PAGE TWO
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1967
PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1967
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Senior
Editors Recommend
Successors
(Continued from Page 1)
opinion and a focus for the im-
portant issues facing the Univer-
sity community during the coming
year."
Stephen Firshein, an honors
chemistry major from Silver
Springs, Md., and Ronald Klemp- has been expanded to three per-
ner, a political science student sons. Carole Kaplan, honors eco-
from New York, were appointed nomics major from Huntington
to the assistant editorial director Woods, and Lissa Matross, honors
posts.
The magazine plans to publish
a lively, vigorous enterprise with
a wide variety of reporting, fea-
ture writing, columns and art ap-
pealing to campus readers," said
Shister. He is a sociology major
who lives in Buffalo, and last year
won a $500 prize from the News-1
paper Fund Intern Competition
for his work last summer on the;
Buffalo Evening News.
The magazine staff of The Daily
English major, from Glencoe, Ill.,
were appointed to fill newly-
created positions.
Miss Schnepp indicated that
The Daily will attempt to "broad-
en its editorial staff by recruiting
students from all University units.
We're especially attracting mem-
bers who don't traditionally join
our staff, such as law and gradu-
ate students." She is a history
major from Flint.
On the business staff Miss Keeps
is a sociology major from Hunting-
ton Woods. Wechsler is a psycho-
logy major from New York. Miss
Rosinski is an English major from
Toledo and Miss Smaller is an
education major from Hutington
Woods. Offen is a business ad-
ministration major from Roches-
ter, N.Y., and Miss Levinson is an
English major from Chicago.
The new Daily editors, who will
serve for the next full year, were
chosen after a lengthy series of
interviews with the outgoing senior
editors a n d the Publications
Board.
UNION-LEAGUE
PRESENTS
PROF. BRETTON of the Political Science Dept.
Speaking on
SOUTH AFRICA AND AMERICAN AFFAIRS
8:00 P.M. TUESDAY, Feb. 21
in the DCLI Multipurpose Room.
A
STEPHEN FIRSHEIN
NEIL SHISTER
RONALD KLEMPNER
SUSAN ELAN
ELISSA MATTROSS
' ._ ____
SESQUIGRAS '67 PRESENTS
Thurs., Feb. 23:
7:00 and 9:30 MOTOWN
CONCERT
in Hill Aud.
featuring
Smoky Robinson & The Miracles
Martha & The Vandellas
Jimmy Ruffin
Choker Campbell & Band
Tammi Terrell
The Spinners
Fri., Feb. 24:
4:00 TG in the Fishbowl
with the fabulous
"5 Bucks" playing
7:30-12:30 BOOTH NIGHT
in IM Building
21 great booths
I
LAURENCE MEDOW
SUSAN SCHNEPP
CAROLE KAPLAN
"YOU ARE GOING TO ENJOY 'Alf E' YERY MUCH."
PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents
(RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES TECHNICOLORs
DIAL Shows at
5-6941,3,5, 7, 9
A Carlo PontiProduction
1
4
bugm
PHYLLIS LEVINSON
NWMIMMOMMIUMM
WON
00505
Sat., Feb. 25:
SATURDAY GAMES
10:00 All-campus musical chairs
on the Diag
1:00
1:15
1 :30
2:00
2:30
Egg toss
Cake decorating contest
Pie-eating contest
Tap the Keg
Bottoms Up
Michelangelo Antonioni's
first English language film
starring
Vanessa Redgrave
ERICA KEEPS
I
co"storring
DavidHemmings
Sarah Miles
rdoy COLOR
The
Te A Premier Productions CO., Inc. Releose
I
"
All afternoon games are
being held on Wines Field
3:30 Faculty Dance Concert
in Main Lounge of Union
All students are invited to watch and
cheer on your favorite professor
8:30 JUDY COLLINS
in concert at Hill Aud.
11:00 Closing Event & Awards
A
DIANE SMALLER
*Time Magazine, Newsweek, Saw,
Review, Life Magazine, E.T.V.,
New Yorker, Commonweal,
New Republic, The Village Vi
The New leader.
sice,
Recommended for mature audiences
WHEN YOU
SEE:"LE BONHEUR"
YOU MUST HAVE AN
OPEN MIND!!!
STARTS
THURSDAY
. .
"An
exquisite
fable of
infidelity"
-Time Mag.
STEVEN WECHSLER
Lose Something?
Find it with a
Daily Classified
A~flO. Va oa'*j
in EASTMANĀ©OLOR
A O.VER MeCNI RM~EA
"Continuously
Provocative"
-N.Y. Times
m
FINAL PERFORMANCE TONIGHT!
SAMUEL OFFEN
I
F,
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i
Everybody loves Georgy-
she's staying for the
7th hilarious week!
I
I
"Cybernetic Challenge in the University"
"Wem ust decide if the trend of the multiversity threatens to
eliminate meaningful experience from the educational pro-
cess."-Wescott
Starting Its National Tour in Ann Arbor!
"BEST PLAY
O F 1966"
N.Y. DRAMA CRITICS PRIME
is TONY AWARD WINNER
"SUPERIOR OFF-BEAT, AND
ORIGINALI"--N.Y.TIMES
CotumolA PCIuRES
06 ME N aldSN S62, L)N @MRve
SUGGESTED F R MATURE AUDIENCES
Tuesday 7,9
"A Superb Dramatic Work of Art!"
-Watts, N.Y. Post
WON
MONDAY and TUESDAY
February
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DR. ROGER WESCOTT
CHAIRMAN OF THE ANTHROPOLOGY DEPT., DREW UNIVERSITY
"A Coenetic Approach to Communication Problems"
8:30 P.M.
HILL AUDITORIUM
"THE PERSECUTION AND ASSASSINATION OF JEAN-PAUL MARAT
AS PERFORMED BY THE INMATES OF THE ASYLUM OF CHARENTON
I
"Coenetics lies in constructing thought machines capable of
parleying feed-back into an organic sort of creativity without
M - 11 " PP 1 I10
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