WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1955 THE MICHIGAN MA1LY PAC'sk VIVR WEDNESAY, FERUARY9,j195 0AI~LKaU~J rnkr. ivr 14 Brotherhood Banquet To Be Given by SRA "Only the Brave Are Brothers"' is the title of the annual Brother- hood Banquet to be held Feb. 22 at Lane Hall. Tickets for the banquet, spon- sored by the Student Religious Association, are $1 and may be' purchased by any student. In pre- vious years the banquet could be attended only by specified groups or by special invitation. The speaker for the evening will be Rev. Samuel Gandy, for- mer president of the American Association of College and Univer- sity Chaplains. Father Gandy is -r I- dt:Po,'44 Carnl/u4 JUNIOR PANHEL-Junior Pan- hel meeting will be held at 4:30 p.m. today at the League. RIDING CLUB - The Riding Club will hold an organizational meeting at 5:15 p.m. today in the WAB. New members are welcome. * * * JGP-There will be a meeting of the JGP properties committee at 7 p.m. today in the League. * * * MICHIFISH - Michifish mem- bers will meet at 7:15 p.m. today at the pool. * . * RIFLE CLUB-The Rifle Club will hold an organizational meet- ing at 7:30 p.m. today in the WAB. * * * JUNIOR MICHIFISH - There will be a Junior Michifish meeting at 8:15 p.m. today at the Women's Swimming Pool. Interested Co-eds are invited to attend. BURO-CATS -A meeting for all League Buro-cats will be held at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the League. 'Ensian picture will be taken. * *-* BOWLING--There will be open bowling for women from 7 to 9 p.m. tomorrow, Monday and Tues- day at the WAB. This may be used as practice for the bowling tourna- ment beginning Tuesday, Feb. 22. HILLELZAPOPPIN-There will be a meeting at 7:15 p.m. tomor- row at Hillel, 1429 Hill, for all women interested in working on the independent coed skit for "Hillelzapoppin." now director of religious activities at Virginia State College, Peters- burg, Virginia. Seminar Planned A three day seminar, Feb. 22, Feb. 23, and Feb. 24 at Lane Hall, will follow the Brotherhood Ban- quet. No tickets are needed for the seminar. The first program will include Father Gandy who will speak on "The Supreme Court Decision, a Year Later." Edward Voss, grad- uate economics student at the Uni- versity will also be a speaker for the afternoon session. Interpreta- tions of the topic under discussion will be given by the speakers; a general discussion will follow. "Campus Realism on Brother- hood," a lecture on the Brother- hood situation at the University, will be given by Father Gandy, Wednesday, Feb. 23. Prof. George Peek, of the political science de- partment will speak on present student relationships. Educator to Speak Thursday's afternoon program will include Father Gandy who will discuss "Progress in Intergration in Education" in his last lecture. Jack Elzay, superintendant of schools in Ann Arbor, will talk on the problem of Negro and White integration. Lane Hall officials hope that the discussions at the banquet and se- minar will help the realistic stu- dent look at progress and integra- tion between Negroes and Whites in democratic measures. -Daily-John Hirtzel "TAKE IT AND LEAVE IT SHELF"-League Library has added another "ervice which permits students to take a pocketbook in exchange for another. Current and old editions of fiction, non- fiction books and periodicals are now available to students at the library. Pocketbook Exchange Shelf Added to Library Facilities Union Slates 2 Meetings For Tryouts Officers To Explain Positions, Activities Of Major Committees At mass meetings at 7:30 p.m. today and 4 p.m. tomorrow, men students interested in joining the Union staff will be informed of activities of the various commit- tees by Union President Tom Leo- pold and other executive staff members. All students will have opportun- ities to participate actively in the Union program for the coming se- mester. After one semester at the Union, tryouts will be able to be- come office managers. Students who wish to partici-j pate on the campus affairs com- mittee will handle such projects3 as Orientation Week, University Day, Junior College Day and the Hatcher Open Houses. Public Relations Publicity, publication of the "'M' Handbook" and dormitory and fraternity talks will be un- der the direction of the public re- lations committee. The dance committee handles all Union mixers, Saturday night dances, Little Club dances and en- tertainment with the League. Tryouts who wish to participate on the personnel and administra- tion committee will have charge of Union membership cards and but- tons and the tryout training pro- gram. The Union social commit- tee helps produce Gulantics, the all-campus talent revue. Publicity Committee Publicity committee tryouts will work with reporters from "The Daily. Sale of football and con-1 cert and lecture seriestickets along with ducats for Union theater trips will be the responsibility of the student services committee. Refreshments will be served at the meeting, and the men will have opportunity to ask questions. Attendance at the meeting does not obligate anyone to become a member. By ROSE PERLBERG Cinemascope, orlon, the H- Bomb-- these familiar words we never heard about 20 years ago. Looking back aver the events that have changed the tempo and texture of our lives during the last 20 years, the editor of w national magazine consulted