Jnion Offers Services To Men; League Is Women's lente 4 !y SRA Unique Organization In University Among the colleges and universi- ties in the nation the University is unique in sponsoring a student re- ligious organization on its campus and making concerted action in var- ious fields of religion an actual part of the University extra-curricular program. Organized five years ago, the S.R.A. is located in Lane Hall. Under Direc- tor Kenneth Morgan, a board of gov- ernors, a student president and ex- ecutive committee, the group spon- sors a varied program including round table discussions, community projects, trips to larger communities, lectures and book review meetings. Prominent among its social activi- ties and affording students an ex- cellent opportunity for introduction to the organization are the informal Coffee Hours held from 4 to 6 p.m. every Friday in the library. Included in the S.R.A. organiza- tion is an Interguild Council, a body representing the various church guilds, the Catholic Church and the Hillel group. The executive committee of the S.R.A. is composed of the president and the student chairmen of the five executive departments which organ- ize and guide the S.RA. program. Within each of the five departments different bureaus under students deal with the various phases of depart- mental work. Hillel Serves As Religious, Social Center Serving as social, cultural and re- ligious center for Jewish students, Hillel Foundation carries out an in- tensive program for nearly a thous- and members. Directed by Rabbi Jehudah M. Co- hen, the Foundation is governed by a representative student council whose chairman is Aaron Moyer, '42. Activities are coordinated by two stu- dent directors, David Crohn, '42, and Robert Warner, '42. The Foundation at 1102 Oakland Ave. features a large classical and popular record library, recreation fa- cilities and a library. Its meeting rooms and lounges are the scene of the many activities which take place during the year. Among Hillel Foundation's more popular activities are the Hillel Play- ers who will present Clifford Odets' "Awake and Sing" in the near future, its regular Friday evening Fireside Discussions at which eminent and popular guest speakers are heard and Thursday afternoon "P.M.'s." The Foundation is the meeting place for Avukah, student Zionist organization, which sponsors numer- ous programs. Ancient Palestinian customs and traditions are studied and preserved by the group. Other Hillel activities include classes in Hebrew, Yiddish and Jew- ish history and customs, the Hillel Niews, a monthly paper and numerous social events. Aid in the war effort is actively promoted by the Foundation. Dances for soldiers from nearby camps are held and such activities as knitting and relief work are accomplished. The local Hillel Foundation is part of a nation wide organization backed by B'nai B'rith, Jewish fraternal or- ganization. Large campuses from New York to California have their own foundations which serve the same purpose as the local group. CO-Ops House 300 Students OnCampus Cooperation to the "nth" degree is the watchword of the student cooper- ative houses on the campus serving upwards of 300 men and women with board, room and companionship. The Inter-Cooperative Council is the central directing body of the co- operative houses and its function is to coordinate and organize the activ- ities of the houses. Two representatives from each of the 12 houses make up the Council and from it the officers are chosen. Central personnel, education and purchasing committees as well as the individual houses are the active agents of the Council in executing the policies formulated by the Coun- cal. There is absolutely no racial, reli- gious or class bar to membership in the cooperatives. The central per- sonnel body attempts to apportion applicants evenly to all the houses, but the individual houses exercise the final authority in accepting new members ., Versatile Male + Characterizes UnionBMOC Tryouts Offered Valuable Career; Organization's EnterprisesAre Varied if you can wear a coat and tie every day, if you can get good pub- licity for a non-existent cat-fight. and if you believe that being BMOC means anything, then you're a Union man, my son. To freshman awed by the smooth, high-pressure executive type (Jack Grady, secretary and friend of the people) and to transfer students over- come by the size of the building we can issue only one warning: Once you enter the sacred portals of the student offices of the Michigan Un- ion, you will have embarked on a career of service whose tenacity can be matched only by the Pony Ex- press. A message to Garcia will have nothing on you. Bandinage aside, the Michigan Union is not only a club for men with a good many of the luxuries of home (pool table, etc.), it is a student organization which annually serves to make life at Michigan a trifle more bearable than it might otherwise be. From Orientation On From the time you begin your campus life during orientation per- iod until you receive your diploma - or draft notice, as the case may be - some Union man will in one way or another be helping to guide you through the pitfalls of college educa- tion. During Orientation Week some sin- ious-minded individual helped you learn the ropes and how to get around them. Now several others just like him are sponsoring an activities smoker to make certain that your extra-curricular life is what it should be, and be assured that the efforts of the Union staff in your behalf will not end there. The Michigan Union led by Robert Sibley, '42, each semester sponsors a Student Book Exchange, oie con- ducted on the pocket-saving barter principle. At about the same time it provides you with a membership card that enables you to cash checks at the Union at any time - providing that they are good, that you guar- antee their validity with something twice their