FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1943
PAGE SIX
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Interfraternity Counci
Rushing Regulations
Rush Schedule
Also. Released
By IFC Group
I Head
For Fall
Announces
Quarter
Allison Pell, Interfraternity
Council President, yesterday an
nounced the rushing rules for
the Fall term. The rules set forth
by the IFC govern only fresh
men, veterans, and transfers. Old
students planning to pledge this
fall will not be affected by the
rules.
In announcing the rules, Pell
also released the Fall rushing
schedule. A modified silence
period will be( observed from
Thursday, Sept. 22 until Sunday,
Oct. 30. Formal rushing will open
at 2:30 on Slunday, Oct. 30 and
continue until Thursday Nov. 3.
Strict silence must be observed
from 9:30 p. m. Nov. 3 until 7
p. m. Nov. 6, which has been
designated as shake-up day. An
other period of strict silence will
b,e enforced from 9:30 p. m. Nov.
6 until noon Nov. 9, which ' hajS
been set aside as pledge day.
The highlights of Pell's rush
ing announcement follow:
Rushecs will pick up their
invitations at Gerrard Hall any
time before noon on Thursday
and Friday, Oct. 27 and 28.
Each rushee must visit each
fraternity from which he has
received a bid on the first or
second day of the rushing period
within the designated hours.
Failure to ab!de by this all
important rule will be considered
a direct violation of rushing
regulations, the penalty to be
determined by the IFC court.
Fraternities will be at liberty
to make dates for the remainder
of the season after the first two
days.
The modified silence period
is, in effect, a period during
which the "new men" and the
fraternity men are to engage in
no conversation concerning
fraternities.
After the first day of the for
mal rushing period, new men
may visit fraternity houses at
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LET CAMPOS WINDS howl fcnd frosi;lacefOir window
these lainelsile . dorm fashions will . warm . you like an . Alma
Mair sind". In policeman blue or fireman,' red--ihe pajamas for
abpul i the 'nightshirt . about $4 you'll vranf , the', whole team.
4n4 wear 'the 'liighlie'ver pajamas during those "Vee sma' hour
gabfesls." Good Housekeeping editors especially like the Tyrol
k influenced their coiiort' braid ;irtauv":
ean
during ; the specified
any time
hours.
No fraternity may make more
than one 'future' appointment
with a rushee. ,
XMo irattrnity may notify a
rushee of his acceptance by the
fraternity before Thursday night,
Nov. 3. The rushee can make no
commitments to the "fraternity
until ' Sunday, Nov. S. 5Jev.rneri
that shake up with "any frater
nity prior . to Nov. " 6,rshall . be
ineligible for pledging fraterV
nity for a period of six month.-
Fraternities violating this regu
lation shall be punished in ac-i
cordance with the ) penalty set J
forth in the IFC Constitution.
After the strict, silence period,
Nov. 6-9, each rustee; wishing to
pledge a fraternity .will appear
before the Dean of Men, andor
any assistants whom the Council
may select toaid him,! and state
his first v choice a fraternity
If the: rushee has received a bid
from the, Fraternity of his choice,
he will; pay.. the; Dean a $1. rush
ing fee, and 1 then' go to the fra-i
ternity of rhis . choice which has
bid him. If he Has hot received a
bid from y the' fraternity, of his
choice, th'evnj'sh'ee may make a
second choice immediately or at
a later date.- if he' so desires.
; The .'Theta,; Chi, fraternity wil
be .allowetogin. rushing one
week ahead -of the other frater
niues Anis.;privvege was grantea
to . fHe .thetak Chi -fraternity this
yeariri'afV effort to help- them
estapiisn cnapter.pn tnis cam
pusii
Ir:."4he': event 6f ! ;a violation of
ihe f IFC;ctd6 by. a , rushee, he
render himself f ineligible tp join
or be pledged,"by any fraternity
at the UriiyersityLfor a period of
not more than' six "months.
Mag Begins : -Annual
Contest
for All Women
The Mademoiselle magazine
has opened its annual contest for
College Board members for the;
1949-50 college year and has is
sued rules for competing for- a
summer position as "Guest Edi
tor" of the young woman's maga
zine.
