i/ WOMEN'S SUPPLEMENT Y S dit d ~Iaitir WOMEN'S SUPPLEMENT I 1' ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1952 @NNW" ONION* Women's League To Be Center of Coed Activity This Fall Iz , * * * * University Gives Organized Aid ToFreshmen Coeds' Judiciary I BigSisters Automatic Membership Allows Use Of Facilities, Activities Participation It is the duty of the University Women's Judiciary Council to for- mulate and enforce rules govern- ing Michigan coeds. The Council, which consists of three seniors, three juniors, and a six sophomore aides, represents the interests of women students and formulates standards of con- duct. Members work with the Dean of Women to enforce regu- lations and act in cases of in- fractions. * * * r .WORK OF THE chairman is to direct and coordinate duties of the Council. The secretary has charge of the files and, handles correspondence. She also directs the work of the sophomore aides. Each year the Council publish- es "Judy Be Good," a pamph- let which gives complete infor- mation concerning house rules and organization. Since the coed is the creator of these rules, it is her duty to be- come acquainted with them as soon as possible. The rules are maintained by means of close co- operation between the Resident Director. of each house and the Judiciary Council. COUNSELING HOURS are held from 3 to 5 p.m. each Tuesday in the Undergraduate Office of the League. The Council urges any- one with problems or suggestions to come and discuss them at' this time. Each Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. members meet in the same room to formulate policies and consider cases brought before them. Each member is assigned a cer- tain number of houses with whose Resident Director and House Pres- ident she works closely through- out the year. IF THE NEED for a rule change arises, a sub-committee of the Board of Representatives works with the Council to investigate the proposal. Their report is dis- cussed by the Board and a motion for the new rule is framed. This is then sent to each dor- mitory and league, sorority and cooperative house to be voted upon by all women residents. In order for the rule to be put into effect, a three-fourths ma- jority in each house is required. Thus coeds actually do formulate their own rules. Members are chosen by petition and interview by the Interviewing and Nominating Committee. Members of Women's Judiciary Council are Judy Clancy, chair- man; Jean Martin and Barbara Buschman, senior members; Ann Pfumpton, Sue Riggs and Barbara Bos, junior members; and Janet Rutherford, Janet Luthringer, Sal- ly Stahl, Ruth Harwitz, Betty Hesse and Karin Oldberg, sopho- more aides. U'Home of President Scene of Teas Opportunities for students to meet President Harlan H. Hatcher ~ and his family are offered many times during the year at the Hat- Cher teas. The first Hatcher tea is held during freshman orientation week. Teas are held twice a month for the rest of the year, usually from 4 to 6 p.m. Tours of the president's recently redecorated home are conducted by the hostesses who are there to welcome students and make in- troductions. The hostesses work under the guidance of the League Social Committee which sponsors the teas. Special campus groups such as the dormitories, fraternities, and sororities are honored at each tea. Students from the International Center are always invited to help acquaint them with the various campus groups. Informality is always stressed First friends are the fastest friends, the saying goes, and about the first friend of the incoming freshman or transfer woman is her big sister. She puts out the welcome mat and stands by during the new student's first year at the Univer- sity. Her duty is to add the per- sonal touch conducive to good work and quick adjustment to life on the campus. * * * THERE IS A big sister chair- man in each of the dormitories, who sends the name and address of an incoming student to one of the returning coeds. This is done during the sum- mer, so the new big sister and her little sister can correspond during the summer months. When she arrives at the dormi- tory in September, then, the new student finds an "old-timer" on hand to introduce her around. * . * THE BIG SISTER orients her to college life, and tries to help her if she has any questions about her academic program. When classes start the big sis- ter can explain how they are conducted and how the point system of grades work. Even if there are a multitude of booklets explaining hours sign- outs and lateness, no one can ex- plain it better than a coed who has lived under the system for a year. THE BIG SISTER also acquaints her little sister with campus or- ganizations such as Assembly and Panhel and the service organiza- tions of the League. During the first week of or- ientation, the dormitories plan a round of social affairs. Some of these are big and little .sis- Upon enrollment at the Univer- sity every woman student auto- matically becomes a member of the League, which means that she is free to participate in all League activities and to make use of all its facilities. The student and alumnae of- fices, which are the coordinating center of all women's activities on campus, are located in the League. * * * AMONG THE other