THE MICHIGAN DAILY nion' s Facilities, Functions re Open To All Male Students Conveniences Includes Cafeteria, Dining Room Ballroom, Barber Shop, Billiards, Bowling Through these portals no woman shall pass -is the unwritten law that hangs over the front door of the Union, the Michigan men's castle. A daily center of male life, and a site of social functions on weekends, the Union has facilities for a variety of 'activities ranging from a quick dip in the swimming pool to an af- ternoon of leisurely reading in the Pendleton library. In addition, the Union sponsors a number of events throughout the year. Every man, upon paying his tuition fee, automatically becomes a mem- ber of the Union, and thereby is en- titled to the use of its facilities. Michigan men may choose their recreation from a "ping pang room, a billiard room, checker and chess boards, or the bowling alleys, in ad- dition to the swimming pool. 195 Guest Rooms Visitors to the University may be housed in the 195 guest rooms lo- cated upstairs in the Union. Of con- venience to students is the main desk where checks can be cashed, bus tickets and tickets for University events may be purchased. Detroit and Ann Arbor newspapers, current magazines, candy, cigarettes and chewing gum are also on sale at the desk. The second floor ballroom is the scene of the . traditional weekend dances which are held every Friday and Saturday that there is no other major campus event taking place. Smokers, mixers, coke bars and large meetings are also held in this room. Comfortable chairs, cushions, di- vans, writing tables and quiet may be found in the North Lounge. In the Pendleton Library, donation of the widow of Edward Waldo Pendleton, '72, current best sellers and popular magazines are available. Taproom Serves Hot Meals An afternoon snack or a square meal will be served in the Taproom down in the basement. Here may be found evidences of the old Michigan tradition of seniors carving their names on the Taproom table tops. Offices of several campus organ- izations are housed in the Union. Michigauma, Vulcans, Druids, Inter- fraternity Council and Men's Glee Club are among those who have headquarters here. The Union is governed by a Board of Directors composed of students, faculty members, alumni representa- tives and one member of the Board of Regents. Second semester fresh- men may become try-outs on the Union staff to work under the of- ficers. The idea of constructing a com- mon gathering place for men was conceived in 1903, and it was on the day of the Ohio State game in 196-7 that the Union opened its first home -the former house of Judge Cooley -to its members. Subscriptions Raised for Union Although an additional wing was added in 1912, the "Cooley House" soon proved inadequate, and in 1914 a campaign to raise $1,000,000 for a new clubhouse was launched. Alumni and undergraduates contributed in subscriptions of $50 to make up most of the fund. Since that time further campaigns have been staged to pro- vide for the additions that completed the Union as it is today, increasing the total cost to more than $2,000,- 000. During orientation week the Union will invite freshmen to smokers where they may meet a few sports figures, and representatives of The Daily, Interfraternity Council, Tri- angles, Sphinx and other campus organizations. Plans for special affairs in the fall will include a Varsity Night, Grid Shuffles, Class Games, the Union formal and a Homecoming dance, in addition to the regular events. Every Saturday afternoon that there is an out-of-town football game, a Grid Shuffle will take place. Students may attend the non-date mixer and watch the progress of the game on the electric scoreboard while dancing to record music. New Post-War Campus ROTC Program Starts Will Train Officers, Supplement 'U' Work A new post-war program of in- struction will be initiated by the Re- serve Officers' Training Corps at the University this fall. Col. Karl Henion, Professor of Mili- tary Science and Tactics, stated that the program is designed to produce "potentially superior officers" for the United States Army in time of a national emergency, as well as to supplement training. in other de- partments of the University. In addition to purely military in- struction, the new course will place emphasis on such subjects as lead- ership training, exercise of command, map and aerial photograph reading, personnel management, and geogra- phical foundations of national power. After instruction in military funda- mentals, students are required to solve specific military problems. The military course of instruction at the University is divided into an elementary course of two years and an advanced course of two years. If selected after the first two years for the advanced course, the student may specialize in one unit of the ROTC-the Infantry, Quartermaster Corps, Engineer Corps, Ordnance De- partment, Signal Corps or Transpor- tation Corps. If he successfully com- pletes the course, he is commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the Offi- cers' Reserve Corps. In the elementary course, students are provided with uniforms, equip- ment and texts, while in the ad- vanced course the student is paid about ,$20 a month. Credit is given for portions of the elementary course to students who have completed training in Junior ROTC units or to those who have had military service in the armed forces. Col. Henion gave as advantages to be derived from ROTC, training service as a leader in time of a