THE MICHIGAN DAILY Subscribe to The Michigan Daily mI DIAL NO'2-2513 BR Ever I SDIAL NO 8-6416 ENDING TONiGHT "THE CASE OF DR. LAURENT"' Wednesday VITTORIO DE SICA SOPH IA LORENx in the sly delight "THE MILLER'S BEAUTIFUL WIFE" 'I 1I ICHARLES DIAL NO 2-3136 ' ENDING TONIGHT* ' STARTS WEDNESDAY ' ONE OF THEGRAT ONES ON CURI ~ SiDNEY P~lm R -~2 UNITED ARTISTS Released thru The Most Acclaimed Picture of 1958 LSA Studies Counseling, lYear Abroad The Literary School Steering Committee yesterday reviewed the possibilities for a junior year abroad, and discussed counseling programs for freshmen, juniors and seniors. It was decided that the program for the junior year needs to be looked into further as to the num- ber of interested students, and to the financial adequacies of the University. Students could then use one of the existing programs of another school if the University could not finance it. The committee also decided that pre-registration was beneficial to the incoming student because it allowed him to spend more time with a faculty counselor. Students who enter for the first time in the fall do not see a counselor for enough time to make the visit profitable. The committee decided it would be beneficial to the new students if a counselor would address a group, followed by question and answer periods, advising them on distribution requirements and other problems that all incoming students face: Also debated was the role of the counselors of juniors and seniors It was held by many of the committee that counselors, in addition to fulfilling graduation requirements; should advise the students vocationally. Some said the student should be assigned to only one faculty member Many also felt that an informal counseling program for the stu- dent would be profitable. By JANE McCARTHY Prof. Nathan Sinai Notes Public Health Improvement v STANLEY QUARTET-The Quartet will present the first of four concerts tonight at 8:30 in Rackham Auditorium. Celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, the group has appeared on the campuses of Midwestern and Eastern universities and has performed throughout the state. Stanley Quartet To Perform onight 4 The Public Health movement originally grew out of a very broad movement of social reform, Prof. Nathan Sinai of the School of Public Health -said in a lecture yesterday. Prof. Sinai's lecture was the second of a two-part discussion of "The Historical and Social. Back- ground of the Modern Public Health Movement" given at a School of Public Health assembly. Before this century, Prof. Sinai said, the health department sym- bolized and typified the health movement of the day. Had the question "Where do we go from here?' been asked then, the an- swer would have been "We're mov- ing towards a world free from communcable diseases." "But then a few dissonant notes began to creep in," Prof. Sinai continued, "in the person of the statistician who said 'Don't look now, but your opinions have no support.' There was the problem of tuberculosis, and those who knew its history knew that its con- centration was found among the badly nourished, among the badly housed, in short, among the im- poverished." New problems were arising, and the health leaders were faced with two choices, Prof. Sinai explained: to accept social leadership and embrace change, or to reject it and remain disinterested. "The tendency to regard health as a relatively isolated problem is totally unjustified," Prof. Sinai stated, "and it is a tendency more prominent in well developed coun- tries than in under - developed countries. Economic development, social advance and health im- provement must advance together. One lagging behind will hold back the others." In the face of the new problems, health departments rejected lead- ership, Prof. Sinai said, but the problems were taken up by other agencies. Today, in addition to the health departments there are in- dependent agencies dealing with polio, cancer, heart disease, sci- entific research and other prob, lems as well as government. agen- cies involved in welfare, compensa- tion and insurance, "Who," -he asked; "can say in 1958 that the public is not interested in public health?" DruidsTa From the Stonehenge circle, Aided 'by the witches' cauldron, Mystic plans were brewed in darkness. Many twigs were examined; Many rocks were overturned, Subjected to heat from blazing torches, Observed by men of knowledge and magic. Those decayed; were burned and destroyed. Finally from the murky grove, From the Cave where Fingal perished, The Order of the Mighty Oak emerged, Causing the earth to shake and shiver, Causing nations and peoples to cower, All to bend the twig and sapling And to capture the sturdy aywends: Loose-swinging Long-shot Lo- cust Lovell, and Mighty-leaping Marble-shouldered maple Mar- ciniak. The Druids Have Spoken! and Also Specialty -- Cartoon News FRIDAY Shirley Booth Anthony Perkins in "The Matchmaker" The Stanley Quartet, composed of members of the University School of Music faculty, will give a concert at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Rackham Hall. Composed of Prof. Gilbert Ross, violin; Gustave Rosseels, violin; Prof. Robert Courte, viola; and Prof. Oliver Edel, cello, the group is celebrating its tenth anniver- sary this year. Beethoven Includedj Included in their program to- night will be "Quartet in D Major 7 Opus. 18, No. 3" by Beethoven; "Quartet No. 2" by Benjamin Lees; "Quartet in G Minor, Opus 10" by Debussy. This is the second of two quar- tet compositions by Lees, a young American composer. His first piece was recorded by the Budapest Orchestra and his second by the Puchinni Quartet Orchestra. In the ten years that it has been on campus, the Quartet has performed nearly a hundred public concerts at the University and a like number throughout Michigan and nearby states. Other Appearances Festivals of contemporary arts at the University of Illinois and at Cornell University have also been on the Stanley Quartet's agenda. They have appeared at such other universities as Yale, Princeton, Indiana, Ohio and the University of Buffalo. Under the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation, they played, at the Library of Congress in Washington. Last spring the Quartet toured South America under the Presi- dent's Fund, International Cul- tural Program of the United States, administered by the Amer- ican National Theatre and Aca- demy. They played eighteen con- certs in Rio de Janeiro, Monte- video and other leadingg cities of Brazil and Uruguay. The Stanley Quartet released re- cordings of Ross Lee Finney's "Quartet No. 6" and Quincy Port- er's "Quartet No.- 8" this year. More of their recordings will be released later this season. Produced TV Series In 1956, the Quartet produced a series of eight television pro- grams, "A Listener's Guide to Chamber Music." This was select- ed by the Educational Television and Radio Center for national distribution through the country's 23 educational stations. Their repertory consists of nearly 100 works, covering the classic, romantic and modern chamber music literature. This includes a wide representation of Haydn and Mozart, the complete string quar- tets of Beethoven and many works by, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Debussy and Ravel. They also have more than 35 works by contem- porary composers. The Quartet presents their pro- grams in the Engineering Society Auditorium, Rackham Educational Memorial, Detroit, a week before their concerts in Ann Arbor. The four concerts at the Uni- versity, two each semester, are open to thewpublic with no charge for admission. S, ASSEMBLY ANNOUNCES: Contest To Pick Houses In Final 'Fortnite' Event I NOW is positively your LAST CHANCE to sign up for your graduation pictures. These pictures are taken ONLY ONCE each year, so make your <'C appointments IMMEDIATELY!, 4 lip - ; ,I Tuesday, October 14, on the Diag from 9 til I World University Service NEEDS- 4, or at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard'Street, anytime.. YOUR HELP A preliminary contest to elimi- nate half of the houses entering the Fortnite competition will be held Nov.,17 and 18, Thelma Mc- Corkle, 159N, chairman, announced at the Assembly dormitory council meeting last night. The special elimination has been planned as a result of the in- creased number of independent women's, residence halls entering the annual activity. TIv6 facilitate time for the tradi- tional skit by the house directors, entertainment between presenta- tions by the houses and the awarding of various honors and trophies, some sort of elimination is necessary, Miss McCorkle said. Houses participating in the pre- liminary contest will not be re- quired to wear costumes and will be judged by the same panel of judges that will decide the final winner. Eliminations will be held in the Student Activities Building. St. Mary's Offers Mass for Poper A requiem High Mass for Pope Pius XII, requested of all parishes in the archdiocese of Detroit by Edward Cardinal Mooney, will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow in St. Mary's Chapel. Father Matheson urged all Ro- man Catholic students to attend one of the scheduled masses. All house chairmen will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Student Activi. ties Building to discuss final plans for the Fortnite competiton to be held Nov. 25. The theme of the, event will be announced then, according to Miss Mc~orkle. Positions Open For League Petitioning and ,interviewingfor positions with the League opens. today and will last through Thurs-. day, according to Jackie= Efrusy, '61. Positions open include director, dance chairman and scenery chair- man of Junior Girls Play; chair- man of the House Committee of the League and assistant treasurer of the League. The assistant treas- urer will be needed to work as soon as she is approved, Miss Efury said, andwill undergo *no training period. Two girls are also needed to Work on the community service committee which plans spring orientation, National Student As'- sociation tours and possibly Un versity Day. These positions are open to all women students, Miss Efrusy said. Women may pick up petition'{ blanks and sign up for interviews in the Undergraduate offices of the League. Wednesday, October 15' I-j _ U U _ mmm HI University of Michigan PLATFORM ATTRACTIONS A Solo Performance - ~SIR V~7C~y John4' U() - -IW-O I u1 Positions with Potential ENGINEERS* CHEMISTS PHYSICISTS Ceramic - Chemical -Civil Electrical - Industrial -eMechanical Metallurgical National Carbon Company, Ameiica's foremost manu- 4acturer of carbon and graphite electrodes and anodes, impervious graphite, brushes for motors and generators, dry cells and flashlights, are carbons and a wide variety of other inkiustrial products, offers positions to qualified B.S. and M.S. graduates in the fields listed above. Positions are available at National Carbon Company's 16 plants, located in the following states: Iowa, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, West Virginia and Vermont, and throughout the country in our sales organization. Interesting, rewarding careers in research, process and product development, production and methods engi- neering, product and process control, machine develop- ment, plant engineering and sales. A National- Carbon representative will be on campus - October 17 NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY h Im [.*_. Tuesday, Oct. 21-8:30 P.M. 4; \'4ll hy\\ ......."i1 .4"' .l'i\ . :.... .. __ _ :: :i:: .: ". : :. ._. ..... ..:.':.'. : .il .. Y SY 'J tA. .}.'\\ i 4 .ti ".\ .. \. .'E : : J' Y.B. "\ r