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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.

November 06, 1960 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-11-06

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

THE MICHI A N DAILV

tOGRAM NOTES:
G&S To 0

den Season with 'Mikado'

For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786
from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday,and Saturday 9:30 'till 11:30A.M.

'4

The Gilbert and Sullivan So-
Lety will present the "Mikado"
s its season opener at 8:15 p.m.,
'hursday through Saturday and
t a Saturday matinee at 1:30
n.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea-
re.
The G & S cast, crews and or-
hestra have been rehearsing for
even weeks for this first pro-
uction of the year. The Society
vill also present the "Mikado"
rov. 19 at the Rackham Aud. in
)etroit -and give two perform-
nces in the Trenton High School
dud., Nov. 20.
"The Brothers Four" will offer
opular, folk and group singing
t 8 p.m. Thursday in Hill Aud.
Me quartet is sponsored by the
Michigan Union and the Wolver-
ne Club. Tickets are available
t the Union main desk and Hill
kud, box office.
Solisti Di Zagreb, an ensemble
f 13 musicians from Yugoslavia,
vill play chamber music at 8:30
.m, tomorrow in Rackham Aud.
'he program will include works
y Vivaldi, Boccherini, Kaleman,
loussel and Mozart. The concert
s sponsored by the University Mu-
ical Society.
The Braitko Krsmanovich Chor-
is from Belgrade University will
ppear at 2:30 p.m. today in Hill
ud, as a part of the Choral Un-
on Series. Conducted by Bog-
an Babich, leading conductor of
he Belgrade Opera, the 80-voice
horus will sing baroque, classic,
omantic and contemporary
iMces, climaxed by Yugoslavian
vorks sung in native costume.
* * *
A Rembrandt Symposium held
n connection with the Rembrandt
rint exhibit at Alumni Memorial
Sall will feature three speakers
Planet Mercury
ro Transit Sun
A transit of Mercury will occur
omorrow, Prof. Hazel Losh of the
stronomy department said.
The phenomenon, which occurs
nly about thirteen times a cen-
ury, will take place beginning at
:3 a.m., with last contact to
ake place some four and a half
ours later.
A transit occurs when Mercury
r Venus passes directly between
he earth and the sun. The trans-
nitting planet is then visible in
elescopes as a tiny dot on the
un's face.
The next transit of Mercury,
vill not occur until May 9, 1970.
rransists of Venus are even rarer
han those of Mercury.,

Wednesday In Aud. B. "The In-
fluence of Rembrandt's Landscape
Etchings on His Contemporaries"
will be discussed by Prof. Wolf-
gang Stechow of the Oberlin Col-
lege art department at 2 p.m. At
3 pm. Harold Joachim will speak
on "Changes of Techniques and
Style in Rembrandt Etchings" and
at 8 p.m. Prof. Jakob Rosenberg
of the Harvard fine arts depart-
ment will discuss "How Do We
Know 'That a Rembrandt Draw-
ing Is by Rembrandt?"
* * *
The Vienna Philharmonic Or-
chestra,.conducted by Karl Boehm
and presenting pianist Wilhelm
Backhous, will play Mozart and
Beethoven in a program at 8
p.m. tomorrow over WUOM-FM.

Organist Robert Ellis will give
a concert at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday
in Hill Aud. He will play selec-
tions from Gabrilli, Clerambault,
J. S. Bach, de Grigny, Mozart,
Ducasse, Gluck, de Maleingreau
and Durufle.
* * S
French composer Andre Jolivet
will speak at 4:15 p.m. Thursday
in the Rackham Assembly Hall.
M. Jolivet Is a guest lecturer of
the School of Music.
* * *
Prof. Oliver Edel of the music
school, cellist of the Stanley
Quartet, will give the second of
three Bach recitals at 8:30 p.m.
Thursday in Aud. A. He will play
"The Six Suites of J. S. Bach for
Cello."

i

Hale Explains Student Housing
'To Visiting College Officials

BUSINESS PERSONAL
BEFORE you buy a class ring, look at
the official Michigan ring. Burr-Pat-
terson and Auld Co. 1209 South Uni-
versity, NO 8-8887. FF2
BUSINESS SERVICES
RITZ BEAUTY SALON
Complete line of Beauty Work
605 E. WILLIAM
Phone NO 8-7066
4
ALL THE INGREDIENTS FOR A
PERFECT SUNDAY BRUNCH
ARE AT
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard NO 2-3175
Open every night until midnight.
J81
YOUR ROOMMATE hateful this week-
end? Get him a plastic bag to play
in at Lumbard's, 1225 So. University.
J82
WE HAVE ALL KINDS OF
PAINT SUPPLIES
Brush Enamels
Krylon Spray Enamel
Wall Paints
Flat, Semi-Gloss Paints
Thinners and Brushes
Brush Cleaners
MUEHLIG & LANPHEAR HARDWARE
311 S. Main St.
J71

LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Small finger ring in the League
Friday. Initials inside, B.G. Call Alice
Lloyd Ext. 204. Reward. A56
LOST: In Chem. Bldk. One light blue
hardcover 3-ring loose-leaf notebook
with word FRONT on cover. Please
return to 210 Hinsdale. A54
FOUND: Lady's wrist watch. NO 2-9701..
A55
LOST: Brown wallet. Call Susan Stagg.
NO 5-6196. A53
LOST? To find yourself try the Michi-
gan Daily. Just find a telephone and
dial NO 2-3241. " A3
FOUND: 30 weeks (a full school year)
of interesting, newsy reading. This
was found on the ,Diag Juno 6, 1960,
and the owner is wanted desperately.
Please call NO 2-3241 for information,
and find a year's DAILY subscription
as a reward (only $6.50 too). A2
USED CARS
'56 MERCURY Convertible, full power,
beautiful shape; must be seen to be
appreciated. NO 3-1352 after 6. N77
'56 FORD. $495. 4 door sedan. Excellent
condition. Standard shift. NO 2-9740.
N74
1960 VOLKSWAGEN, dark green, Ameri-
can equipped, excellent condition.
Phone Jane Cars at NO 2-5675. N70
1955 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP by original
owner. New tires and battery, winter-
ized. $395. Phone NO 8-6967 and
evenings NO 3-1449. N72
1958 MGA. Excellent condition. R&H,
WSW. Wire wheels. Call 6:30 p.m.
NO 5-9134. Keg

LINES
2
3
4

ONE-DAY
80
,96
1.12

SPECIAL
TEN-DAY
RATE
S.39
.54
.54

Figure 5 average. words to a line.
Call Classified between 1:00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri,
and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

By PAT GOLDEN
"An institution this large can-
not hope to house all students,"
Assistant Dean of Men John M.
Hale told a group of visiting col-
lege administrators yesterday.
The visitors, mostly from other
countries, had expressed concern
because the University only houses
about half its student body. Hale
explained that when a group of
people live together in supervised
housing various regulations are
necessary. Many students prefer to
live where they are not subject
to group living rules.
Reviewing the history of college
housing, he noted an initial per-
iod of concern for student welfare
outside the classroom, then a time
when schools accepted the German
philosophy of no interest in the
student outside the classroom.
Fraternities Begin
This is when the fraternity sys-
tem began. Students banded to-
gether to secure better housing
conditions and then gradually de-
veloped links between campuses.
When women entered colleges.
in the late 19th century, hous-
ing became' important again. In
a few decades the government be-
gan to aid student housing con-
struction by both gifts and loans.
"The trend has been toward
more and more counseling and
guidance within residence halls,
but now we think this has been
overemphasized. Counseling is a
separate campus function," he
said.
Attempt Stimulation
Residence halls at the Univer-
sity attempt to create programs
for intellectual stimulation now.
"Our staff members are chosen
because they are worthwhile peo-

ple for students to know, not be-
cause they are trained in counsel-'"
ing and guidance."
Hale explained that residence
halls here have six staff members
for each house (approximately 150
students). One of these is a house-
mother, one a resident advisor,
and the others are student staff
counselors.'
He told the group that the
housemother's function is to "set
the tone, advise, and be sort of a
symbol of motherhood." Some-
times, the University feels, boys
would rather discuss problems
with an older woman than with
k graduate student staff member
just a few years older.
Organzaion
Notices
Cong. Disc. E & Rt Stud. Guild, Nov.
6, 7 p.m., 524 Thompson. Speaker:
Sandro Sarti: "Freedom and Responsi-
bilfty of the Press."
Gamma Delta, Luth. Stud. Club, Sup-
per, 6 p.m., Nov. 6, 1511 Washtenaw.
Speaker: Rev. P. Heinecke, Mich. Dis-
trict Mission Bd., "Synodical Sunday."
f* 4
La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, Nov.
7, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. Cafe y conversa-
dion.
Unitarian Stud. Group, Meeting, Nov.
6,. 7 p.m., 1917 Washtenaw. Speaker:
John Hyde, Dept. of City Planning in
A & D school, "Problems of Integra-
tion in Ann Arbor."
* . .
Young Friends Coffee Discussion with
Albert Bigelow, 2-4 p.m.; Albert Bige-
low speaking on "Non-Violence in the
Struggle for Peace," 8 p.m.; Nov. 9, 1416
Hill St.
Newman Club, Dinner put on by
Grad. Students, Nov. 6, 6 p.m., 331
Thompson.

MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
GRINNELL'S
LESSON-RENTAL PLAN
8 PRIVATE % HOUR LESSONS
and an Instrument of Your Choice
at home:

GUITAR
TRUMPET
TROMBONE

ACCORDIAN
CLARINET
VIOLIN

DANCE & LISTENING MUSIC
So you can't afford a live band. Let
us bring you all the well known
dancedbands in Stereophonic Tape
Recorders, amplifiers and speakers.
Donation only.
G. A. Goresbeck & Son
Stereophonic Dance Music
860 Gill St., Ypsilanti HU 3-1977
J49

8 weeks for $16
Call GRINNELL'S now for further
information

FOR SALE
FOR SALE: Automatic Westinghouse
washer, $75 with matching electric
dryer, $65. Also misc,. nursery furni-
ture. NO 5-7374. ° B50
THE TREASURE MART
529 Detroit NO 2-1363
ur invitation to visit a friendly
(tore handling articles on con-
signment. We sell to you - or
for you - all kinds of furniture,'-
dishes, silver, appliances, tuxedos,
topcoats; men's suits, snowsuits, fur
coats, baby needs, toys, and ice
skates.
Come In and Browse
Weekdays 'til 5:30 P.M.
Mon. and Fri. * ti 9:00 P.M.
B1
35MM. XACTA CAMERA. $120. Dinner
jacket and tux. Size 39 long. $20.
NO 5-8247. B56
HEATH-KIT Hi-Fi Amp. and Pre-Amp.
Assembled, never used, GE 8-4231;
(free call). B57
FURNITURE FOR SALE-Beds, bunk
beds, desks and chest of drawers.
NO 3-6140. B58
1959 PIXEY TRAILER 21'x8', like new.
Ideal for living or travel. Bath with
shower, apartment-size stove and re-
frigerator. Sacrifice at $1,750. Phone
NO 2-5024. B54

PERSONAL
HELL'S A POPPIN' at Hillelzapoppin
Mass Meeting. F104
CASE OF the race for space, Diag's
the place. Wed. 12:45. F105
Rt. I. P,
UNION
F106
IT'S A KNOWN FACT THAT .
"Weakness and meanness are usually
-committed for the sake of the people
whom we most despise."
Dickens F107
HOW MANY PEOPLE could possibly be
packed in a place possible to pack
people? Diag-Wed.-12 :45. F 108
PLANNED PARENTHOOD CLINIC. Ad-
vice of physician on birth control.
Professional counsel on marriage
problems. Clinic hours Tues., and
Thurs. 7:30 to 9. 122 N. 4th Ave. Call
NO 2-9281« F117
PLANNING TO GO HOME Thanksgiv-
ing and Christmas? Make your flight
reservations at Alva's Travel' Agency,
30 5 Thayer.' The due date for pay-
ment is Nov. 1 so you'd better HUR-
RY! For information call NOrmandy
2-1006 between 8 A.M. and 6 P.M.
7195
BE SURE to attend the Student-Facul-
ty Coffee Hour. Nov. 10. 4 p.m. 3rd
floor conference room, Michigan Un-
ion. Free refreshments. F82
REWARD for information leading to
the return of Wolverine Club bill
boards. Phone NO 5-8215, between 3-5.
F71
LAST FRIDAY, Oct. 28, about 11:15 a.m.
one of our ' fellow students was in-,
volved in an accident on S. University
and Woodmere Pl. The student was
driving a red motorcycle and the
other vehicle was a 1958 Pontiac. As
a result of the accident, the student
is' now confined to Univ. Hosp.i
serious condition. Will anyone wit-
nessing the accident please be good
enough to contact Merv Klein at NO
3-41$7. F62
ENTERTAINMENT at Cafe Promethean
every Friday and Saturday evening.
Floe
Yes-You Can Still Join
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
BUSINESS STAFF
-- Advertising
-- Layout
- Accounting
Stop in Anytime
F'2
FOR THE FINEST in music and enter-
tainment contact the Bud-Mor Agen-
cy, eaturing the BollWeevils, Johnny
Harvard, Dick Tilkin, the Kingsmen,
Ray Lewis, Al Young, Al Blaser, Men
of Note plus many others. 1103 South
University. NO 2-6362. F7
NEED HELP?-The originator of MAD
magazine has done it again-only.
this time for college students! He's
created a hilarious new magazine
called HELPS Want to see how funny
an adult satire mag can be? Send 50c
to HELPI, Dept. M-1, Box 6573, Phila-
delphia 38, Penn. F40
BARGAIN CORNER
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95: socks
39c; shorts 69c; military supplies.
SAM'S STORE, 122 l. Washington
W1

