100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

July 20, 1960 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1960-07-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


THE. MICHIGAN DAILY

CENTRAL DETROIT:
Study Shows Income Decline

Educational Television
Faces Varied Challenges

MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

Not only have people been mov-
4ng out of the central Detroit area
in increasing numbers, but the
average income of those who stay
-within a six-mile radius of city
hall-shows a marked decline.
The University's Detroit Area
Study (DAS) indicates that the
emdian income for the entire met-
ropolitan area-Wayne, Macomb
and Oakland counties-increased
from $5,900 in 1958 to $6,000 last
year. But nearly all the increase
was concentrated in suburban
families, while the median income
of city-livers declined from $4,400
to $3,800.

"There is no question the City
of Detroit has lost, and will con-
tinue to lose, those segments of
its population best equipped to
pay the ever mounting costs of
metropolitan government," DAS
Director Harry Sharp noted.
The whole metropolitan area,
he said, is still fighting the effects
of the 1958 recession. The propor-
tion of low income families has
substantially increased since 1956,
while the median family income is
no higher today than it was then,
$6,000.

Detroit has always been a high
income community, with the med-
ian family income in the metro-
politan area last year about $600
above the national average.
Compared to the rest of the
country, however, Detroit has lost
ground since 1951. Family income
grew 50 per cent between 1951
and 1959, according to the na-
tional average. In Detroit, the
increase amounted to only 30 per
cent.
Real purchasing power jumped
by 17 per cent for the city.

U

Talk "if th e

7To4!

BARGAIN DAYS

It's your chance to choose from high quality wearables - all
from our own regular stock of Spring and Summer suits - All
wool coats - huge group of better dresses of every kind includ-
ing dark fall types - better jewelry - all handbags - a wide
choice of jewelry at . .

By MICHAEL BURNS
A "creative team approach" is
being used by producers to meet
the "Challenge of Educational
Television," a University profes-
sor said yesterday.
Prof. Garnet Garrison, director
of University broadcasting, said
that educational television faces
many problems in its development
ranging from the question of pur-
pose to limited budgets.
By means of a coordinated team
headed by a producer-editor, the
Man Needs
Creativeness
The great need of our society is
to solve creative problems, Prof.
Aarre K. Lahti of the design
school says.
The professor believes that
man's potential is greater than
his contributions and there are
certain basic concepts which stifle
his creativity.
He denies that competitions can
bring about creativeness.
"It is cooperation which can
bring this about. Competition
brings forth expediency and not
basic contributions. My apologies
to those American industries not
competing for monopolies."
He points out that a philosophy
based upon absolutes and an
authoritarian viewpoint are harm-
ful to creativity.
"Possessiveness stifles creativ-
ity, while sharing does not. Sec-
retiveness defeats, but openess
produces. Evasiveness corrodes,
while the willingness to make
commitments refreshes. The re-
jection of group participation re-
tards, while the awareness of the
inseparable nature of the need
for others accelerates.
"And finally fear of being wrong
is the most insidiously debilitating
of all these factors, since at best
we are seldom more than partially
right," Prof. Lahti stresses.
HAIRSTYLES GALORE
for the
FEMININE SET!!
* No Appointments Needed
* Air Conditioned
The Dascola Barbers
Near Michigan Theatre

