PAGE STX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1953 PAGE SIX FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1953 'U' Offers New Extension Course on Retirement Plans SL GAVEL RELINQUISHEL: Honors, Ties Accumulated by Willens By VIRGINIA VOSS O> *: :. A University extension course entitled "Delightful Things To Do in Retirement" will be offered be- ginning at 7:30 p.m. Monday. Consisting of a series of six meetings, the course is planned to demonstrate the types of activi- ties mature people enjoy. The pro- gram has been arranged by Wilma T. Donahue, chairman of the Di- vision of Gerontology, Institute for Human Adjustment. "THE HAPPIEST older people are those who have a wide variety of interests and skills," Mrs. Dona- hue said. "They are the people who have stored their minds with a wealth of interesting things to think about and who have trained themselves to enjoy participation in many activities." Such varied handicrafts and hobbies as making wire or cer- amic jewelry, basket weaving, silver work, photography, rug hooking, bird watching, gem cutting, and sculpture will be discussed by people who have already retired or who are plan- ning ahead for retirement ac- tivities. One session will be devoted to a visit to the industrial arts shop in the University High School. The final meeting will be a garden tour and a discussion of garden- ing as a hobby. An enrollment fee of five dol- lars may be paid during the half hour preceding the opening ses- sion in Rm. 171 Business Admin- istration Bldg. 1. I1 11 IN ANN ARBOR . . .it's the V F.W. Club for DANCING Friday and Saturday Nites Members- and Guests 314 E. Liberty St Ph. 2-3972 C -UD You Must Be 21 11 DON BAILEY Your Singing Host __ HALL RENTALS & BANQUETS Riley's Capitol Market Open every evening until 1 :00 Sunday until Midnight aII ENTERTAINING NEEDS FOR EVERY PARTY OCCASION BEER * WINE f CHAMPAIGNE * LIQUOR MEATS and GROCERIES 123 East Washington Depending on whether you look at him from an activities, class- room or roommate orientation, Howard Willens, '53, means Stu- dent Legislature president, 3.85 average or rack upon rack of all- occasion ties. Now relegated to the ranks of "has beens" on the SL front, Wil- lens, present tense, is a 21-year- old Oak Park, Ill., senior with a list of campus honors matched numerically only by his collection of four-in-hands. WILLENS reflects that he "does not bewail the hours spent" mov- ing up through the SL committee- cabinet structure and becoming Phi Beta Kappa on the side. Effort he has spent building around himself a "myth that others feel as strongly as I do about student government" is another matter. However pessimistically he looks at his myth, he stands firm on the ground that thefuture will see no need for it. "The principle of the democratic voice of student,opin- ion has real validity," he feels, "and is one which will be accept- ed." Sincere beliefs that "SL is a permanent fixture" and thatd"the motivation of people in student government is not ulterior" have 'madefor Willens' optimistic out- look. * k THE TWO-and-a-half year SL career which ended in a several minute ovation in the midst of new cabinet elections Wednesday night began ingloriously enough. A transfer from California's Stanford University, Willens as a sophomore joined Zeta Beta Tau fraternity. The ZBT's were looking for a ''bright young man'' to run for SL and Willens, who at the Alumni Given Clean 'Slate' The University of Michigan Alumni Club in Hong Kong, has been granted a non-Communist stamp of approval by the Hong Kong police. The police had previously re- fused to officially recognize the alumni club because they felt its constitution allowed the accep- tance of "undesireable persons" into the organization. The persons were living in neighboring Com- munist China. The constitution had stated that "persons residing in or near Hong Kong" were eligible to join the club. "On the basis of this" said Jack Yuen, president of the alum- ni group, "the police thought we might accept members from the People's Republic of China." At the last meeting of the Alum- ni Club the constitution was amended so that only residents of Hong Kong would be acceptable for membership. This satisfied the objections of the police. Benner