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May 25, 1949 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1949-05-25

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

PAGE X THE MICHIGAN DAIL'

I

Lisle Fellowshi p
Students Chosen
Ten University students will take part this summer in the Lisle
Fellowship, or "laboratory of human relations" as it is better known.
Albert Black and Mary Jared, '49, will go to the New Hartford,
Conn. unit; Julia McWethy to the Watkins Glen, N.Y. division; and
Richard C. Scott, '51E, and June Harman to' the Lookout Mountain,
Col. unit.
* * * *
STUDENTS SERVING on the staff will be Mercia Lockyear, Don
Ervin, '49 Grad., David Jenkins, Grad., and Jean Ervin at the Michi-
gan-Detroit area unit and Barbara, Miller, '49, at Lookout Mountain,
Col.
Dewitt C. Baldwin and his wife while working as mission-
aries in Burma learned to live with people from different parts of
the world. They conceived the possibility of building international
understanding on a college campus 10 years ago in Lisle, N.Y.
Baldwin, newly appointed director of Lane Hall, established a
Lisle Fellowship office at Lane Hall when he came here in Septem-
ber. Until May 22 he served as program director of the Student Re-
ligious Association on campus.
Students may get two to eight semester hours academic credit
in the project, sometimes called the International Institute of
Human Relations. At the University the sociology and psychology
departments and the education school grant credit to students
who register in summer school before leaving.

WE'LL HITCH OLE DOBBIN:
Shopkeeper Undaunted by Machines
* * * *

Report Changes in Housing
______________

By HARRY REED
Horseless carriages and mass
production have failed to change
John Malloy, harness shop pro-
prietor.
The dusty shop opposite the
county court house has been op-
erated by the Malloy family since
1891, and has outlived seven sim-
ilar shops which, one by one, fell
before the wheels of the advancing
automotive industry.
TODAY, STUDENTS beat a
path downtown for their leather
repairs, which range from ripped
belts and baseball gloves to semi-
demolished golf bags and suit-
cases.
One unusual job was the re-
harnessing of a 91 year old
horse-hobby horse, that is.
*Doc' Malloy also, upon one oc-
casion, performed an emergency
operation on an artificial arm.
RACETRACKS AND riding sta-
bles add to the occasional farmer
trade, and customers come from
out of state for hard to find ob-
jects like buggy whips.
The shop is the picture of an
age gone by with its black and
gold sign over the door and its
dark-stained leather hung walls.
It has remained void of ma-

A Daily survey of prospects of
student housing for next fall re-
vealed several changes in campus
housing units.
Adelia Cheever House, women's
dormitory on Madison Street, will
not be used next semester, accord-
ing to the Office of the Dean of
Women.
* * *
HOWEVER, the name itself
would not go off campus. The
house on the northwest corner of
Haven and Hill will be opened next
fall as the new Adelia Cheever.
There will also be some shift-
ingamong the women on Ob-
servatory Hill. With the opening

of the whole New Women's
Dorm it will be possible to cut
the number of residents in over-
crowded Stockwell and Mosher-
Jordan Halls.
This drop will "not be a big re-
duction," according to Francis C.
Shiel, residence house business
manager. The number of women
will fall from the present 560-70 to
450-500 in each of the two units,
Shiel said.
* * *
IN CONTRAST to the scheduled
changes in women's housing, pros-
pects for men's and marriede hous-
ing seem to be normal, the Office
of Student Affairs reports.

Relieving of the overcrowded
conditions in men's dorms "looks
fairly far in the future" to
Edith Gowans, assistant in
charge of residence hall place-
ments.
"We'd like nothing better than
to change back, but with the num-
ber of incoming freshmen, this
looks impossible at this time."
Despite the changes in rent-
control laws, Mrs. Esther C. Grif-
fin, who handles outside housing
placements, said there had been
"no apparent raise" in the rents
for outside student rooms. But, she
added, by next fall, "things may
change."

Fr .1

-Daily-Wally Barth
LAST OF THE LOT-Harness shop proprietor John Malloy looks
over a saddle produced in his shop. He is the last harness maker
in Ann Arbor to continue to make leather goods for horses. His
work includes everything from making saddles and buggy whips
to repairing torn baseball gloves.
* * * *

AFTER GRADUATION:
A job with a'future and*
substantial earnings .. .
f ast'...

It pays to sell at Follett's

chinery down through the years;
Malloy still does all the work by
hand.