na- tional emergency and the opportunity to develop one's "leadership potential for executive responsibility in civil pursuits." By ART NEWMAN With the beginning of the 1946 fall semester, fraternity life at Mich- igan, an institution nearly as old as the campus itself, will once again be in full swing. Twenty-nine of Michigan's 41 fra- ternities have announced, that they will be operating on an active basis again. Most of these have either re- opened their houses which were abandoned during the war or ob- tained new ones. To accommodate long chapter rolls created by the re- turn of many members from the ser- vices, sdme fraternities have acquired annexes. Those who register with the Inter-Fraternity Council will see rushing on the same scale as in pre-war years, IFC president Harry Jackson has promised. During the war these activities were limited for the most part to small informal get-togethers. Registration for rushing will take place in the first week of the term in the IFC offices in the Union. Rushing will begin on Sunday, Sept. 29, and continue until Oct. 10. Two new features. wil be inaug-. urated in this rushing period, Jack- son pointed out. The registration card will have space for the rushee to specify any fraternity in which he may have a particular interest. Each chapter on campus will hold an open house on Sept. 29. This new regulation will provide the rushee with an opportunity to visit all org- anizations and their members. The IFC Executive Council has ruled that fraternities will observe the "preference-list" system of bid- ding with the return of peace-time conditions. By this system, both fraternities and rushees submit lists of their choices to the Dean of Students Office. The office will honor these blids and acceptances according to their respective pos- itions on the lists. "The dragnet, tarpit system of rushing referred to in Max Schul- man's satirical novel, 'Barefoot Boy With Cheek,' is not practiced at Michigan," Jackson said. "In the same vein, fraternities here are turn- ing from the old practices of hazing during pledgeship.." Those who are pledged to frater- nities must meet with the scholastic requirements of the IFC and Dean of Students before they may be in- itiated. A scholastic average of C or better (depending on the number of semester hours being carried) is nec- essary. It is customary for initiations to be held early in the second semes- ter after pledging. Fraternities at Michigan originated in 1845, four years after classes were begun on the campus in Ann Arbor. They are responsible for many of the oldest traditions and activities which students now honor. Joining a fraternity offers a man an opportunity to make friends with whom he can remain throughout his college career and even afterwards, according to an official IFC publication. Other ad. vantages to be had through an af- filiation with a fraternity were list- ed as: the opportunity for the de- velopment of leadership tendencies Fraternities Will Resume Full Swing Operationis Houses Reopened, Annexes Added; Pla For Rushing Made by 29 Active Groups and personality; an experience in cooperative living in which men assume their share of group obli- gations and vahlable training in the work of, an executive through mana.gement of the chapter. President Ruthven has written, "The fraternity is as typical a feature of American colleges as the division of students into freshmen, soph- omore, junior, and senior classes. Each fraternity organization, as compared with unorganized groups of students, possesses extremely im- portant and valuable assets to start with - common aims, the support and backing of alumni who main- tain a lively interest in the success of the chapter, national organiz- ation, and unusual opportunities for the cultivation of lasting friend- ships." A tentative list of fraternities which will be active in the fall is: Acacia, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Chi Psi, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Delta Tau Delta. Delta Upsilon, Kappa Sigma, Lam- da Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Lambda Phi, Psi Upsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu. Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Theta Chi, Theta Delta Chi, Trigon, Zeta Psi, and Zeta Beta Tau. The Inter -Fraternity Council which is the "link" between 'these organizations was established ac- cording to its constitution "to pro- mote the interests of the University and the member fraternities and to facilitate cooperation between them and the Universty." 1A Typewriter and Fouitain Pen Repairs LAW MEDICAL 11PUB LIC HEALTH DETA FLUORESCENT LAMPS TO AID STUDYING 0 D MORRIL 304 South State Street SINCE 1908 -- THE TYPEWRITER AND STATIONERY STORE - PHONE 7177 s' , - 1 .... e 1 -- - and SUPPLIES Riding "leasure We specialize in the above professional books and carry a complete stock of all titles. Also general supplies, stationery, trade books, reference books, notebooks, paper, etc., etc. Prompt Special Order Department. Veterans' Accounts Capably Handled "Try our efficient and friendly service" l GOLFSIDE RIDING STfBLES Private or Group Instruction WOODED BRIDLE PATH BREAKFAST RIDES every Sunday morning and SUPPER RIDES every Friday HAYLOAD and SLEIGHLOAD PARTIES followed by eating and dancing in the special GOLFSIDE DINING ROOM,... Particular attention is given to fraternity and sorority parties. ONE OF MICHIGAN'S LARGEST INDOOR RIDING ARENAS. OVE IE "I Private horses boarded and trained. I I II I