Pia r ME TUMM'AS FDXMY ~VrrTI T. i i o __ StudentCo-ops Traced 19th Century Project Had Broad Effect Mutual Sharing Is Basis of Movement By JEAN FAGAN American student cooperatives, a segment of the international cooperative movement have grown from a small house operated by a group of University of Michigan students-to a national organiza- tion with a membership of sev- eral thousands. In 1844, however, the group of 28English weavers who decided to run a non-profit grocery store at Rochdale could hardly have dreamed that their unusual ex- periment in cooperation would be followed by millions of people in almost every nation on the globe. Fundamental Principle The group was initiated on a simple share - and - share - alike basis, which has remained the fundamental principle of the co- operative movement. Each consumer-member was al- lowed one Vote, and each received returns according to his purchases' and dealings with the enterprise. Therewas no discrimination, and everyone helped with the work and management. Those Rochdale principles are maintained today by all co-op members in the United States Student Co-ops New Before the depression of 1929,1 there was no lasting cooperative activity in American colleges and universities, although several co- operatively run stores 'and fac- tories existed. In 1932, however, a coopera- tive room-and-board house was started at the University which held on despite depression, pres- sures, and lack of sufficient funds. Pine Tree Is x.rCo-op Symbl The pine-tree emblem of Amer- ican cooperatives is more than an emblem-it is a symbol. Two green pine trees within a green circle on a yellow ground make up the emblem, now used throughout the U. S. by consumer, produce and student coopera- tives. Evergreens, ancient symbol of eternal life and endurance, sym- bolize the enduring quality of co- operation. Two trees represent the need of mutual help and their equal size represent the spirit of democracy, The pine-tree symbol was de- signed by Dr. James P. Warbasse, president emeritus of the U. S. Cooperative League. Co-operatives' Ann iersary Marked Here Michigan House as Pioneer in Movement Michigan Co-operative House, the oldest college room-and-board 7ocperative in the United States, is ;elebrating its sixteenth anniver- sary this fall. In 1932, during the depths of the depression,. thedStudent So- cialist Club planned to operate . house where students could ob- tain low-cost meals and housing. The group appealed to Ann Ar- bor citizens for donations of fur- niture and textbooks, and with the help of The Michigan Daily and the Ann Arbor Daily News, were able to start operating the house. Complications due to red-tape and the newness of tthe project were many and overpowering at first, but through practice in man- agement, and under the guidance of Mrs. Ruth B. Buchanan, the students were able to keep the house. During the sixteen years of its existence, Michigan House has known two locations, two names, and seven hundred students who have worked and eaten under the co-op plan. *~ * .,, Muriel Lester House, one of the two women's co-ops, houses 20 students andastudent house- mother, chosen by the members and approved by the Dean of Women. The house was started in 1940, and has been in its present quar- ters since 1942. Despite rising liv- ing costs, Lester House charges $6.50 each week for room and board, a price which is only ,$1.50 higher than that charged in 1943. The house received national publicity in '43, when it was fea- tured as an average campus co-op in the Saturday Evening Post. POOLS POW ER : ICC Welds Co-op Members Into Utiified Operatingr(houp By JOlN MORRIS Five co-op houses, with a total miembership of 170, operate as ai single unit, cue to the efforts of the Inter-Cooperative Council, which was organized late in 1940. Made up of students elected from e h ol the houses, the ICC pools buying power, handles mem- bership, and provides a series of social and educatiiuAtl programs for the members. The 1CC purchaser, captain of the team of purchasers elected from each house, gathers market and food information. enabling them to buy when prices are best News Affects Prices Purchasers know that news sto- ries affect prices: A Florida storm means a rise in Citrus fruit prices; a decision bet ween wheat and corn flakes is based on grain-pit quota- tions in Chicago. Ca reful huying methlods hare improved the relations between the ICC and business firms, wh are eager to supply accurate data on their prodicts. New Members New members are assigned t houses by the ICC membershil committee, which, like other ICC committees, is made up of mem hers eleeted trom each of the Members are selected on their potential value as co-opers and their individual need, as deter- mined by the committee. The ICC social committee is charged with providing entertain- ment for the member houses in the form of parties, pwinics, and bi-monthly exchange dinners be- tween the men's and women's 1 houses. At ICC parties, held twice a se- mester, the atmosphere is infor- mal, admission is not charged. nqr is it restricted to members. I - - -- - -- SYou Con Lose Unwanted Pounds and Inches e just where you want them off; no diets, drugs, medicines or o back breaking exercises. It a Harold M. Baskin o Physio Therapist p 8 N. Normal -St. Phone 2410 C YPSILANTI -I CO-OP APARTMENT-Barrington Hall at Berkeley, Calif., houses 150 women members of the University Students' Cooperative Association. 