several crys- tal-ball makers to find out what's in store for us 20 years hence. Although they may now seem inconceivable, here are a few pre- dictions. We will no -anger suffer ex- hausting shopping excursions. Full color fashions, possibly in 3-D, will come right into the home, through the medium of televi- sion. A push of a button, and the order will be transmitted directly to the store. The TV shopper will have much more variety in cloth- ing. Every little store will be able to carry goods from even the re- motest corner of the globe. Students of tomorrow may just- ly be walking around in a continu- al daze. Future educators plan to use hypnosis to speed up the ab- sorption of information. The field of electronics is play- ing an increasingly important role in our lives. Scientists promise even greater feats for tomorrow. The parking problem will easily be solved with moving strips and punched cards. All accounting and record keeping will be accomplish- ed automatically by electronic de- vices. Sky Advertising "The sky's the limit," so the saying goes. Advertisers plan to make it their billboard. New lights 200 times greater in intensity than anything now used will enable sky- writing at night. Remarkable advances in travel over the last 20 years show great prospects for the future. Jet planes will be whisking people all over the world, landing them at their destination even before they're scheduled to take off! In the home, all heating and lighting will be invisible, without any fixtures. Most of the food we eat will be packaged. Wood will become increasingly important -- as a source of synthetic food. The trend toward more leisure Green's is here already. Twenty years from now the four-day week will be commonplace. One of our major national problems will be the cre- ative use of our leisure time. Ar- ticles for recreation and hobbies will be one of the most important items in stores' stocks. TWENTY YEARS HENCE: Leisurely Living Trend Foreseen University of Michigan -s WAA BlazerSale WAA University of Michigan blazers will go on sale from 1 to 5 p.m..tomorrow at the wom- en's pool. ..Orders will be taken at this time, with the sale continuing from 19 a.m.' to 5 p.m. Friday. A $5 deposit is due when the order is placed, and the remain- der of the money is to be paid when the jackets arrive. The blazers come in two styles-one of heavy flannel in navy blue, oxford gray and white and the other of shet- land tweed in white only. Both blazers are fully lined. Personal fittings will be made, with no extra charge for alter- ations. Facilities for study and leisure reading are not forgotten in the social whirl provided by the League. The League Library, which con-' tains a wide variety of fiction, non- fiction books, current magazines and pamphlets, is reserved for women students. Opening hours for the library are from 9 a.m. to noon, 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. Monday1 through Thursday; 9 a.m. to noon and 2 to 5:30 p.m. Friday and 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. Sunday. The library is not open Saturday. One new attraction is "the take it and leave it shelf." Students may take a pocketbook from the shelf in exchange for another one which the student leaves in its place. Students who prefer listening to classical music while studying may use three music listening rooms. The rooms are furnished with modern chairs, tables, and lamps. Recordings are piped into each room from the central turn- table in the League Library. The music listening rooms are in the memory of the late Barba- ra J. Little. Opening hours of the music room will be the same as those of the League Library. JGP Tryouts Tryouts for the 1955 JGP, "Cock-a-Hoop," will1be con- ducted from 4 to 5:30 p.m. to- day through Saturday and from 7 to 10 p.m. today through Fri- day. All junior coeds are invit- ed to try out for parts in the show. f' BLAZERS Sponsored by WAA Oxford Grey, Navy, and White Flannel also, White Shetland Wool SALES OPEN TO PUBLIC i . I :r 'i !' A. Orders taken THURSDAY 1 to 5 FRIDAY 10 to 5 at New Women's Pool 7 __. -- _._ _ - y 1 ~. (Author of "Barefoot Bob/ With Cheek," 0oc.) 'Aw" Perfume for your Valentine 0 Choose from such famous fragrance lines as Lanvin, Guerlain, Gourielli, Schiaperelli, Caron, and many others. GIFT WRAPPING AT ,NO EXTRA CHARGE Q 0 320 SOUTH STATE STREET PHONE 2-3109 !1 <-) > Ct=O <= }C)Go<=0> Y'n (C".C THE TREEHOUSE OF THE AUGUST MOON Spring is just around the corner, and with spring, as always, will come tree-sitting contests. This I applaud. Tree-sitting is healthful and jolly and as American as apple pie. Also it keeps you off the streets. Tree-sitting is not, however, without its hazards, as you will presently see when I tell you the dread and chilling tale of Manuel Sigafoos and Ed Pancreas. Manuel and Ed, friends and room-mates, were walking one day past the folk music room in the School of Dentistry and Fine Arts. Suddenly they stopped, for coming through the door of the folk music room was a clear and thrilling alto voice singing the lovely folk tune, I Strangled My True-Love with Her Own Yellow Braids, and I'll Never Eat Her Sorghum Any More. When the last shimmering notes of the ballad had died away, Manuel and Ed rushed into the room, and there they thought their swelling hearts must burst asunder. For the singer was as beautiful as the