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April 30, 1950 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1950-04-30

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

PAGE SIX

TID'E ' MIEHT A DAILY

SUNDAY.-AMM 3.0. IWO-

.T.HE, M.H.A ATY

NVA\A 1nA1V. ARLVA VV)1~ lY

I-.

Ann Arbor welcomes Eu-
gene Ormandy and the
Philadelphia Orchestra -
along with the University
Choral Union, the Festival
Youth Chorus and Amer-
ica's leading solo artists
- to the 57th Annual
May Festival, May 4th-
7th, Hill Auditorium.

1C(

IN ANN ARBOR -
508 East William St.
(Illusyt)r a abov
Eugene Orrnanjdy
3L U M 13 0 A E" 10 R D S
for your favorite encore list of
THE PHILADELPHIA O CRCHESTRA
Superb musicianship, immeasurably rich tone
and inspired direction make the name of The
Philadelphia Orchestra synonymous with "Mus-
ical Perfection" . .. Hear this great orchestra
in your own home with concert hall realism on
Columbia Records from the large Lyon & Healy
selection.
aydn PROKOFIEFF-Clossical Symphony
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV-Russan Easter Overture
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
$3.85 Orchestra, ML 2035 ................$3.85
RESPHIGHI-Pines of Rome
DEBUSSY-Two Nocturnes
.$4.85 Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra, ML 4020 ................$4.85
SCHUMANN-Piano Concerto in A Minor
.$4.85 Rudolph Serkin and Eugene Ormandy and the
Philadelphia Orchestra, ML 4041.....$4.85
GRIEG-Peer Gynt Suite No. 1
$4.85 LISZT-Hungarian Rhapsodies Nos. I and 11
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra, ML 4132................$4.85
.$3.85 STRAUSS-Overtures and Waltzes
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Minor Orchestra, ML 2041................$3.85
.$4.85 BRAHMS--Symphony No. 4 in E Minor
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
e Orchestra, ML 4017 ................$4.85
S$4.85 DVORAK-Symphony No. 5 in E Minor
(New World)
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
.$4.85 Orchestra, ML 4024 ................$4.85

'Arty' Garg
Will Appear
Tomorrow
Gargoyle goes "Smooth" tomor-
row.
"Smooth," a special issue of the
campus humor magazine, will bit-
terly satirize men's and women's
fashion magazines, according to
Brian Duff, '50, editor.
* * *
"GARG'S 'SMOOTH' edition.
which hits campus tomorrow, will
completely shatter all precedents
of decency and decorum," Duff
boasted.
"Smooth" will not only ridi-
cule stylish, "arty magazines,
but will also imitate them in its
format, with half-pages and
flashy make-up, according to
Duff.
Evidence of "Smooth's" com-
plete lack of morals is its fea-
tured story, "I Kept a Mistress on
the GI Bill," Duff added.
"Equally licentious is 'Nude Un-
ashamed,"' Duff said, "While our
home design section will illus-
trate a 'Perfect Love Nest."'
Duff insists that every story in
"Smooth" is intended )o raise
the readers' cultural standards.
Plat Trip for
Army Game
Students who want to see the
Army game this October in New
York may buy reservations in the
Administration Building for one
of the planes to be chartered by
the Wolverine Club.
Arrangements for the Army
game weekend were announced
this week by John Zabriskie, club
publicity chairman.
FRIDAY NIGHT the travelers
will be feted along with the foot-
ball team and the marching band
at a dance and rally to be given
by the Michigan Alumni Associa-
tion of New York. Saturday eve-
ning there will be a buffet dinner
dance.
The Wolverine Club will also
buy Broadway theatre tickets for
anyone who wants them.
For information of trip costs in-
terested persons may call Za-
briskie, 5806, or Edmund Gibbon,
2-4591, 202 Strauss House.
Slosson To Speak
Prof. Preston W. Slosson will ad-
dress the Congregational-Evangel-
ical-Disciples Guild on "Commu-
nism and Christianity" at 7 p.m.
today in the Congregational
Church.
The talk will follow the church
supper at 6 p.m.

* * *

* * *

New Business Appointees

WALTER SHAPERO DONNA CADY
... Associate Manager . . . Advertising Manager
PLANETARY TRIPS:
Americans Make Space Ship
Reservations For Future

ROBERT MERSEREAU
... Finance Manager
-Daily-Wally Barth
Shelves Open
For Research

* *

Music School
Orientation
Plan Passed
Music School Student Council
yesterday passed a plan for a big
sister and brother program to wel-
come and aid entering freshman
and transfer students.
The council, formed early this
year, is composed of representa-
tives of each of the school's fields
of concentration. Under the new
plan representatives will assign
new students to volunteers in their
departments. These big brothers
and sisters will correspond with
the freshmen, offer counseling and
advice and try to make them feel
at home when they arrive on cam-
pus.
THE FOLLOWING new council
officers were installed at yester-
day's meeting: John Tipton, '51
SM, president; Donald Robinson,
'53SM, vice-president; Marilyn
Palm, '52SM, secretary and James
Berry, '52SM, treasurer.
Prof. Allen P. Britton of the
music education department ac-
cepted the post of faculty ad-
visor to which he was elected
last week.
The council also elected John
Flower to the Graduate Council
as the Music School Assembly
representative.
Plans were made to appoint two
members to the Inter-Arts Union.
Apartment Project
To StartMay 10
Construction of a $750,000 145-
family apartment project on Nob
Hill just off S. Main Street has
been scheduled to begin by May
10.
The first unit bf the 10-building
project is expected to be ready
for occupancy by September 1.
Present plans indicate that each
unit will contain a living room,
dinette, bedroom, kitchen and
bathroom.

