THE MIChIGAN DAILY TUE S'T)AY..TANUATVV7,191 s Will Sign JDENT CONTROL: hicago Conference Sets udependenceProgram EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of' a series of five articles dealing with the Chicago Student Confer- ence. Establishing the independence nd freedom from censorship of udent organizations and publi- ations, eliminating the com- ercialization in intercollegiate ports, and assuring that all stu- ent activity funds are controlled y the students themselves were Mme of the aims agreed upon at ae Chicago Student Conference ecember 28-30. fichigan Delegates Among thes475 representatives f 304 colleges in 42 states who et at the University of Chicago plan the creation of a National tudent Organization were four ridge Contest E'ntries Begin Bridge enthusiasts may register r the annual all-campus bridge urnament from 3 to 5 p.m. to- iy and tomorrow at the Student ffices in the Union. Onlysundergraduate University udents are eligible and must gister in order to enter the tour- ament. Names and addresses of th participants will be neces- ry. The elimination round will take ace at 1:45 p.m. Sunday, in the riion Ballroom. The Howell system of duplicate idge will be used. Sections will set up, consisting of six or ven tables. Four couples will be lected from each section to com- te on the following Thursday, in. 16. The number of sections il depend on the number of )uples entering the tournament. Two couples selected from the nal round will represent the niversity as finalists in an inter- >llegiate bridge tournament with etional rinners throughout the untry. This tournament will be eld in Chtcago. Mixed couples and stags are eli- ble. The Union will award me- alions to the top four couples. Michigan delegates: Terrell Whit- sett, Rae Keller, James Reiss, and Tom Walsh who, as an alternate delegate from the Student Legis- lature,, took the place of Archie Parsons who was ill. Promote Student Exchange Fostering cultural activities, promoting two-way student ex- change and facilitating student travel both within this country and abroad were advocated as measures to promote student friendship and understanding on national and international levels. A National Continuations Com- mittee was established which, act- ing on the mandates set forth by the Chicago conference, is to pre- sent a tentative constitution for the new organization to the con- vention which will meet next summer. Whitsett on Committee MiChigan's Terrell Whitsett was named vice-chairman of the Michigan region by 18 delegates representing eight schools within the state. He is, therefore, an al- ternate member of the NCC which is composed of one delegate from each of 30 regions plus three members of national student or- ganizations. Jim Smith, president of the University of Texas Student As- sembly, whose initiative produced compromises on several major controversial issues, was chosen to head the NCC. By acclamation, Russell Austin of the University of Chicago, chairman of the American delegation to the World Students Congress in Prague last summer, was made the NCC vice- chairman. Other officers elected were Cliff Wharton of Harvard, secretary; and John Simon of Ford ham, treasurer. The delegates ordered the con- tinuations committee to investi- gate means of cooperation with the World Student Service Fund and "favored the principle of need alone as the basis of the distribu- tion of relief." Tomorrow: Shadow of the Con- federacy etsWn For Refresher Course Today Registration will begin at 8 a.m. today in the Rackham Building for the University's fourth Veter- ans Refresher Course, according to Clark Hopkins, assistant di- rector of the Veterans Service Bu- reau. Actual classes will begin Thurs- day morning and meet four days a week concluding on Tuesday, Feb. 4: As of yesterday 130 men had enrolled but the total num- ber may be as high as 150 by the time the refresher course actually begins. One class each will be offered in history, chemistry and physics. A review of English, a course in lit- erature and five mathematics courses complete the schedule. Veterans will be allowed to choose only one mathematics course. Besides the regular classes, spe- cial tours of the general library and of the R.O.T.C. rifle range have been arranged. In order to qualify for subsis- tence under the GI Bill of Rights, veterans will be required to take three four-hour classes, and they are at liberty to select a fourth if they wish. Hopkins stated that no upperclass subjects are being of- fered by the University because' most of the incoming veterans' have not been to college or else left in their freshman year. The purpose of the refresher course, according to Hopkins, is to get veterans accustomed to study- ing and to get them acquainted with the University and other stu- dents. Most of the veterans com- ing in now went into service after the war had finished, he said, and their readjustment