important facilities is the Rumpus Room, located in the basement, which has a television set, ping-pong tables, and a juke-box for student en- joyment. The cafeteria on the first floor is a favorite spot for meals or after-class snacks. Another fav- orite snack center is the Round- Up Room in the basement. A library on the third floor of- fers coeds a quiet place to study or browse through a variety of books and magazines. Entirely stu- dent supported, the library is well stocked with reading material. THE CHAPEL, located on the first floor, frequently provides an impressive setting for student marriages, initiations, religious meetings and pledging ceremonies. Other meetings may be held in any one of the League's sev- eral meeting rooms, while a special room is reserved on the third floor for committees pre- paring decorations and publicity for coed activities. Sleeping rooms for League mem- bers and their guests are available on the fourth floor. Reservations are made at the main desk in the lobby. Also important to students are the League Garden and the Ball- room. The latter has a capacity of from 350 to 400 couples and is available for private parties. Junior Girls' Play, Speech De- partment productions and Fort- nite are held annually in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, which is available for student use. * *.* League Council Phyllis Kauffman, as president of the Women's League, is also chairman of the League Council. The Council, which meets once a week, is the governing body and the supervising and co-ordinat- ing board of the League. THE COUNCIL is composed of the executive board, the adminis- trative committees' chairmen, and the chairmen of associated organi- zations of the League. In order to aid all students, men as well as women, the Council has developed and put into practice many new ideas during the last few years. One of the recent projects was the revision of the League Low- down, an informative booklet about the League and its function, in order to make it larger, more attractive and easy to understand. ANOTHER ORIGINAL idea of the Council's was to have faculty WOMEN'S LEAGUE-Above is the building which houses facilities for students on the entire campus. Here women present their annual class productions, dances and take part in campus activi- ties. The doors swing in and out continually when men and women stroll over for a snack or just to talk and relax between classes. ter parties where other fresh- men and the upperclassmen in the dorm meet. Other social functions include mixers with the quads and fra- ternities or Coke dates arranged by the orientation leader or big sister. With all these activities, the new student will undoubtedly have, some questions to ask about the barrage of rules she must learn. Her big sister is the one to whom she goes. The big sister plan in the dorms will have been in use for three years now. It was started by As- sembly Association, the organiza- tion of independent women on campus. Campus Group Members Sponsor Projects, Activities FRIEND AND ADVISOR: - Dean Bacon To Begin Third Year as'U' Women's Guide Miss Deborah Bacon assumed her duties as Dean of Women and assistant professor of English at the University of Michigan in the fall of 1950. A native of New Haven, Conn., Miss Bacon's field of academic specialization is English literature.') She has had many years of pro- fessional experience in nursing Miss Deborah Bacon, Dean of Women, presents the follow- ing message to incoming fresh- men. "It is always emphasized to incoming freshman women that you will be entering "a new world" when you move into the college or university environ- ment. That is quite true, but a corollary of this statement is not so often emphasized. It is "a new world" especially tai-- lored to suit the overwhelming majority of you freshmen. About ninety-five per cent of you willmake avery success-. ful adjustment academically, socially, and emotionally to the University of Michigan in this coming year. "Freshman classes are classes for freshmen. Orienta- tion Week is devoted entirely to acquainting you with those as- pects of this new world which will concern you. The house di- rectors, residence counselors, and big sisters in the residence halls where all freshman women live are always available to and particularly concerned with you. "There is no doubt that this will be for you a challenging new game. It should be an ex- citing and a rewarding game and, above all, one that is great fun to play. Your four-year record at high school shows clearly your aptitude and train- ing for it. Remember, in the opening weeks of the semester, your .high .school .principal, your parents, and the Unive- and entered nurses' training at Bellevue Hospital in New York in 1930. In 1936-37, she went to Fort Yukon, Alaska, with an Episcopal missionary hospital. Returning to the United States the following' year, she enrolled as a student at New York University and in 1941 received the degree of bachelor of science in education. She spent the year 1941-42 in Oneida, Ky., as superintendent of Assembly Steers Independent Girls Every incoming freshman and transfer woman, whether she lives' in a dormitory, private home or league house is automatically a member of