,SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1950 I I NO MONASTERY MONOT ANY: 'U' Student Spends Year as Trappist 7 , * 4 .-... - - .. . - -. . By MARY LETSIS "A Trappist monastery isn't the grim place many people think;" Rank Melton, '52NR, said as he reminisced about the year he spent as a Trappist monk. "Sometimes it was a little like a western movie," he grinned. "Especially , when we'd bounce along in an old manure wagon be- hind a team of ornery mules. Oc- casionally someone bounced out of the wagon on a sharp curve as they rattled over rugged Kentucky ridges." BUT MELTON, who lived at Our Lady of Gethsemane monastery near Louisville, Ky., remembers the serious side of monastery life as well as the laughs. Drab denims form the back- bone of a monk's wardrobe, Mel- ton noted. "On feast days, how- ever, when celebrating the Mass, priests wear gloriously-colored robes. The satin vestments signi- fy that those who are beautifully dressed are close to Christ be- cause they approach His beauty. Yet, on the outside, the flashiest dressers are sometimes the far- thest away from Him." Monks live longer than most --Daily-Pete Arno HANK MELTON * * * people, Melton noted. "The average life span of monks ranges from 75 to 80. They do not eat meat, fish or eggs, which are generally thought necessary to a long, heal- thy life. They eat vegetables and fruits in season, as well as whole wheat bread." "MONKS ARE allowed to drink the nation's popular drink," Mel- ton said. "In Italy, they drink wine, in Germany, beer, and here in the United States, it's coffee. But coffee beans can't be grown in this country, and we produce all our own food on the monastery grounds. So we grew soybeans and combined them with barley to make barley water. And that was1 our coffee," he explained. The work changes from week to week with the seasons, and. this relieves the monotony." A monk's routine begins at 2 a.m. with a visit to the church. After breakfast, outside labor -on- tinues until noon dinner. Then there's more outside labor until bedtime at 7 p.m. The day's ac- tivities are frequently punctuated by prayer and meditation. * * * A TOUCHY stomach, aggravated during the war by Army food, forc-; ed Melton to leave Our Lady of; Gethsemane monastery. "It isn't, uncommon for monks to eat half, a loaf of long bread and a )acket-; ful of potatoes and other vcge- tables at one sitting," he Said. "My digestive system couldn't' take that much, and when I ate less after working so hard, I was still hun- gry and became weak." Soon after leaving the m.'as- tery, Melton said, he returned to his old habits. "With so many1 distractions, it is impossible to maintain such peace of -oul as I found there. My novice-master warned me that it would happen, and I found it to be true," he, confessed. There are 200 monks in the Trappist monastery in Kentucky and about 12 such monasteries in the United States. "The movement is rwing r'a- pidly, Melton.tdeclared, atd about seven applications a day are received from men who re anxious1 to become Trappists." Set Atlantic Union Meet .for Today Newly Formed Group Open to Student Body The! newly formed Ann Arbolr chapter of the Atlantic Union Committee will hold its first meeting at 8 p.m. today in Rm. 3A of the Union. Primarily held for the purpose of expanding group membership, especially to the student body, the meeting will be open to the pub- lic. It will be held under the aus- pices of the Student Religious As- sociation, * * * THE CHAPTER was formed last month by thirty faculty members and Ann Arbor residents as part of the national committee having chapters in thirty seven states and Canada. The aim of the organization is to extend federal union princi- ples over the democratic nations that are now members of the North Atlantic Pact. Its immediate objective is to have the Atlantic Union resolu- tion which has been before the House Foreign Affairs .Commit- tee since last year, brought before Congress for instant action. The aims of the Atlantic Un- ion differ from that of the United World Federalists, as the Union forbids the membership of totali- tarian governments. Chairman of the committee, Prof. Preston Slosson of the "his- tory department will address the meeting. He is also faculty advisor to the student World Federalist group. Portrait Parade Election Results Reveal Curious Local Sidelights Campus Ticket Sales Begin For Varsity Night Program M4OSCOW DECORATED-Huge portraits of Marx, Lenin, Engels, and Soviet Premier Stalin decorate the facade of Moscow's Bolshoi theater where Deputy Premier Nikolai Bulganin de- livered the official address Nov. 6 on the eve of the 33rd anni- versary of the Soviet revolution. Bulganin singled out Communist China for special praise and declared that "Korea has become the banner of. all oppressed peoples fighting for their liberation." HUMANIZE MEDICINE: Broad Pre-Med Education Stressed b 'U' Psychiatrist A few interesting local side- lights on Tuesday's election turned up yesterday, as vote tabulations came nearer to completion. A new county voting record for an off-year election was estab- lished despite late afternoon and evening rains, but officials' early hopes for an all-time high turn- out failed to materialize. Local voters placed the city gov- ernment