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State University of Iowa Code for Coeds, 1956-1962
Page 23
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AWS You are already a part of one SUI organization; by being admitted to the University, you became a member of Associated Women Students. AWS. Although all undergraduate women students belong to AWS, degrees of participation in its activities range from nonexistent to extremely active. You'll want to attend the AWS Open House and familiarize yourself with the various phases of the group's work. There will be opportunities at the open house to discuss the committees with their chairmen and to sign up for those which interest you. Your first year at SUI is the ideal time to begin participation in these committees, as chairmanships are usually reserved for coeds possessing previous experience with the groups. At the open house, you can meet the members of the AWS General Council - committee chairmen, housing unit representatives, and the organization's executive officers who are selected each spring by vote of all undergraduate women on campus. The new officers are: Tobye Baronm president; Nedra Morgan, vice president; Mindy Baker, secretary; and Jan Armstrong, treasurer. Miss Helen E. Focht, counselor to women, serves as adviser to this group. The diverse activities of the entire AWS are coordinated through the General Council. Regular weekly meetings deal with problems of specific committees and projects and with new areas into which the organization may expand. This section of Code for Coeds will outline the various activities of AWS. Take advantage of the open house this fall to learn more about them. Remember, you're a member of AWS already; give the group your support and enthusiasm and help assure the success of its projects. FRESHMAN COUNCIL A voice reserved especially for you is the AWS Freshman Council, which forms a bridge between the freshman women on campus and the active body of AWS. Composed of one representative from each housing unit, its twenty-to members are chosen each fall on the basis of their potential in the areas of scholarship, leadership, and all-around campus participation. 23
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AWS You are already a part of one SUI organization; by being admitted to the University, you became a member of Associated Women Students. AWS. Although all undergraduate women students belong to AWS, degrees of participation in its activities range from nonexistent to extremely active. You'll want to attend the AWS Open House and familiarize yourself with the various phases of the group's work. There will be opportunities at the open house to discuss the committees with their chairmen and to sign up for those which interest you. Your first year at SUI is the ideal time to begin participation in these committees, as chairmanships are usually reserved for coeds possessing previous experience with the groups. At the open house, you can meet the members of the AWS General Council - committee chairmen, housing unit representatives, and the organization's executive officers who are selected each spring by vote of all undergraduate women on campus. The new officers are: Tobye Baronm president; Nedra Morgan, vice president; Mindy Baker, secretary; and Jan Armstrong, treasurer. Miss Helen E. Focht, counselor to women, serves as adviser to this group. The diverse activities of the entire AWS are coordinated through the General Council. Regular weekly meetings deal with problems of specific committees and projects and with new areas into which the organization may expand. This section of Code for Coeds will outline the various activities of AWS. Take advantage of the open house this fall to learn more about them. Remember, you're a member of AWS already; give the group your support and enthusiasm and help assure the success of its projects. FRESHMAN COUNCIL A voice reserved especially for you is the AWS Freshman Council, which forms a bridge between the freshman women on campus and the active body of AWS. Composed of one representative from each housing unit, its twenty-to members are chosen each fall on the basis of their potential in the areas of scholarship, leadership, and all-around campus participation. 23
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