TWO I THE MICHIGAN DAILY -- FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1947 'SMOKE, SMOKE. .': Coeds Thicken Atmosphere By Putting 'T-Zones' to Test g ~1 '1 By FRAN ICK .. What's this three-to-one ratio doing to our coeds' nerves - local druggists report that they've tak- n to chain-smoking in a big ,ay' Men on campus may be more numerous thai women, but they can't hold a candle to them whenl it comes.to cigarettes, for coeds buy about half of the 1,500 packs sold each week by the average campus drugstore. Girls who smoke, smoke more than men, a local druggist said. "There are more chain-smokers among women than among men." In agreement with this, another druggist declared than when a woman takes up smoking, she be- comes: a production-line smoker - one after another. Perhaps the coed's view is ob- scured by the haze, for she tends to stick to the well-advertised brand more closely than does the average man. She buys more king- size cigarette-holders than the man. The coeds are.halso lazy about their smoking; they buy by the carton much more than do men. A ray of light was shed on the situation by one counter attend- ant who observed, "Coeds don't seem to enjoy smoking as much as fellows. They light a cigarette and take a couple drags just to have something to do.." Taking into consideration the ratio. of men to coeds, the equal cigie-butt consumption between the .s exes indicates that coeds smoke three times as much per capita as men students. Add to this he cigarettes women mooch or snoke on dates, and the Uni- versity is in quite a heated condi- tion. ICC To Send 25 Delegates To Conference Twenty-five delegates from the University's Inter- Cooperative Council will be present at the con- vention of the Midwest Federation of Campus Co-Ops to be held this weekend in Chicago. Jerry Rees, president of the ICC, stated that the delegates repre- sent more than 100 students liv- in in the five ICC houses in Ann Arbor. The Michigan delegation will be one of the largest at the meeting, which will include representatives from more than a dozen colleges and universities. Dean Attends Meeting Dean. Russell A. Stevenson, of the business administration school, is in Chicago to attend a meeting of the Committee on Standards of the American Association of Col- legiate Schools of Business. 1 i '4 Guild Open House.. . Roger Williams Guild Nill have an open house at 8:33 p.m. tonight at the Guild House. The program includes games, dancing, discus- sion and refreshments. All stu- dents are welcome. Astronomy Event ... Visitors' night at the Angell Hall observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. today. Plans call for the observation of the rmeon, provided the sky remains clear. In case of cloudy skies, the Open Night will be cancelled. Children must be accompan- ied by their parents. * * * , Hillel Even..- Open House will be held at B'naif B'rith Hillel following the game tomorrow. Cider, doughnuts and apples will be served as refresh- ments. All members and friends have been urged to attend with their guests. * * * IC Record Dance . .. A record dance will be held at 8 p.m. today in the recreation room of the International Cen- ter. All those interested may at- tend. * * * 'Uplift League' . . The "Blue Monday Uplift Lf ague" will meet at 7:30 p.m. Mon., Oct. 27 at Lane Hall. This organization was created and sponsored by the Student Re- ligious Association and is open to all students who are interested in participating in an evening of Hal- loween festivities. Students at- tending this event are advised to wear blue-jeans. Unless the Oxford University debaters coming to the campus Wednesday reveal some nic-- names, formal introductions prom- ise to be slightly complicated af- fairs. Used to meeting Americans named "Joe" and "Bill," faculty members and students will have to be excused a gasp or two when they hear the visitors' names. Leading the list is the Hon. An- thony Neil Wedgwood Benn, whose cognomen is clearly inferior when compared with that of his dis- tinguished father. Scarcely less impressive is the name of Sir Edward Charles Gur- ney Boyle, who is a baronet. The third member of the team offers a breather. He answers to plain David Kenneth Hars. Two of these men will be picked to face Michigan's William Starr and William Flaskamp at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Rackham Lecture Hall. Oxford will take the nega- tive on the proposition, "That the working of a modern democracy demands a liberal rather than a vocational education." In the only other visit of an Oxford team to the University, Campus Highlights IMPRESSIVE MONICKERS: Oxford Debaters List Names of Distinction the Michigan debate team tri- umphed on the question of pro- hibition. That was back in 1925. Oxford's debaters are making a four-month tour of this country's universities, debating one of four given topics selected by each op- ponent. They will arrive in the midwest after meeting schools in the East and Canada. From here, they will proceed west, then south along the coast. A trip through the southern states to the east coast will terminate their tour about the middle of January. # I I I $. I , . ": -41,111 ARE YOU BLOODTH IRSTY? We dare you to see "THE ADAMS HOUSE STORY" CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING h-r I .o Time-Saturday Morning Adm.-FREE Place-Thompson St. between Jefferson and Monroe ----------