educational television studio at-
tempts to provide an attractive
yet dignified, entertaining yet in-
structional type of program.
Harmony is necessary to insure
that the budget is met and inno-
vations used to createdramatic,
yet less-expensive effects for the
shows.
Television is forcing its way
into the classroom, also, and even
replacing it in some instances, he
said.
Television courses will soon be
beamed at classrooms in a five-
state area around Indiana by use
of an airplane transmitting the
TV waves. Of course, closed cir-
cuit television classes have been
going on for several years, he
pointed out.
Filmed classes pose the ques-
tions of residual rights for in-
structors and whether actors read-
ing scripts or actual teachers
should be used. Where the distri-
bution would be broad, the shows
might be criticized for teaching
only one teacher's view to so
many students.
There will be 50 educational
television stations at the end of
this year, Prof. Garrison esti-
mated, and another question each
must answer is how to attract
and serve the audience. Stations
cannot entirely program college
credit courses, for they limit
viewer interest and will not appeal
to the "general person tired of
the pap that comes out of regular
TV." Stations must plan effective
television programs, at the same
time maintaining high standards.
Private sources, such as the
Ford Foundation, are presently
the main contributors to educa-
tional television programs, Prof.
Garrison said, and this poses
questions of potential dominant
force which the field needs to
answer. The federal government
has also given $4.6 million in the
last two years for educational TV
research.
Television advances have also
influenced the architecture of
some schools anticipating its use
in classrooms and changes in cur-
ricula. Large experimental classes
of 150-200 pupils have viewed TV
classes.
Through ingenuity in set de-
sign, camera techniques and ma-
terial presentation, educational
television can overcome the tight
budgets and other handicaps
which hamper it, but the good
will always be for quality pro-
grams, he said.

1/2 PRICE

MANY ITEMS
FAR BELOW

EXTRA SPECIAL GROUPS

REAL ESTATE
STOP and SEE
1804 Cooley Ave.
$16,500
By owner, three yr. old, three
bedroom ranch. Slate entry,
large living room, dining area,
tile bath. Aluminum storms,
screens, gutters. Shrubs and
flowers. Lot 53x170x101x150
on quiet dead end street one
block from Wines and For-
sythe schools. 1804 Cooley
Ave. NO 3-6551.,
SEE IT TODAY! !
FOR SALE: 3 bedroom older home, two
doors from Burns Park at 1138 Mar-
tin Pl. Large carpeted living-dining
room plus 12x15 music or TV' room;
large hal upstairs suitable for study;
screened porch and large backyard;]
excellent dry basement; gas heat.
Minimum down payment if desired.
Ownerleaving town. Phone NO 2-2133.
R3
LAKEWOOD SUBDIVISION: 3 bedroom
ranch. 309 Mason Ave. Near new ele-
mentary school. Landscaped lot. Full
basement. $15,500 FHA Discount for
conventional financing. NO 2-8101.
R2
GRAD STUDENT LEAVING. Nice home
with 2 bdrm., basement, large lot.
Phone NO 3-2595. Rl
FOR RENT
DOUBLE or SINGLE rooms.Graduate
women. Cooking. 517 E. Ann St. NO
2-2826. C36
3 ROOM APARTMENT unfurnished on
beautiful farm. Nine miles from Ann
Arbor. Fishing, horseback riding.
swimming. $65. NO 3-6578. C35
PACKARD NEAR STATE. Nicely fur-
nished 2 room apartment. Private tile
bath. Utilities included. $77 per
month. Phone NO 2-7898 or HI 9-2108.
C34
CAMPUS-Large quiet rooms for men.
Low rates. Linens furnished. NO
3-4747. C30
GOOD STUDENT apartments close to
campus at 344 S. Division. Phone Mr.
Pray. F. A. Sergeant Co. Realtors,
NO 2-3259. C12
YPSILANTI: Ranch house, 3 bdrms.,
full basement. Near schools; good con-
dition, good neighborhood. Fenced lot;
unfurnished. $110 per month. Call HU
3-0790. C29
EDGE OF CAMPUS-a nice 2 room fur-
nished apt. Private bath, all utilities.
$75 a month. NO 8-7234. C27
WANTED TO RENT
WANTED: Nicely furnished 3-rm. apt.
for couple. Campus area; long-term
rental, year-round. Must have desk
and reasonable rates. Write Michigan
Daily, Box 3.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: To Chicago and
back. Leave Fri, morning and return
Sunday evening. Phone NO 3-8213,
ask for Steve Salzman. G
RIDERS WANTED: To New York. Leave
Noon Fri., 22 July. Return Late 24
July. Phone NO 8-6158. G4
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Off-white leather billfold with
6 keys. Help I'm locked out,4Contact
K. Moore, NO 2-3241. A3