will be prob- ably more simple than that of vet- erans enrolled in previous terms. Coeds Given Icy Greeting Thirty-two members of Gamma Phi Beta sorority re- turned to their cold house yes- terday after workmen repaired the furnace stoker which filled the house with coal gas fumes during Christmas vacation. Barred from the house by the Health Service Sunday, Gam- ma Phi members spent the night doubling up at other so- rorities or sleeping at the Union. Eleven women slept in the sorority annex. Theatre Offers Award Play The Drama Critics' Award play "The Glass Menagerie" will be given at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Michigan Theatre. Produced and staged by Eddie Dowling, the cast of the Tennes- see Williams comedy drama in- cludes Pauline Lord, Jeanne Shep- herd, Richard Jones and Edward Andrews. The play, which won the acclaim of critics all over the country, ran two years on Broad- way. The plot of the play concerns the struggle of a southern widow to obtain wealth for her son and a suitable "gentleman friend" for her daughter. The title of the play is taken from the collection of glass animals which symbolize the characters' dream world. Tomorrow night's performance will be the only one given in Ann Arbor by this company. Annual Party To Open Union Doors To Girls The fron, door of the Union will be open to women for the annual Union Open House, when the house committee entertains Uni- versity students with a variety of activities from 1 to 5 p.m. Satur- day. The all-day affair will include competitive sports playoffs, a wat- er ballet, dancing and a special General Electric stage show. Tournaments to be played off are bowling and billards, for which trophies will be awarded. The bowling tournament has been featured this semester, and the 14 finalists will compete. Billiards will be played on an individual basis that day. In addition, the WAA Swimming Club is to pre- sent a water ballet in the Union pool. Electrical stunts and scientific acts will be featured in the Union Ballroom by the General Electric House of Magic. Programs will be distributed to guests for information as to the time and place of the events. A member of the Union will ap- pear on campus Friday wearing some personal ideritification. What it is to be will be announced later. The Union will honor the student who can identify him during the open house, in addition to a num- ber of prizes to be awarded. The event is held annually to acquaint students on campus with activities and facilities of the Un- ion. Student Directories may be pur-' chased from 1 to 5 p.m. today through Friday at the 'Ensian Business office in the Student Publications Building. Polonia Meeting . Polonia Society will hbld a meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the International Center. Congregational ea... Tea will be served from 4:30 to 6 p.m. today at the Congre- gational-Disciples Guild House. ASME To Meet ... The American Society of Metal- lurgical Engineers will hold a business meeting at 4 p.m. tomor- row in the seminar room of the East Engineering Building. The Ensian pictures will be re- taken. * * * Piano Recital*. . . Helen Ashley, pianist, will present a piano recital in par- tial fulfillment of the require- ments for a Masters Degree in Music at 8:30 p.m. today at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The program, which is open to the general public, will in- clude three sonatas by Beethov- en, Chopin and Schubert. 'Ensian Tryouts . .. There will be a meeting of all Ensian Edit staff tryouts at 4:15 p.m. today in the Student Publi- cations Building. Broadcast Change . .. "Stump the Professor," Uni- versity radio program, which was formerly heard at 2 p.m. Saturday over Station WJR, will be broadcast at 2:30 p.m. hereafter. Guests this Saturday will be Dr. Frank Robbins, Major Rob- ert Brown. Professors Robert Angell, George Kiss and Amos Morris. Chemical Society .. Faculty and student members of Phi Lambda Upsilon, national Fson chemical honorary society, will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. W. L. Badger, consuting engi- neer, will show kodachrome slides of his 1946 business trip to Eu- rope. Canterbury Club,. Following Holy Communion Service at 7:15 a.m. tomorrow, the Canterbury Club will serve breakfast at the Student Cen- ter. * * * House Presidents . . League House presidents will hold a compulsory meeting at 5 p.m. today in the League. Prof. Irene Place, of the School of Business Administration, will speak on "Career Opportunities for Women in Business." Prof. Warren *. - Prof. Austin Warren, of the University of Iowa English de- partment, will give a talk on "Emerson as Self-Therapist" at 4:15 p.m. today in Rackham Am- phitheatre. Prof. Warren is associate edi- tor of two scholarly journals, "The New England Quarterly," and "American Literature." In addition, he has contributed over 30 articles on English and