value, and that you pre- sent them between 12 a.m. and 12:02 a.m. Among Other Among its other multitudinous and nefarious enterprises are pep rallies, the biggest and best of dances, and a mysteriously invisible weekly bridge tournament. To show that their interest is in more than the lighter things of life the moguls of the Union also provide an hour of classical music each week, special "Coffee Hours", and the cul- turally uplifting "Coke Bars." These are the things that may be seen on the surface, but there are many other services which the Union performs for which it gets little or no recognition. Foranyone interested in extra- curricular activities, the Michigan Union offers a varied and interesting program, one whose value will be re- flected in later life. World Peace Is SDD Aim Organization Champions Aid To Nazi Enemies Prosecution of the present conflict to a successful conclusion, the main- tenance of our civil liberties and democratic institutions at home in the course of that struggle, the for- mation of a worldwide democratic federation to guarantee peace in the postwar world, and the furtherance of social and economic progress in our own nation are the main planks in the platform of the Student De- fenders of Democracy, soon to merge with the Student League of America. Founded last year in the midst of a raging storm of public opinion on our foreign policy, the SDD has al- ways championed the dispatch of all possible aid to those nations fighting against Hitler and his allies. The Michigan Chapter of the Stu- dent Defenders of Democracy will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the Union to discuss the proposed merger with the Student League of America, and1 then to vote upon it. Those desiring3 information or wishing to .ioin should contact Homer Swander, '43, or at- tend the meeting.1 Originally the American Student1 Defense League, the local organiza- tion last year affiliated itself with the Student Defenders of Democracy,T a national youth organization having1 a parallel program. Now still an- other change of name is due, for thec Student Defenders of Democracy wast one of the student organizationsi sIiirc s' =t hcr- .h'If ,hv 'I\N inniA 41ri V Center For University Men Play Production Activities Give Budding Actors Their 'Break' Outstanding among the types of extra-curricular activities offered to students is that represented by Play Production of the Department of Speech. This group, which is rated highly among the little theatres of the coun- try, is organized for the purpose of providing dramatic entertainment for the campus and giving budding actors dramatic experience and training. The yearly program includes the winter dramatic season consisting of five plays given on the average of one a month from November to April, the Spring Drama Festival which opens in April and carries on through the end of the semester pre- senting plays with professional actors assisted by a few Play Production students, and the summer session's Michigan Repertory Players, com- posed of actors from Play Production and visiting directors and scenic de- signers. In addition to this, many experi- Non-Aff iliates Are Orgaie In Assembly Corresponding to Panhellenic As- sociation, the organization for af- filiated women, is Assembly, the campus organization for independent women. The purpose of this group is to promote an interest in outside activ- ities in the lives of independent women in the University. Through its monthly meetings, attended by representatives of smaller groups of women, the Assembly Board keeps in contact with all independent women. Leading the organization is an executive board of four, aided by 14 women who represent the League House residents, the Ann Arbor In- dependents, each of the eight dorm- itories and Beta Kappa Rho, an or- ganization for women students work- ing in Ann Arbor. Officers are Jean Hubbard, '42, president; Emily Root, '42, vice- president; Doris Cuthbert, '42, sec- retary and Elizabeth Ann Walker. '42, treasurer. Alpha Phi Onega Aids Community Performing useful services to the University, youth and the commun- ity, its members, and the nation is the role played by Alpha Phi Omega, national honorary fraternity for former boy scouts. A national service group, Alpha Phi Omega selects its members from. University students connected with scouting with the same procedures employed by the social fraternities. The chapter of Alpha Phi Omega here at Michigan was formally in- stalled in the national organization only last year, but it already has es-] tablished a record for beneficial serv- ices. mental plays are given under the guidance of Virginia Whitworth, who assists in the Department. Many of these plays are given with student directors from directing classes and student set designers from advanced stagecraft classes. Play Production actually consists of students in play production classes in the speech department-or students who have taken one or more of these courses. It is under the di- rection of Valentine B. Windt, asso- ciate professor of speech. Professor Windt, and in some cases William P. Halstead, assistant speech profes- sor, conducts tryouts for the plays about six weeks before they are to be given. All students in Play Production are eligible for extra-curricular ac- tivities because they must present eligibility cards before they may take the courses. This is one of the few courses for which a student must have an eligibility card. For the in- formation of second-semester fresh- men who are eligible, anyone not in Play Production may *~ry out for parts in the plays, although most students wait until they are in Play Production to try out. This year, with the initiation of the third-semester plan, the summer drama season will probably be very similar to the winter season, but the Drama Festival in the spring is al- ways quite different. In the first