To Head Engineering Group Tom Benner, '55E, and Bill Dia- mond, '56E, have been elected to one semester terms as chairman and secretary of the Engineering Steering Committee. The following have been ap- pointed to one year terms as mem- bers of the committee: Tawfiq N. Khoury, '54E, Keith Coates, '56E, David Davies, '55E, Peter Reed, '54E, Irv Stewart, '53E, and Fritz Glover, '55E. Spiegel To Lecture Edward Spiegel, Grad., will give a glimpse of a day on the moon during the astronomy depart- ment's visitors' night at 8 p.m. today in Rm. 2003, Angell Hall. The lecture will be followed by a visit to the observatory. time lived in Strauss House, East Quad, was contacted. What the ZBT's overlooked was the six-man slate of Strauss House candidates, Willens in- cluded. After a campaign handicapped by split house allegiance, the po- litical science major sat it out until 4:30 a.m. election count day' to watch himself squeeze in last place by a four-vote margin. But the ZBT's "bright young! man" was nevertheless in. Tapped by Sphinx honorary that1 spring, Willens in his junior year climbed from SL committee work to cabinet member-at-large to president, as an idea man who knew how to put his ideas to work. IN THE person of its president, SL got a scholarly former tennis champion with a wit one member characterizes as "Adlai Steven- sonian" and a store of energy at least as effective in "organizing" as in covering an asphalt court. In the SL presidency, Willens got free dinners ("sometimes four out of five a week"), posts -Daily-Frank Barger on the Student Affairs and Lec- ture Committees and a chance to put into effect his theories on student government. The theories: "SL must consoli- date the progress of its six-year tradition and at the same time at- tempt to integrate itself within the framework of the total campus community." "Difference of opinion is not bad per se-but it should be aired openly, with frankness and thor- oughness and without fear of ad- ministrative disapproval." While Willens and theories went to work on SL, Michigau- ma, Pi Sigma Alpha political science honorary and the na- tionalncommittee to pick the outstanding ZBT of 1952 all looked in his direction at awrt d- time. His three roommates insist on adding to the above record a count against Willens for "lousiest apart- ment dishwasher." Willens admits he does the job "not well-but fast." Minus dishwashing ability, Wil- lens, theories and ties now look to a future of law or political sci- ence study-possibly aiming at a judicial post. Willens has put down the gavel for the time being but. chances are he will take it up again. 'U' Hospital Treatments Aid Patients University Hospital doctors real- ize that for some patients medical treatment alone is not enough. In these cases the aid of the hospital social service has proven effective. "Our job is to help the patient make the maximum use of medical care," Ruth Locher, social service field consultant, explained. THE SERVICES of the social worker are called for when a pa- tient worrying about personal problems ornresisting medical treatment~ is not recovering as het should. After speaking to the pa-I tient and his family, the social4 worker attempts to alleviate the problems hindering recovery.. One of the cases in which a social worker's aid helped both the medical department and the patient, concerned a man who withdrew completely from oth- er people and refused to coop- erate in his treatment. Upon speaking to the man, the worker discovered that he thought he was going to die. At the other hospitals his case had been pro- nounced hopeless, but University Hospital doctors found a treat- ment to save him. When she explained the situa- tion to him, he made more prog- ress in three weeks than he had in the preceding year. The social worker also referred him to the vocational rehabilitation agency and now he is earning his own liv- ing. Miss Locher emphasized that the function of the 23 member: staff is more important in Univer- sity Hospital than in other hos- pitals because the patient's own physician does not follow him into the Hospital. The patient is apt to feel that no one really cares about him because of the stream of medical people that work on his case. "Personal contact with one