/ THE MICHIGAN DAILY + +. .v+ss vcRas Yf1 iiJi ' y t/ e am't te ta at Number I Campus Location SERVING BETTER DINNERS FOR LESS Serving Dinner: 5:00-7:15 Daily PROGRAM NOTES: Minneapolis Symphony To Perform Closed Sunday On State Street Advertising want me p ractical e: S. ..The Mic * provides prac in advertising Thhik abou Watch for of tryout mee s 3/ ': MENO.I~ a firms m with xperience .06 :higan Daily tical experience it joining - dates tings. By SUSAN FARRELL The Minneapolis Symphony Or- chestra, acclaimed asaone of the top symphonic organizations on either side of the Atlantic, will perform at 8:30 pm. Monday in Hill Aud. The program includes Beetho- ven's Overture to "Prometheus," Symphony in D Major by Haydn and Roger Sessions' Symphony No. 4. Known as the "orchestra on wheels" because of its extensive tours since 1910, the Minneapolis Orchestra is directed by Antal Dorati, one of the world's great- est conductors and a "genuine poet." Tickets to the concert, seventh in the Choral Union Series, may be obtained in Burton Tower. The Festival Quartet will make its first Ann Arbor appearance in the Chamber Music Festival from' Feb. 12-14. The quartet re-unites four cele- brated musicians who are col- leagues at the Aspen Festival and have continued their work into the winter season. Members of the quartet are Victor Babin, pi- anist; violinist Szymon Goldberg; William Primrose, violist; and cel- list Nikolai Graudan. Now in its fourth season, the group is the first contemporary all-star quartet dedicated to per- forming the rarely performed pi- ano quartet literature of Beetho- ven, Brahms, Mendelssohn, Mo- zart, Schumann and Strauss. They will present three; con- certs in Rackham Aud. The first two will be given at 8:30 p.m. Fri- day and Saturday, Feb. 12 and 13. The third will be presented at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 14. British comedienne Joyce Gren- fell, claimed to be "as refreshing as a good cup of tea" by an Amer- ican newspaper, will appear in Ann Arbor next Friday with an evening of monologues and songs. THEATRE - Sidney Blackmer, Geraldine Page and Rip Torn appear in Tennessee Williams' "Sweet Bird, of Youth" at the Cass Theatre in Detroit. Miss Page and Blackmer appeared in the original production. The play will be in Detroit until Feb. 12. for the Greatest Selection of 0 1 LOVlE VALENTINE C A SaGIFTS see BRUNDAGE GIFTS 307 South State Let us wrap and mail your candy. You are inviteCd to a Special Trunk Showing of beautiful Maureen Suits for Spring -I on February 10th Einiger Tweed 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 85% Wool) Colors: Grey, Beige, Green and "All by herself, she can fill a' stage with more foolish, funny, and lovable people than can be found in any theatre in town," Oscar Hammerstein II said of Mass Grenfell. Since 1939 she has appeared an- nually on the London stage and has worked in movies with Sir Laurence Olivier, Marlene Dietrich and Michael Wilding. Tickets may be purchased from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 u.m. next week at Hill Aud. Marc Connelly's "The Green Pastures" is, in Connelly's words, "an attempt to present certain as- pects of a living religion in the terms of its believers." He has translated the reverent and imag- inative faith of the Negroes of the deep South into a play which is a moving chronicle of human struggle, success and failure and divine compassion. "The Green Pastures" will be presented by the Wayne State University Theatre on Feb. 12 and 13 and again from Feb. 18-20. Tickets are available at the University Ticket Office, Cass and Putnam, Detroit. * * *0 Tennessee Williams' "Sweet Bird of Youth," now being seen in G e r m a n y, Sweden, Argentina, Mexico, Greece and Holland, is at the Cass Theatre in Detroit un- til Feb. 12 after a Broadway run of 383 performances. Starring in it are Geraldine Page and Sidney Blackmer in the roles they created and Rip Torn whose performances on television have attracted wide attention. * * * Next at the Cass Theatre Is Thomas Wolfe's "Look Homeward, Angel." Ketti Frings' dramatiza- tion of the novel met Wolfe's style so well that the play received the Pulitzer and New York Drama Critics' Circle prizes and was one of last season's eminent successes. "This is the story of a family of violent feelings and of a moon- struck youth dreaming of the world . . . it has gargantuan hu- mor and vitality . . . it has the mark of truth and Miss Frings has given it honor on the stage," New York critic Brooks Atkinson said when "Look Homeward, An- gel" opened. Included in the Detroit cast will be Miriam Hopkins as Thomas Wolfe's mother. Detroit's Shubert Theatre will be changed into the Oriental "World of Suzie Wong" beginning Feb. 8. Exotic settings and a cast of 41 actors of 11 nationalities and speaking 14 languages contribute to the total effect of intrigue and mystery which have long been as- sociated with Hong Kong. "Christian Architecture in the Roman Empire" will be discussed by Prof. Richard Krautheimer of the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, in a series of five lectures this