Ameri- can literature to such pubhca- tions. The author of biographies on Alexander Pope, Henry James and others, Prof. Warren is known for his work both as a research scholar and a writer of criticism. Before becoming a member of tht Iowa faculty in 1939, Prof. Warren taught at the Universities of Kentucky, Minnesota and Bos- ton. His lecture today is open lto the public. CAMPUS HIGHLIGHTS Prof. ("Iusiaf soll o * Plant hormones will pe dis- cussed by Prof. Felix G. Gustaf- son and Prof. Carl D. LaRue, of the botany department, in a Sigma Xi symposium at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphi- theatre. "The Chemistry of Hor- mones and their Physiological Effects" is the subject of Prof. Custafson's talk. Prof. LaRue will speak on "Some Morpho- oigical Effects of Hormones." Refreslhments will be served following a question period. The meeting is open to the public. Urology Seminar. More than 65 doctors from all over the country will attend a postgraduate seminar in urology, sponsored by the department of postgraduate medicine of Univer- sity Hospital and the Detroit Uro- logical Society, tomorrow and Thursday at Rackham Amphi- theatre. Guest lecturers at the Seminar will be Dr. Robert R. Dieterle, consultant in psychiatry at St. Joseph's hospital in Ann Arbor, Dr. Robert S. Hotchkiss, assistant professor of urology at New York University Medical College and Dr. Robert C. Moehlig, professor of clinical medicine at Wayne University. Diamonds and Wedding s cw (i 4ELV'Rings f)717 North University Ave. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 (Continued from Page 2) U. of M. Flying Club meet to- morrowsat 7:30 p.m., Rm. 1042, E. Announcing the OPENING OF A NEW SERVICE to the Students and Faculty of Michigan THE STATE STENOGRAPHIC SERVICE willbring you all the advantages of a private office at a cost that everyone can afford. You can profit by using the services of a stenographer and typist familiar with your copy requirements. Inquiries invited Hill and State Streets ... Phone 9502 803 South State Mrs. Rose Jennings I Engineering tonight. La P'tite Grill Room, Bldg. Board meeting Causette: 3:30 p.m., League. meet at 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Paul F. Chenea, 1054 South Main. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation social committee meeting at 4:30 p.m., at Foundation. U of M chapter of the Intercol- legiate Zionist Federationiof America meet at 8 p.m., Hillel Foundation. The Hechalutz Con- vention and the World Zionist Congress will be discussed. Chlristian Science Organization meeting at 7:30 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. League House Presidents. Im- perative House Presidents meeting at 5 p.m., League. Mrs. Irene Place will address the group on the sub- ject "Career Opportunities for Women in Business." Play Reading Section of the Faculty Women's Club meet at the home of Mrs. A. G. Ruthven at 2 p.m. Polonia Club meeting at p.m., International Center. freshments. 7:30 Re- i Commg Events Notice to Students in Wood Tech- nology: Mr.,Leo Jiranek, Consultant De- signer, will speak on Furniture Design at 11 a.m., Thurs., Jan. 9, East Lecture Room, Mez. Floor, Rackham Bldg. All Wood Tech- nology students are expected to attend. Faculty and students of other Departments are invited. fU. of M. Section of the Ameri- can Chemical Society will meet at 4:15 p.m., Jan. 10, Rm. 151, Chemistry Bldg. Dr. W. M. Stan- ley, Department of Animal and Plant Pathology, The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, Princeton, N.J. will, speak on "Studies on Purified Influenza Virus." The public is cordially in- vited. Dr. Sam G. Wildman of the California Institute of Technol- ogy will discuss the Separation and Properties of Spinach Pro- tein at 4:15, Jan. 8, East Lecture Room, Rackham Bldg. Everyone invited. Delta Sigma Pi, professional Business Administrationffrater- nity, pledge meeting at 7 p.m., Wed., Jan. 8, Rm. 302, Union. Ac- tives meet 7:30 p.m., Rm. 302, Un- ion. Sigma Xi: 8 p.m., Wed., Jan. 8, Rackham Amphitheatre. A sym- posium on the physiological and the morphological effects of "Plant Hormones." Speakers, Professors Felix G. Gustafson and Carl D. LaRue, of the Department of Botany. The public is invited. Phi Lambda Upsilon faculty and student members meet at 7:30 p.m., Wed., Jan. 8, W. Confer- ence Room, Rackham. Mr. W. L. Badger will show kodachrome slides of his 1946 business trip to Europe. Romance Language Journal Club meet at 4:15 p.m., Jan. 8, East Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Prof. Charles Koella will speak on "Panait Istrati, le vaga- bond humanitaire." AVC Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Wed., Union. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented Repaired STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 I I WE ARE OPEN FOR BUSINESS at 115 W. 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