THE MICHIGAN DAILY U Panhellenic, Assembly Boards Support Campus War Projects, Hold Own Social Functions drive for books to send to prisoners of war, the scrap paper drives, and similar projects. One sorority took over the switchboard at the local Red Cross unit. Panhellenic Board, which heads the Association, is composed of Miss Lau- bengayer as president, Marcia Sharpe as vice-president, Rosemary Klein, secretary, Jean Wick, treasurer, and Joyce Livermore, rushing secretary. Regulates Rushing The Board's primary executive pur- pose is to regulate sorority rushing, which is the Greek-letter method of drawing new University women into sorority organizations. To promote fairness, Panhellenic Board has drawn up a series of regulations which will be distributed early in the fall semester to freshman, transfer, and upperclass women who are in- terested in joining sororities. While a few houses will hold in- formal rushing for upperclassmen and transfers during the fall term, formal rushing will begin during the second semester. The events will be opened with a meeting, during the fall semester, to explain to new stu- dents the purposes and methods of rushing, and another meeting at the beginning of the spring term. Time and dates for the gatherings will be announced later. There will be a two-week rushing period, covering three weekends. There will be rushing parties on Tu- esdays, Thursdays, and three on each weekend. Pledging will be held Ap- ril 1. A new contact rule will be used this year. No freshmen may, Miss Laubengayer said, be in contact with a sorority woman unless an active member of another sorority is pres- ent at the time. No house may at any time have a membership, including pledges and activities, exceeding sixty in num- ber. Assembly Promotes Activities Of Local Independent Womenj (Continued from'Page 1) The secretary-treasurer, Pat Carr, is incharge ofkeeping Assembly's records and is concerned with finan- cial records. Last year Assembly sponsored two main social functions, Assembly Ball and Recognition Night, and the tra- ditional events will in all probability be continued this year. Functions Modified Both affairs underwent modifica- tion. Assembly Ball was given in conjunction with Panhellenic Boa- rd's annual dance, Panhellenic Ball. The joint affair, the first of its kind on the campus, was called Boulevard Ball, receiving its name from the street signs set up in Waterman Gymnasium, where the ball was held. The entire site was decorated to re- semble a park, with signs denoting the various campus dormitories and sororities indicating radiating streets. Recognition Night is the successor to Assembly Banquet, vetoed for the first time last year by wartime food shortages. Although dinner gave way to a brief dessert at Recognition Night, the traditional talks and a- wards were presented. Geraldine El- liott, a radio script writer, spoke, as well as several campus activity heads, and scholastic and activities awards were presented to outstanding inde- pendent coeds. is supposed to look like a rabbit, is Natalie Mattern. Nat adds the spice of red hair to the organiza- tion, besides efficiency and able work as head of Judiciary Council. Juniors Begin Third Season Of Stamp Sales Auction Sale, Junior-Senior Night To Highlight 1944-45 Events of Project's Activities A stamp-and-bond auction sale, the traditional Junior-Senior Night, and varied sales and publicity activi- ties will this year keep the campus aware of the war stamp and bond campaign which has been Junior Girls Project for the last three years. At the auction sale well-known persons will be asked to contribute articles which will have more sou- venir than practical value, and the Honor Sc Based on Activities, fl Scholarship Mortarboard, Senior Society, Scroll and Wyvern, are names signifying superior achievement in the fields of both scholastic and extra-curricular activities, and the tins worn by the limited number of women eligible for the four campus women's honor so- cieties are marks of distinction. Mortarboard, the top national hon- orary society for senior women, takes into membership only those second semester juniors who have a schol- arship rating three tenths of a point above campus average, the general point rating being a B minus aver- age. In addition to the scholastic achievement, Mortarboard members must be the most prominent women in the junior class, those women who will direct campus affairs during their senior year. SENIOR SOCIETY, which also has a membership of twenty women, is an honor society for senior independ- ent women