I PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUG. 12, 1939 0 1 . , FRESHMEN Michigan Union Offers Recreational, Social Facilities ToUniversity Men FOLLETT'S are anxious to make you a regular, every-day customer and friend of ours-We can only do that by giving you what you want . ... when you want it .. and at the LOWEST PRICE. Come in and browse at FOLLETT'S. Get acquainted even before you're ready to purchase your BOOKS and SUPPLIES. In Ann Arbor we find Michigan Students "DCALCOMAN IA CONSCIOUS As a means of becoming acquainted with YOU, won't you please drop us a Post Card requesting your FREE Official University of Michigan DECALCOMANIA. (There is absolutely No Charge.) We'll gladly send it along with any other information you desire. III New Addition Completed Last Year Contains 90 Sleeping Rooms, Lounge The Michigan Union, hub of men's activities on campus, offers recrea- tional, club and hotel facilities to Michigan men. A new addition, completed last year, contains 90 sleeping rooms, two dor- mitory type rooms that will accom- modate 12 men each, and quarters for the Faculty Club, including a game room and a lounge. The dor- mitories a;e ued by visiting athletic teams, and the sleeping rooms are a part of the building's hotel facilities. Seven bowling alleys, newly recon-, ditioned and relaid, will be opened at the beginning of Orientation Week. They are located in the basement of the new addition. A large billiard room, with tables for pocket billiards as well as the standard game, is on the second floor of the building, and includes eight ping pong tables and equipment. The Union swimming pool, which was used for Conference swimming meets before the Intramural Build- ing was completed, is open to Union members. Women students may use the pool at specified times, and a series of lessons in swimming, life saving and water safety, under Red Cross supervision, will be announced duiring the year. Showers and steam baths are a part of the pool equip- ment. Informal dances are held every Fri- day and Saturday during the school year in the main ballroom of the Union. The Union Formal, held about the middle of November, is the first important formal affair of the year. Only men are allowed to use the Union cafeteria in the basement. Three meals a day are served, and the soda fountain is open at all hours., Members of* the Union and their guests may eat in the dining room on the first floor. The Pendleton Library on the sec- ond floor is a haven for those who wish a quiet place to read and study. It is well supplied with current pub- lications as well as standard works. Lounges on the main floor, a barber shop in the basement, and offices and meeting rooms for the use of campus groups and societies complete the list of Union facilities. Expenses Vary Students Find Average Budget Estimated At About $530 (Cdntnued from Page 5) per week for rooms in outlying sec- tions of town farther from campus. Comfortable rooms immediately off the campus run closer to $5 weekly. The rise of the student cooperative movement in the past few years has done much to slash living costs for students, without eating too far into time needed for study and recreation. The Wolverine Cooperative offers 20 meals a week for $4.50 while the five men's and one women's cooper- ative living houses run about $2 for room and $2.50 for board: a total of about $4.50 a week. Since cooperative students are only required to contribute about 7 hours a week toward the upkeep of these cooperative establishments, they avoid the ill-fated results of scholastic fail- Lre, social introversion and broken health which educators decry as the all-too-often result of "working one's way through school." At the opposite end of the expense scale from the cooperative is fraterni- ty and sorority life. The average house bill for Michigan houses runs around $60 per month with some tacking extra miscellaneous expenses. S __ ._ -. DON TREADWELL Union Secretary Presides Over Union Automatic Membership Is Provided Male Students; Walz, Oaks In Charge A service organ for undergraduate men and alumni and an administra- tive agency in certain student activi- ties is the Michigan Union, to which all men on the campus automatically belong. The Union provides social and recreational facilities for men on the campus and services several of the men's organizations. It also pro- vides the staff to carry out class elec- tions and other student activities. The business management of the Union is under the direction of Stan- ley Walz and Frank Oakes, Who have been connected with the organization for several years. They are in charge of the dining room, cafeteria, pool, bowling alleys, billiard room, library and housing functions of the Union. The activity side is under the direc- tion of a student staff, headed next year by Don Treadwell, president, and Hadley Smith, secretary. Conducts Orientation One of the most important func- tions of the Union will be conduct- ing the men's side of Orientation week, with Marshall Brown in charge. The Union will plan schedules for freshmen, select student advisers and offer activities during this week. The Union also is joint sponsor of the Book Exchange, which will be open during the latter part of Orien- tation Week. This is an exchange, where used books may be bought and sold at prices bid and quoted by in- terested students. Every Friday and Saturday the Union offers weekly membership dances in the ball room. Bill Sawyer will be the regular Union orchestra this year, replacing Bob Steinle. The annual Union formal will be held in the fall, and other "big" dances will be in the ballroom. Facilities for luncheon groups, clubs and other or- ganizations are also offered. Coffee Hour Popular Popular during the last two years have been the weekly coffee hours, at which men and women can come for an afternoon's informal get-to- gether. From time to time various persons are asked to speak at the Coffee Hours. Also important are the vocational talks given by heads of different colleges and depart- ments during the year, and the Occu- pational Week in the spring, spon- sored with the Bureau of Occupation- al Information. The Union sponsors certain campus projects such as the Michigras, the Ice Carnival and Mimes, and con- ducts in the spring University days for visiting high school students. A new and important function will be the conduct of all student elections, working in cooperation with the Men's Judiciary Council. Eligibility Rules Freshmen are eligible to try for the Union staff in the second semester. During their sophomore year, tryouts rotate through the different commit- tees, and at the end of this year, 10 are selected to head the committees in their junior year and serve on the Junior Executive Council. From this council are chosen the president and secretary. Junior committeemen this year will be Irl Brent, Elmer Foster, Marshall Brown, Douglas Gould, Pete Brown, Charles Kerner, Jim Palmer, Harold Singer, Chuck Heinen and Bob Ul- rich. Organized In 1921 The Schol of Business Administra tion was organized in 1921, and hs an enrollment of 176 students, and 14 faculty members. The prerequisite for admission to the school is either graduation from college, or a three- year combined curricula course. The degree of M.B.A. may be received after completion of a two-year course in the School of Business Adminis- tration. a HADLEY SMITH Courses Given All Over State Extension Service Offers SubjectsIn 33 Cities The University Extension Service, which had its beginning in 1913 offer- ing only three subjects, has grown to- day to a state-wide service with courses in 33 cities. Inaugurated for the purpose of en- abling persons who are unable for some reason or other to take advan- tage of the facilities of the Univer- sity, to receive University instruction, the service, under the direction of Dr. Charles A. Fisher, offers both credit and non-credit courses, allow- ing students to earn as much as 30 hours toward a degree in one year. Last year more than 6,000 students took classes in the various cities of the state to which University profes- sors are sent. Groups usually meet for a two-hour period each week. In addition to the extension service, a correspondence study department is also offered. Organized in January, 1936, the service offers both credit and non-credit courses to those who cannot attend classes regularly be- cause of ill health, work or other reasons. Many other educational features are offered by the Extension Service to keep the University in touch with every community in the state. Among these are the Michigan High School Forensic Association, the Library Ex- tension Service, the Bureau of Visual Education, the Joint Committee on Health Education, the broadcasting service, institutes and lectures. 1 O'. FOLLETT'S BOOKSTORE-just across from the campus. MICHIGAN BOOK STORE I II - - - Lu u mu * - - __ I