50,000 STRONG: Student Co-op Move ments Had Origins on'U' Campus Daily--Lmanian CURTAIN RAISING-Jerry Byer and Otto MacMorris, two Mich- igan Cooperative House members, install new curtains. From its inception on the Mich-, igan campus in 1932, the student cooperative movement has spread throughout the country, and now includes more than 50,000 mem- bers.. Representing campus co-ops on the national level is the newly formed North American Student Cooperative League, which last summer held its second annual business meeting in Berkeley, Calif. Closer to home is the Midwest Federation of Campus Coopera- tives, until recently housed at Michigan. At NASCL and MFCC confer- ences, co-opers get a look at other campuses and other co-op set- ups. At the University of Texas, which celebrated its eleventh an- niversary last summer, one of its new houses was built entirely by co-op members. With the help Co-op Experience Proves Valuable Training in cooperatives here has been valuable to local co-op alumni and leaders. Jean Curtis, Ella Aidel, and Bill Gamzon, three University co-op members are engaged in working with the Mid-West Federation of Campus Cooperatives, and nation- al co-op organizations, as a re- sult of the training that they received in house-management and personnel work here. of a local lumber company, the house was built at a substantial saving. At the MFCC conference in Chi- cago last month, co-op delegates were housed in coeducational houses. There men and women -Jeep on separate floors, but din- ing and living rooms are open to both sexes. Another Chicago co-op was named a single family unit re- cently, when zoning regulations threatened to make several stu- dents homeless. Student co-ops on other cam- puses have entered fields other than housing. Co-op restaurants, bookstores, laundries and other money-saving enterprises are own- ed and operated by the students themselves. At Antioch College, Ohio, stu- dents are operating a co-op snack bar, and many campuses are run- ning restaurants similar to the Wolverine, which operated here before the war. Co-ops at Berkley, Calif., where the organization includes mor than 800 members, not only have such large modern facilities ac Barrington Hall, which is pictur- ed, but also run a catering serv- ice providing meals not only t members but to other student or- ganizations at low cost. Bookstores on many campuse, are operated on a consumer co- operative basis, eliminating pro- fits and passing the savings on t students in the form of patron age refunds. e e s s -0 Lester honor of who has for slum activities to the members House was named in an English social worker done much in working clearance. Although her were not directly related cooperative movement, of the house wished to l r f honor the spirit with which she strived to better workers' living conditions. Robert Owen House, the largest men's co-op on campus, was start- ed in the fall of 1940 by 18 stu- dents. The house grew rapidly until the outbreak of war, when mem- bers were drafted into the army, and 1943 found the few remain- ing Owenites hauling spuds from their victory garden and working part time in war plants. In 1944 the Inter-Co Council bought a new house for the Owen men, but it became a women's co- operative until '46 when the men returned in sufficient force to 'again take over. * * * Stevens Co-op, which accommo- dates 19 men, was founded in the fall of 1944, and is named for Prof. A. K. Stevens, a lecturer for the University Extension Service. Prof. Stevens who has believed in and aided the campus coopera- tive movement since its inception, takes pride in the fact that an "international educational melt- ing pot" bears his name. The men in the Stevens House, as in all other co-ops, are of vari- ous racial and religious back- grounds. ** * Osterweil House, the newest co- operative on campus, was started in the spring of 1946. The house accommodates 17 women and a student housemoth- er chosen by the members and ap- proved by the University. The house is named for Harold Osterweil, a Michigan student who was instrumental in establishing the Inter-Cooperative Council. fI I i INTER -COOPERATIVE Uiiihinq i/ice COUN CIL '. U. S. PAIl Azol _ 0 awk Q Q 90~' ,;r r GREENE'S M cr clean AN UNDER THE MICROSCOPI ' ,rNeOWI get started Many fine positions at good salaries Since January 1, we have received many times more calls for office employees than we have been able to fill. Trained office work- ers are scarce. Starting salaries range from $140 per month. Train Quickly You can complete a business course in from 9 to 18 months. Courses include secretarial, ac- counting, bookkeeping, steno- graphic, office machines and stenotyping. New Classes New Classes will start on Mon- day, November 17. A limited number of new students can be at the University of Michigan continued sue- cessful operation on the occasion of Campus Co-ops' 15th Anniversary. The Michigan Cooperative Houses * First in the Country - pioneers for over 200,000 College Students, living cooperatively * Following the Rochdale Principles of Cooperation: Open Membership... One Member - One Vote Neutrality in Religion and Politics Constant Education. .. Continuous Expansion it Ann Arbor Sealtest Dairy 121 Catherine Liberty Music Shop 205 East Liberty 2-0675 A&P Food Stores East Huron Street Symons Bros. & Co. I I rMPIACA-it" - 9372 A I I 11 9372 11