FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1944 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ___________________________ I I I DOES ITS SHAREa: Union Participates in War Activities A. One of the foremost contributors to the Univer~smy's war effort is the tradition steeped University Union, the campus club for Michigan men. Ine addition to its functions as the central point of a large proportion of campus activities, the Union takes an active part in. such war activities as maintaining a Student Blood Donor's Bank to aid the Red Cross in its blood donor drives, the Bomber Scholarship, to enable University war Veterans to continue their edu- cation here after the war and a weekly "GI" Stomp, a record dance for servicemen on campus. Mem'oership in Union New University men make their first acquaintance of the Union dur- ing Orientation Week. As soon as enrollment in the University is com- pleted the student becomes a mem- ber of the Union and is entitled to any of the Union services and facili- ties granted members. During Orientation Week, upper classmen, who shepherd incoming students around campus and explain the complexities of Michigan life, have been trained for their jobs by the Union student staff. Since Union dues are part of every full-time student's tuition fee, new men on campus immediate- ly are eligible to use the 22-table bil- liards room, the table tennis room, the bowling alley, swimming pool, Pendleton library, lounges, confer- ence rooms and hotel facilities. Other Facilities Besides the recreational facilities and the Pendleton Library, the Union also contains a barber shop, cafe- teria, taproom and student offices for various campus activities. Offices of the Interfraternity council, Congress, Executive and District Councils, and three Senior Secret Societies-Michigamua, the all-campus group, and Vulcans, the engineering society, are all in the Union. Other Union functions during the year include Friday night informal date dances beginning at 7:30 p. m. and ending at midnight. These rec- ord dances have replaced the usual Friday and Saturday night dances, complete with a band, which are war casualties. They are started early to enable V-12 members on campus to cram in some fun before they return to barracks on Friday night. The Union produces an Hour of Fun program every two months in Hill Auditorium featuring campus talent. It annually sponsors the President's Birthday Ball January 30 for the aid of sufferers of infantile paralysis. Ticket Resale Desk During football season it maintains a ticket resale desk for the conven- ience of those wishing to sell or ex- change their tickets. On Sunday evenings the Union shows movies of the preceding Michigan football games. Union tradition goes back to the beginning of the century. In 1903 and 1904 plans were first formulated for a Michigan Men's Organization. Nov. 17, 1907, the Union was first opened to members. The building was the former Judge Cooley home and featured two dining rooms serv- ing a total of 70, one billiard table, a lounge and a desk where cigars and sundries were sold. By 1912 a structure to serve as ballroom and banquet hall was be- gun. Two years later it was recog- nized that the "Cooley House" was inadequate and a campaign to raise $1,000,000 for a new clubhouse was launched. Non-Affiliated Men Organized Into Congress Organization Begun To Provide Representation In Campus Activities The Congress for Independent Men was organized in 1937 to provide some sort of representation for campus men who would not be co-ordinated by the Inter-Fraternity Council or the Inter-Cooperative Council. Before F the war members came mostly from men in private rooming house, who would otherwise have had no voice or active part in cam- pus activities. The policy-forming part of the congress and the liaison between the men and the officers was the Rooming House Council. Mem- bers of the council were elected as representatives of the rooming houses in the various zones into which the congress had divided Ann Arbor. One of the attractions of mem- bership in the congress, in addition to its social activities, was the cost discount arrangements the group had mnade with several local merchants. Orientation Will lBe Curtailed A curtailed war-time orientation program is being planned for the smallest group of entering freshmen in many years under the leadership of Bob Gaukler, orientation chair- man.' The modified orientation will be' held from Wednesday, June 28, to Saturday, July 1, for approximately 125 new men students. It is expected that there will be three groups of engineers and four groups of literary college freshmen, with 25 students in each group. The eight orientation advisors will meet Tuesday, June 27, to make final plans. Continuing an innovation of last summer, the chief entertainment for the new students will be an Amateur Hour to be given at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Each group will be assigned a topic to act out for the presentation, with most of them based on Orientation Week experiences. Because too few coeds will be en- tering the University in July, no Orientation Week Dance will be held, Gaukler said, but there will be coke dates on a Dutch-treat basis, tours of the campus and an information booth in the League lobby for the benefit of the freshmen. STUDENT DEMOCRACY: Co-op Life Teaches Initiative, Responsibility, Management "Cooperative living stands for ini- tiative, independence and complete democracy," states Irv Statler, presi- dent of the Inter-Cooperative Coun- cil, when introducing Ccaperatives to new students who plan to come to the University during the sum- mer and fall semesters. "The students run their own house, do their own work and take full re- sponsibility for all duties and man- agement-that is the way a democ- racy is run," Statler goes on to say. Co-op members have pointed out that outside of a few University rules which all houses must observe, all rules in the houses are made by the members. Dynamic Democracy Cooperative students pride them- selves not only on their dynamic de- mocracy, but also for the economy they employ. By means of the Inter- Cooperative Council, which is the central organ of all the Cooperative houses, they are able to buy much of their food at low prices in mass quantities. In each house all work -is divided equally so that expenses arc held to from $3.50 to $7 per person, room and board, each house. from 5 to 7 house. varying in price with Students usually work hours a week in the Born During Depression Although the Cooperative idea was born in the chaos of the depression, it has grown rapidly since then so that at present there are five girls' houses and two mens' houses on campus. Six of the houses are rent- ed while the seventh was bought by the ICC this spring. IFCAct ivities Continue in War In spite of the war the Infraternity Council is still an active organization on campus, and is now attempting to keep the fraternities running un- til after the war. The IFC is an organization of all the fraternities on campus. its poli- cies are determined by meetings of the house presidents of the fraterni- ties and the IFC. The IFC sees that the rules for governing the houses are carried out. 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