S

Personality Counseling Plan
Devised for Dorm Women

FOR
We buy all books whether they
will be used here again or not

A new counseling plan of the
Office of the Dean of Women will
aid in the personality development
of women in Stockwell and New
Women's Residence Hall, the of-
fice has announced.
Eight advisors for each dorm
are being chosen from among
"mature" graduate students. They
will work with individual women in
solving their personal problems
and with such groups as music or
literary clubs within the dorms.
* * *
THE SELECTED women will re-
port three days early in the fall
for a special training course. Later
they will have weekly two-hour
meetings to hear speakers from
University organizations like
Health Service.
Unlike similar plans at Wis-
consin and Minnesota, this one
Pollock Goes
To Washington
Prof. James K. Pollock, chair-
man of the political science de-
partment and member of the Pres-
ident's Commission on Reorgani-
zation of the Executive Branch of
the Government, left for Wash-
ington last night for the final
meeting of the Commission.
The meeting, called by President
Truman, will be held at the White
House tomorrow.
At the same time, the commis-
sion will release the last of 1818
reports.

will select counselors from all
fields of study, not just those in
personnel work.
Mary C. Bromage, associate
dean of women, said that she
thought this would result in more
"intellectual enthusiasm" shown,
by the advisors.
Doktor To Be
Viola Soloist
For Concert
Paul Doktor, member of the
University Music School faculty,
will be the featured viola soloist at
the first concert of the newly
formed Detroit Little Symphony
orchestra at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow
at the Detroit Art Institute.
The 30 member chamber music
ensemble, composed of members of
the now defunct Detroit Sym-
phony, is trying the unique ex-
periment of playing without a
conductor. This device, Doktor
explained will enable the audience
to enjoy the work of each player,
something that they usually miss
by concentrating on the conduc-
tor.
The Little Symphony will play
Hoffmeister's "Concerto for Viola
and Orchestra," Mozart's Sym-
phony No. 35 ("Hoffner"), Rav-
el's "Tombeau de Couperin" and
Rossinni's overture to "La Scala di
Seta.
Tickets, many of which are half
priced for students are on sale in
Ann Arbor at the Music Center.

For the future--"there's still
horses around, so I guess I'll keep
working," said Malloy.
KEEP
POSTED
on the University's ever-ex-
panding activities, on Varsity
athletics, and on the achieve-
ments of Michigan men and
women throughout the world.
For just $2.00-half the regu-
lar subscription rate-graduat-
ing Seniors can assure them-
selves of a regular message from
their Alma Mater, edited es-
pecially for their alumni inter-
ests in the 900 annual pages of
THE MICHIGAN ALUMNUS
magazine.
You are cordially invited to visit
the office of the Alumni As-
sociation in Alumni Memorial
Hall for a leisurely inspection
of sample copies of THE MICH-
IGAN ALUMNUS and for addi-
tional information.
The Alumni Association
Alumni Memorial Hall

This can be your opportunity to get maximum
results from your college training-
1. If you believe ambition and ability
should determine your business and finan-
cial progress.
2. If you want to enter a profession that has
always paid top rewards.
8. If you want a job in a firmly established
field, but one in which a man with the
will and ability to produce can become a
supervisor or sales manager in a matter
of months.
Yes; it's true! These opportunities await college
men in the Youngstown Kitchen merchandising
business-the business of supplying modern,
white-enameled steel kitchens to the nation's
homes.
GIANT NEW MARKET
The demand for Youngstown Kitchens has accel-
erated with tremendous speed. More than one
and a half million men and women who have
read our advertising in the national magazines
have written us for more information about
Youngstown Kitchens. More than a million have
bought!
But actually, this is only a beginning. 'Twenty
million home owners need a Youngstown Kitchen
and can afford to buy. And there must be a
kitchen in every new dwelling unit built.

HERE'S WHERE YOU COME IN
The Youngstown Kitchen dealers across the
country need men to be trained as merchan-
dising experts. If you qualify, you will be asso-
ciated with one of these "certified" dealers-
probably in the city of your choice.
Your natural ability can pay off fast. You will
receive what we believe to be the finest vales
training available anywhere.
Here's a chance to get the kind of experience
and training that put many of America's top
flight executives where they are today. We know '
of no finer opportunity for college-trained men.
GET THE FACTS
For full information, just send us your name,
university address, and home address, and tell
us where you would like to work. A post card will
do. Or if you prefer, write us a letter. Your in-
quiry is confidential.You will hear from us atoce.
--.- c, .. om.. .sa . . a~c.'^ ---
CHARLES A. MORROW, Vice President in Charge of Merchand*isk
MULLINS MANUFACTURING CORPORATION
WARREN, OHIO
World's Largest Makers of Steel KItchim#

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ATTENTION...

Fraternities and Sororities

Co(U~. naf
al l~
biS u13S o n
ro sad.
6182s ~~
1t.P ~

flub Zil in iyea4 t' 4ene y
Is your house going to be closed this summer? Solve
your eating problems at CLUB 211. Group seating
arrangements can be conveniently reserved for every
meal. And prices are at their usual low - $9.00
a week. Make your summer eating arrangements
now. Call 2-8315 and ask for Mr. Miller.

Our humrpze rice c5edule

18 M eals . . . . ...... . . . . . . . . . $9.00
No Breakfasts ...............$8.10
No Breakfasts or Weekends. .. $6.95
EAT WITH FRIENDS THIS SUMMER AT

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