THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDN ckham Offers Counseling To Present 'Electra' SWAMPS, JUNGLES: Three Students To Cycle Througoh Latin America seling division, section of the Bu- reau of ,Psychological Services of the Institute for Human Adjust- ment is located. While the counseling division offers help with a wide range of psychologicaE.and emotional prob- lems, the majority of their clien- tele asks to be assisted in two areas: solving academic problems and aid in choosing a vocation. Help Given For students who "clutch on blue-books," cannot seem to mas- ter course material or are unable to sustain concentrated study ef- fort the counseling staff pro- vides methods of solving individ- ual problems.- However, help gen- erally begins when "technical me- chanical aid" has been exhausted. Many students who suffer from reading difficulties and similar study problems which, in turn, effect exam taking prowess, find that the reading improvement service is extremely beneficial. But to those who know the efficient DIAL NO 8-6416 Ending Thursday CECIL RDEMILLES , methods but still can't apply them, the counselors provide a further source of help. Essentially, the staff, in private interviews, attempts to make a student spell out his problem. Re- alizing his difficulty, an individ- ual can be helped to stop actions which *have hampered his aca- demic functioning. Uses Interview To solve the question of "what; to do" the division uses the same interview, exchange idea tech- nique. Talking briefly during a first interview, the staff counselor determines just what type of problems are confronting a stu- dent. Solution may be found in talking out a difficulty, testing an individual or referring him to vo- cational information which the division keeps on file. Running an individual through a battery of tests designed for all students isn't the standard means of helping a person who comes for help. The division relies on staff flexibility to adjust to particular cases. Dating complications, home- sickness and roommate conflicts are also brought into the counsel- ing office but on a lesser scale. The majority of problems occur in two areas and are brought out by students coming in for help. Send Students Reference by faculty, academic counselors, residence hall advisors bring in other students. In some cases, the staff will refer "admin- istrative-legal =problems" to the offices of the Dean of Men or Wo- men., When a counselor feels that help which only these offices can contribute is needed, he will refer the case to the Dean of Men or Women. Serious cases which in- volve medical complications will go to Health Service since the staff is neither legally nor medi- cally qualified in -these areas.- -Daily-Robert Kaplan "ELECTRA" SET-Sophocles' "Electra" will be presented at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow, Friday and Saturday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The speech department's Playbill production is directed by Prof. William Halstead and will star Lorraine Small (far right) in the title role. Others in the cast include (left to right) Howard Green as Aegisthus, Nancy Enggass as Clyemnestra and Howard Poyourow as Orestes. A few tickets are available for tomorrow's performance only and may be purchased after noon at the theatre box office. CITY COUNCIL: Approves State Street Traffic Islands' By NORMA SUE WOLFE Wil Porter, Grad.; Bob Mancell, '59, and Dick McElroy, '60, are three University students who met a month ago through an ad- vertisement in the personal col- umn and will travel an estimated 15,000 miles together via motor- cycle through the villages and un- penetrated jungles of Latin Amer- ica this summer.- The ad simply read: "Adven- ture -- Tired of the everyday grind? Two grad students plan- ning expedition through S. Amer- ica, room for two more. Live out- doros, travel by motorcycle. June through Sept. Net cost about $300." "I conceived the idea last De- cember," Porter admitted, "but original plans did not materialize. I ran the ad in The Daily and for- tunately found two other students with similar interests and objec- tives," he added. Adventurers Specialize Each of the adventurers has something to offer, he said. Man- cell, who is majoring in geography and has a special interest in Latin America, will unroll maps and knowledge as they travel. McElroy, a journalism student, is going to write a book of their adventures. And Porter is a me- chanical engineer. Attached to the back of each motorcycle will be carriers for the equipment they plan to take: pis- tols, tape recorders, panchos, jungle hammocks, cameras and machetes to clear their way through the jungle. Area Unexplored Two hundred of the 15,000 miles are unexplored, according to geog- raphist Mancell. The boys antici- pate stringing their cycles along cliffs with block and tackle, ford- ing rivers and clearing their own paths. "All the way down there are, good roads until we hit a 25-mile gap in Guatemala," Porter said. "We'll probably be able to make it through." "We're not supposed to make it through there. A road won't be built until 1961. But our motor- cycles have oversized tires for rid- ing through mud and along rail- road beds." The Darien Gap, 200 miles of trackless jungle, is the third ,ob- stacle. Porter described it as "the least known area in the entire Western Hemisphere." The Automobile Association of America has predicted that there is "absolutely no possibility of getting through." Establish First "If we can't penetrate Darien, we may hitch a ride on a banana boat," Porter said. "But this would be defeating the entire plan of es- tablishing