place, only students with outstanding ability have roles for most of the parts are taken by professional ac- tors from Broadway and Hollywood. Professor Windt directs these plays, Robert Mellencamp designs the sets and Emma Hirsch is costumiere. Engine Council Serves Groups Membership Is Elected By Various Societies Composed of representatives of every class and organization in the College of Engineering, the Engi- neering Council serves to coordinate the work of the various societies and to aid engineering extra-curricular work. Members are elected by the organi- zations they represent, while class delegates are chosen by popular bal- lot at the regular class elections. Class presidents are members ex- officio. The purposes of the organization have been set forth as follows: 1. To supervise any meetings, com- petitions, elections or other functions in which all engineering students, or none but engineering students par- ticipate: 2. To actively promote frequent so- cial functions of such a nature that they will have a popular appeal to all engineering students; 3. To represent the student body of the College of Engineering in any discussions with other schools or col- leges; 4. To advance the interests of the College of Engineering in any way Cfti lr l nil t4.ita MifliniF s II'' r. vv'. . rlni Chances Open For Students In Journalism The Department of Journalism of- fers to its students opportunities to show their journalistic aptitude through the honorary associations, Kappa Tau Alpha and Theta Sigma Phi. Kappa Tau Alpha, the National Scholarship Society in Journalism, sponsors bi-weekly discussions con- cerning the war and significant books on major issues. These discussions, which are a part of the War Board program, reflect the activities of the department in connection with the war. Theta Sigma Phi, the National Professional and Honorary Fraternity for Women in Journalism, will join Kappa Tau Alpha in these meetings. They are also open to all others who are interested, and coffee will be served during the discussion. Membership to the honorary jour- nalistic societies is -obtained by elec- tion on the basis of scholarship. Other opportunities to demonstrate journalistic prowess are offered in annual competition for three awards. A gold medal is given the student who has the best four-year scholastic rec- ord; a silver medal to the student who writes the best editorials while in the department, and a bronze medal to the best newswriter. These medals are part of the McNaught Award given each year by Mr. V. V. McMitt, '04, of the McNaught News- paper Syndicate of New York. Another award in journalism is offered by the American Newspaper Publishers Association. A $1000 cash prize and gold medal is awarded in national competition for the best monograph on the subject of "Achievements of the Daily News- paper in Public Service." Further information about the Journalism Department may be ob- tained from Prof. J. L. Brumm, head of the department. French Club Plans Lecture Programs Lectures and club meetings on al- ternating weeks make up the main program of Cercle Francais, the or- ganization whose purpose it is to acquaint the student with the more familiar aspects of the French tongue and culture. Remaining in the lectures series are four programs, scheduled for Feb. 18, Mar. 4, Mar. 18, and April 1. At the close of the year members of the organization will present a French play, April 29, in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Tickets for the lec- ture series are available at the of- fice of the secretary of the romance languages department. President of the club is George Kiss, Grad., and the faculty'adviser is Prof. Charles E. Koella of the ro- mance languages department. Architects Are Honored Alpha Alpha Gamma, national hon- orary sorority in architecture and its allied arti. has as its goal the fost- League Offers Social Center For U' Coeds Women's Union' Features Cafeteria, Music Room Ping Pong,_Club Rooms Occupying the same position in the extra-curricular life of women as the Union does with men students is the Michigan League, which is headquarters for all meetings and undergraduate organizations. Presid- ing over these activities is Margaret Sanford, '42, president of the League, who is aided in the various depart- ments by the 15 other members of the Undergraduate Council. Membership in the League is auto- matic upon enrolfitent and with graduation each woman student be- comes a life member of the organ- ization. As with the Union, the League provides the student with a library, music room, ping pong tables and private dining rooms, among other facilities. Both men and women are entitled to take advantage of the cafeteria on the main floor during meal and "coke" hours. League Orga nizationx Organization of the League is com- posed of eight committees, social, orientation, tutorial, dance class, theatre-arts, house merit system and candy booth. Participation in these committees is open to second semes- ter freshmen andall other students who have obtained eligibility cards. Women may be on more than one committee and should file their peti- tions for these organizations in the Undergraduate Office of the League. For further information, students may call Miss Sanford. The reward for real interest in the activities fostered by the League may be membership on the Council. Of- fices which are open each year to senior women are president, two vice- presidents, secretary and treasurer. Also members of the Council are the chairmen of the six standing com- mittees, candy-booth, theatre-arts, house, merit, dance class and social. The remainder of the executive or- ganization is made up of the presi- dents of the Judiciary Committee, Assembly, Women's Athletic Associ- ation, Panhellenic and the' Women's editor of The Daily. League Seeks The League seeks to make itself the meeting place for campus