only, and bases its re- quirements for membership on quali- fications similar to those of Mortar- board, with the principal exceptions that the scholastic rating is not as high and that no affiliated women may be pledged. Similar to Senior Society is SCROLL activities honorary for sor- ority women. The principal differ- ence is the rule that no member of Mortar Board may be tapped for Scroll, so a, greater number of coeds are consequently included in activi- ties honorary societies. )cieties Tap On Criterion PEG LAUBENGAYER FLORINE WILKINS Ex-Daily EditorC Heads Council Of Outstanding Activities-Women v As the proverbial birds of a feath- er, the campus' outstanding coed personalities have flocked together . to comprise the Women's War Council. Marge Hall, the president, is a typical case of University Activities Woman . . . a bundle of dynamite packed into 5'1". Marge's original hangout was The Daily, where she worked up to become Associate Wo- men's Editor before ditching the newspaper business to become head of all campus women. Marge spent her early life in China, where, so the tale goes, she was frightened by a chimpanzee. The shock checked the growth of her hair, and consequently she has sported a crewcut ever since. An- other story has it that Marge has been so busy running campus war f _____MRRJLYN SHOPPE ___ fund drives she never has time to comb her hair, so she just cuts it down to the scalp every Sunday morning.. Speaking of war fund drives, Marge ran three of them last spring Red Cross, Infantile Paralysis and Fresh Air Camp . . . and all three were outstanding successes. Another Hall accomplishment is two years' service on the Women's Athletic Board. Mexico's Gain Marge spent the summer in Mexico dodging typhoid germs and studying at the University of Mexico. Rumors that she is studying revolutionary techniques for use on the League are unfounded, as are parallel rumors that she plans to add burros to the WAA riding club schedule. In addition to journalistic abil- ity, Marge made herself invaluable on The Daily by keeping a file of nickels for use in the coke ma- chine. went on the blink soon after "Scoop" Hall departed. Viewing Marge from the heights is Pat Coulter, the War Council's tow- er-of-strength personnel director and vice-president. Pat is known to campus women as the D. S. of Junior Girls Play fame, a characterization which, Pat says, has frightened her away from Health Service for all time.. To 'Doctor' the Help Shortage Instead of new kinds of tumors, Pat will concern herself with the ills caused by the local labor shortage. During the summer Pat pitched in herself by dishing hash in the West Quadrangle chow line. Therefore, the local Navy ulit regards Miss Coulter with pleasant associations- with the only meat and butter on campus, when things got tough. But Pat's first love is horses . . Coulter and the colts is a bad but oft-used pun. Pat's earliest campus days were occupied with Crop and Saddle riding club, of which she subsequently became president., The "Kappa bunny-rabbit," who Although her sorority sisters insist "she's a very normal person," Nata- lie has had more than a normal indi- vidual's share of campus positions, starting out as a sophomore with the presidency of Wyvern and chairman- ship of Soph Project. Maybe She'll Clean the League Jean Loree is- glad to resume her place as secretary of the War Coun- cil, after spending the summer play- ing maids in Repertory Players' dra- matic productions. Although she once played a Roman centurion, Loree was first, last and almost always the maid. The rumor is that the Chi Omega house was untouched by the help shortage. Jean merely rehearsed her roles at strategic moments. Debbie Parry is the creator of "Thumper," the little rabbit whose sayings have become law about the League and the TSO buildings. Be- sides drawing bunnies, Deb found time to head Junior Girls Project and become a member of Phi Beta Kappa during the past year. Marge, Pat, Natalie, Jean and Deb- bie are your executive board of the War Council for the coming year. It should be a most interesting one. Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb of the sociology department will return to the permanent teaching stiff begin- ning the latter half of the Summer Term. He has been in Washington, D.C., for the past two years with the Communications Division. Flli Daily arrivols make gooad shopping. #)eAi-eF =o r' aF' .raF1 cF aF P 995 Sandals goo social this. season.®®. add a slim hel.. an open back®.. a peek-a- Gaberdine Suits and Matching Toppers 39.50 up PLJ 44 in'~ wn I i