Assembly Association, the organization of independent women on campus. Weekly meetings held by the Assembly Board, an elected body of nine independent women, air the problems that arise in the residence halls. * * * WEEKLY MEETINGS are also held by the dormitory and league house presidents for the purpose of representing the independent women students on campus. In addition to its representa- tive-function, Assembly Associa- tion sponsors several projects during the year. The newest of these projects is the inter-dormitory newspaper, Assembly Line, which was started last year. It carries stories by wo- men in the dormitories on subjects that are of interest to them. THE BIG SISTER plan was started three years ago by As- sembly, and serves the purpose of greeting freshmen and transfer students when they arrive or) the campus and making them familiar with college life before the fall term begins. On the list of social events sponsored by Assembly is Fort- nite, an evening's entertainment that consists of skits presented by every residence hall. Installa- tion of house presidents is also held at this time. A gold cup is awarded to the house that had the highest schol- astic average and the highest per cent of . participation in extra- curricular activities the preceed- ing semester. * * * ONE OF THE most popular fea- tures of Fortnite is the skit pre- sented by the resident counselors of the dormitories and league houses. A - Hop, all - campus dance sponsored by Assembly and the men's Inter-house Council, form- erly the Association of Inde- pendent Men, this year will be presented sometime during the fall football season. Last year A-Hop had as its theme 'Kick-off" and featured typical An Arbor scenes on the day of the big game. * * * FOR ITS ANNUAL coed-bid Panhel Represents All Sororities Panhellenic is the coordinating organization that binds sororities' together. It is a member of a national organization by the same name of which all national sororities are members. * * * - PANHELLENIC on the Michi- gan campus is made up of repre- sentatives from all of the sorori- ties and is directed by the Pan- hellenic Board consisting of a president, two vice-presidents, se- cretary, treasurer, rushing chair- man, chairman of rushing coun- selors and public relations chair- man chosen by the Interviewing and Nominating Committee. Panhellenic meets weekly to plan organization activities and formulate panhellenic policies to further inter-sorority rela- tionship and bring about greater cooperation with the University in every possible way. Panhel works to achieve these aims principally through campus projects such as student-faculty teas, Tag Day for the Fresh Air Camp and Frosh Weekend. WORKING IN coordination with Assembly Association, Pan- hellenic plans Frosh Weekend and collects contributions for Tag Day. Along with these campus pro- jects, the organization: of affili- ated women presents entertain- ment projects throughout the year. A large project for Panhel is the annual Variety Show which fea- tures a big star in the professional entertainment field. HELD IN Hill Auditorium for the entire campus, Variety Show has featured such stars as Danny Kaye and for the past two years, Spike Jones and His City Slickers. Annually members of all sor- orities on campus combine their efforts to stage one of the big- gest social events on campus, Panhellenic Bell, where affilia- ted women invite their dates and foot the bills. Dressed in all their finery, women and their dates dance to music of a name band. Throughout the year, Panhel- lenic works in close cooperation with the Inter-fraternity Council in planning campus activities. All in all, Panhellenic each year faces a calendar full of events which contribute to a year of fun and activities for not only affili- ated women, but the campus as a whole. Members of the Panhellenic Board for the coming year are Diane Harris, president; Marianna Larson. first vice-president; Sue MAIZE AND BLUE: Freshmen Vie for Honors Coeds of 1956 don't let your class down! Start thinking now of making this year's Frosh Week- end the greatest ever. Although the event is compara- tively new on campus, since it started only four years ago, it has already gained a permanent place among the varied traditions of Michigan life. DURING league night of orien- tation week all freshman coeds are divided into two teams, the Maize and the Blue. These teams get together again in March and plan their team's dance. Each team takes one night to attempt to outdo the other in decorations, floorshow and pub- licity for the respective dances which are judged impartially by faculty members. The name of the winning team, together with its class, is engraved upon a plaque which is displayed in the league Undergraduate Of- fice. FOR WEEKS in advance of the actual event, students are be- seiged by various and sundry pub- licity stunts, skits and pleas on the part of the coeds to convince the campus that their dance will be the best. "Pardon My Politics," a take- off on this year's presidential campaign was the theme of last year's victorious Blue Team. To advertise the dance, mem- bers invited a dark horse candi- date to campaign at this school. The presidential aspirant turned out to be a real