women and offers special classes, as in social dancing, as well as frequently spon- sored teas. A new feature last year is the 7-11 Club which provides an informal setting on week-end nights for dancing to records, light refresh- ments and card playing. Committee positions are available to all eligible women who petition for membership, and senior positions in the League are attained by partici- pating in committee work and "learn- ing the ropes in the freshman and sophomore years. Phi Beta Kappa Retains Strict Requirements Phi Beta Kappa, the oldest of all Greek letter secret societies, was or- ganized at the college of William -and Mary on December 6, 1776. The belief of the founders that a know- ledge of the basic laws which govern the universe is necessary to good living was reflected both in their motto and in the character of their meetings. These were in great part given over to a discussion of the problems which affect humanity. The Michigan Chapter was found- ed in 1907. Keeping in mind the pur- pose of the Society, the recognition and encouragement of scholarship and cultural interests, the Student I Elections Committee makes a care- ful study of the entire University record of each possible candidate with a view to determining as far as is humanly possible the student's standing both scholastically and as a citizen. The standards set are high and the relatively small numbers elected each year bears witness to the care with which they are observed. Since Phi Beta Kappa has been, from the beginning, an organization which functioned in the field defined by the old cultural college course, elections are restricted to Juniors and Seniors of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Seniors in the School of Education and to candidates for ad- vanced degrees in the Graduate School, who meet the extremely rigid requirements. Eligible Junior Women May JoinMusic Society Mu Phi Epsilon is the only national music honor society for women on campus. Qualifications for election to this society are a scholarship rat- ing in the upper quarter of the jun- Many Campus Supervised By Activities Group One of the most important Uni- versity extra-curricular groups, the Men's Judiciary Council claims among the greatest of its responsibilities recommendation of disciplinary ac- tion on cases referred to it by the University; these recommendations are in turn handed to the University Disciplinary Committee, a faculty group, for final decision. In addition, the Council super- vises all school elections except those of the Engineering Council and sen- ior engineering class officers. Others of its powers include supervising honor society initiations and formu- lating rules for campus dances. Any second semester junior may petition for a position on the Coun- cil. These petitions are in turn con- sidered by an appontment commit- tee'consisting of the managing editor of the Daily, the presidents of Con- gress, Interfraternity Council and the Union, the outgoing president of Judiciary Council and the dean of students. From those petitioning, the committee, selects before May 15 a president and six other men for mem- bership on the Council. President this year is William Slocum, '42. Honor Societies Pledge Women In a spring tapping, outstanding senior women will be honored by Mortarboard, national honorary soc- iety for women. Membership in Mor- tarboard is based upon good schol- arship, participation in extra-curric- ular activities and personality. Com- posed at present of about 18 mem- bers, the organization holds meetings every other week at the League. Wyvern, the honor society for jun- ior women, has as its purpose the promotion of friendship and coopera- tion between freshman and junior women. Prospective members, chosen on the basis of personality, scholar- ship and participation in outside ac- tivities, are "tapped" in the second semester of their sophomore year or in the first semester of their junior year. Luncheon meetings are held by Wyvern once each month. Michigan 'Wolverin.e is Run By Students The Michigan Wolverine, with 700 members, is now the largest student cooperative in the world. The Wolverine is far from being a mere restaurant. It is a club for students run by students. Its activi- ties vary from programs of sym- yhonic music to intramural athletic teams. Private parties and occasional dances form an important part of the Wolverine's activities. The club is run by a board of direc- tors, consisting of two faculty mem- bers, Charles W. Spooner, Jr., of the mechanical engineering department and Prof. Paul Mueschke of the Eng- lish department, three student ex- ecutive officers and seven students elected from the general member- ship. Group Aids Transfers Beta Sigma Rho was organized' at the University of Michigan' during the fall termn of 1931 and soofrTafter- IFC Is Open To Affiliated Men Students Any sophomore student who is a member of a social fraternity is eligi- ble to try out for the Interfraternity Council, the "clearing house for gen- eral fraternity activities." The minimum time required for work on the Council is one afternoon a week for office hours and one half- hour meeting a week. Meetings are held in the Interfraternity Council Room. 306 in the Union. The Council takes charge of all ar- rangements for Interfraternity Ball, the Pledge and Initiation Banquets, the Interfraternity Sing, Greek Week, and the presentation of a scholarship cup to the pledge class with the high- est scholastic average. In addition to these activities, the Interfraternity Council also sponsors most of the fraternity charity func- tions such as the annual Christmas party and Tag Day. All sophomore fraternity men in- terested in becoming active on the Council are requested to watch the D.O.B. for announcement of the per- son to contact for further information about Council activities. Men's Council Takes Petitions