social worker helps decrease the impersonality of the hospital," Miss Locher said. HOWARD WILLENS .". "let me explain SL" a ( PAUL THOMPKINS ON THE HAMMOND EVERY SUNDAY Champs University Hospital physician Dr. David Freeman, world bad- minton champion, will play Kuldip Maini, Grad., all-cam- pus champion and runner-up for the Michigan title, in the International Sport Night at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Intra- mural Bldg. Other features scheduled for the evening are exhibition games from several foreign countries, ping pong, volleyball and tennis. Psychology Club To HoldMeeting The newly-formed undergrad- uate psychology club will hold its first regular meeting at 3 p.m. to- day in Rm. 3415 Mason Hall. 'Oscar' Film Stars Davis Six Academy awards have been confered upon this week's Stu- dent Legislature Cinema Guild presentation, "All About Eve." Starring Bette Davis as the proud and erratic queeh of the theater, "All About Eve" is a bit- ing satire on Broadway and the legitimate theater. It delves into the lives and entanglements among the actors, rivals, critics and the host of others who make up the Broadway scene. Anne Baxter is starred as Eve, and George Sanders as the cun- ning critic. Presentation of the film will be at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Sat- urday and at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Architecture Auditorium. Ad- mission is 50 cents. how 'bout DINING this weekend at WEBER'S ANN ARBOR'S FAMOUS RESTAURANT SPECIALIZING IN * STEAK * SEA FOOD * CHICKEN * PLANKED FOODS I .4 4, I .I i A ROOMY PARKING LOT FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE AT welbf 0s sUp ch~ ub Open Daily 12-12 - 3715 Jackson Road Nine Minutes from Downtown .4 Ri L i I___ __ _ _ LISTEN! Drive in and SHI at Op OFTDRINKS * KEG BEER r Sunday Noon to 7 P.M. Phone 7191 Read and Use Daily Classifieds -~~~-1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ,! * BEER * WINE SC Open Daily 10 A.M. 114 E. Williams " ." '. .. not +a blemish is sight t (Continued from Page 4) p.m. Unitarian Student Guild co-hostess. All students invited. Coming Events The Labor Relations Law Section of the State Bar of Michigan will present a labor relations law workshop meet- ing on Sat., Apr. 25, from 10 a.m. to 12 m. and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., in the Rack- ham Amphitheater. The subject is "Rights of the Individual Under the Collective Bargaining Agreement, With- in the Union, and Under Taft-Hartley Law." Among the participants are Professor Clyde W. Summers of the University of Buffalo Law School; Wil- liam Otter of the University of Michigan Law School (NLRB attorney on leave), Leon Cousens; Paul Franseth; Gabriel Alexander, General Motors/UAW-CIO Umpire; and Mark L. Kahn of Wayne$ University, instructor in collective bargaining. Faculty and students will be admitted to these sessions free of charge. I.Z.F.A. offers positions for counsel- lors at leading Jewish co-ed camp (10- 17 years campers) located in northern Wisconsin. Interviews at Hillel Build- ing, Sun., Apr. 26, at 2:15 p.m. BI Before deciding on your sterling, stainless, crystal or china see our beautiful selection of imported and domestic patterns. JOHN LEIDY 537 East Liberty * 6779 11 Nylon-Rayon CORD SUTin light blue, grey, navy, charcoal . . . /$17.50 11 I 21; 4 Sport Coats Trousers . I 4 I $7.50 . . . , bra ., 2 re4 by LYDIA O'LEARY Instantly, completely, Spotstik conceals all skin blemishes- eruptions; bruises; white, red, own, blue spots. Easy-just pat n, blend. Safe, soothing. Variety of shades. Get Spotstik today- kee* kandv in nurse. dre inz uniy }125. iNo ze. tax. x or large, permanent blemishes -get COVERMARK cream. Called "Modern Miracle" by Reader's Digest. Medically commended to completely cover burn scars, vitiligo (brown and sooa white patches) ... even thmarks I $2.00, $4.50. No fed. tax. "talk a Few StePs and Save Dollars" 7EAST LIBERTY PHONE 8020 I1 q v... __.- ., ___._. _ ._. _ J..-- MAST CAh CALKINS-FLETCHER DRUGS 324 So. State - 818 So. State "PUS> TEEK-END SPECIALS Buy now and save A I WINTHROP SHOES I I- -n Blue Suede Smoked Elk Brown Calf LAST THREE DAYS... Generation Magazine presents Paintings & Drawings by JOHN GOODYEAR N r s r ; ,l ;::.: , <.