4.
a

Thirteen hundred English

21

~A~Ei-t
MEN-.
cWi

M
!
1
t
/~""

"Let's get away from it all!"
This is the motto of 10,000
Americans who have made reser-
vations on interplanetary space,
ships.l
Selling reservations for inter-
planetary travel began as a publi-
city stunt for a Hayden Planetari-
um trip through space.!
* * *
HIOWEVER, stories concerning
reservations have brought such a
large response that the planetari-
um has decided to turn the reser-
vations over the to first commer-
cial interplanetary flight service.
When asked if he would like
to reserve a ticket, one Univer-
sity student asked, "Has the
drinking list gotten that far
yet?"

BRAHMS-Variations on a Theme by H
LISZT-Les Preludes
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra, ML 2066 ..............
SIBELIUS-Symphony No. 7 in C Major
WAGNER--Siegfried Idyll
Beecham and the New York
Philharmonic, ML 4086............
RIMSKY-KORSAKOY-Scheherazade
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra, ML 4089 ...............
STRAUSS-Death and Transfiguration
. Rosenkavalier Suite
EugeneOrmandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra, ML 4044...............
BACH-A Bach Program
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra, ML 2058...............
TCHAIKOVSKY-Symphony No. 5 in E M
Rodzinski and the Cleveland
Orchestra, ML 4052...............
BRAHMS-Violin Concerta in D Major
Joseph Szigeti, Eugene Ormandy and th
Philadelphia Orchestra, ML 4015.... .
FRANCK-Symphony in D Minor
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra, ML 4024 ...............

get as far away from here
possible," she said.

as

NOT QUITE as enthusiastic,
Marilyn Palm, '52 SM, thought
that "it might be exciting to go
to Mars, but it's plenty cold
enough for me here in Ann Ar-
bor." Mars is "even farther"
away from the sun than the earth
is, she explained.
Hayden Planetarium of the
American Museum of Natural
History in New York City is still
accepting reservations.
The expected date of departure
for the hopeful adventures is
sometime around 1975.
LorTo Speak Here
Prof. Hsu Lo of Purdue Univer-
sity will speak on "High Speed
Structures" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrowI
at a meeting of the Institute of
Aeronautical Sciences.

freshmen need no longer clog the
library circulation desk, seeking
magazines for term paper re-
search.
The journals these students
need have been placed on open
shelves in the first floor reading
room so they could help them-
selves.
The new system successfully
passed the crucial test this
week, as the ninth week of the
semester brought the usual
crowds of students seeking vol-
umes for research.
The bottleneck which used to
form around the main library
desk and in the halls was elimi-
nated, according to Mr. Dimock.
He added that the magazines
would be returned to the stacks
on May 6 so that other students
would not be inconvenienced by
the switch.

_4

Barbara A. Johnson,
siastically demanded
where to get a ticket.

'51, enthu-
to know
"I want to

Aeronautical Sciences. the switch. bathroom.

LP - 7 in., 12 in. - 3313 RPM - one speed, one system.

at C DLLINS, cotinairj lo.
*. t ft Xy
.4:.
$10.95
$17.95 $16.95
THE SUMMER DRESS SHOP IS OPEN
and ifc4 oCI-/t 11o/tde fp(edlie(4 C{tte /or towni anI uacttion.
COME AND SEE all the new-season news at one stop. We've a$,Q895 $1 95
downstairs cotton shop for your convenient selection of all the

Ag
fashion treasury
color-alc
from a ward
f =R 'SAPPHIR
*

by
old-misted beige ... coined for Spring's

A

4.

l.

of golds, yellows, off-whites and beige... subtle
chemy for black, red, navy! Choose OLD GOLD
drobe of filmy sheer, lastingly lovely
RE nylon stockings.
uage 15 denier
age 30 denier
age 20 denier

'courtesy of the maklers or
OW G QW CIGARETTES

...

SORCERY SHEER ............1.95 pr. 54 gu.
ALL-PURPOSE SHEER .......1.65 pr. 51 gu
DAYTIME SHEER ..........1.35 pr. 48 gu
HOSIERY - FIRST FLOOR

4.

\ N

'A

Basically Speaking . ..

A

ij

JOHANSENS for all occasions!
Here are shoes that possess all the virtues and graces
necessary to become all compliments to almost all
costumes . . . so perfectly do they take to dressing up
or down . . . Basically speaking . . . they're wonderful!
Smarty, in Red Calf, 12.95 pr.
Rip Snorter in White Elk, 8.95 pr.
SHOES - FIRST FLOOR
An a

I

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