Fortnight Show Will Highlight Special Event (Continued from Page 1) the newly created position of social chairman, directing League House dances and cooperate with Panhel- lenic Association in sponsoring fac- ulty teas. Exchange dinners and teas between houses are also under the direction of the social chairman. New Post Created Phyllis Pettit, Mosher, tas project chairman will supervise the various money raising activities for the Uni- versty Fresh Air Camp, Assembly's project for the year. Inaugurated last - fall, Assembly Fortnight will run from Sept. 23 to Oct. 12. Highlight of the pro- gram is the Fortnight Show to be presented Oct. 2 in Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre, featuring skits and entertainment prese ited by League League house groups. During the Fortnight, members of the Board will visit dorms and houses to ex- plain the functions and programs of Assembly and League. activities. Traditional events of Assembly include Assembly Recognition Night, scheduled for 'Oct. 24, which has officially replaced annual Assembly Banquets. Margaret Thompson, Stockwell, is chairman of the affair this year. Talks and awards to out- standing independent women are made at Recognition Night, and a dessert is served in place of the former elaborate banquets. Assembly Ball Set for Spring Another annual event is Assembly Hall, which will return to its origi- nal status as a separate dance this Spring. During the war, Assembly cooperated with Panhellenic Associa- tion in presenting the ball. The affair is the only coed-bid dance for inde- pendent women. House presidents installation, to be held Oct. 16, is another annual event of Assembly. At this time, all campus house presidents are official- ly installed by taking an oath to fulfill the duties of her office. Minia- ture gavels in Assembly blue and white are given to all new house presidents. Coke bars at all, campus dances are managed by Assembly women as a money raising project. Positions of chairman and assistant chairman of coke bars will be filled this fall by the regular League system of peti- tioning and interviewing before Ju- diciary Council. Dances Will Be Continued Also instituted last year, the series of League House dances will be con- tinued, on Saturday afternoons in the League Ballroom. The project was begun because many campus residences are too small to hold their own dances and parties. Petitioning and interviewing for the central committee will be held this Fall. 'U' Was First Coed Institution To Attend Alumnae Meetings The University was one of the first of the large universities to become coeducational and was the first of them to be represented at an early national alumnae conference, spon- sored by the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, now known as the Amer- ican Association of University Wo- men. Although Michigan alumnae have been active since the first woman Judiciary.. (Continued from Page 1) ing the week if the affairs are given on the week-end also. Chief among the violations which bring offenders before Judiciary are latenesses of one-half hour or over and five late- nesses in one semester. Other important house rules are as follows: Any student expect- ing to be out of the house after 7:30 p.m. must register the oc- casion and place (if out of town, the complete address.) Closing hours Monday through Thursday "are 10:30 a.m., 12:30 a.m. Friday and Saturday, and 11 p.m. Sunday. Any woman wishing to be out of her house overnight during the week must register her plan in the Office of the Dean of Women before 4:30 p.m. of that day. All late permissions must be ob- tained from the Office of the Dean of Women. House directors are not allowed to give out late permissions. Women who attend certain Uni- versity sponsored events must be in the house one-half hour after their termination. Judiciary Committee also is re- sponsible for the enforcement of quiet hours within the houses. Tutoring Services Offered by League Council Committee Incoming students who wish to be tutored after five weeks' grades come out have the opportunity to use the services of the Merit-Tutorial Com- mittee of the League, chairmanned by Judy Rado, Martha Cook. Tutors must have received an A or B in the course they wish to teach and preferably have taken the course within the last year. Announcements concerning the registration of pros- pective tutors will be carried later in the term in The Daily. The Merit-Tutorial Committee al- so keeps a catalog of activity cards, pictures of each student, and infor- mation on their extracurricular