month. Lectures will be given at 4:15 p.m. Feb. 11, 16, 18, 22, 23 in Aud. B, Angell Hall. Titles are: Feb. 11 - "The Lat- eran Basilica in Rome: A Study in Method;" Feb. 16 -- "Constantine, and the Christian Basilica;" Feb. 18 - "The Cult of the Dead and of the Holy Sites -- San Lorenzo in Rome, St. Peter's, The Holy Sepulchre;" Feb. 22 - "A Clas- sical Renaissance in Rome Under Pope Sixtus III;" Feb. 23 - "San- ta Sophia in Constantinople, A Palace Church." The lectures were provided by the will of Thomas Spencer Jer- ome. They are sponsored jointly by the University and the Ameri- can Academy in Rome and will be given at both institutions. "The Cranes Are Flying," first Russian movie to be sent to the United States under a Soviet- American cultural exchange plan, opens at the Campus Theatre to- day. Paddy Chayefsky's "Marty," winner of an Academy Award for best-picture-of-the-year a few years ago, was the United States' movie sent to Russia. * 0,* Tickets to Richard Wagner's "Das Rheingold," Playbill opera sponsored by the speech depart- ment and music school to be pre- sented March 1-5, are on sale by mail order only. No tickets will be sold at the Mendelssohn Theatre box office until the day before the opera opens. To order tickets, which are available for $1.75, 1.40 and 1.00, patrons should send a check pay- able to Play Production with a stamped, self-addressed envelope to "R h e i n g o 1 d," Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor. Mail orders should express first, second and third performance preferences. Friday and Saturday perform- ances are already "sold to the walls" but there are good seats remaining for week night per- formances. South Quad To Entertain Orchestra Students at South Quad will entertain the Minneapolis Sym- phony Orchestra at dinner on Monday, Feb. 8. Arrangements are being made by Lyle Hagert, '60M, and his committee, Douglas O'Handley, '60, John Charters, '61, and Mrs. Virginia Harryman, South Quad Correlating Advisor. Hagert views this dinner as "an educational opportunity for stu- dents who may never again get to eat with professional symphony members." Invitations have been issued to ninety-one orchestra members and business managers. Hagert talked with Antal Do- rati, Minneapolis Symphony Con- ductor, at a Christmas concert in Minneapolis in 1958. It was then that Hagert found out the Min- neapolis had an engagement in Ann Arbor in 1960. Since that time, he has contemplated inviting the orchestra members to dinner at the quad. Mrs. Harryman aided Hagert in his plans. February 8 will be the first time South Quad has entertained a major orchestral group. In the past East Quad entertained the Boston Symphony, and the Phila- delphia Symphony has visited West Quad. The Minneapolis Symphony will be here for their Choral Union Concert at 8:30 p.m. Feb. 8 in Hill Aud. Plan Housing For Women The University will institute a new type of housing for next fall: University apartments for wom- en. The Office of the Dean of Wom- en recently announced that 75 spaces in 23 apartments in Cam- bridge Hall, University Terrace would become available to under- graduate women next fall. The reason for this step is the loss of Fletcher Hall for women's housing and the possible tem- porary loss of West Couzens for renovation. This would leave at least the 70 students planning to return to Fletcher Hall with no housing. Dean of Women Deborah Bacon said that this type of University housing was intended to help those with genuine financial need, and the cost would compare favorably even with off-campus housing. This type of housing would not involve "apartment permission," and should not affect the situa- tion regarding outside apartments for women, Miss Bacon continued. The structure and government of Cambridge Hall will be based on the current system in under- graduate women's housing. This will include membership in As- sembly and representation on the Assembly Dormitory Council and membership in and operation un- der the Women's Judiciary. Announcement of the methods for application for residence in Cambridge Hall will be made dur- ing March by the Dean's Office. Qualifications for residence will include genuine financial need and sophomore or higher -class stand- ing. After selection of next year's residents, a committee will be drawn from among them to work out the details of operating pro- cedu're under the leadership of the Assembly Board and Women's Judic. U B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill Street ORIENTATION SABBATH SERVICE TONIGHT, Feb. 5, 7:15 P.M. ZWERDLING-COHN CHAPEL Oneg Shabbat to follow I' ______________ I Powd Wors Colo Blac Beige Greer and at 49 Sizes der Blue sted Telga Type rs: Navy, k, Powder Blue, le, Honey, m, Red Grey 9.95. s 7-,15, 8-18. New Fresh spring C..olors and styles also SUSAN ROSS and MINDY ROSS Dresses For SPRING and SUMMER Smart styles in cottons and linens, prints. FINAL Our winter clearance sale offers you an unusual opportunity! Our distinctive sportswear for sale at greatly reduced prices. /1 1 fJink' THE SUITS 39.95 to 65.00 THE DRESSES Sa~es 7-15'10-20 10.95 to 19.95 m