a first by land," he added. He plans to supplement K- ration meals in Darien with wild bananas and other food from the area. "We'll have mess kits - just got to know what we're, doing with jungle food," Porter, who has been planning the trip for four months, said. Around World Porter hopes to work his way around the wo'rld in a matter of years. Past experiences. include traveling by car "all over the West." Mancell spent two summers in Mexico and the West. McElroy described his experience in trayel as "from Lynwood to Bay City and back." And how about reaction of par- ents? Calls Home McElroy said,+ he called home, briefly discussed his contemplated tour through Latin America with his mother, and hung up. One-half hour later, she called back. McElroy began his story again. "Actually, this is more than a trip for adventure or fun," he em- phasized. "Although we have no purpose, you could say that we're going to 'broaden our horizons'." 11 t CHARiJ YOE ANNt WARDGQ ETON-"BRYNNER-"BAXTER-ROBIN5ON YVONC OtBRA JOHN DE CARLO-PAGET-DEREK SCieC NINA IfA A w JUTH vnCNT tIARDWCKE- fOCH-'SCOTT-ANDERSON- PRICE A PARAMOVNT PICTURE " TECHNICQ",QV) ONE SHOW DAILY AT 7:30 Adults $1.00 al m DE u D 111= MI 1 "'II - The Ann Arbor City Council Monday night accepted a bid for building four permanent traffic islands in the State St. business area. They will be, located at State and William, State and Liberty, Liberty and Maynard and May- nard and William Sts. They will Pianist Garner ORIENTATION, LEADER INTERVIEWS April 27-May 1 .L. . from 3-5 Male Students Sign Up at Union Student Offices This Week To Play Here Jazz pianist Erroll Garner will be featured in Greek Week-1959, co-chairman Mike Sklar, '60, an- nounced yesterday. Garner will appear May 15 at Hill Aud., topping a round of acti- vities which will open with the Inter-Fraternity Council Sing May 11. Garner is presently playing to "packed houses" in New York, and will return there after his Ann Ar- " bor performance, Sklar said. Order forms for block tickets will be sent out early next week. { General ticket sales will open May 6. - --- -- replace temporary islands now there. Made of concrete, they will be built so that barberry bushes can be planted inside them by' the Parks and Recreation Depart- ment. Electrical and other facili- ties for Christmas displays, in particular Christmas trees, may also be included. The bid accepted last night, which did not include the latter item, was for $2,391. The low bid was $245 above a, previous engineer's estimate, -but City Administrator Guy C. Lar- com said that the bid was low enough to warrant that it be accepted. They also approved a study of how large amounts of rain water get into the sanitary sewer system. The water adds considerably to the volume the sewage-treatment plant must treat. During rainy periods the average the plant treats approaches 17,000,000 gal- lons a day, approximately its ca-' pacity. The normal daily flow av- erages 8,000,000 gallons.' The Council approved contract- ing with a local firm of consulting1 engineers for the study. Larcom said a rough estimate of the cost was $10,000 for as much as two years' work. Board Passes Early School Tax Allotment The Tax Allocation Board Mon- day tentatively allocated the Ann Arbor school district nine and one-half mills of the 15-mill property tax. It gave Washtenaw County the other five and one-half mills. The action was taken unusually early. Board chairman Wiiliiam F. Verner said it would give the board more time to hear from the various governmental agencies under it and to decide on final al- locations. The Ann Arbor Board of Edu- cation had submitted a budget that required 15 mills from the property tax, but it has authority to levy 51/2 more mills. The coup- ty asked for six mills. The county budget for the year totals $3,175,224 with $2,889,919 of it to be collected from the prop- erty tax. Final allocations must be made by June 1. A hearing on them will be held May 26. The meeting will be held to dis- cuss the preliminary allocations. t; If . . La §on4 c TOBACCONISTS SINCE 1898 Ann Arbor Representative SY MANELLO Whew!' } Our shipment of Heath Stoneware finally arrived. So many of you have inquired about it, and we are tlad our stock is good again. JOHN LEIDY me NO 8-6779 * 601 East Liberty 1317 WILMONT fr.5 r FREE PIPE TOOL given with It the purchase of any LaFond's Briar Pipes especially made for us by G.B.D. FREE SAMPLES of our six private blends on request. Phone NO 2-4786 for Classified Ads NO 5-7653 BOURBON ST. MISSION uervices Saturday Night I-M Building t -Daily--Robert Dennis LATIN AMERICA OR BUST-Wil Porter (far left) and. Dick McElroy (right) discuss geographical difficulties with Bob Mancell. The three University students hope to establish a first by land when they motorcycle through Latin America this summer. Phon I DIAL NO 2-2513 ENDING THURSDAY More people are loyal to Camels than any other'cigarette today. It stands to reason: the best tobacco makes the best smoke. The Camel blend of costly tobaccos has never been equalled for rich flavor and easygoing mildness. No wonder Camel is the No. 1 cigarette of all brands today! Fads and fancy stuff are for the birds ... Have a real cigarette - have a CAMEL DIAL NO 2-3136 "Call it the most hilarious entertain- ment of 'this or any year and you come close to describing 'Some Like It Hot' . . . Go and have yourself a wonderful time." -N.Y. Journal-American ARILYNMOME and her bosom companions TONY CURTiS JCk LEMoN tn a BILLY WILDER production LkE iT Ho r 4 I also TOM & JERRY D "WFRIDAY "WARLOCK" I t Read Daily Classi ieds I. HENRY H. STEVENS, Inc.' ID v., IV%. "WAMIM, I' ,~- 'r