4 . six TH MICHIG---.&AN&.a DATTN.a WEDNESDAY, MAnt B I4, xs*si THE MTCTITET~avAN IbATTY .EDNE_. AY, MRC! 1.y1951.. IOW ENGLAND LIVES: Cameraman Bryan To Speak Here Vani y s Cey nteofLaneHall MIRROR, MIRROR-Sylvia Conner, London ballet dancer, ap- plies makeup with the aid of the mirror in her dressing room. Miss Connor is a member of one of the six English families feaatured in the film accompanying Julien Bryan's lecture, "England in a Changing. World." -ntertainment To Highlight nnual Union Open House The one time of the year when 'omen can break the Union's 'onclad tradition and not only nter through the front door, but o anywhere in it, is fast ap- roaching. urdom Says Employment Odtloo _Good The job outlook is good for the June graduate. According to T. Luther Purdom, director of the Bureau of Appoint- ments, there is a great demand for college graduates to fill jobs and anyone who really wants em- ployment can get it. The greatest demand is in the technical and scientific field, es- pecially engineering, Purdom said. Government jobs in these fields are particularly abundant, he add- ed. Many opportunities are also open, he pointed out, for sales- people, accountants and secretar- ies. Teacher, librarians and die- ticians are also in demand. A great call is out for social science teachers in the secondary schools. Purdom advised students not to think that the draft will spoil their chances, because many com- panies take on help for a short while before they are drafted, planning to take them back after they get out of service. UJA To Hold First Meeting A kickoff meeting for all stu- dents interested in working on the United Jewish Appeal annual fund drive will be held at 4 p.m. today at Lane Hall. A film will be shown, and two university alumni, Julien H. Kro- lik and Mrs. Leonard H. Weiner, of Detroit, will outline the work and the goals of the UJA. The UJA drive is slated to run through April 4. The campus goal is $7,500. 'The drive is under the chair- manship of Eli Robinson, Grad, and Jules Pearlberg. Opera Ticket Sale Will Open at Union Over-the-counter ticket sales, for the forthcoming Union OperaI "Go West-Madam" will open this afternoon in the lobby of the Unon. Tickets for $1.20 and $2.40 seats at the March 28 and 29 perform- ances are available,. along with az few $1.80 tickets for the former night. No seats are left for the- March 30 showing. The tickets may be purchased from 1:30 to 5 p.m. today and to- norrow, from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Fri- day and from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Sat- urday. The Opera will be present- d in the Michigan Theatre. Daily Classifieds Get Quick Results WIN When the Union holds its an- nual open house on Saturday, March 17, from 1 to 6 p.m., all students will have an opportunity to roam the building and enjoy the entertainment planned. As an added attraction, the Union's tower, a room seldom seen by human eyes, will be open. According to Union student offi- cials, the tower provides an un- paralleled view of the campus. Highlighting t h e afternoon's program will be a 'Preview of Progress' review, finals in the Union's sports tournament, a mix- er dance with a live orchestra, an exhibition by the Michifish, and a glance at the JGP's planned pro- duction. "And," Bill Burke, '53, in charge of the open house, noted "Every- thing is free, including refresh- ments." Illness Halts Play Opening The opening of "Hotel Uni- verse," second production of the Arts Theatre Club has been post- poned until Friday, Ed Troupin, club business manager announced yesterday. The play had originally been scheduled to open last night. Troupin said that the opening was delayed because Sonya Raimi and Warren Pickett, actors in the production, are ill with flu. "Hotel Universe," which was written by the late Philip Barrie, deals with a group of people, dis- illusioned with life, who cut them- selves off from the world in a spot on the Riviera. Here, through thinking out their past errors and the aid of a mys- terious, Godlike man, they find hope and redemption. Friedericy To Give Address Cameraman Julien Bryan, who will speak here tomorrow night on "England in a Changing World", is a man who has spent much of his life documenting films on the life and customs of people the world over. Bryan's lecture, the last in the 1950-51 series of the University Oratorical Association, will be given at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. It will feature Bryan's latest film, one which ex- amines the different modes of liv- ing of six English families. *' * * THE LECTURER - Cameraman has been a leader in the field of documentary films since his first tour of Russia in 1930. It was on this trip that he made his first film. The opening of war in Sep- tember, 193, found him in Warsaw. He remained, ii the Polish capital throughout the whole of the Nazis blitz, the only cameraman to do so. Bry- an"s films of this period, smug- gled through the Nazi lines aft- er Warsaw's fall, weremade in- to the picture "Seige." Tickets for Bryan's lecture are on sale in the Hill Auditorium box office, which will be open between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. and between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. today. Tomor- row the box office will be open between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. and from 2 p.m. until lecture time. The tickets are priced at $1.50, $1.20 and 60 cents. Alumni Clubs To Celebrate U Birthday University alumni clubs across the nationwill be holding meetings throughout March to mark ther 114th anniversary of the Univer- sity's establishment at Ann Arbor. Although an act to establish "the Catholepistemiad or Univer- sity of Michigania" was adopted by{ the governor and judges of the Territory of Michigan on August 26, 187, the territory was not ready for education at the college level, and the University, estab- lished at Detroit, maintained only an elementary school and academy. March 18 has been officially set aside as University of Michigan Day, since it was on that day in 1837 that the Legislature of the newly admitted state of Michigant passed an act to provide for "the organization and government ofE the University of Michigan." This act established a Board ofj Regents and stated that the tni- versity should consist of a depart-' ment of literature, science and the arts, a department