THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATUDAY. A IEVAL PAGEANT: ueen's Entry Ends Tradition MICHAEL HARRAH f.:|:.ยง.'|::t:||l :.:.".- ''"'. ulmination of the medieval Leant tradition came with the yeuse entree' of Queen Claude Paris in 1517, Prof. Daniel artz of the University of Calf- ria music schoolrat Berkeley d in a lecture yesterday. The tradition- was connected h the royal entry into Paris for fny centuries," he said. "And was extinguished in one genera- n-from the entry of Queen ude in 1517 to the entry of her i, Henry II, in 1548, when the aissance took over." Prof. Heartz said that music, ,yed a considerable part in the reuse entree.' A sovereign nor- ,lly made one 'joyeuse entree' ing his or her reign, and that try was a means of revealing majesty of the crown to the ple with great ceremony. Same Route T'he entry always followed the aye route through Paris. First procession of nobles, clerics, d other dignitaries, and the narch, crossed into Paris at rt St. Denis, where the first in eries of seven pageants honor- the entry was staged, From there the column proceed-. past the Fountain of Ponceau, Church of the Trinity (St. eques), Port au Paintre, the urch of the Holy Innocence, Chatellais, and finally to the thedral of Notre Dame, wiere coronation ceremonies took ice. Pageants were performed for the mnarch at various stops along the ite, and the procession was ac- npanied with great fanfare by impets and drums. The plays emselves were mostly songs and isical portrayals of symbolic ,ditions. Reached Height The height of this pageantry cellence came in May, 1517, Zen the bride of Frances I, een Claude of Brittany, made r entry into the city. At Port St. Denis the tableau pitted a dove descending and cing a crown on the queen's ad. The figure of the queen a surrounded by 10 ladies. Six re biblical figures, and four re allegorical figures. These mbolized Claude's coronation as een. At the Fountain of Ponceau, ree ladies surrounded the Foun- n, as Claude and her two youngf ughters. The message of this geant told the queen to bear e king a 'dauphin' (a male' ir).. At the Church of the Trinity, tors depicted the king and the een, surrounded by such human :bols as wisdom and knowledge. A child is shown holding the al of Tantalu at Port au intre and below him are the ures of the papacy and the mon- chy, symbolizing the truce be- een the church and the state, d importuning a continued re- ect of it. At the Church of the Holy In-. cence, a large heart was open- into three sections signifying Pick Board For Unified Study Plant The University and Wayne State University Thursday named ad- ministrators and members of their respective governing boards to be members of the joint Committee for Unified Planning. The committee, formally struc- tured last week, Is designed to study areas in which the two in- stitutions can coordinate their programs more closely. Members of the committee from the University will be President Harlan Hatcher, Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin Nie- huss, and Regents Eugene Power, Donald Thurber and Fredrich1 Matthaei. WSU- members are President Clarence Hilberry, Vice-President for Academic Administration Wil- bur Harbison, and from the WSU Board of Governors, Leonard Woodcock, Benjamin Burdick and Michael Ference. The committee has not set the date for their first meeting, but it is expected to be held before the end of May. Niehuss said the committee was not set up to formulate a report on certain areas, but rather as a continuing group to view possible cooperation between the two uni- versities. Cites Party Competition (Continued from Page1) been run fairly well, and there has been progress in keeping up with our maintenance needs," she said that basically the city, has only a "caretaker government." Going Nowhere{ "The motor is running, but we're not going any place. The really big problems facing the city are ones the present administra- tion doesn't talk about." She emphasized, general issues, covering a broad range of sub topics, speaking quietly 'but with intense concern. .IIL OFFICIAL I ULLETIN I "We need a program for the '60's. The major problems of the city don't lend themselves to short-range solutions." For instance, she sees capital improvements as a major need in which "a responsible city govern- ment owes it to the community to inform and sell the, public on needed programs." Cites Prospectus The candidate referred specif- ically to a $32 million building prospectus offered for the next six years by the city planning commission. "The new city hall has been sold' to the community out of context -as one big project which will be our last for a while," she charged. Mrs. Pealy saw this handling of city building as a typically Re- publican "sin of omission, not of commission." ' The all-GOP City Council has become concerned with 'improve- ment of- downtown Ann Arbor. Mrs. Pealy's emphasis on long- range planning was' evident