in some confusion by en- thusiastically approving a shorter E. Ann Arbor Remains City In Close Vote East Ann Arbor, the city which doesn't want to exist, failed at the polls Tuesday in a move to dis- solve. A petition to disincorporate was turned down by a margin of 31 votes, as a two-thirds majority was needed to pass it. The totals were 439 for and 266 against dis- incorporation. The city was incorporated /in June, 1946. Proponents of disin- corporation felt that taxes were too high to counterbalance the ad- .vantages of "city life."'The city would have dissolved back into Pittsfield township from whence it came, if the petition had passed in Tuesday's election. Opponents of the proposal thought that the services provided by being, a city were worth the higher taxation. The issue was the first of its kind to come up in Michigan history. The. Christman-Warner Bill of 1949 set up the machinery for disincorporation. Coffee Hour Today A student-faculty coffee hour, sponsored by the Union and Lea- gue, will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Terrace Room of the Un- ion. The coffee hour offers an op- portunity for students to meet members{ of the history depart- ment facultyon an informal basis. work week for firemen without providing funds to accomplish it. The proposal to raise the tax limit slightly in order to finance the expansion made necessary by the shorter week was voted down. The Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment managed to get both Repub- lican and Democratic precinct workers on each others' necks ear- ly Tuesday morning. Because of a misunderstanding, police confis- cated many of the small cam- paign stake-signs placed near the polls on Tuesday morning by the workers. TheDemocrats thought the Re- publicans had pulled them up; the Republicans blamed the Demo- crats. Someone discovered that the police had-removed the signs, The police replaced them. It was evident from a glance at the precinct totals that, with vot- ing machines, split ballots are al- most a thing of the past. In Free- dom Township, Washtenaw Coun- ty, for example, out of a total 169 ballots cast fewer than ten were split. Even in Ann Arbor, where voting machines have been in use for several elections, split ballots were noticeably absent. In the first precinct of the sec- ond ward, out of an approximate 1200 ballots cast, there were only about 70 split ones. Ohio Bus Tickets Placed On Sale Anyone wishing to make bus reservations to the Ohio State- Michigan football game at Co- lumbus can do so this week, ac- cording to George Benisek, Wol- verine Club publicity chairman. Special buses are being charter- ed which will leave Ann Arbor early Saturday morning, Nov. 25. On the return trip, one bus will leave Columbus shortly after the game, with a second bus leaving at 10 a.m. Nov. 26. Round-trip fare for both groups is $8.50, and reservations can be made until Nov. 17 at the Student Affairs window in the lobby of the Administration Bldg. No game tickets are available with transportation reservations, Benisek emphasized. Tickets are now on sale for the twelfth annual Varsity Night to be held Nov. 17 in Hill Auditorium. The gala variety show, always a campus favorite, will be preceded by an all-campus pep rally for the Northwestern .game the following day. RADIO COMICS Joe Gentile and Ralph Bingay of the dawn hour program Early Morning Fro- lics from WJBK will emcee the two hour star-studded variety show. Comedy Magician Karol Fox, the King/of Korn, and comedy juggler Danny Daniels will be the two other professional perform- ers. Seven studlent acts have al- ready been chosen by Prof. Wil- liam D. Revelli, conductor of the University Bands and director of the show. The proceeds from Varsity Night are used by the three University AMONG the student performers chosen are: an acrobatic ballet by Patricia Herman; a barbershop quartet composed of law students, James Kendall, Vern Witham, Bob Rizley and Phil Robertson; and a midget act by Marjorie Ingram and Suzanne Rose. Other student performers will be instrumentalists, B e v e r 1y Shuber, Patty Joy and Margaret King, and a jazz combo, Bob Leopold and his Dixieland Five. Several more student acts are still being considered for the pro- gram. Tickets are now on sale at lo- cal music and record shops, the Union, the League, Harris Hall, the Administration Building and from all Band members. Last year's show, emceed by ra- Stressing that today's doctors must treat their patients as total personalities, Dr. Herbert T. Schmale of the University Hospi- tal's psychiatric department told the Pre-Med Society last night that they must try to broaden their education. "Concentrating on the labs and not on the humanities has caused many of today's doctors. to be trained technicians but not men that understand their patients," REJECT TOOL KIT: Coeds, Government Disagree On Idea for Ideal' Bridal Gift ________*7 To prepare themselves properly for the field, Dr. Schmale advised that pre-med students take four years of preparatory work instead of three. But Dr. Schmale also said that much can be done while the stu- dent is in medical school. "Here at Michigan," he said, "students have some psychiatric work in each of' their four years of medical stu- dies." Dr. Schmale