{ e w ct semester's schedule arrange a convenient time for your typ M ndl shorthand classes offered during the day or evenings. Weather-cooled I rayon Masterfuly detailed and only $25 With turnover flop pockets, ribbon-bound seams. di 1s 11AI ii i i