in her' comments on such rehabilitation. Need Expansion "We've got to go beyond the central business district and study what Ann Arbor's economic fu- ture will be like in the next 20 years. "We won't solve the problem by patchwork solutions. Parking or one-way streets mean nothing if a study shows there is no future in these projects, or that there is a different kind of future. "The Chamber of Commerce has concentrated its efforts on down- town," she said implying that this group had done more than the City Council. "Downtown is an intimate part of the rest of the city-it will flourish if Ann Ar- bor flourishes." Pealy Opposes'Caretaker Government' for linking the North and Central campuses by transportation. Mrs. Pealy is not only a Uni- versity graduate, but her husband, Robert H. Pealy, is an associate professor in the political science department and a research asso- ciate in the Institute of Public Administration. The University's role in the long-range physical plans made by the city is balanced by the city's duty to give the University a wide range of municipal services, she explained, "These problems are largely a matter of a highly co-operative and friendly relation between the two. Each should seek each oth- er's active participation." Enforcement of liquor laws was one example of interrelation she discussed. Student Problem "Students provide a particular problem. I have a suspicion that the rule keeping taverns out of the campus , area may be done away with. The city, on its own, cannot decide this. The Univer- sity is a state institution and has responsibility for the students' health, welfare, and activity." Expanding on the Democratic party's platform on human rela- tions, she advocated that the city government give more power and money to the Human Relations Commission, which works with housing discrimination, fair em- ployment and similar minority group problems. On deteriorating neighborhoods in the city, Mrs. Pealy generally criticized the support which May- or Creal has given to the volun- tary committee he set up to re- place the controversial urban re- newal program after he was elected in 1959. Explores Future "I would like to explore where we go from here. Do we need pub- lic funds to do the job? Can we get national money? Can we stim- ulate private investment in low- rent housing, especially for our senior citizens who live on low fixed incomes? "We should take advantage of whatever is available to solve this problem, and stimulate the total community and make it aware of the facts. "Bad housing is not found just in the old urban renewal area. It is found all over the city, and aging houses will get worse with. out preventive action. "I think the University, with its more adequate residence halls, has stimulated more thought on what ought to be done about apartment housing. Our realtors are meeting competition, and this will cause them to move," she said.. Although running on the minor- ity, party ticket, Mrs. Pealy is fairly optimistic about her chances in the April 3 election. "You can never count a candi- date out. If I didn't think I could change the voters' minds I wouldn't be running." The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. SATURDAY, MARCH '25 General Notices The approval for the following stu- dent sponsored, activities becomes ef- fective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. AU publicity for these ecents must be withheld until the approval has become effective. Mar. 28 Michigan Citizenship Clear- ing House, speakers Neil Staebler and William Boughlin, discussion of pres-. sure groups in Political Parties, Union, 7:30 p.m. April 13 Political Issues Club, speak- er Maude Russel, "Red China Today," Union., 7:30 p.m. April 21-23 SGC Wolverine Club, Pep Club Conference, CAB and Yost Field. -Daily-James Warneka' 'JOYEUSE ENTREE'-Prof. Daniel Heartz plays medieval page-' ants music. These festivals were finished by the 'Joyous entree' of Queen Claude in Paris in 1517, Prof. Heartz said. The music was replayed on a tape recorder. AID FOR HONG KONG REFUGEES COMM ITTEE love of husband, God, and kin. Below, more biblical figures por- trayed this message. At the Chatellais, the four daughters of Justice were depict- ed, and behind them the family tree of Claude. Finally at Notre Dame, the sa- cred 'Te Detim Laudamus" was performed. The seventh pageant was held at the Palais Royale, the final destination of the en- tree. Group To Help Celebrate Day, A wreath 'will be placed on the statue of Gen. Dementrius Ypsi- lanti at 3 p.m. this afternoon, in celebration of Greek Independ- ence Day, Steven Hasapoglou, '64 E, of the Hellenic Students' As- sociation, said. Ypsilanti was a general who helped to liberate Greece from Turkey in 1821. The ceremony, which will be at the corner of Washtenaw and Cross Sts., will include an address by the president of the Hellenic Student Association, an invoca- tion by a Greek Orthodox priest, and an