I LGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1949 _. J _ --- --- M - I CAMPUS HOOVER COMMISSION: SL Revamps Election Procedure Phi Eta Sigma Names Qualified Men .4 Setting up a Citizenship Com- mittee to guide student elections by the Student Legislature, came as the result of several months digging by an SL Citizenship Study Committee. The Committee, which has as much local prestige as the Hoover Commission does nationally, pre- sented a six point program to re- vamp elections. Four of the pro- posals were accepted and the rest tabled in the face of serious oppo- sition. THE SECOND proposal accepted by SL involved a Constitutional amendment which would make at- tendance at Legislature tryout meetings compulsory for candi- dates and, at the same time, abandon candidates' petitions. Ratification in the coming elec- tion by two-thirds of students vot- ing will put the amendment into effect. The Legislature accepted the committee's recommendation that the new permanent Citi- zenship Committee utilize ex-of- 'Religion in Labor' Conference To Open at Lane Hall Today _ Spokesmen for labor and man- agement of the Willow Run Kais- er-Frazer plant will start the wheels rolling for a two day Re- ligion-in-Labor conference at 1:30 p.m. today. The conference is one of series sponsored each year by the Stu- dent Religious Association as part of a study of social problems. * * * - AFTER TOURING the automo- bile plant, conference members will return to Lane Hall to the conference speaker, Rabbi Harry Essrig, of Grand Rapids. Later the conference will unite with Hillel Foundation in a special program. Rabbi Essrig will speak on "A Religious Inter- pretation of Today's Labor Sit- uation" at 7:45. The program will continue with special group discussions on Sat- urday at Lane Hall. Discussion leaders will be Prof. Ronald Freddman, Prof. Clark Dickinson, Rev. Frank Littell, Rev. John But, Rabbi Essrig, Robert Stevens and Gene Martinson. ficio the experience of SL alum- ni. They also passed motion calling for a study to be made of the Uni- versity's administrative commit- tees with the objective of develop- ing them into joint Student-Fac- ulty administrative committees. LAID ASIDE for further consid- eration were proposals to bring "major campus organizations" closer to SL by giving them non- voting seats. Suggested groups were Union, League, Student Re- ligious Association, IFC, AIM, Pan- Hel and Assembly. Factions op- posed SRA and tried to add the Inter-Cooperative Council and AVC before tabling. President Jans said he would appoint a commit- tee to study the motion. A recommendation that mem- bers of campus groups also serve on SL committees was also held over. Social Study Groups Open Membership Exploration groups sponsored by the sociology and psychology de- partments to help freshmen gain a perspective of college life are ac- cepting new members. These 'X-Groups,' organized last semester, meet weekly to discuss problems of interest to the mem- bers. DISCUSSION TOPICS can roughly be divided into three cate- gories.: 1. Problems with social sig- nificance such as prejudice and racial discrimination. 2. Political problems with em- phasis on US foreign policy and the United Nations. 3. Personal problems of dat- ing, family relations and study habits. By means of 'role playing,' a de- vice which employs students act- ing out situations, many issues are clarified. * * * UNDERSTANDING of some topics has been aided by inviting faculty members to give informal talks. Last semester, most of the groups were either all men or all women. This year, however, the planning committee feels that the groups willfunction better if they are mixed. Groups are limited to 12 mem- bers each with one faculty mem- ber to act as advisor. Names of the mien ,IiLibl for hi Eta im r m i; I" announcei i Jcrn Goidnan. president of the mi diOn. Eligibility is ba: .d on the achievement of a 3. 5average for the first freshman semester or an overall 3.5 average for both se- mesters. * * * POTENTIAL members are Ger- ald Abramow, Constantine-Doras Argyriadis, Richard Aster. Ken- neth Averill. John Beck, Carll Beers, Edward Belcher, John Bel- jan, George Benisek. Dwight Bicker, Robert Bloom, Herbert Boothroyd, Stephen Bromberg, Ernest Brookfield, Richard Burns, Donald Brown ,James Cassidy, James Castelli, Bangalore Chel.- varajan. The list continues with Russel Church, James Clark, Ralph Clark, Douglas Cutler, Daniel Dow, Jack Edick, James Ekwall, Henry Elsner, Armando Giar- dini, Jack Gillette, Lawrence Gottlieb, Thomas Graham, Leonard Greenbaum, Glecn n Guthrie, John Hall, Robert Hartman, Charles Hays, John Hensel, Carl Heyer, James Hil- and earn 2% current rate on insured savings Lower Prices Sale 100;, WOOL GREY FLANNEL Regular $9.95 Value $588 ALTERATIONS FREE Immediate Service I ; debrand, Ralph Hileman, Har- old Hood, Robert Horwitch,1 John Huntington, Irving Jaeger,z David Jahsman, Jerome Jelinek, Robert Kaplan;, Robert Keith, Lawrence Lange, Howard Low. Others are Samuel Luborsky, Roger McLaughlin, W. Modlin, James Moran, Arthur Nelson, Donald Nelson, Leslie Noaker, Lorne Norton, James Nyberg, Douglas Peck, Jules Perlberg. John Piazza. Frederick Pierce, Edward Poindexter, Jerome Porter, Robert Radner, Charles Rank, Johnc Riecker, Arthur Rose, James Ross. Donald Rothschild, Milton Schie-F sen, Garry Schott, Herbert Sher- bin, James Simonsen, Stephen Smale. James Smigel, Jerold Sol- ovy. The names continue with Frank Stocking, Bruce Swanson, Richard Thomas, Thomas Verhake, Curtis Verschoor, Arthur Waltz, David Weigel, Milford Wenokur. Frank- lin Westervelt, Justin Wilder, Deil Wright, George Zazanis, Joseph Zinnas. Eligible