FEBRUARY 17, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FV _ _ v _ Dr. Polgar To Present H ypnoismProgram Proceeds from South Quad Benefit Show Will Be Given to University Fresh Air Camp Dr. Franz Polgar, heralded by magazines and newspapers as "America's greatest one-man show" will present his "Miracles of the Mind" at 8:15 p.m. Friday, Feb. 27, in dill Auditorium. Polgar's performance at the Uni- versity is sponsored by the South Quadrangle for the benefit of the University Fresh Air Camp. * * * ADVANCE SALE of tickets will begin tomorrow at the Administra- tion Building. Tickets will also be on sale the day of the perform- ance at the Hill Auditorium box office. Prices have been set at $1.25 for reserved seats. General ad- mission tickets may be pur- chased for $1 or 75 cents. ACTIVITIES CHAIRMEN - There will be a meeting of dormi- tory activities chairmen at 5 p.m. today in the League. JGP COSTUMES -- There will be a meeting of the costumes com- mittee for JGP at 4:30 today in the League. The room will be post- ed on the bulletin board in the lobby. * * *0 ALPHA KAPPA PSI - Alpha Kapp Psi, professional business- men's fraternity, invites all pre- Business Administration and pre- sent Bus. Admin. students to a rushing smoker at 7:30 p.m. to- morrow at the chapter house, 1324 ? Washtenaw Avenue. JGP USHERING-All junior co- eds interested in ushering for the Junior Girls' Play March 19, 20 and 21 are requested to sign up on the list in the Undergraduate office in the League before Friday. Coeds may usher one night, two nights or for all performances. Polgar is billed as a man who can read minds, memorize entire magazines at a single sitting and hypnotize many persons simulta- neously. * * * THE SHOW is divided into three parts. Memory demonstrations will be featured first. Claims havebeen made by Dr. Polgar that he can meet 100 people in rapid succession and remember their names. He has made a practice of paying $5 to each person whose name he for- gets. The second part of the program will be devoted to mind reading. In a performance at the Detroit Town Hall Forum, Polgar had his check for the evening's work hid- den. Using a volunteer from the audience to give him mental direc- tions, he found the check in four minutes under the hat of a woman in a crowd of 2,000 people. HE HAS ALSO found an ob- ject hidden under the upper plate in a man's mouth and a war stamp concealed in an office on the fif- teenth floor of a skyscraper. Concluding the performance will be a demonstration of hyp- notism, the featured portion of the show. Members of the audi- ence will be invited to take part in the exhibition. Polgar gained national publicity when he hypnotized the Georgia, Tech football team the day before they were to play Alabama. Geor- gia Tech won the game. WHEN GEORGIA TECH lost their game the following week without Polgar's services, Atlanta papers proclaimed, "The team needs Polgar." Polgar, who lists college stu- dents as his best subjects and New Yorkers as the most dif- ficult, has hypnotized approxi- mately 75,000 persons. The subconscious mind still functions during hynosis, Polgar, holder of the degrees of doctor of psychology and doctor of econom- ics from Budapest University, has emphasized. MISS MACHINERY - * * * * Hula Dance Causes Conflict Among Talent Committee Junior Coeds Begin Work On Comedy Dancing, Singing Cast Swing into Rehearsals For Annual JGP Event Last week junior coeds began working on the annual class proj - ect, Junior Girls' Play, as the cast of over 100 players started rehears- als and the various committees began operations for the extrava- ganza March 19, 20 and 21. All the available space in the League has been utilized by the junior women as the dancing, singing and uke choruses began practices for the original show written by Jane Thompson, '54. Costume creations and scenery designs have been drawn up for committee members to follow while they paint, sew and organize the various phases of the production. All junior women are invited to participate in their show exclaimed Mary Hodges, general chairman of the JGP central committee. Workers are particularly needed in the costume department. Experience is not needed to qual- ify for this committee work. "If you can thread a needle or hold straight pins, there is a place for you in JGP," Miss Hodges ex- plained. Any junior woman who wishes to work on the play production may sign up in the Undergraduate office of the League or call Miss Hodges at 24547. Working on the various commit- tees for JGP gives coeds an oppor- tunity to meet and make new friends as well as help to produce JGP. Committee members will also be able to participate in the Senior Night festivities. JGP is an annual event, a mu- sical comedy usually based on some phase in the life of a young girl. Entirely original, the three act play is written, produced and di- rected by the women of the junior class. Music and lyrics for the songs are also original. Every year the $1 class dues that are collected from all coeds in the junior class help to produce the show. Proceeds from the show go toward a worth while cause. This year all proceeds from JGP will help to decorate the new "Bar- bara Little Room" in the League. Opportunities to learn n e w sports skills or to become more proficientin familiar ones are of- fered to University men and wo- men by the sports and co-recre- ation clubs sponsored by the Wo- men's Athletic Association. Three of these clubs, rifle, camp counselors and ballet, which will reorganize this week, have in- vited all interested students to at- tend these meetings. THE BALLET CLUB, one of eight co-recreational clubs spon- sored by the