THE MICHIGAN DAILY °T "HANG DOWN YOUR HEAD"-Not following the advice they give to Tom Dooley in their hit song, the Kingston Trio are flying high. The three, who recently received college degrees in economics, got together while in school, discovered another common interest (folksinging) and gave up thoughts of professions in economics for the present to take up bongo drums, banjos and guitars, and sing their favorite songs before cheering audiences. T HILL AUDITORIUM: Kingston Trio To Play on Saturday International Committee Makes Plans Information about 15 European countries and Israel will be avail- able at the Union-Student Gov- ernment Council sponsored travel show, Carol Holland, '60, chair- man of SGC's National and In- ternational Committee said yese- terday. To be presented from 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. on the third floor of the Union, the program will feature displays and information about a separate country in each room. A student from that coun- try will also be available to answer questions, she explained. Prof.'James Davis, director of the International Center, will also show slides of University cities in various parts, of the world from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. she said. Included in the collection will be pictures of the Universities of Delhi and Beirut and other institutions un- der consideration by the commit- tee for a student exchange pro- gram. Additional slides on hosteling in Europe will be presented. Written material on visas, passports and immunization procedures will also be available. Although the program is pri- marily for students interested In going to Europe this summer, anyone interested is welcome to come in and "just wander around," she added. Fashion Show To Feature Suits, Coats The public is invited to attend the annual University of Michi- gan Dames fashion show to be held today at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Union Ballroom. The show, "Silhouettes in Fash- ion," will feature suits and coats, sportswear, casual and daytime dresses and "after-five" dresses. The spring fashions and acces- sories will be modeled by "dames" chosen from the club's glamor group. Refreshments will be served after the show, which is open to men as well as women. Tickets will be sold at the door, or can be obtained by phone by calling Mrs. William Drake at NO 2-5489. campus where one member,. Dave Guard, was doing graduate work in economics. The other members of the group, Bob Shane and Nick Rey- nolds, also hold degrees in econ- omics which they received from Menlo College last year. The nearness of the two schools brought the trio together and their common interest in the mu- sic of Hawaii, Tahiti, Mexico, Spain, America and the -calypso rhythms of the West Indies soon prompted them to forsake the field of economics to become en- tertainers. Since their discovery by a West Coast publicist during an appear- ance at the Cracked Pot, a Stan- ford student gathering place, they have performed in a number of San Francisco night clubs and have toured the country. Critics and citizens, from Bing Crosby to Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, have acclaimed the pro- ductions of the trio, who accom- pany their renditions of the folk- songs of many lands with guitars, banjos, ukeleles and conga drums. Of the trio's accomplishments and goals, Guard has said "We don't really consider ourselves folksingers in the accepted sense of the word, but it was our basic interest in this kind of singing that brought us together." The diversity of their repertoire, he added, is limited only by the restriction that the songs must have a "basic intelligent thought and be founded in good taste." All three young entertainers grew up in atmospheres in which folksongs and folklore figured pre- dominantly. - Guard and Shane were born in Hawaii where they acquired much knowledge of the traditional mu- sic of-it and the surrounding Poly- nesian islands. They learned to strum ukeleles when they were about seven years old, the same time that they learned to swim. They later mastered the art of playing both banjo and guitar, with Reynolds' talent on the conga drums rounding out the group's musical accomplishments. Critics have often noted the trio's enjoyment of the songs they sing and have commented on the pleasure they show in singing to- gether. I VA I U.S., LATIN AMERICA: Axelrod Notes Equal Health Plans i rI By JUDITH DONER "It is hard to justify Latin American public health students coming to the United States to study," Prof. Solomon Axelrod ad- mitted yesterday. Having recently completed a five month tour of six south of the border countries, the associate di- rector of the Bureau of Public Health Economics reported that he found "the same facilities, methods of instruction, courses and in some cases course num- bers" as in the United States. Speaking at a Delta Omega lec- ture, sponsored by the School of Public Health, Prof. Axelrod noted "the rather severe shortage of public health personnel" in the Latin American countries which he visited. Compares Figures Reporting that there averages one trained medical person for every 2,500 citizens, he compared this figure with the one to 730 ra- tio in this country. "The majority of public health personnel in the Latin American nations are concentrated in the cities," Prof. Axelrod continued, although governmental action to This stipulation improve the distribution has been initiated. In Mexico, for example, compulsory social service in rural areas is required for graduation by all medical students. fulfills the three-fold purpose of giving grad- uate medical students rural prac- tice, often supplying rural com- munities with their only health personnel and encouraging medi- cal students to practice in rural areas, Prof. Axelrod said. . Chile Offers Bonus Jn Chile, the government offers a bonus to physicians who agree to practice in other than urban areas and gives special credit to- ward promotion, he continued. General hospitals are operated by the Central Ministry of Health in each of the Latin American countries visited by Prof. Axelrod. These hospitals are supplemented by those built by social security administrations, he r e p o r t e d. There are also a small number of voluntary hospitals, which operate purely as welfare organizations. Consequently, the concept of local health services through local health centers was introduced. "In trying to duplicate the North American system, only the conven- tional services were offered," he noted. Realizing their mistake, treatment services were recently initiated. i I PROF. AXELROD . . .lectures 1 "r.-r: r x".t Sv:y;¢,rrr."n:"sc,:,"y'"w,'i ::+o: " e o..":. .. r.".^:cs:c; k:'v:+"v i:°:i skik: % sx.,. .a}::{tie .;at'."i; ti% 'rs" "°"r ;.. ' SP,"'": r ti7, 7ua .'L4 'r' c maoiFa ' f4 ^:::"';:': ":{jS:%r:;Y.!fiSw';"%7+ct"". +r:9"r:. ..:: :.::';{ ;' ::Mri.{:"rry. }y:,"."k::::......"":':"::Pr "1YV,4::':,,....:,:rsrxal.:...«:.as::'°'4:::^:}:,".a"..,.,.s9:arrd.r.. tr sd"irr.Cirkrat.s k "'r,',"? ..:. ATIC N NOTICES R A I Z Y 7 " " ::a :51" " .: rrvr :.^.:. M:S lfi "r F ..^r{r"{{i;.:; .^. ;1,4 ;r: ;T};.}C^.R ;1"':.:'"".1: :':}:i ' : \i"' "'" ": , r. 5"1:"r. 11..r. Y1".':"fr. ":" { y,. , ( r ' 1, .: r: vv+"; ::?' +: :};q"; g;;., rr"'"-r,:".",r,.-"":{xtiy, .. "x ...:.. r"}. :'"r."rrxr v: ""'":..r:'": r"P".';rr .} °?:": :"'."::... . {.. .,..+ry. . ,r.;. r.."n:":r " , s rax" fi.".s .a".m r'a : +fi 'd".'"kf ia4 :'.reC . ". rr "rM:: ,'";fi}; . r,. {:,}4i "..rxrx.{'v .;"{:":;:r. .U''r.^.?.r..,:a."rk:"..""::ira^ .r,.«.«.,,eS;'ara^f...a tr~.e.. ...vY: 4e;......««.....,...,,.. ...,:::+."P."::s au: i :r.:.u "sk...=...wii, rivx-na:.:s:a{h.'"."3a".«xda^.:r:.;rr r.".hr:rsa :.k" Closing Hour Student Activities: Stu- dent Government Council has author- ized an extended closing hour of 1 a.m. for student-sponsored activities held EUROPE Dublin to Iron Curtain; Africa to Sweden. You're accompanied-not herded. College age only. Also short trips. $724-$1390 EUROPE SUMMER TOURS 255 Sequoia (Box 4)-Pasadena, Cal. on the night of March 14. Badminton Tournament, Mixed Dou- bles, March 10, 7 p.m., Barbour Gym. Congregational and Disciples Guild, coffee break, March 10, 4:30-6 p.m., Guild House. Graduate Newman Club, panel dis- cussion, March 11, 8 p.m., Newman Club. Topic: "A Christian Sociologist's View of World Population Problems" with Father P. Besanceny. * * * Graduate Student Coffee Hour, March 11, 4-5:30 p.m., Rackham Bldg., 2nd floor -- W. Lounge. All graduate stu- dents welcome. Lutheran Student Assoc., communion service, March 11, 7:30 a.m., Lutheran Student Chapel. * * * Ullr Ski Club, meeting, March 11, 7:30 p.m., Union, Rm. 3-D. Elections, final spring vacation planning. * * * Women's Rifle Club, meeting, March 10, 7 p.m., WAB. * * * Fencing Club, meeting, March 10, 7-9 p.m., WAB. &1auto) Ilome4 TRAVELOGUE Picturesque HOLLAND Historical q.._I i I I