THE MTCHTGAN DAILY University Band Enters Bigger Season As. Its Importance Increases 125 Members Are Expected To Play In Fall :':>' Group Gains Reputation- 'All-American Band' In Past Gridiron Seasons With the advent of the 1939 foot- ball season, the University of Michi- gan Varsity Band will start its season of fall activity with a personnel of 125 members, an increase of 25 over last years membership, Prof. William D. Revilli, director, announced. With its activities increasing' as fast as its size and importance on the University campus, the band faces a program of activity for 1938-39 which includes another Varsity Show, Fall Concert Series, regular Univer- sity Broadcasts, special invitational broadcasts, formation marching at the football games and a trip to Yale University to root for the team wh~n it plays in the Yale Bowl. New Staff Picked The staff for next year has been chosen, Professor Revelli announced: the new manager will be Gilbert Phares, '39; the equipment manager, Donald Marrs, '39; librarians, Rich- ard Correll, '39; Sidney Berg, '39; William Rhodes, '39; and Frank Men- ichetti, '39. The band is led in its radio and concert apoerances by Professor Revelli, but the military training of the band in its marching drills is diredted by Maj. Walter B. Farriss of the United States Army. Financial matters and special details of band business are attended to by, Herbert G. Watkins, assistant secre- tary of the University and faculty band manager. The growth of the Band and its pro- gram of activities has gained for the Band in the past years a wide- spread reputation of excellence of musical ability and spectacular marching appearances. This fact is proven by the remarks of Ted Husing, nationally famous NBC sports broad- caster, who said the Band was the "All-American Band" of his choice based upon his view of the country's outstanding collegiate groups in ac- tion last Fall on the nation's grid- irons. The New York Times printed the 'following statement concerning the Band when it appeared at the Penn State game in the East last year: "The University of Michigan Band has proven the outstanding sensation of the eastern football sea- son." To Build Dorms For 1,000 Men Present University Dorms Only House 170 (Continued from Page 5) + been in incipient stages in Ann Arbor with both University officials and prominent alumni attempting to get the ball in motion for a concerted drive for funds. Chicago alumni have been in the van of the move- ment and last year the Midway grads initiated a one month campaign for $75,000. Students have participated in the dormitory movement through the campus Dormitory Committee which has sponsored numerous social af- fairs, spent much time in publiciz- ing the housing shortage and enlist- ed the aid of various alumni organi- zations. Prominent men on campus are annually chosen for service on the Dormitory Committee. Fraternities have long been bitter opponents of any dormitory move- ment feeling the latter to be a menace to their own housing security. This year, however, fraternity men and independents buried the hatchet on the time-worn housing issue and both put their shoulders to the wheel for better housing. Several fraternity men served on the Dormitory Com- mittee. Difficulties in dormitory construc- tion arise principally around the ex- traordinary cost of land in Ann Ar- bor. In every instance dwellings must be torn down to make room for the new projects. Extremely low-coast boarding and housing accommodations are avail- able at three cooperative rooming ouses in Ann Arbor, all student man- aged. The Girls Cooperative House accommodates about 20 women and offers room and board for $5.75 a week. The Rochdale Cooperative for men accommodates about 23 and charges $a a week for room and board. The Socialist House accom- modates about 15. Band Conductor PROF. WILLIAM D. REVELLI * * Prof. Revelli Back From Two Weeks As N.Y.U. Conductor Prof. William D. Revelli, director of the University of Michigan Band, has just returned to Ann Arbor from New York University where he has been spending the last two weeks of the Summer Session as guest professor in N.Y.U. School of Music. Nation- ally famous for his work in teaching the technique of modern band organ- ization and his outstanding successes in directing various musical organiza- tions, Professor Revelli, faces a full season of activity with the advent of the Fall semester. Professor Revelli conducted the Third All-High School Band Clinic in Ann Arbor during the early part of the Summer Session and climaxed an especially outstanding season by inaugurating the First University of Michigan Outdoor Band Festival, a recital of band selections presented in Ferry Field before a crowd of 9,000 people. Recently Professor Revelli conduct. Non-Affiliated Men Organized Independent Group Dates From Last Semester (Continued from Page 5) tories for men students to decrease costs, and to provide the men with congenial living surroundings. During Orientation Week, Robert Hartwell, '39, president, and other representatives of Congress will ad- dress the freshmen and transfer groups to acquaint the new men on campus with Congress' activities and future program. The desk will be maintained at the Union where names will be taken of those desiring to participate in Congress as an extra- curricular activity and where fur- ther information concerning Congress may be secured. A special program has also been planned by the officers of Congress during Orientation Week and the first week of the first semes- ter. Congress is administered by Execu- tive and District Councils. The Execu- tive Council, composed of the presi- dent, executive secretary, recording secretary, treasurer, chairmen of the committees and District Council representatives, is appointed by a special student-faculty group in the spring of each year. The District Council is cbmposed of the presidents of the 10 districts into which the men students on campus have been divided. Each fall elections are held in all the districts for presidents of the districts. These president sit on the District Council and select their staffs to conduct organizational work within their zones. The committee represeuted on the Executive Council are social, sports, administrative, cooperative and pub- licity. Smaller corresponding commit- tees are also set up in each district. ed the Sumrher Session Directors Band when it played the dedicatory program at the presentation of the city's new band shell in West park, 7:"D..a.. r Complete Library Available A full complement of instruments is available for the band's use and the library of musical selections in Mor- ris Hall, band headquarters, is re- puted to be one of the most complete owned by any musical organization in America. Professor Revelli and the" Band offer, according to Ernest A. Jones, former manager of the Michi- gan Band, the finest kind of all around band training., During Orientation week, tryouts will be held daily from 9 a. m. to noon and from 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. for freshman interested in joining the band. Rushing Rules Griven Revision New Sorority Regulations Will Be Issued (Continued from Page 5) Friday nights wtih either a dinner or luncheon on Saturday. The din- ners last from 6 to 8:30 p.m. and a girl may go to the same sorority house only once each week. Following the two weeks of these dinners there are two formal dinners held on Monday and Tuesday nights of the third week lasting from 6 to 9:30 p.m. The Panhellenic rules provide that a rushee may' not attend more than four functions at any one sorority during formal rushing. 'This means that a girl may attend one of the initial teas, one dinner during the first week and another the second week of rushing and then one formal dinner the last two days of the par- ties. The period of silence begins on Tuesday night of the third week and lasts until Friday night. During this time there is absolutely no communi- cation between sororities and rushees.. If a girl has been bid by a house, she will receive a preference slip which she fills out and returns to the Dean of Women's office; Pledging will be held on Saturday ,afternoon, Oct. 15. Informal rush- ing starts the Sunday after pledging and may continue throughout the year. The complete list of sororities on campus are: Alpha Chi Omega, 1004 Olivia; Alpha Delta Pi, 722 Forest; Alpha Epsilon Phi, 820 Hill; Alpha Gamma Delta, 1322 Hill; Alpha Omi- cron Pi, 1017 Oakland; Alpha Phi, 1830 Hill. Fraternities Play Important Part In Life Of 700 Students Here Two-Week Rushing Period' S ited To Open Sept. 24; Freshmen Visit Houses (Continued from Page 5) "The Interfraternity Handbook" con- taining complete information as to the individual houses and their mem- berships'. In this handbook will also be found a copy of the rushing and pledging rules. At the end of the rushing term there is a silence period of three days. The silence period culminates in a "pledging" ceremony. When the stu- dent becomes a "pledge"-after he has pledged himself to join a frater- nits, but cannot yet be initiated-he enters the one semester pledge pe- riod. During the pledge period the freshman is trained in the fraternity and University requirements. His so- cial and scholastic development, his moral and financial reliability are then finaly evaluated by the fra- ternity before he can be initiated. The initiation takes place early in the second semester provided the stu- dent attains the standards set up by the fraternities and the University. Michigan