2 .80
3 .96
4 1.12
* -Figure 5 average
Call Classified between 1:'
and 9:00 and 11 :30 Satun
FOR SALE
REAL BUY: Danish soft, 2 end tables,
2 lamps, TV bench, cushion, 2 Mo-
saic ash trays, captain's chair, and
a scroll. $200. NO 3-7088 after 6 P.M.
B7
MODERN 40 FOOT 2 bedroom trailer.
Must sell. Call GE 7-5560. B6
HI FI PHONOGRAPH: Bozak speaker
system. Excellent sound. Low price.
NO 2-8081 evenings. B5
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS

LINES

I DAY

CAMPUS

1961 Revere
TAPE RECORDERS
Have Arrived!
2 track monaural and
stereo models
SEE THEM TODAY
Music Center

OPTICIANS

Most frames replaced
while you wait.
Broken lenses duplicated.
FAST service on d1l repairs.
240 NICKELS ARCAD

wards to a line.
00 arid 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
rday - Phone NO 2-4786
BUSINESS SERVICES
On your way home from class
Drop in at Ralph's
For your dinner supplies
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard <YNO 5-71
"Open every night 'til Midnight'
TYPING: Theses, term papers, reas
'able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7

3 DAYS
2.00
2.40
2.80

6 DAYS
2.96
3.55
4.14

300 S. Tayer

NO 2-2500
X9

NO 2-9116

NO 8-

Special group
Setter Dresses and Costumes
Rain 'N Shine Coats,
Shortie Coats
$14.98
(orig. to $39.95)
Group of
NYLON SLIPS,
PETTICOATS
Sizes 32-44
LONG CINCH BRAS
$3.98
DRESSES in all groups
Sizes 7-15, tall 10-20,
Larger and Regular
38-44, 1212-24 /,a
and brief sizes.
SAVE MORE
Use our lay-away charge plan--
a deposit with the purchase-
balance later.
ON FOREST, off cornerof
S. U. app. Campus Theatre
Park at rear of Main Shop

Huge Group of DRESSES
of every kind and size for Summer
and late fall.
$10.00
(many 3 times sale price)
ALL JEWELRY
of all kinds including costume
t rings. Orig. 2.00 to 14.95.
NOW 1/ to 1/2 OFF
Special Group of EARRINGS 49c
3 prs. for $1.00

EXTRA SPECIAL
CLOSEOUT
$5.00
includes 50 dresses including eve-
ning styles, sizes 7-44. Better
Leather Handbags. Any 5.95.
Nylon slip and half slip. Long
cinch bras, girdles, crystal jewelry,
zircon and stone set rings. (many
items 5 to 6 times sale price)
Group
NYLON HOSE
reg. 1.35-1.65
NOW 79c pr.
3 prs. $1.98
HATS
All Spring and Summer
(excepting new ribbon velvet
and whimsies)
$1.00 to $3.98
Orig. $4.00 to $16.95

Complete line of Hi F1 components
including kits; complete service on
radios, phonographs and
Hi F1 equipments.
HI Fl STUDIO
1317 South University
1 block east at Campus Theatre
X2
PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED
Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co.
21s E. Washington NO 3-3109
Xi
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington NO 2-1834
X3

CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIE
C-TED STANDARD SERVIC
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and accessor-
ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See
us for the best price on new &
used tires. Road service-mechanic
on duty.
"You expect more from Standard
and you get itt"
1220 S. University at Forest
NO 8-9168
S
WHITE'S AUTO SHOP
Bumping and Painting
2007 South State NO 2-3350
BARGAIN CORNER
MEN'S short-sleeve sport shirt $1.0
Skip-dents & seer-suckers santorize
wash & wear, asstd. colors.
Sam's Store 122 E. Washington
W

