THE MICHIGAN DAILY -I . .- ..... .. - -. r- re t ~ "'T'--"r1 . -T Y1f * T T1 RT Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES New Books If You Prefer OLLKITT'LS STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY INVITE BOSTON SYMPHONY TO DINE: East Quad To Host Orchestra World University Service Provides Needed Program I) TIrS WEEK! GRAD MIXER-Sat., Oct. 18 John Vonin's Orchestra Members of the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra will be hosted by East Quadrangle at 5 p.m. Sat- urday, October 18, according to John Bay, '59. This will be the second time in the last two years that the Bos- ton Symphony has been the din- ner guests of East Quad. The invitations were issued at the request of the East Quad Council and students: A special committee under the chairman-. ship of Bay and Jerold Humel, Grad., were appointed to make ar- rangements for the expected 80' orchestraemembers and the 20 faculty guests. The orchestra members wil he separated into groups of 10 and will have dinner in each of the eight East Quad houses with resi- dents of each house who request to be present at the dinner. The orchestra members will be met at the Union shortly before dinner and transported by bus to East Quad. After dinner they will be taken to Hill Auditorium where they are scheduled to give their performance., Rackham Ballroom 9-12 P.M. Sponsored by Graduate Student Council ©u Don't Have to Wait! You =Can See It Today! BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA-Under the direction of Charles Munch, the orchestra will, present the second concert in the Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in Hill Auidtorium.. Programmed for the performance, are Mozart's Symphony No. 35 "Haffner," Honegger's Symphony No. 5, and Beethoven's Symphony No. 6 "Pastorale." Munch, a native of Strasbourg, Germany, was known as one of the foremost musicians of France before he came to the Boston Symphony in 1949. He had been conductor of four Paris orchestras during his career there. When the Boston Symphony toured in Europe in 1956 it performed in Moscow, becoming the first orchestra from the United' States ever to play in the Soviet Union. A limited number bf tickets for Saturday's concert are still available at the University Musical Society office in Burton Tower. The picture EVERY critic has acclaimed the finest dramatic motion picture of our time! "SAVORY CINEMA, SHARPLY SEASONED !" --Time Magazine "EXCITEMENT! FEROCITY IS THE KEYNOTE !" -World Telegram and Sun University of Michigan PLATFORM LIFE . N.Y. Times. . others without exception . . . praise lavishly! ATTRACTIONS See We It Yourself . . KNOW you'll agree it's GREAT! k.A.{Solo sz:4Pefo ance /n R A 5N@CKUR. Two chaiflO Ifgits .spef ate trying ta - C fromthe and each otheri I Frieze Fills. New Academic, Requirements, By RUTHANN RECHT Converted to University use, the Frieze building, located on Wash- ington and State streets, now holds the School of, Social Work, speech department apd the ro- mance language department. Formerly this building housed the high school students of, Ann Arbor. The first building on this site was built in 1856 and was named the Ann Arbor Union High School. This building -was en- larged in 1871. During the Christ- mas vacation of 1904, the building burned. The Ann Arbor Board of Edu- cation then built what is the 'old'' part of the present Frieze build- ing. Its doors were first open tol March 19, 1907. The name of the school was changed to Ann Arbor High School, which it retains to the present. Moved in 1956 In 1938, an addition was built on Washington Street. The high school moved its location in 1956 because the "school was over- crowded and could not compen- sate for the needs of the stu- dents," Principal Nicholas Schreiber said. "When it was built," he added, "it could accommodate 200 stu- dents. We now house 13,074 Also, the playgrounds for recrea- tion are very far froim the build- ing, and there was no room for ex- pansion. "The building was total- ly inadequate except for the class- rooms," Schreiber remarked. New Wing Built It was for these reasons that the Ann Arbor Board of Educa- tion sold tfie building to the Uni- versity. The Board of Trustees named it after Professor Frieze,. president of the University. Before University students could occupy the building, it had to be remod- eled to fit the needs of the Uni- versity. "A new wing to the east of the building, near the R a c k h a m School of Graduate Work, was constructed in modern architec- ture in 1956. This wing houses the faculty offices and physics labor- atories," Lynn Fry, University ar- chitect, said. (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the text of a letter from the Rev. Celestine Fernando onbehalf of World University