fraternities voluntarily set high scholarship standards for initiation; they also maintain study halls and regulate study hours for the benefit of pledges and members. The student must achieve more than merely satisfactory scholarship in order to be initiated into his fra- ternity, in order to remain in school, and in order to participate in any extra-curricular-activity. The Mich- igan Interfraternity Council is de- termined thatfraternities atMich- igan shall maintain a level of .scholar- ship which is above that required by the University for graduation. The fraternity houses at Michigan are designed to give the student ade- quate living conditions. They are subject to inspection by the Univer- sity and civic authorities, thereby in- suring the health and safety of its members. Each year fraternities house some Get Your Name Stamp e Calkins-Fletcher's ad p. 4) Filotthis coupon (first, mid- ta e.l . n~a~~ arlftscc.rfl 1,400 men in comfortable quarters and board in the neighborhood 'of 1,700. Finances in fraternities are con- ducted on a monthly basis. At the beginning of each month all mem- bers and pledges are presented with a house bill. This bill averages $56 a month for an active member eating and living at the house. For fresh- men and other members living out of the house the cost is about $30 month- ly. This .latter cost includes the noon and evening meals and monthly dues. Aside from these costs each fra- ternity at the University charges an initiation fee which is paid only dur- ing a life time. The amount of the fee varies with the group. Fraternities here at the University are stably organized financial insti- tutions with a total annual turnover of close to three-quarters of a mil- lion dollars. Each fraternity is man- aged by one of its members under the supervision of the University Fra- ternity Financial Advisor. The complete list of fraternities fol- lows: Acacia, Alpha Chi Sigma, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Al- pha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Chi Psi, Delta Kappa Epsilon. Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Hermitage, Kappa Delta Rho, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Beta Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Epsilon Pi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Sigma Delta. Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Lambda Phi, Psi Upsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Triangle, Trigon, Theta Chi, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Xi, Zeta Beta Tau and Zeta Psi. Alumni University Attracts Graduates More than 150 alumni of the University are regularly enrolled in the alumni University each year. The alumni University, which at- tracts graduates from all over the country, is held each year just fol- lowing the June examination period. It includes a program of 10 or 12 courses given by prominent faculty members of the University teaching staff in their resepctive fields. The session lasts about one week. In addition'to the regular academic classes, 1nembers of the coaching staff each year offer instruction in tennis and golf to the alumni students. Ohio Statute "There must be no walking about the halls in the nude"-Edict issued at the University of Toledo (Ohio). At the -same time, the students were told to see that their curtains were drawn while undressing. Coo. OfP , 2 - ' dik SOS O ,oW c~)4," dt "t oa SWIFT'S DRUG STORE 340 South State Ill* s then read the correct answer So rapid has been the development of electric ranges in the last few years, so great the improve- ment in speed and efficiency, that many people do not realize how little it now costs to cook electri- cally. As proof of this, jot down your own impres- of73 P sion of electric cooking costs in the chart above, persons and compare your guess with the correct figure in (net) per the table at the right. The result may surprise you! obtained Today's modern electric ranges open a new world homes of cooking enjoyment to thousands of women who Pero have felt that they were unable to afford it. The per. price of an electric range is about the same as that makes ad of an ordinary stove of comparable size and electric a *r month is the 8vera ri * Cookinglin familes o a t rate of 2 ce kwhr. This f-gure was by act ual meter test in ng electric ranges, over a year' timeFor farnjjj, n, the cot averagedon,, month. Five wel-know 9 differentmodels of Iges were Ue nti women ueinti. W encooking meals. nary kitchen. fA PRESCRIPTIONS DRUG SUNDRIES STUDENT SUPPLIES TOILET ARTICLES CIGARS AND CIGARETTES PIPES AND PIPE RACKS features. See the new electric ranges on dis- play at department stores, electrical dealers or at Detroit Edison offices. survey by, daily in ordi STATIONERY FOUNTAIN SERVICE III III