freshmen whose names do not appear are asked to con- tact Jerome Goldman, 304 Strauss House, 2-4591. k Our New Everyday Low Prices! LEVI'S $ itu Daily-Olilinger SOLE INTEREST-Jesse Brown draws on his 18 years of experi- ence in shoe repair to see that foot-weary University students are kept well shod. Here Jess nails a top lift onto a lady's shoe with the latest in a series of machines which, he says, have reduced his trade to a science. This contrivance completes four separate operations before you can think about it, saving time and doing a neater job than most humans can. * * * * FOOTWEAR FOREVER: Students Continue To Wear ShoeStyles Ancestors Wore Genuine LEVI'S NEW $345 LOW PRICE The Original Cowboy Dungaree 45 Men's Sizes A PAIR FREE If we are Undersold! .A PAIR FREE If They Rip! L~OOK FORT)E RED TAB-6N 1 TH ECK ANN ARBOR CLOTHING 113 South Main By JAMES GREGORY Styles may come, last their giddy day and go, but underneath all those buttons, bows, and off-cen- ter laces, people are wearing the same kind of shoes they have for centuries. That's what Jess Brown says. He has seen quite a few style changes in his own eighteen years of' repairing footwear for hard- walking University students. Re- pairmen, according to Brown, find the same basic construction in shoes year after year, whether the toes be pointed or round, the heels high, low, or indifferent. * * * THE CURRENT coed craze for Louis XIV heels has had many an- tecedent manias, since the day the Sun King bid a last adieu to his gathered courtiers and took off for the hereafter. The concave heels and severely pointed toes of the Louis style were prominent among the footwear of 100 years ago, and appeared again, in modified form, as recently as the twenties. The University's driving ban, another institution dating from the twenties, has been the bane of most well-heeled students, but it has brought smiles to the faces of campus shoe-repair men that have not worn with time. For the resultant increase in student walking put rockets into the shoe repair business, ssending it up a full third over its pre-ban level. It hasn't come down yet. Students, according to Brown, are walkingest people you'd care to meet on an all-day hike. This p e d a l prognosticator estimates that the average book-totter gives his half soles six or seven miles' wear every day he goes to classes. THE TOP ITEMS among stu- dent repairs are heels and soles for men, and top-lifts for coeds. The dainty top-lift, it appears, is rare- ly good for more than a month's walking, at the end of which it's a likely patient for one of Mr. Brown's newest machines. This prodigious gadget fas- tens new top-lifts onto heels. It cuts a nail-sized hunk from a roll of wire, drives it into the top-lift, and heel, buries it be- neath the surface of the lift, and puts a head on it-all in the space of a casual click. The saddle-shoe fad a few years ago threw a minor scare into the retread business, the heels on said shoes having an endurance nigh onto that of concrete. But with coed styles reverting to formality and high heels, the good, old, un- reliable top-lifts have come into their own. BROWN THINKS the business of repairing shoes is a fine one- shoe, heemphasizes. "People," he says, "bring in everything they can't get done anyplace else." Brown is always willing to oblige a customer, even those who bring in damaged bicycle seats, baby buggy tops, and purses. But when a local matron walked into his shop the other antemeridian, bear- ing a rather weatherbeaten girdle, well ... 116 North Fourth Ave. Opposite Court House Phone 2-2549 Assets Over $12,400,000 I Ai 1h U. S. NAVY 4l '7 "T" SHIRTS 497 FIRST QUALITY - SIZES 30 to 44 OPEN TILL 6:30 P.M. SAM'S STORE 122 East Washington dMWA .. .. . I 1 While They Last... I DESIRABLE ITEMS STILL AVAILABLE ON OUR OVERSTOCK SALE OF COLUMBIA RECORDS at itZ y Is Here! pring 50% { BACH: Sonatas for Harpsichord and Violin Kirkpatrick and Schneider DEBUSSY: Afternoon of a Faun ......... London Philharmonic under Beecham GRIEG: Concerto in A Minor (in plastic) Levant with N.Y. Philharmonic HANDEL: The Messiah ................ Huddersfield Chorus etc. under Sagent off Regular Price . . $19.50. .. 1.25 . . 9.00 27.00 Sale Price 9.75 .63 4.50 13.50 3.50 3.63 4.50 3.63 .63 INTROP'S TRILE DECKER Got an appetite for the new and different? Then tie into this rugged, triple soled Winthrop. It's novel, corrugated, rubber sole will give you cushion ease and caterpillar traction, $ 9 : $ Here's a Every one Middle - Weight champion! of these gabardines is perfect MOZART: Symphony No. 40 in G Minor (in plastic )...... Pittsburgh Symphony under Reiner RACHMANINOFF: Third Piano Concerto ................... Cyril Smith with Birmingham Orchestra SCHUMANN: Concerto in A Minor (in plastic) ................ Serkin with Philadelphia Orchestra SIBELIUS: Second Symphony .............................. . Philadelphia Orchestra under Ormandy STRAUSS: Salome's Dance ................................ . Cleveland Orchestra under Rodzinski 7.00 7.25 9.00 7.25 1.25 for spring . . . every one has the ease and comfort of a summer-weight suit PLUS the style and smartness of your winter-weight clothing. It makes these suits ideal for the business or pleasure traveler prepared for uncertain weather at any season and many wear 'em the year round right at home. We have the color you want, in both single and double-breasted models. Specially Priced Regulars -- Shorts -- Longs E® - C 6l / This sale is approaching its conclusion. Take advantage of the tremendous savings while these top recordings are still in stock. El UI '\IUW13UE~jp~L.jdol. /1 I / ~1- Or !0 i I tli / / 1 I I i I Aml z A