Service. Rev. Fer- nando is the visiting counselor to the Protestant Foundation for Interna- tional students from the University of Ceylon.) University students all over the world are, generally speaking, in no position to spend their money on other people; they have so, little money and so many needs of their own to spend it on. And yet when they are confrontedd by fel- low men or women in real need, students +canabe. and are most gen- erous in sharing.. It is as a project to share with fellow-students in need in (parts of the world much less fortunate than Ann Arbor and particular- ly in Asia, Africa and South America that the members of the University of Michigan should look on the appeal of World Uni- versity Service today when the lo- cal WUS group will have its an- nual Bucket Drive to help in the World Campaign for Funds for the WUS Program of Sharing and. Mutual Assistance. To Help Causes Whatever money is given will go to good causes - for a Uni- versity Hospital in Athens, a stu- dent center in Salonika, aid to hospitals, cooperatives and a san- atorium in India, for hostels in Khatmandu and student com- mon rooms in Vietnam. Funds will also go for a cooper- ative student center in Japan, and International Rest Center for tu- berculosis patients, in Combloux, xeray units, sterilizers and other medical equipment for Tagore's University and educational ma- terials for African, students and for refugee students in Germany and$ Sweden. All this help, will be given, as always in WUS, on the basis of human 'need -- irrespective of political, religious and other af- filiation. WUS History - Related WUS began about 30 years ago as European. Student Relief after the first world war. In view of the problem of student relief be- coming a world problem, the name was later changed to Inter- national Student Service, (in the United States, the: World Student Service Fund) and then in 1950 to World University Service. It has its headquarters in'Geneva and national committees formed of 'U' Press Club Picks Leaders Meridith Clark, publisher of the Vicksburg Commercial, has been elected president -of the Univer- sity Press Club of Michigan. Cleland B. Wylie, managing editor of University News Serv- ice, was re-elected secretary- treasurer and Prof. Leland Stowe, of the journalism department, was re-elected secretary in charge of foreign journalism fellowships. DIAL NO 2-351 3 Ending Tonight CiAALES NENe f BOYR VIDAL.- 4 ..S. Plus - Disney's Great Featurette "AMA GIRLS" " Friday _# Pulizer Prize Winner THORNTON WILDER'S GREAT COMEDY "THE MATCHMAKER" with SHIRLEY BOOTH ANTHONY PERKINS, staff, students and others inter- ested in many countries. Because ' the problem of relief cannot be dissociated from wider human welfare, WUS stresses cul- tural and social programs and conducts conferences, seminars and other study projects both on a national and an international basis. These discuss various prob- lems of University life such as student -administration,- staff- student relationships,health serv- ices, coops and other self-help programs and .theUniversity and Personal Freedom. University Help Needed By associating and sharingin the WUS program, members of the University will certainly be helping in a very great cause and a worthy one in keeping with the internatidnal traditions of this University and some of the urgent international needs of students in other parts of the world. It is for this reason that I have every assurance that this call to .student- sharing will; have a 1140~ response today. AU' Proposes Rud'd o f , seI Building Plan (Continued from Page 1) space and that new laboratory and service facilities are needed. In requesting a cancer research building, the brief stressed the need for centralization of the 40 separate projects now underway' in the Medical School on cancer research. University Vice - President in charge of Business and Finance Wilber K. Pierpont said that addi- tional development is also ex- pected on central campus "within the next five or ten years." He explained that territory East of the Michigan League to iPalmer Field will probably someday be opened up for instructional and research development. I iurp Si~Fe~ere 4es 9,a t 0 I S Tuesday, Oct. 21-8:30 P.M. STUDENT PRICES $1.50 - $1.00 -75c Regular Price -$2.50-1$2.00-$1.00 Tickets Now On Sale 10 A.M.-5 P.M. THIS WEEK! GRADUATE 'MIXER, Saturday, Oct.18,9 till 12 Rackhamn Ballroomk JOHN BONINO ORCHESTRA Sponsored by Graduate Student Council STARTING TODAY AT REGULAR PRICES Dial NO 2-3136 Doors open at 12:45 * * Buy night tickets between classes! HILL AUDITORIUM r'- I ___________________ Starting TODAY DIAL NO 8-6416 Week Days at 7o an PM Calling All Campus Talent! * * * for, * * *t RSI * Tr* Sponsored by the University of Michiaan Bands