1958 MGA Roadster. Exe. cond. See at
2307 Walter Dr. NO 5-7313. N64
57 JAGUAR, 3.4 Sedan. O'drive, 21,000
miles. Immaculate. NO 5-6426. N63
'51 CHEVROLET-Body, etc.: Poor. Me-
chanical shape; Excellent. New
brakes. $90 or best offer. Call Dick,
NO 2-0648. N58

323 S. Main

NO 2-5667
X5

A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington NO 2-1834
l

CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and accessories.
Complete ,Automotive Service--Al
products and services guaranteed.
Road Service
"You expect more from Standard
and you get it."
1220 South University
NO 8-9188
82
FOREIGN CAR
SERVICE
We service all makes and models
of Foreign and Sports Cars.
Lubrication $1.50
NYE MOTOR SALES
514 E. Washington
Phone NO 3-4858
84

55 LINCOLN hard top. A-one cond. All
power extras. 6:30 p.m. NO 5-9134.
N67
FOR SALE: 2 door, 2 tone 1960 Simca.
Grand large. Call HU 3-5034. N68
FOR RENT
ROOMMATE WANTED to share large
3-room apartment. 538 N. State. Phone
3-6678 after 4:30. C74
FURNISHED APARTMENT for three
people. $110 a month, utilities fur-
nished. 314 S. Fifth Ave. C74
1309 S.. UNIV. Ideal campus locale.
Modern, furnished apts. with wall-to-
wall carpeting. One efficiency and
one 3 rm. apt. Immediate occupancy.
.Call NO 3-6030 or NO 2-4607. C72
HOUSE--2 bedroom. New oil furnace.
Newly decorated. Furnished or unfur-
nished. $75 per month. Off Highway
23 between Ann Arbor and Brighton.
EL 6-8995. C25
ONE BLOCK from campus - Modern
apartment. Newly furnished. NO 2-
1443. C1O
PARKING SPACE and garage. One block
from campus. 514 8. Forest. Phone NO
2-1443 08

SPECIAL AT GRINNELL'S!
Beautiful Francis Bacon Grand Piano
Ideal for Hams!
Only $295
No reason to be without .a piano-
Uprights - reconditionpd and re-
regulated -- $69.50 up.
Hammond Spinet Organ - Excel-',
lent Condition. Only $975.

WOMAN'S Raccoon Coat, size, Medium.
Very good cond. $20, NO 3-5355. B49

MAKE GRINNELL'S YOUR PIANO
HEADQUARTERS
323 S. Main NO 2-5667
S8
HELP WANTED
STUDENTS AND YOUNG WOMEN, 18
years and over to work part time:
9 a.m.-1- p.m., 1 p.m.-5 p.m. or 5 p.m.-
9 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Telephone inquiries
from our office. Salary. For interview
call NO 2-5697. H7
WANTED TO BUY
WANTED: Pregnant cats. Offspring to
be used for experimental (non-sur-
gical) purposes. Willing to pay. Call
Mart Meyers, NO 3-1511, ext. 2492. K6

SITUATION WANTED,
HOUSEWORK WANTED - Experienced
dependable person. NO 2-782. HH2

Read
Daily.

Classifieds.

I

*0S

i

* FOR THE UNITED STATES

* FOR MICHIGAN

* FOR WASHTENAW COUNTY

6

RICHARD L.
CUTLER

LAWRENCE
OLTERSDORF

ELAINE I.
RICE
Register of Deeds

State Senate

Sheriff

GRACE
MARCKWARDT
State Representative

ADELINE
DREWS

RICHARD E.
NASH

I

I

I D" 0I% J&A A E~f'U a. I

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