THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE -MV* "'w' THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE' "Now Coeds Set for Frosh Weekend Hillel Group' Prospective Teachers ceieirates Dress rehearsals are on Blue and Maize Team agendas in prepara- tion for Frosh Weekend dances and entertainment. Last night the Blue Team met to put the finishing touches on their presentation, "M-barrassing Bluepers," which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom. ThedMaizerTeam will conduct a final dress rehearsal tonight for their production, "Mae's Here To Stay," to be presented from 9 p.m. to midnight, Saturday in the League Ballroom. To Vie for Award Freshmen women, having been divided into two teams, Blue and Maize, are competing in friendly rivalry for an award. Plans for the decorations and entertainment have been kept a secret by the teams vieing for the prize. However coeds have been displaying colorful posters and per- forming stunts on the Diag in or- der to win support for their team, -' since attendance is another aspect to be judged. Coeds on the Blue Team will form a parade from noon to 12:15 p.m. today, which will procede from the Union to the League. Dressed in navy blue, the fresh- men will either ride in convertibles or strut along, singing, "Blue Team Goes Marching Along."~ originality To Be Judged Tickets will be a parallelogram with unusual printing whilecthe programs will consist of a coed holding a towel of real material, identical to the design for the Blue Team ticket booths. Maize Team members have made parodies of fraternity songs which were sung at fraternity and soror- ity houses. "In. Her Hair She Wore A Yellow Ribbon," is the theme song of the Maize coeds. Mae, the Michigan Arboretum Elf, peers over the Maize tickets, while the programs will be in the shape of elf shoes. Tree stumps with little elves around them are serving as ticket booths. Learn Dances, Games Israeli Birth Dance, Guest Speaker Faculty Coffee Hour To Highlight Weekend Israeli Cabaret Night Dance, a guest speaker and faculty coffee hour are among Hillel's highlights for the celebration of Israel In- dependence Week through Satur- day at Hillel. Sponsored by the Student Zion- ist Organization of Hillel, this year's celebration is to commem- orate the seventh anniversary of the establishment of the Jewish State of Israel. Israel Independ- ence Day was yesterday according to the Hebrew calendar. Among the activities for the week will be a faculty coffee hour at 4 p.m. today featuring Mr. Sim- cha Pratt, Consul-General of Is- rael in Chicago, as guest speaker. Mr. Pratt practiced law in Tel Aviv until 1935 when he joined the Israel Foreign Service. After leav- ing service in 1949, he resumed his law practice and became active in the Israel Bar Association. He was elected to the Tel Aviv Branch Committee of the Association and in 1953 became a member of the Central Committee. Mr. Pratt was also vice-president of B'nai B'rith Lodge "Shaare Zion," of Tel Aviv until his departure for Chicago. Mr. Pratt will deliver services and a sermon at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Hillel. Oneg Shabbat, Israeli- style, will follow services. Cabaret atmosphere will provide ,a middle eastern setting for Hil- lel's Israeli Cabaret Night Dance, 8:30 p.m. Saturday. Israeli enter- tainment, refreshments and Israeli and American social dancing will be available. Proceeds from the dance will go to the Jewish National Fund. Res- ervations can be made by calling Hillel, NO 3-4129. , -Daily-Fred Day SNEAK REVIEW--While rehearsing their Hawaiian dance for the Maize Team's "Mae'z Here To Stay," Joan Conroy and Betty Boyn- ton are critically watched by Blue Team onlookers, Carol Klein and Linda Ascher, who will perform in "M-barrassing Bluepers." Panhel Elects Committees, Orientates New Delegates Have you ever tried to teach a college junior or senior a folk dance or game? This is what members of the D- 127 Education School class do in preparation for teaching elemen- tary school classes. Students learn various activities for teaching phy- sical education although the course is designed for classroom teach- ers and not for physical education majors. The D-127 class is a prerequisite for state certification, and mem- bers attend the lectures, labs and observations, into which the three credit course is divided. The obser- vations take place in Ann Arbor elementary schools, while in the labs, students teach each other songs, folk dances and games. Learn Rhythm Games For half of the semester, stu- dents learn how valuable rhythm is to early elementary school chil- dren. The rhythm games that they learn include fundamental walking activities for first and second gra- ders. In this type of game, chil- dren are taught to imitate frogs or jumping jacks, spinning leaves or giants, unfolding flowers or rocking horses. In teaching more advanced games, prospective teachers learn to direct their pupils' activities un- til the pupils themselves seem cap- able of taking over leadership. Teach Team Games For the remainder of the semes- ter, students learn to teach simple and more highly organized team games. Dodge-ball, and the "cat and rat" game have become famil- iar to many junior and senior edu- cation students, while others have improved their skills in soccer and .volley ball. This class has not only proved valuable as a teaching aid, but Education School graduates have said that many games and ideas learned in the class have been a big help in conducting meetings and in raising their own families. Because this course may serve so many purposes, class member- ship is open to all students with the consent of their individual{ schools. PERMA-LIFT Gives You Buy the Best . . . BUYI BALFOUR Now is the time to place orders for those items needed so early' in the fall for open houses and other social gatherings .. . CHRISTMAS CAR DS . . . Party Napkins Place Cards... Invitations ... Rushiiig Cards Book Matches . . . Correspondence Papers. Orders placed now will be delivered in the fall in ample time for your needs. Special discounts apply on many items ordered now. L. G. BALFOUR CONPANY 1321 South University - Ann Arbor, Michigan - .N ~ / Freedom of Action. \\ / In Our Oval-Crotch Panty. Girdle .-...-.-} Opening with a general orien- tation of delegates, the Panhellen- ic Board of, Delegates met yester-, day in the League. President Debbie Townsend out- lined the purpose of the group as legislating and discussing any mat- ters that concern the sororities as a group. Beverly Shea, Delta Delta Delta, and Sally Blackman, Collegiate Sorosis, were elected members of the finance committee. Under the chairmanship of Jean MacRae, Treasurer of Panhel, the group will handle all financial arrange- ments. Miss Shay and Miss Blackman will also serve with Martha San- ders, Alpha Kappa Kappa, as dele- gates to the scholarship commit- tee which awards 'Panhellenic scholarships and grants from the emergency fund. It was decided that the Associa- tion work through the Ann Arbor Junior Chamber of Commerce in locating a photographer to takej future sorority composite pictures. I. HOT DOGS SAVE YOUR PENNIES: College Students Can Budget Their Money With All The Trimmings BEST IN ANN ARBOR'* For Your PARTIES, PICNICS, OUTINGS, IATE SNACKS, And Even MEALS! (Not More Than 5,000 to a Customer) *By our own admission ANN ARBOR RESTAURANT NO 3-1683 1015 East Ann Street By SUE RAUNHEIM Do you need a budget? For a great many people, the word "budgeting" has an un- pleasant connotation because it has come to mean complicated bookkeeping, a program of desper- ate penny-pinching or an attempt to live according to somebody else's set of rules. It is a good thing to be sensible and thoughtful about money. That is not true just because goodmon- ey management makes money go farther but because good planning Mongol can mean less preoccupation with money and a better, saner attitude toward life. If the college student is inter- ested in money management, the first thing he must do is outline a plan for himself. It should be writ- ten out and fairly detailed. Later, he can modify it or carry on with- out any bookkeeping at all. Fix Amounts After outlining his plan, the stu- dent must set aside a certain amount of money each week. He should write down all his fixed obligations such as paying the laundry bill, buying toothpaste and books. Then, if he sets aside a few dollars each month for these pur- poses, he will have the money when he needs it. An emergency fund is important to meet future unexpected ex- penses. Another thing to consider when making a budget is living expenses. The students living in dormitor- ies do not have much worry over this problem but those living *in apartments may need some ad- vice. Write Expenditures By writing down how he spends his money and by keeping mental track of it, the student will spend less money. He will see fewer mov- ies, which, he probably did not want to see anyway, and he will drive his car fewer unnecessary miles than he would have ordi- narily. Or else he can learn to live a little more efficiently. There are many people who dress well and spend little money for their clothes. Change Habits The student can also change the way he spends money. Instead of having a car, he can do without one and save money that way. In- stead of smoking a pack of cigar- ettes a day, the student might cut down on them. Sarah Lovelace, BAd, '55; com- mented, "A budget is a wonderful thing to have if you want to go through four years of college." You tot can have a budget! >1 1 8.50 What young people are doing atGenerac Electric No lonesome leftovers when you ,(\ buy our LETTER PIPERS Why send out mis-matched letters they make a poor impression), when you can always match paper and envelopes with Eaton's Young manager handles finances for building of $5,000,000 plant In the next ten years, the demand for General Electric industrial heating equipment will double. To meet this demand, a giant new plant (model at right) is being built at Shelbyville, Indiana. The plant will cost $5,000,000, and the man responsible for handling finances for the entire job is 32-year-old R. E. Fetter. Fetter's job is important, responsible Dick Fetter's work as Financial Manager of the Department began long before General Electric started building the plant. He and his group first had to estimate probable op- erating costs and predict whether the plant would be profitable. Now, during construction, Fetter's chief concern is keeping track of all the expenses on this multimillion-dollar project. When the plant is completed, he will set up a complete financial section and manage everything from tax, cost, and general ac- counting to payrolls, budgets and measure- ments, and internal auditing. 25,000 college graduates at General Electric This is a big job. Fetter was readied for it in a careful step-by-step program of devel- opment. Like Fetter, each of the 25,000 col- MATCHMATES By Saba of California 2-piece Dress . . 16.95 Fancy Pants .. 7.95 SABA has scored again with this typically Californian print in lovely blues and purples . . . the two piece dress with its sunback halter top is perfect for the coming i