ac- tivities. This catalog is used as a reference by campus honor societies, Judiciary Council, and by the Social Director of the League when answer- ing requests for recommendations. graduated in 1871, they did not org- anize into a group until 1917, when the Central Correspondence Com- mittee began directing work "to do more for Michigan women and to stand loyally by all interests and achievements of therUniversity as expressed through her Alumni As- sociation." Purchase Self-Help House The first project of the alumnae was to purchase a self-help house, to be maintained by women students. A house on Washtenaw Avenue was occupied until it was razed, and in 1926, the Regents asquired the pres- ent Mary Markley House, earlier known as Alumnae House. With the growth of alumnae groups, the name Central Correspon- dence Committee was no longer rep- resentative of the function of the organization, and accordingly, in 1920, it was changed to Alumnae Council of Alumni Association. Until 1928, headquarters of the alumnae, as well as of all women's organizations, were housed in Bar- bour Gymnasium, which had been built to accommodate about 400 wo- men students. Aided League Fund The Women's League began the fund for a separate women's building in 1921, and the Alumnae Council embarked on a campaign to raise $1,000,000 for it. When half the sum was accumulated, the Regents donat- ed the land on which the building now stands, and in June 1929, the formal dedication took place. The Coi cil has a national chair- man and a Board of Directors. About 50 local groups are represented di- rectly on the National Alumnae Council, which meets annually in Ann Arbor. In addition, the Council is represented by two alumnae on the Board of Directors of Alumni Associ- ation. The first executive secretary of the Alumnae Council was Mrs. Mary Bartron Henderson, '94, who served from1917 until 1930. Mrs. Margue- rite Maire held the position until 1932, and Mrs. Lucille B. Conger suc- ceeded her. Edited Bulletin During the war, Mrs. Conger edited the Alumnae News Bulletin, which was sent to more than' 500 Michigan women in Service. In the past, the Council has sponsored surveys of housing facilities for women. Last year's project, that of selling engage- ment calendars decorated with Mich- igan scenes, and playing cards, ash- trays, and leather billfolds carrying the Michigan seal, will be continued this year in the Alumnae Council Office at the League. Among the permanent projects of the Council is a program of student aid based on broad lines, awarding of current scholarships and fellow- ships, and the establishment of per- manent endowments in $10,000 units as basic funds for graduate fellow- ships. ,. Has Records Galore for Campus Concerts or Private Proms BC g' If record breakage runs high in your "dorm" or house, stop in at Lyon & Healy for one of our sturdy, new racks or extra albums ... and - while you're in - "browse" through our comprehensive music folios or listen leisurely to your favorite selec- tions on Victor and Columbia Records from the large Lyon & Healy Collection. Music of Tchaikovsky (Tchaikovsky). Andre Kostelanetz con- ducting the Robin Hood Dell Orchestra. Col. M-601. $4.04 Concerto in A Minor for Piano and Orchestra (Grieg). Artur . Rubinstein and the Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Or- mandy, Conductor. Victor DM-900. ..................$4.04 Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, Op. 95 "New World" (Dvorak). Eugene Ormandy conducting the Philaedlphia Orchestra. Columbia MM-570. .....................................$6.14 Gems from Sigmund Romberg Shows Volume I (Selections from New Moon, Desert Song, Student Prince, May Time, and The Night Is Young). With Orchestra conducted by Sigmund Romberg. Victor M-1051.................$3.95 A Cole Porter Review (Music featured in the Warner Bros. Technicolor production "Night and Day"-Night and Day, In the Still of the Night, Begin the Beguine, What is This Thing Called Love, and others). David Rose and his Orches- tra. Victor P-158. .....................................$2.91 Favorites (Let's Fall in Love, I'll See You in My Dreams, Adios Muchachos, Imagination, and others) Andy Russell. Capitol BD 13, .......................................$2.91 xtr Ra red Alhnms :Cvered in 1) Peerless Record Rack: Stout wooden base covered with gold - stamped leatherette. Heavy wire dividers, multi-colored, holds 50 records $1.25 Metal-base Record Rack: Rigid base supports with wrapped dividers for 50 records. Gold color ........$3.50 Duotone Permanent Tvne NAed- I