address by Harry Kooks, IL. Eastern Michigan University's ROTC unit will march and play both the Greek and American Na- tional anthems. A reception fol- lows in McKenny Hall on the ESU campus. Here St. Louis was portrayed on his throne, with his mother and lady Justice on either side. Below are three laborers. Here four singers performed a motet, lauding the accomplish- ments of composers past and pres- ent. Prof. Heartz played a record- ing of that motet, saying that it was the first time it had been performed since 1517. In subsequent entries, Prof. Heartz said, biblical symbolism gave way to secular and allegori- cal symbolism. The entry became somewhat a Roman triumph, and the sets of the pageants turned into mammoth architectural struc- tures. The scenes depicted were of pagan gods and goddesses, Council Appoints Wolverine Heads Student Government Council yesterday appointed the following officers to the Wolverine Club: Judith Caplan, '61, president; Ar- thur Barnett, '63, vice-president; Stanley Rodbell. '62BAd, treasur- er; Dane Stone, '63, and Mort Le- vine were appointed Block M co- chairmen; Robert Rosenberg and Warren Colodner, '63, pep rally co-chairmen; Marcia Moorhead, '63A&D, as publicity chairman; Roger Mayerson, '65Ph, and Mar- jorie Meyer, '64, as special events co-chairmen; and Joan Studnicky, '6OEd, was appointed to the Stu- dent Activities Scholarship Board. OPEN MEETING 1(MOVIE ON HONG KONG REFUGEES) Sunday, March 24 ..<4~ P.1 Room 3B Union S.A. Chinese Stu. .. I I I I II (Author of y'I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) i BOOM! Today, foregoing levity, let us turn our keen young minds to the No. 1 problem facing American colleges today: the population . explosion. Only last week four people exploded in Cleveland, Ohio-one of them while carrying a plate of soup. In case you're thinking such a thing couldn't happen anywhere but-in Cleve- land, let me tell you there were also two other cases last week- a 45 year old man in Provo, Utah, and a 19 year old girl in Bangor, Maine-and in addition there was a near-miss in Klamath Falls, Oregon-an eight year old boy who was saved only by the quick thinking of his cat Walter who pushed the phone off the hook with his muzzle and dialled the department of weights and measures. (It would perhaps have made more sense for Walter to dial the fire department, but one can hardly expect a cat to summon a fire engine which is followed by a Dalmatian, can one?) :. 'I Dial 8-6416 tinuous From 1 P.M. Today "As Fine A Crime Film As You Are1 Likely To See!" -N.Y. Herald Tribune B G CL B %/ ,- ; .. _ -- . a.: . . - . DANCING IN A NIGHTCLUB ATMOSPHERE Featuring MIKE SHERKER I E 4 FRIEDRICHI DUERRENMATTI$ IT, ia ' 1/i UNION BALLROOM ' 'FROM His STORY "THE DIE" wt l Mstrbt"in binem Sat., March 25 9:30-12:30 $1.50 per couple i n r1 I Dial 5-6290T ENDS SUNDAY }a. ~THE S*C TONIGHT and SUNDAY at 7 and 9:20 SON OF THESHEIK 4 r with 4 . . . . .. . ..-. . .4 I bring up the population explosion not to alarm you, for I feel certain that science will ultimately solve the problem. After all, has not science in recent years brought us such marvels as the transistor, the computer, the bevatron, and the Marlboro filter? Oh, what a saga of science was the discovery of the Marlboro filter! Oh, what a heart-rending epic of endless trial 'and error, of dedication and perseverance ! And, in the end, what a triumph it was when the Marlboro scientists after years of testing and discarding one filter material after another-iron, nickel, lead, tin, antimony, sponge cake-finally emerged, tired but happy, from their laboratory, carrying in their hands the perfect filter cigarette! What rejoicing there was that day! Indeed, what rejoicing there still is whenever we light a Marlboro and settle back and enjoy that full-flavored smoke which comes to us in soft pack or flip-top box at tobacco counters in all fifty states and Cleveland ! Yes, science will ultimately solve the problems rising out of the population explosion, but in the meantime the problems hang heavy over America's colleges. This year will bring history's greatest rush of high school graduates. Where will we find class- rooms and teachers for this gigantic new influx? Well sir, some say the answer is to adopt the trimester system. This system, now in use at many colleges, eliminates summer vacations, has three semesters per annum instead of two, and compresses a four year course into three years. This is good, but is it good enough? Even under the trimester system the student has occasional days off. Moreover his'nights are utterly wasted in sleeping. Is this the kind of all-out attack that is indicated? I say no. I say desperate problems call for desperate reme- dies. I say that partial measures will not solve this crisis. I say we must do no less than go to school every single day of the year. But that isjnot all. I say we must go to school 2-4 hours ESCAPADES OF AN EXQUISITE HEIRESS! x21