song! Fair as the morn she was, doe-eyed and curvilinear. "My name is Manuel Sigafoos," cried Manuel Sigafoos, "and I love you madly, wildly, tempestuously!" "My name is Ed Pancreas," cried Ed Pancreas, "and I love you more than Manuel Sigafoos." "My name is Ursula Thing," cried the girl, "and I've got a jim-dandy idea. Why don't you two have a contest, and I will r go steady with the winner?" "What kind of contest?" cried Manuel and Ed. "A tree-sitting contest," cried Ursula Thing. "Natch !" "Done and done," cried Manuel and Ed, and they clambered up adjoining aspens, taking with them the following necessaries: food, water, clothing, medicaments, bedding, reading matter, and - most essential of all - plenty of Philip Morris cigarettes. We who live on the ground, with all the attendant advan- tages, know how important Philip Morris cigarettes are. Think, then, how much more important they must be to the lonely tree dweller - how much more welcome their vintage tobaccos, how much more soothing their mild pure flavor, how much more comforting to know as one sits in leafy solitude that come wind or weather, come light or dark, Philip Morris will always remain the same dependable, reliable, flavorful friend. Well supplied with Philip Morris, our heroes began their contest - Manuel with good heart, Ed with evil cunning. The shocking fact is that Ed intended to win the contest with a Machiavellian ruse. It seems that Ed, quite unbeknownst to Manuel, was one of three identical triplets. Each night while Manuel dozed on his bough, one of Ed's brothers - Fred or Jed - would sneak up the tree and replace him. Thus Ed was spending only one-third as much time in the tree as Manuel. "How can I lose?" said Ed with a crafty giggle to his brother Fred or Jed. But Ed had a surprise coming. For Manuel, though he did not know it himself, was a druid! He had been abandoned as an infant at the hut of a poor and humble woodcutter named Winthrop Mayhew Sigafoos, who had raised the child as his own. So when Manuel got into the tree, he found to his surprise that he'd never felt so at home and happy in his life, and he had absolutely no intention of ever leaving. After four or five years Ed and his brothers wearied of the contest and conceded. Ursula Thing came to Manuel's tree and i ............... a Jz /{ J C'2 L f M A - - - ,, ,~* .1"{ YOU'VE7 Probably wondered what the Student Co-ops are all about... At Michigan there are three men's, three women's, and one married couples' cooperatives which house about two hundred students. Here are a few facts on how the co-ops work. WHO OWNS AND RUNS THE CO-OPS? WE DO. Co-ops are owned by the Inter-Cooperative Council (I.C.C.), a corporation set up and run entirely by the students who live or eat in the houses. Each member, new or old, has one vote, and shares equally in all decisions: what to eat, how much to spend, how much to work. WHO MAY JOIN THE CO-OPS? ANYBODY. Andbody who agrees to participate in running the co-ops democratically is welcome. Members are accepted on a first come first served basis without racial, social, religious or political discrimination. There is no pledge or initiation period. WHAT ARE THE LIVING AND EATING ARRANGEMENTS? As a roomer, you are provided with a bed, closet space, desk, chairs, shelves, storage space as well as the social space and eating privileges. " As a boarder, you get twenty meals a week, planned and prepared by you and your fellow co-opers. "Guffing", our traditional between-meal snacking, is one of our most cherished privileges. Everyone has free access at all times to milk, bread, butter and jam, fresh fruit, cereal and leftovers. Eggs and some other items are charged at cost. Any member may invite guests. There are adequate laundry facilities. Co-ops stay open during vacation periods and in the summer. HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? Each house sets its own budget. Average costs for the past semester have been: approx. per week approx. per semester For room and board $13.00 $208 For board only $ 8.25 $130 New members pay a $20 deposit when they join; it is refunded when they leave. There are no other dues of any kind. WHO DOES THE WORK? WE DO. All the cooking, dishwashing, maintenance and management is done by the members; each choosing the job he or she feels best fitted for. Any member, new or old, can be elected officer: president, house manager, food purchaser, bookkeeper . . It takes from four to five hours a week per member to run a co-op. The exact work time is decided by vote of the house. There are no maids, janitors, resident advisors or other paid employees, HOW ABOUT THE LIGHTER SIDE OF LIFE? Co-ops aren't merely an inexpensive way to live. The men's, women's and couples' houses have together a aood number of orannized social events. Our members. comina F N I and C I S H I R T L A U N D R Y H AVE the most beaut most beautiful day in your in our hearts for brides so that' and expense to find the ne and at a price that wi BEAUTIFUL LACES Advertised in1 You'll now find in Priced from Bridal Veils,I tiful dress in the world for thaat r life. We have a soft place s why we went to so much trouble newest and loveliest bridal gowns ill fit that already stretched budget. S - TULLEST SATINS I SERVICE Phone NO 2-3231 Day or Night leading magazines our Bridal Department 39.95 to 100.00 too, from 10.95 I m I I