horse! ANOTHER TIME the Blue team conducted a mock dog election. Using the slogan, "Which dog is the cat's meow," students were asked to vote for their most popu- lar fraternity dog. As winner, Brandy, Delta Upsilon's St. Ber- nard, received a nice juicy bone. The Maize team used, "Moon- shine Madness" as their theme and decorated the League ball- room with a hillbilly setting us- ing Li'l Abner characters, corn "likker" jugs and pickle barrels and corncob pipes. Previously the Blue Team won the first two dances held with their "Commotion in the Ocean," and "Watch the Birdie" themes. However, two years ago the Maize team rose from the defeated ranks with their "Make Mine Moccasins" idea. UPPERCLASSMEN still remem- ber one of the stunts pulled that year. A wolverine gymnast reck- lessly threw himself from the diz- zy heights of the second floor of the League into the waiting arms of the Ann Arbor Fire Depart- ment. The suicidist was reportedly despondent over being unable to get a date for Frosh Week- end. This event is a wonderful op- portunity for students to meet other members of their class and become acquainted with League activities. Positions on the cen- tral committees for the two danc- es are gained by petition and in- terview. A wonderful time is guaranteed to all coeds participating in Frosh participation in Gulantics, annual campus variety show. Three summers ago the Coun- cil developed the League Travel Bureau to aid students with their travel plans for tours both in this country and abroad. The new idea for opening League dance classes to couples was an- other project of the Council. Recently the Council has sent junior instead of senior women as representatives to conventions. This was done so- that the wom en who attended the various con- ventions could contribute their ideas and experiences to the League during their senior years, * * * Merit-Tutorial One of the many League groups of interest to the entering fresh- man is the Merit-Tutorial *Com- mittee, which keeps records of coed extra-curricular activities and recruits tutors. The group keeps a card file containing information on the ac- tivities of all undergraduate wo- men. Participation in all-campus functions and class projects, major house offices and membership in campus clubs, church guilds, WAA clubs and honor societies are list- ed. PERSONNEL REPOR'P are compiled by the activity chairman. of each house and by heads of various organizations. The file is used by the Office of the Dean of Women, Social, Director of the League, Judiciary Council, League committees and honor societies. After graduation, records are transferred to the Office of the Dean of Women and to the Bur- eau of Appointments, where they are kept on file for reference by prospective employers, The committee, also aids stu- dents seeking academic help by providing them with the name and phone number of a tutor. The tu- tor and student make their own arrangements for the time and place of tutoring. The fee for tu- toring is $1 an hour for evey subject but chemistry, which is $2 per hour. .* * * A STUDENT must have received "B" in a subject which is in his major field or "A" in any other course in order to be a tutor. The Merit-Tutorial Office, lo- cated in the League, is open from 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Students may apply for a tutor at any time. However, it is recommended that they ap- ply early in the term in order to receive the greatest benefit from the tutoring. The Committee will issue a call early in October and again in February for workers to help with the files. This is an excellent op- portunity for freshmen to begin their participation in League ac- tivities. Last year committee heads were Iris Leja, chairman; and Ruth Blight, Shirley Cox, Vonda Genda, Barbara Palmer and Phyllis Pet- erson, junior members. * * * Dance Classes A popular "course" on campus having no homework or finals is the series of dance classes spon- sored each semester by the League. These classes, open to all stu- dents on campus, afford an op- portunity to learn to dance, im- prove on the two-step, and learn rhumbas and tangos in addition to the newest dance steps. Men are charged a fee for the eight-week course, while coeds re- ceive lessons free because they act as hostesses and assistant teach- ers. Dancers are divided into three groups -beginners, intermediate and advanced. Instruction is based on the ability and prefer- ence of the class. The groups meet for one hour each week in the League Ballroom. Enrollment is limited to 65 men and an equal number of women. Time and place for registration and tryouts will be announced in the Daily. Chairman, of the League dance classes for the coming year is Jan Weekend. DEAN BACON * * * nurses in a hospital project di- rected by the U.S. Public Health Service. From 1942-1946, Miss Bacon was in the army nurse corps. Her unit was an evacuating hospital at- tached to the Third Army. After the close of the European war, Miss Bacon attended classes at the Sorbonne in Paris for ten weeks before returning to the United States. She then enrolled at Columbia University Graduate School where she pursued her studies in English literature. In 1948, she received the master of .. : . . ::. . . .:.:.: :;