Pianos

Any 3-$1 .98 items
purchased togethersor,
any $2.95 sale items
purchased together for
$5.00

I

Open Wed. Eve.
'til 8:30

NOTICE
State Highway Commissioner John C. ackie is calling a public
hearing at 1:00 p.m. Thursday., July 1, in the Little Theater of
the Ann Arbor High School, Ann. Arbor, in accordance with Sec-
tion 116c of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, Section 128
of Title 23, U.S. Code, for the purpose of explaining to interested
citizens the proposed relocation and extension of US-23 freeway
from Milan north to existing US-23, Ann Arbor-Whitmore Lake
freeway, and to hear testimony regarding the economic effect
of the project on the community.

MIRROR STYLE CONSOLE -
Used, perfect condition ..$189
USED UPRIGHTS-From ..$49
STEINWAY CONSOLE - Like
new. Special ............$995
GRAND PIANOS-From ... $295
NEW aRINNELL-Holy spinet
.. . . . . . .. . . . . . $479
Organs
HAMMOND-Extra voice. Only
.~$905
PORTABLE CHORD ORGAN
..$. +.... ..... .... .... 79

PERSONAL

11

WANTED: Garage space near Stockwe
for Corvette. Starting Aug. 1 for
year. Will pay well. Call E. Quad 13
Strauss. F4
ALL CAMPUS DANCE
League Ballroom
Friday nite 9-12
Stag or Drag
F4
AL YOUNG SINGS
at the
CAFE PROMETHEAN
This Friday and Saturday
F4
MISS BU-R'emember what the French
men are thinking, and don't ge
caught-it's every man for himse
and "Cherchez la femme . . ." F
USED CARS
1950 BUICK automatic. $50. Call Ma
shall Franke. NO 2-3164 any mea
time. N
1953 PONTIAC. Automatic, new plugs
exhaust. $245. NO 5-6203 evenings.

BARGAIN DAYS

Grinne l's
323 S. Main St.

at

FOOTWEAR

Ann Arbor
* BARGAIN
(*DAYS

I

CAMPUS BOOTERY
Ann Arbor's BARGAIN DAYS SHOE
Annual B i I~SPECIALS

X7

II 41 1PLYMOUTH, '55. Original owner. 38,
GO F COURSE miles. Motor excelent. Body rust
oW a $295. Call after 7 P.M. NO 8-8451.
ICLEAN '54 Volkswagon. Sunroof. .
WSW tires, safety belts, radio.
_______________________________ 3-3893.

1M

516 EAST LIBERTY STREET

I , VTT TT TT

_ -.

at

by Citation, Pierre
Reg. to $12.95

HI HEELS-MID HEELS-LITTLE HEELS-SQUASH

State and Liberty

White,I
Copper, redc

PUMPS - SLINGS - STRAPS in
Grey, Bone, Blue, Pink, Orange, Gun Metal,
and black, brown and tan, bone and beige, black,
green, white dyeable silk.

White SPECTATORS
Lt. Blue, Pink, Lt. Green

MAIN fLOOR

COORDINATING HANDBAGS Reg.9* 5.00

HI AND MID HEELS-SANDALS, PUMPS
CASUALS - FLATS $390-$490
Wedges, Barefoot Sandals - Reg. to $10.95
Dress Flats - Sport Ties
Washable Casuals ... $2".. .$390
Sun-Steps by OOmphies
by Kedettes
MEN'S SHOES

DRESSES...COATS...
SUITS. . . BLOUSES...

from our regular stock

KICKERINO
CASUALS
Reg. to 12.98
$600

---------------------- -------

SPORTSHOP
lower' level

(Reg. to $22.95)

Tu-Tones, Vents, Slipons - Discontinued Styles, in Black and Brown
350 PAIRS -- 790 and $990
by Weyenberg, Mansfield Reg. to $14.95

'I

.

I

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan