rientation w eek Program Presents Many Activities For W omen Students 'o Continue Into Yeara League Located On East Side Of Mall To Aid New Women In Their Orientation By MARY HELEN DAVIS To better aid freshmen women to adjust to university life, the Orien- tation Week program for women will be extended for several weeks into the semester, to be under the direc- tion of the League Orientation Ad- visors Committee with Marcia Con- nell, '39, as chairman. Following a custom inaugurated several years ago, all freshmen wom- en will have banquet dinners with their advisory groups in the League Ballroom. The first of these will be at 6 p.m. Tuesday of Orientation Week when President Ruthven and Dean Lloyd will give welcoming ad- dresses In the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre afterwards. Following the dinner Wednesday night Miss Connell will give a talk on ''This World of Ours" and tell the new students something of the cus- toms and standards of the University. The members of the Michigan League Council will be introduced at this time. Thursday night the upperclassmen will be putting on a cabaret dinner at 6 p.m. in the League Ballroom: There will be dramatic skits, dancing and singing in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre afterwards. During their first month on cam- pus freshmen are required to attend a series of lectures conducted by un- dergraduate women. These are de- signed to acquaint new students with / the University and its traditions, cul- ture, extra-curricular activities and cultural opportunities offered such as attendance at the Choral Union Series of concerts, the Oratorical Lec- ture Series, the Dramatic Season and the May Festival in music. Prominent faculty members and leaders of the League will conduct these lectures: '3ot obligatory, but usually well attended are the "How to Study" lectures. Orientation Week has been care- fully planned and organized with the purpose of being helpful to the new students and is designed to make the first difficult weeks of school run as smoothly as possible, Miss Connell pointed out. There are 97 Orienta- tion advisors and the groups which they will direct are limited to 12 freshmen to facilitate acquaintence- ship a xong the freshmen. Plan Program For Transfers Advise Women Entering On AdvancedStanding An extensive and flexible advisory and assisting program for women transfers this fall has been planned with Dean of Women Alice C. Lloyd in charge. Fifteen outstanding campus women have been selected to serve on the Transfer Advisory Committee and will be under the direction of Patricia 'Haff, '39,% general student chairman In charge of transfers.TheLeague, the center of women's extra-curricu- lar and social activities, will be the headquarters for the transfer ad- visory groups. Transfers are urged to meet the advisors in the Council Room of the League between 9 a.m. and 5 p~m. on Tuesday, Sept. 20 so that they may be quickly assigned to groups. During the first month the under- graduate women will conduct a series of lectures designed to acquaint new students with campus traditions and extra-curricular activities.. League Is Center Of Women Students' Campus Activities The Michigan League is the focal point on the campus for women, both in offering facilities for extra-cur- ricular activities and recreation, and in being the headquarters of the gov- ernment which serves the women of the University. Upon her enrollment in the Univer- sity, every woman student automatic- ally becomes a member of the League, and at the completion of four years, on campus, she receives with her di- ploma the understanding that she is to be a life member, her dues auto- matically paid in full. Most important of all, perhaps, is its function as a place of recording the merit system of the League. This Women Guide ' Own' General Activities Here The Undergraduate Council of the University, with its members repre- senting groups from the entire wo- men's student body on campus, is the guiding hand in extra-curricular ac- tivities, orientation programs and class projects for the women of the University. The Council is composed of 16 members, with the. President of the League at its head. Other council women are the three vice-presidents, the secretary and the treasurer of the League; the presidents of the Judiciary Council; of the Women's Athletic Association; of Pan-Hellen- ic Society, the organization of soror- ity women; of Assembly, the similar organization for independent women: the Women's Editor of the Daily and the chairmen of the various League standing committees, such as the social, orientation, theatre arts, merit system and publicity groups. The Undergraduate Council ap- proves all recommendations -given to it by the Judiciary Council for the major positions in all class projects and for the important League offices and is in charge of all extra-curricu- lar work on the part of the women. In its short three years of exis- tence, the Council has made great strides in establishing scholarships and paying off its pledge to the Building Fund of the League, which amounted to $50,000. It established the Alice Crocker Lloyd fellowship, which amounts 'to $15,000 and the $10,000 Ethel McCormick scholarship. The organization is primarily con- cerned with the undergraduates, their government and their prob- lems, although it also cooperates with the business office and the alumnae service. Business meetings are held each Monday when the group meets in the Council Room adjoining the Undergraduate Offices of the League. plan begins automatically when every woman enrolled on the campus reaches the beginning of her second semester on campus, and continues until she graduates. It offers com- plete equality in the matter of par- ticipation in college activities, and the complete record of hours spent and work accomplished in these ac- tivities by each woman, provides the basis for selection of candidates for major League positions and member- ship in the honorary societies for Michigan women. For every hour a woman spends in working on an activity, and for the efficiency with which she executes her duties, points are awarded her and kept as a permanent record by the merit system committee. These points, which may also be earned for sports, debating, glee club .or news- paper participation, are considered in appointing' women to fill campus po- sitions. The numerous facilities for recrea- tion, rest and study offered by the League building include such things as the library, cafeteria, beauty shop and the garden. The League Library, which is located on 'the third floor, was opened two years ago, and is notable as the one library on campus where women can study in deep easy chairs with true informality. Any of the approximately 1,300 books which fill the shelves in the library may be taken out for two weeks, or read in the room. The Undergraduate Book Fund added 300 books to the collec- tion last year, Attendance during the hours, from f2:30 to 9:30 p.m. daily except Sunday, amounts an- nually to more than 9,000. The cafeteria and beauty shop which are not exclusively for under- graduate women are nevertheless well patronized by them. Both the walled- in garden on the east side, and the chapel of the League are favorite places for weddings of students and alumni. The chapel, also used for pledging and initiation ceremonies of honor groups, was given in memory of Charlotte Blagden, who died dur- ing her term of office in 1925 as president of the League, after ma- terially aiding toward the completion of the building itself. The garden is used in the warm months for teas and receptions given by campus groups. The ballroom, which holds 800 per- sons, on the second floor is the scene of the Panhellenic and Assembly Balls, the Sophomore Cabaret as well as the usual Friday, and Saturday night dances. All plays given by the Michigan Repertory Players, the Summer Ses- sion stock company, or by the Play Production group in the winter are given in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The Junior Girls Play and a series of orientation lectures also take place in the theatre. I We're anxious to make you a regular, every-day customer and friend of ours We can only do that by giving you what you want. .. when you want it. . . and at the LOWEST PRI CE. Come in and browse.' Get It acquainted even before you're ready to purchase your BOOKS and SUP- PLIES. Come in once - and you'll come in often STU DENT SUPPLIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Fountain Pens Study Lamps l.E.S. Lamps Laundry Bags Notebooks Stationery Mich. Pennan ts Notebook Paper Mich. Jewelry Architects' and EnineersSuplies Lab Equipment You Can Save at MICHIGAN BOOK STORE I