WAA, will hold a meeting for intermediate dancers at 7:15 p.m. today in Barbour Gymnasium Dance Studio. All men and women interest- ed in ballet who have had no training, are invited to attend the beginner's class at 8:15 p.m. The club will provide its mem- bers with instruction and oppor- tunity for performance. * * * MEMBERS ARE also encourag- ed to try their hand at choreo- graphy. Some of the resulting compositions will be used in club presentations. The club presents its programs in cooperation with the Modern Dance Club. Vera Simon is manager of the club. ANY COED interested in riflery may attend the reorganizational meeting of the Rifle Club at 7:30 p.m. today in WAB. Beginners as well as "expert marksmen" are invited to mem- bership in the club. Instruction will be provided by club mem- bers and by Miss Pearl Berlin, faculty advisor. Postal matches with o t h e r schools are often held by the club, as well as "shoulder to shoulder" matches within the club. WOMEN MARKSMEN will also compete with the men's rifle team in a shooting match. Plans are also being made to enter a team in the National Rifle Association Intercollegiate Women's Match. Another of the clubs open to coeds is the Camp Counselor's Club, which will reorganize at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the fen- cing room at Barbour Gym. "This club offers activitiescto students with 'camp fever'," club manager Joan Hubbell has an- nounced. * * * INCREASE YOUR SPORTING SKILLS: WAA Clubs To Reorganize This Week MISS PEARL BERLIN will be The club meets two times guest speaker at the club's first month. - } 7l, 4 V P 9 V PP PPPP O PPPP V P VPV'VP a I PRINTING KING SIZE SERVICE Cord to a Catalog by Push Button LOWER PRICES meeting of the semester, listing opportunities offered in private camping. Following the meeting, new and old members will get ac- quainted "over a cup of coffee" in the Roundup Room of the League. Speakers, movies and "discus- sions will occupy members during the semester, as well as the sing- ing of camp songs, coookouts and overnight trips. Downtown - 307 N. Main Start the Semester off Will the Hawiian Hula dance of Miss Audrey McIntyre continue to be part of Saturday's Gulantics Variety Review or will an act by Miss Machinery be substituted? This problem was thrown di- rectly into the laps of the Gulan- tics committee members at last' night's stormy session. Just before the paper went to press, a spokesman for the com- mittee reported that support for the two hula acts was equally di-- vided. At the present time the more conservative members of the com- mittee favor Miss McIntyre, a Uni- versity student who learned to do the hula while studying at the University of Hawaii last summer. However, some of the seniors on the committee vociferously sided with Tom Sparrow, '53, publicity chairman, who insisted that Miss Machinery appear on the program to safeguard Gulantics exclusive billing as Michigan's biggest va- riety production. When interviewed after the meeting, Len Sanford, '54, ex- pressed concern over the future of the star if she performed Saturday in Hill Auditorium. Sanford feared that the eventual effect of the act would produce an unprecidented epidemic of strained neck and eye muscles among males in the audience. According to Sanford, there's no way of predicting just what line of action the infuriated coeds in the audience will take if the controversial dancer takes to the stage. One spokesman ventured that the services of the Ann Arbor po- lice-force might be needed for the first time in Gulantics history to keep the talent program's record clean. Confronted with these charges of disrupting the program, Miss Machinery indignantly told re- porteds, "it's a lei." While all this controversy was thrown back and forth through- out the meeting, students on the committee eventually agreed on a few major issues. Rejecting an "early birds" mo- tion that ticket sales begin at 8 a.m., the group decided that the ducats will remain on sale from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day this week at the Hill Auditorium Box Office. In a routine move the Gulantics committee approved the appear- ances of Mel Sach's Orchestra, the Novelaires, and the Men's Glee Club, who will perform during the intermission periods between the competing acts. A faculty trio presenting a sur- prise act will complete the show. Women Voters The Campus League of Wo- men Voters will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Student-Fa- culty Lounge of the League. The topic for discussion will be "Your Role in Local Affairs." All interested women are in- vited to attend. TWIN SERVICE That's the Thing! One Call',. Does It All . xI QUALIY PRNTIN ii' _.R- ,a . __±._3-s a..a~s_,l.s..a aa_.w4 aa ni" a aa sr aa r . ar, r in the right way. HAIRCUTS and Permanents at * s M CONSEQUENTLY the subject cannot be induced to follow a hyp- notic suggestion against his basic code of right and wrong, he states. Polgar's extraordinary powers were acquired after a bomb ex- plosion buried him in an Hun- garian army trench for three days during World War I. After months in a hospital, he re- gained his lost speech and nem- ory, but the strong telepathic quality remained. Jerry Van Otteran is chairman of the committee sponsoring Pol- gar's appearance. r . .. 'taeAe e BEAUTY SALON Have You Heard? Good news for those of you who have been searching for a good position. We know that these are the qualities for which you are looking in a position: f. . ;. :yv ;i _ .: iaf" r# 3: ,t : ti; ;. ' : f. SEE THESE and the beau- tiful orlon knit dresses, orlon blouses, and orlon sweaters-allin Spring's newest colors at I CLASSIFIED ADS . II I