emphasized that the heart of Medical School teaching is that the doctor should handle himself so as not to arouse the patient's anxiety. Dr. Schmale spoke on the "Psy- chological Factors in Medicine," in the Chemistry Bldg. lecture hall. Dr. Schmale said. HE EXPLAINED that "one i r Bands, the Marching, the Concert, dio comedian Robert Q. Lewis per- and the Varsity, to aid in carrying formed to a standing-room-only on their, year's activities, audience. Tired of Walking to Lunch? Let J. D. Miller give you a ridL. Bus to J. D. Miller's Cafeteria Le'aves Bus Ad. Bldg. - 12:01 Leaves Engine Arch - 12:05 Eat Lunch at J. D. Miller's and board return bus at 12:45. DAME MYRA HESS Most engaged. coeds on campus apparently do not. put much store in government suggestions for the "ideal" bridal gift. At least, the recent suggestion that a tool kit would be just the thing for the newlywed woman has met with much dissatisfaction from campus-brides-to-be. THE IDEA came from Earl Mc- 'MacBeth Film To Begin Today Orson Welles' widely discussed production o f Shakespeare's "Macbeth" will begin a three day run at 8 p.m. today, at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The film, which originally had Welles displaying one of the strongest Scotch burrs ever por- trayed, 'has been toned down con- siderably because of the criticism it received. Reviews for the film have been varied,''but according to the Har- ward Crimson it is "an exciting, superior movie with moments of brilliance." All seats are reserved and sell for $375. Seats "are still available for tonight's show. Exhibit 'U' Prints Three prints from University art collections are currently ap- pearing in an exhibit, "American Processional," at the Concoran Gallery of Art in Washington,D.C. The Clements Library has loan- ed "Party for Commodore Perry at the Yokahama Entertainment House, Honshi' Province," and "The Indian Summer." An oil painting, "Indians At- tacking' an EArigrant Train,". has been loaned by the University Museum of Art. Cracken, household equipment- expert for the U.S. Department of$ Agriculture. He said the kit should be complete with- a hammer, two screw drivers (one large, one lit- tle), a medium sized pair of pliers, and a six-nch crescent wrench. They are to come assembled in a neat, handy holder, so that they will be easily accessable in time of emergency. Reactions to the suggestion var- ied from incredulity to hedged ap- proval of the idea, with few wo- men agreeing that such a kit would be any kind of a gift. * * * SUE BEEBE, '52 A&D, was downright hostile to the idea. "I don't think it's much of a gift,". she said. "I'd rather get extra- vagant and frivolous stuff; we can always eke out the bare necessi- ties." "It's a foul idea for a gift," Joyce Baker, '51, commented. "And even if I did get one, I wouldn't know how to use the tools," she added. Ginny Gray, '51 Ed., thought that such a gift would be useful, but, "there. are lots of other things I'd rather get,". she said. "A toas- ter. or a waffle iron 'would be more up my alley; besides I think it's better for the man to be the fixer," she said. But McCracken's idea was up- held by Barbara Jacobi, '51, "I think it is a novel and very cute idea for a gift," she said. "It would certainly be very useful, and I wouldn't mind if I got one at all," she maintained. prime need in medical education is to broaden the educational base of the medical student before he goes to medical school. "We must teach students that they are dealing with people and not with kidney stones." CHICAGO COLLEGE of OPTOMETRY Nationally Accredited An Outstanding College in a Splendid Profession Entrance requirement thirty hours of Liberal Arts credits. Advanced standing granted for additional L.A. credits. Next Class Starts February 12 Excellent clinical fa- cilities. Recreational and athletic activities. Dormitories on campus. Approved for veterans. 350 Belden Ave,. Chicago 14, Ill. I BRITISH PIANIST EXTRA SERIES ALL-BEETHOVEN PROGRAM Tues., Nov. 14, 8:30 Hill Auditorium Tickets: $3.00-$2.40-$1.80. UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY Burtori Memorial Tower TYPEWRITERS Rented Sold Bought Repaired G..Requisitions. Accepted on Supplies only MORRI LL'S 314 5. State Ph. 7177 fountain pens repaired a -J -J Q. 4' .J -J a- U -J .Q -J J V HOT FUDGE SUNDAE Friday Only 17c WITH COUPON ,' FAB 25c LIMIT ONE No Rinse PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S * PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S * I WIMBERLY PIPES $2-$5 Val. $1.29 LIMIT ONE I I MYRA HESS Finland Chorus - November 28 Solomon - November 20 I r------- SLACKS!! I SLACKS!! SLACKS!! 'WITH . f r. MIC IGAN MEN its Alwas A,. Large assortment of BALL POINT PEN and PENCIL both $1" LIMIT ONE SET WE HAVE THEM SMs and5s Flash Bulbs 16c ea. Cleansing TISSUES 200s LIMITED QUANTITY 6 BARS PALMOLIVE IN Plastic Bag 49c, LIMIT ONE LARGE HERSHEY BARS 2 for 35c LIMIT TWO 60c POPULAR BRANDS CIGARETTES $1.79 Carton, Plus Tax LIMIT ONE 79c SHOWER SPRAY Discontinued Line 49C SUPER SPECIAL SET OF 8 Tumblers 98c LIMITED QUANTITY AMERICAN THERMOS' BOTTLES $2.50 Val. $1.59 One to a Customer m r- m AA k - * 1n A Vw - r m Hn the newest styles and colors ... GABARDINES . I FLANNEL II fl 1 !.se._.. a _ II 11 r"q _- L __ __:.- I I