JANUARY 15, 1954 THE MICHIGAN HkILY PAGE NTNE ;..,.R JANUARY 15, 1954 THE MICHIGAN I)~ILY VAGE Nfl%1~ Inter-House Council To Sponsor Greek Mythology To Supply Theme for Annual 'U' J-Hop READ AND USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Polgar in 'I Dr. Franz J. Polgar, telepathist< and hypnotist, will present his "Miracles of the Mind" show at1 8:30 p.m. tonight at Hill Auditor- ium. Music by the Paul McDonough trio will provide entertainment be- fore the performance. Merritt (Tim) Green, captain of the Mi- -chigan football team in 1952, will act -as master of ceremonies forj the show. POLGAR'S performance at the Uiversity is sponsored by the In-t ter-House Council. The proceeds will be used to purchase office equipenta service project in the L~ui~mnt~ t Airacles of the Mind' I It t' TEST YOUR POTENTIAL FOR A SUCCESSFUL CAREER IN ADVERTISING! The 8th Annual Examination for Advertising, sponsored by the American Association of Advertising Agencies, will be held on Saturday, February 20, 1954. Examinations will take place in Detroit, Ann Arbor and East Lansing - exact time and place to be announced soon. Plan now to take this test of your apti- tudes in the following types of advertising work: " Advertising Planning and Merchandising " Merchandising " Copy Writing " Advertising Research " Mechanical Production * Radio and TV Production " Art and Layout " Media Selection This aptitude test is not a job competition, but it should help you appraise your own potentialities fornadvertising work. In addition, if you do well, the American Associa- tion of Advertising Agencies will circulate your examina- tion record among advertis- ing personnel executives. Examination fee $20.00. For more information write, phone or wire, E. A. Jones, Chairman, Examination Committee, Michigan Coun- icil, A.A.A.A., Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Midwest 6-1000 or Jordan 6-2300. Contact Prof. Scott-Buy, Ad. Prof. Wooding- journalism Dept. spring and will pay for the pub- lishing of IHC booklets and the regulation booklets for men's dor- mitories on campus. Tickets for this year's pro- gram are priced at $1.25 for re- served seats and $1 for general admission, Roger Kidston, presi- dent of IHC announced. Polgar will select volunteers from the audience to act as sub- jects for his mental . feats, which will include mind-reading, mem- ory demonstrations and hypnosis. AS ONE mind-reading stunt, a member of the audience will be chosen to hide Polgar's check for the performance somewhere in the audience. If the doctor is unable to find the check, led only by thought impulses from the audience, the money will be donated to the IHC fund. Wherever Polgar goes, he en- counters skepticism. Nearly every- one, he finds, is willing to acknow- ledge his ability to put people in a state of trance. But his faculty for mind-reading, the transference of thought from one person to another, is usually too baffling to believe. At a magazine's New York edi- torial offices, Dr. Polgar, who holds degrees in psychology and economics, was challenged to prove his telepathic powers. He and sev- eral members of the staff agreed to play a game of hide-and-seek in the 102-story Empire State Building. * * * THEY DECIDED to hide a sil- ver-folding money-clip. While the hypnotist-telepathist was at a nearby restaurant getting a cup of coffee, the staff members hid the clip in as unlikely a place as they could think of. They took an elevator down to the sub-basement and concealed the clip in a drawer within the safe in the locksmith's office, positively convinced that P.ol- gar could not possibly know Religious Center To Invite Students To Social Activity For all students who will be on campus between semesters, Lane Hall is sponsoring an open house from 9 p.m. to closing hours on the Friday and Saturday nights of J- Hop weekend. Included among the activities will be square and social dancing, movies and group singing. The game room and library will also be open for use by the stu- dents, and there will be material from the various student religious groups on display. At this traditional open house, the group serves some unique re- freshments, such as the lummy- burgers served last year and the barfburgers the year before. The freshman group at Lane Hall has charge of the refresh ments and all the other arrange- ments. J-Hop and its associated activi- ties will help fill in the "dead" pe- riod between semesters. The annual dance, in its 77th. year of existance at the Univer- sity campus, will be held from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday, Feb. 5, in the Intramural Building. Tickets, priced at $7, will still remain on sale from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. through the exam weeks in the Administration Building. The orchestras of Ray An- thony and Buddy Morrow will alternate on the bandstand, pro- viding an uninterupted program of dance music for couples at- tending. i FRANZ POLGAR where the clip was hidden. Af- ter 5Y/ minutes, Polgar found the clip. The finale of tonight's perform- ance will be devoted to hypnotism. Although subjects lose many of their inhibitions and perform un- expected stunts under hypnotic suggestion, Polgar emphasized that no subject can be induced to f o 11 o w a hypnotic suggestion' against his basic code of right and wrong. <. . - Decorations for J-Hop will car- ry out an under-the-sea setting, depicting "Atlantis," the lost city. Said in Greek mythology to be lo- cated on an island, this highly- cultured civilization sank into the sea, never to be found again. The ceiling of the Intramural Building will be decorated to give the appearance of the surface of the ocean as seen from its depths. Broken columns will represent remnants of the mythical city in its watery grave. Murals painted at both ends of the ballroom will feature other underwater scenes. Fish and sea plants will also add to the "wa- tery" effect. The two bandstands will re- semble giant sea shells. Coeds attending the dance will receive favors, although the J-Hop committee has announced that particulars will be kept secret un- til the night of J-Hop. In choosing this year's orches- tras, the committee has hoped to satisfy the tastes of all students. The Anthony aggregation was recently chosen the top band of the year by Billboard's national disc jockey poll, while Buddy Mor- row's orchestra was picked as the most promising "newer" group. Anthony's orchestra is com- posed of five trumpets, four trombones, five saxes, drums, bass and a piano. Tommy Mercer, Marcie Miller and the Skyliners, a vocal quintet, will be the featured vocalists for the group. Regulations for the dance state that no corsages may be worn. Student groups wishing to have parties on the J-Hop weekend must receive approval from the Office of Student Affairs, follow- ing the usual procedures. Requests for approval of specific events should be filed on or before Jan. 22.' The Office of the Dean of Women must separately approve arrangements for housing women overnight in men's residences. The Dean of Women must also approve a chaperone-in-residence for fra- ternities occupied by women guests. Women will be granted 4 a.m. permission on Friday, and must be in their residences by 2 a.m. fol- lowing Saturday's events. Frankly . . . T pretty to please ... inspired by thoughts of Spring . . . date and dance dress for those important formals 'frinstance J-Hop? . . . romantic cotton iced with rhinestones .. . hand screened print in fragile pastels. Misses sizes. / ", ...~.....*.......,* *,.~,,*. ~ * S ,..e...,w.....,.........,..'...,a. "; 39.95 - .$} {?"{.::"5,.: r, :;., :.: r.:.>}:?. ;++f k {}'i" . = .v:v.;".};;}±;rr.. ; ",.}},xvs,. ;r.".;.1;.v.;C;;.,, '* b';+.?,;"h..;:ij{,::^,".,n.,y;;{.?: -"":4tigr{,i :{, } ;as?';;?.'ti ~vnL: ::..5 *, ^.e?.^.'^:hi" "5,. ,v:.....,.ti"."}. .Z:4;t.k...":. ."alis°'h*'ri'":.^... 4...#....":. 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