Membership in the College
Board is the first step in becom
ing one of Mademoiselle's twen
ty Guest Editors, who will be
taken to New York City next
June to help write and edit the
annual August college issue of
the magazine.
The twenty Guest Editors are
selected from the College Board
on the basis of three assignments
given by tha magazine during
the year. They are paid a regu
lar salary for their month's work,
plus round-trip tronsportation to
New York.
The . contest is open to all un
dergraduates at accredited col
leges and junior colleges, avail
able to work as Guest Editors
from June 5 through June 30.
All participants must submit a
report of two type-written, double-spaced
pages on any phase
of campus life. They must sub
mit a snapshot plus complete in
formation on college and home
address, class year, college major,
and minor, other interests and
activities and paid or voluntary
jobs -held.
Averages Listed
For Sororities,
All Fraternities
Four sororities and one frat
ernity were among the top five
in sorority-fraternity scholastic
averages during the 1948-49 term,
acconding to statistics from the
Dean of Students. Chi Omega So
rority had the top mark at 2.35.
The averages of the 28 social
groups are figured with a grade
of A figured as one, B as two, C
as three, D at four and E as five.
Top five in the year's averages
were Chi Omega, Pi Beta Phi, Al
pha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Gamma
Delta and Delta Delta Delta
Spring averages released at the
same time put AEPi on top of the
Keap with a 2.29. Pi Beta Phi was
second, Chi Omega was third
Chi Omega won the year s
crown by being tops in the Fall,
dropped to fifth in the Winter
before coming back to the top in
the Spring. Biggest achievement
was Delta Kapufa Epsilon's
which dropped from tenth in the
Fall to 23 during the Winter,
came back to ninth in the Spring.
The all fraternity average for
the Spring Quarter was 3.001
compared to a 2.9514 mark for
all men students. The fraternity
average is computed according to
the number of members in the
fraternity. All men's average is
figured by a sampling method.
If you do not live in a dormi
tory or fraternity house, and have
not filled out a Daily Tar Hee:
address card, you must do so
immediately or your Daily Tar
Heel will not be delivered to
your residence. You do not have
to pay anything; the Daily Tar
Heel is paid for out of the stu
dent government budget.
hare's more for r
your money ;
quo oui
fti
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JuO
Jills
6 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator
Kittens Stop Heating Church
DETROIT, Sept, 22-(AP)-They
can't turn on the heat at
the Oak Park Christian CJTapel
because two kittens refuse to
to come . out of the heating
duct.
The Rev. James B. Shallow
reported today he has tried all
tricks to entice the kittens
from their cozy nest. They've
been offered catnip, horse meat
and bits of bacon.
"They are the bacon and
ducked back in their nest," he
said. He pointed out extreme
measures such as smoke . or
tear gas might kill the kittens.
And they would still be in
the heating duct.
Two hundred of the pastor's
flock gathered for an evange
listic service last night.
"We like to froze," the pas
tor said.
r;".- ... n '-..-' 1 ? ch 1 wj. k.. oniv the r- u
It'i the year's big value I
6 cubic feet of storage space
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sriea-so
Meter-Miser mechanism
5-Yeer Protection Plan
Super-Freezer holds 15 lbs. food
- Flat top is extra shelf
Big, glass-topped Hydrator
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Big Cold Storage Tray
All-porcelain interior
Streamlined shelves, 11.6 sq. ft.
fOAsl" IJ Ask abouf a trade-in of your old refrigerator on a new
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Tomato Juice .15 Shrimp Cocktail .'60 Fruit Cocktail .20
Homemade Soup .15 &I.25 Jellied Consomme .20
Roast Prime Rib of Beef U $1 .50
: Baked Ham if 1 .50
Half Broiled Chicken 1.35 .
Soft Shell Chesapeake Crabs (2) 1.30
Club Steak . l .25
Chopped Sirloin Steak 1.10
Chicken Giblets on Toast 1.10
(CHOICE OF TWO .VEGETABLES)
Candied Sweet Potatoes
French Fried Potatoes
Buttered Cut Corn
Baby, Green Lima Beans
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Fried Banana
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