4 Page 2 - The Michigan Dily - Friday, November 14, 1986 Glee Club begins another season I I By JULIE KELLER Out of a fraternal drinking club in the 1800s sprouted a men's group that became the second oldest glee club in the country. The club was organized in 1846, but it was not formally recognized by the University until 1859, one year after the Harvard club was recognized. THE CLUB'S 76 student members will perform selections from Offenbach, Rossini, and Bernstein at their 127th Annual Fall Concert tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. The annual concert is traditionally held on the night of the last football game to keep the old alumni in town. This week's game against Minnesota is the last trCANTERBURY HOUSE ESPISCOPALCHURCH AT U-M 218 N. Division St. Services daily, 5 p.m.; Midnight (exc. Saturday). All Are Welcome * * * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Ave. 663-5560 (Between Hill and South U.) DR. PAUL FOELBER, Interim Pastor Communion Service at 10:30 a.m. Bible Study at 9:15a.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave.-662-4466 (between Hill and S. University St.) William Hillegonds, Senior Minister Sunday Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00a.m. Church School, including nurseries at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. CAMPUS MINISTRY Sunday Bible Study 11:00 a.m. Wednesday Communion Service 7:00 p.m. AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron St. (between State& Division) Sundays: 9:55 Worship, 11:25 Bible Study groups for both Undergrads and Graduate Students. Wednesday: 5:30 Supper (free) and Fellowship. CENTER OPEN EACH DAY for information call 663-9376 ROBERT B. WALLACE, PASTOR home game of the season. "The concert is a little different this year because we have some choreographed numbers," said Kelly. "The show is fast moving and energetic." AFTER THE intermission, the Friars, an octet, will perform. The fall concert is a club tradition. "It's a magic feeling walking on the stage, knowing that so many other glee club members have performed there before," said Kelly. "We've been entertaining and making folks happy for so long." Before the club expanded into a full-scale chorus in the1800s, a small group of men called the Friars gathered every week to sing at a restaurant or bar. "They were a fraternal drinking society of the era," said junior Mike Osborne, Men's Glee Club president. UNTIL THE EARLY 1900s the club flourished, but in the 1920s it began experiencing financial hardships. In an effort to raise money and increase visibility, the club became affiliated' with the Michigan Union. The club ended up working with the Union to raise money for the building and is considered to be one of its founding members. The group officially became the Michigan Men's Glee Club in 1922, but the Friars continued to perform as a small a capella group. The Friars are all members of the Glee club, but they raise their money and produce their own albums. In the early years of the club, the seven to 12 members sang college songs and vaudeville tunes. To this day, "The glee club sings more traditional Michigan songs," said Bo Kelly, the club's business manager, while "the Friars sing basic upbeat tunes including a lot of '50s music." THE GLEE CLUB went on its first world tour in 1967 in honor of the University's 150th Anniversary. On their tour they sang in Finland, Russia, China, Japan, the Philippines, India, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Great Britain, France, and Wales. The club still takes its music on tours. In 1985 the club toured Greece, Yugoslavia, Italy, Austria, West Germany, France, Great Britain, and Wales. In January, the glee club. will sing in several Michigan cities and in the spring the group will tour the west coast. Step on up LSA freshman Sanjay Varma music school. Daily Photo by JAE KIM bides the time waiting for a friend at the New CRISP system to begin winter term (Continued from Page 1) names begin with Rob- through Z- 8,497 students and faculty surveyed, are scheduled to CRISP from Dec. 52 percent selected option two, 2 to Dec. 4. which gives juniors priority over freshmen and sophomores. "AAA-DOR" STUDENTS John Yurko, an engineering will register from Nov. 22 to the senior, said he agrees with the new Dec. 4, and undergraduates whose policy, but he regrets not being last names fall between Dos- and able to take advantage of it. "It Kom- must wait until Dec. 4 an 5 helps the juniors out and it doesn't to register. There will be no hurt anybody too much. registration on Nov. 26, 27, and 28 Somebody's got to go last," he because of Thanksgiving break. said. For students registered in a MUSIC STUDENT MIMI school on North Campus - Spaulding said, "Obviously I can't including art, music, architecture, feel too good about it right now and engineering students - a because I'i a freshman." At the registration office will be open at same time, she said, "Because 53 Chrysler Center. All other juniors have hassled with it for two students will CRISP in the years, they're entitled to an earlier basement of Angell Hall. registration. I know I'm going to Students who miss their want that privilege when I get up scheduled CRISP appointments by there." only one hour can still register. Registration for seniors begins Others will be rescheduled at the next Wednesday and runs through earliest convenient time. To request the Nov. 21. Juniors register from an alternate appointment, students then until Nov. 25. should go to the hall window at the Freshmen and sophomores will north end of room 17 Angell Hall, CRISP in a random order within or the Chrysler Center, from their alphabetical grouping. Those Nov.17 to Dec. 5. whose last names fall between Kon- CRISP offices will be open and Roa- register from Nov. 25 to from 9 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. and Dec. 2, and students whose last 12:30 p.m. to 4:15 p.m. -N BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS Leftis slain in Philippines MANILA, Philippines - One of President Corazon Aquino's leading leftist su'porers was found brutally murdered yesterday, the day she returned from abroad to a capital swept by rumors of coup plots against her. Police found the mutilated body of Rolando Olalia, president of the Partido ng Bayan (People's Party) and the militant May 1st Movement labor alliance, in a ditch on the edge of the capital hours after his family reported him missing. The body of his driver was found two miles away. Antonio Cuenco, political affairs minister, said the killing "further aggravates" the crisis in Mrs. Aquino's government, which has been split by Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile's criticism of her policies. During her four-day visit to Japan seeking aid for the crippled economy. Manila was rife with rumors that disaffected military officers linked to Enrile would strike against leftists to provoke a violent response as a pretext to take over the government. Woman becomes speaker pro temnpore in Mich. House LANSING---State Rep. Teola Hunter, a Detroit Democrat, became the first woman in the history of the Michigan House to be elected speaker pro tempore yesterday. Hunter, who catapulted from assistant majority floor leader to the No. 2 postition within the Democratic caucus, will succeed outgoing Speaker Pro Tern Matthew NcNeely (D-Detroit). McNeely, who held the post since 1973, is retiring after 22 years in the House. Hunter, who like McNeely is black, called her selection the highest achievement of her political career. "I am just ecstatic about the election and ecstatic that (my) colleagues and peers decided I was competent for the position," said the 53-year-old lh. ..'aker, who was first elected tothe House in 1980. As speaker pro tem, Hunter will preside over the House for the speaker unless another lawmaker is designated to preside. Serving for the speaker, the speaker pro tem calls the House to order and conducts the chamber's bsiness for the day. Hunter's victory over Reps. Joe Young (D-Detroit) and William Keith (D-Garden City), created some dissension. American first foreigner to become Chinese shareholder PEKING - Chinese bankers boosted New York Stock Exchange Chairman John Phelan's personal portfolio yesterday by giving him one share of the Flying Happiness Acoustics Co., making the visitor Communist C hia's first foreign stockholder. Zhou Zhishi, head of the People's Bank of China Shanghai branch, handed Phelan the certificate wrapped in a red ribbon at an extraordinary conference on financial markets sponsored by the state-run bank and the world's biggest stock exchange. "You have become a shareholder in a Chinese company," Zhou told Phelan at a closing ceremony in Peking's cavernous Great Hall of the People. Phelan, the first foreign stockholder in China since the 1949 Communist takeover, smiled broadly. Gov't encourages families WASHINGTON -- A Reagan administration study group, charging that the "fabic of family life has been frayed by the abrasive experiments of two liberal decades," yesterday called for tax breaks and government polices to encourage child rearing. "Intact families are good. Families who choose to have children are making a desirabie decision," said the report entitled "The Family: PreservingAmerica's Future" "Mothers and fathers who then decide to spend a good deal of time raising those children themselves rather than leaving it to others are demonstrably doing a good thing for those children," the report said. Education Un adersecretary Gary Bauer, who headed the 22-member task force, denied that the report implied any criticism of couples who decided not to have children or who put their youngsters in day care. Michingan temperatures dive Gale.-force winds that carried a blast of cold Canadian air into Michigan began calming yesterday, leaving behind a shivering state where at least a half-dozen record low temperatures were set. The lighter winds began calming Michigan's lakes, which had been whipped up by near hurricane-force gusts the day before. The National Weather Service canceled an advisory warning of severe beach erosion along Michigan's Lake Superior and Lake Michigan shorelines. Gale warnings issued for lakes Superior, Huron, Michigan, and Erie were discontinued yesterday, and waves began shrinking, but frigid air lingered behind. "This is very unseasonable," weather service meteorologist Bob Fendon said from Ann Arbor. ".... The system that brought in this cold is going to be moving rapidly to the east." He estimated that temperatures across the state ranged from 15 to 20 degrees colder than normal. Record lows were set early Thursday in Marquette, where a five- below-zero reading was 13 degrees colder than the previous record set in 1977. &heiichtgan BUtI Vol. XCVII --No.52 The Michi an D- ny (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through ' r d+ n' the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September ihrou'h April-S18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term--S0 in town; S20 outside the city. The Michi n Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes t:_Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Sports Editor............................BARB McQUADE Editor in Chief... RICMATTSON Associate Sports Editors........DAVE ARETHA Madi ditor ..............RIC OT BMARK BOROWSKY ORTT BRICK KAPLAN City Editor_...................C". RISTY RIBI)EL News Editor.............. JERRY MARKON ADAM MARTIN Features Editor.....................:°MY MINDELL .PHIlL NUSSEL NEWS STAF : irancin Al bralth Atkins, Eve SPORTS STAFF: Jim Downey, Liam Flaherty, Allen Becker, Melissa Birks, La A.Bischoff, Steve Gelderloos, Chris Gordillo, Shelly Haselhuhn, Al Bionder, Rebceca 13' ::roestein, Brian Bonet, Marc Hedblad, Julie Hoilman, Join Husband, Darren Jasny, Carrel, lov Cohen, i 'y, John Dunning, Rob Rob Levine, Jill Marchiano, Christian Martin, Eric Earle, Ellen Fiedeolt Martin Frank, Katy Gold, Lisa Maxson, Greg McDonald. 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