of law and a department of medicine. Two days later, on March 20, 1837, the Legis- lature passed another act locating the University at Ann Arbor. This Sunday will mark the fifth annual celebration of University of Michigan Day. Pierce To Speak On Rocket Travel "An Astronomer Looks to Inter- planetary Travel" will be the topic of a lecture by Prof. Keith Pierce, of the astronomy department, to be given at 8 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Sponsored by Sigma Xi, an hon- orary science fraternity, Prof. Pierce will deal with the condi- tions a rocket ship might encoun- ter in outer space. An expert in solar physics, he will also discuss time and space factors involved in rocket travel. Court Postpones 'U' Students Trial The trial of Felix Mielzynski, '51, and Paul Kluth, Grad., on charges of breaking and entering has been indefinitely postponed while Circuit Judge James R. Breakey, Jr. is on vacation. The court clerk 'said the trial h * * * : * * SRA SOUNCIL MEMBERS REPRESENT VARIOUS CAMPUS RELIGIOUS GROUPS * * * * * * * * * S RA Sets Steady Pace * a * A4 DISCUSSION groups, parties, special films, devotional serv- ices-all are part of the many and varied student activities which are carried on daily in Lane Hall, the red brick building on the corner of State and E. 'Washington streets. T w o large bulletin boards, greeting the visitor on either side of the front door as he enters, tell through announcements, pic- tures, and sign-up sheets the re- sults of the constant efforts of Lane Hall workers to keep a var- ied program going at all times for the students' profit and en- joyment. * * * A TYPICAL weekly agenda would probably include the regu- lar square dance sessions and the crafts shop meeting, plus Hillel's sabbath services and a Triton film society program on Friday eve- nings. The summer projects office, of- fering information on travel-and study-abroad plans, is open daily, A coffee hour and luncheon group meeting give opportunities for in- formal discussions. The most current enterprize for Lane Hall and the Student Religious Association, which makes its home there, is plan- ning and carrying out the an- nual Religion-in-Life Week pro- gram, a five-day series of lec- tures, seminars, and meetings designed to investigate religious faith and the answers it can give to current problems. One of SRA's functions is to' serve as an official co-ordinating agency for the many student reli- gious groups, but it also initiates religious activities for the campus as a whole., The annual all-cam- pus Carol Sing on the Library steps at Christmas time is one of the more familiar of these SRA- sponsored events. One of the most typical of Lane Hall's regular functions is the weekly Friday afternoon coffee hour, at which students, religious workers and leaders, faculty members and special RELIGIOUS GROUP NEWSLETTER GOES TO PRESS * 4: * * * * guests meet and exchange views in an informal atmosphere. Promoting intercultural under- standing among foreign and Am- erican students is a very impor- tant part of the SRA program. Inter-cultural retreats - weekend outings to camps in this vicinity- with group discussions and recre- ation, provide a basis for the fel- lowship and understanding. Volunteer work at the Univer- sity or Children's Hospital, or ac- tivity with child and adult groups at the community center is or- ganized-under SRA workers. * * * WITH A PROGRAM of activi- ties ranging from creative arts to peace conferences, SRA and Lane Hall have managed to extend their work throughout the Uni- versity. Last semester SRA stu- dent - initiated activities com- manded a total attendance of ap- proximately 3,500 students. The religious program on campus has thus progressed from the time when student ativities of a social and educational nature were sponsored by various Ann Arbor churches. When the original Student Christian Association was or- ganized'in Ann Arbor in 1857, it was the first organization of its kind in any institution of learning in the country. The national YMCA had been created earlier, but that group provided only for men, while- the SCA at Michigan was organized to include all local women who jwanted to participate in its activ- ities, although women had not yet been admitted to the University. Early meetings were held in the south wing of old University Hall, until Newberry Hall (the present Museum of Archaeology) was op- i ened in 1891. The YMCA and the YWCA were organized on the campus later. The three groups were combined in 1904, and were later to be taken under the sponsorship of the University. LANE HALL and SCA were taken over by the University in 1937, at which time the Stdent Christian Association was reor- ganized into the Student Religious Association in its present form. As a campus religious organiza- tion, SRA is unique in its inter- faith program. On the SRA coun- cil all organized campus religious groups are equally represented. At present 21 of these groups have seats on the council. SRA is also unique in that it is part of the University pro- gram-the agency recognized for student extra-curricular re- ligious activities, and as such is supported by state funds appro- priated for the University bud- get. The Rev. DeWitt Baldwin, af- fectionately known to Lane Hall workers as "Uncle Si", has served as director of Lane Hall since the 'spring of 1949. TYPICAL OF religious organi- zations on other campuses, SCA and SRA have initiated many projects which have since been taken over by University depart- ments. The first housing and employment bureau was SCA- sponsored, and the Fresh Air Herman J. Friedericy, Nether- lands United Nations Assembly delegate and a former Dutch East Indies government official, will give an informal address on "The United Nations and Indonesia" at 7:15 p.m. today in the Henderson Room of the League. Friedericy, whose experience in- cludes many years as a magazine editor in the Dutch colony and several stints as colon~ial advisor to Netherlands Security Council delegations, will speak before the University UNESCO Council. The meeting will be open to the pub- lic. Earlier in the day, Friedericy will be the guest of the political science department at a depart- mental tea at 4 p.m. in the Lea- gue. VOLUNTEER WORKERS CHECK BOARD SQUARE DANCERS 'DUCK BACK INTO THE SAND' may be rescheduled for tomorrow.I .- i -- - _. " _.. -Il 4 4-;a. - / /t,,.11,\ ' - 1jj-' s