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January 08, 1954 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1954-01-08

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XI

PAGE TWO

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1954

i 1

VARIED PROGRAM:
'U' Singers, Symphony
To Give Cocert oday

'U' Subpoena
Policy Given
(Continued from Page 1)

Selections written for symphony 'bone,"featuring
bands will highlight the concert to Whitener, '56SM.

soloist Bruce

be given at 8:30 p.m. tonight in * * *
Hill Auditorium by the Symphony VAUGHAN WILLIAMS' "Folk
Band and Michigan Singers, ac- Song Suite" and Respighi's "Pines
cording to Prof. William D. Re- of the Appian Way" will conclude
velli of the music school. the first portion of the concert.
Ferde Grofe's "March for Amer- The Singers will perform Josquin
Icans" will open the band's pro- de Pres' "Ave Verum Corpus,"
gram, which will continue with Ginastera's "Lamentations of Jere-
Mendelssohn's "Overture for miah" and Bruckner's "Mass in
Band," written when the composer E. Minor."
was 15 years old, and Rimsky- Monteverdi's "Sonata Sopra
Korsakov's "Concerto for Trom- . - - . "Snaa -.

Speech One-Act
Plays To Continue
The three speech department
one-act plays: Noel Coward's
"Ways and Means," *George Ber-
nard Shaw's "Press Cuttings," and
William Butler Yeats' "Deirdre"
will continue their run at 8 p.m.
today in Lydia Mendelssohn'Thea-
ter.
Student directors are: Paul Re-
billet, Grad., Sue Spurrier, '54, and
William McAnallen, Grad.
The plays are open to the pub-
lic, and no a'dmission will be
charged.

Sancta Maria Ora Pro Nobis"
will be performed by both
groups. This number was ar-
ranged for band and chorus by
Prof. Hans T. David of the
music school, who dedicated it
to Prof. Revelli and the Sym-
phony Band.
Alfred Reed's "Symphony for
Brass and Percussion," finished
only a year and a half ago, will
open the last part of the program.
Gallois' "Grape Festival from
"Italian Sketches'" is next, fol-
lowed by Floyd Werle's "Michigan
Rhapsody."
Werle, a former member of the
band, now heads the arranging
staff of the Air Force Band in
Washington, D. C.

I U

NOW ON SALE ...
TICKETS FOR
THE WORLD'S GREATEST HYPNOTIST
JANUARY 15th at HILL AUDITORIUM

General Adm. $1.00
Reserved $1 .25

On Sale NOW
at The Adm. Bldg.

P.

EUROPEAN HOLIDAY
52 Days--$925.OO
ENGLAND, BELGIUM, GERMANY,
LUXEMBURG, ITALY, SWITZERLAND,
FRANCE AND SPAIN
Sail from Montreal July 3rd - Return 'uebec Aug. 24
Mrs. Mae Ufer - Ph. 3-1813 - Mrs. Marie Netting
Planned by
Ask Mr. Foster Travel Service
Henrk Ibsen's
a tragedy of virtue.. .
Opening TONIGHT, January 8
at 8:00 P.M.
The Arts Theater
2091 E. Washington Phone NO 8-7301 for reservations
NOTE - EARLY CURTAIN

would be a reason for not having
the Joint Judiciary Council handle
any disciplinary action against the
student,.if action were taken at all.
The general feeling at the Nov.
31 meeting was that a faculty
member would have a stronger ob-
ligation than a student to explain
use of the Fifth Amendment.
The group felt that if a student
appeared before the Committee
and refused to answer even reason-
able questions, or was unduly un-
cooperative, the University would
investigate and decide then wheth-
er disciplinary action was war-
ranted on the merit of the indi-
vidual case.
EXCERPTS from President Hat-
cher's letter of Dec. 4 to Miss Fiber
and Smith follows:
The Joint Judiciary Council,
though relatively new, has al-
ready shown its high-minded
concern for the welfare of the
University community, and its
capacity to deal judiciously with
difficult problems.
"There is no reason that I can
see for us to be too apprehensive
over the possibility that some stu-
dents might be involved in Cn-
gressional investigations. I have
no reason to expect that any stu-
dent will be called. If by any
chance he should be called, we
should hope that he would respond
honestly and frankly as befits a
citizen of this nation exercising his
freedom. Certainly he would be
given full protection of his rights
under American law.
If a student should be guilty of
serious misconduct in this kind of
situation, we would regard it as
we would view any other charge
of misconduct, and if it were the
kind of case which would normally
be referred to the Joint Judiciary
Council, it would be so referred.
The present procedures seem en-
tirely competent to deal with such
a situation if it should, perchance,
arise.
House Pa
Discussed
(Continued from Page 1)
the quads would be details of
financial and social obligations
of ech of the three housing
groups. The IHC would include
a similar statement of its own.
Asked if he thought the effect
of the information program would
be a mass movement out of resi-
dence halls, Kidston said, "My
reaction is to let them go. Our
responsibility is to give the man
the facts of the housing possibili-
ties on campus."
Anderson Concert
To Be Held Sunday
Returning for her ninth appear-
ance at the University, Marian
Anderson, noted contralto will be
featured in the fourth concert of
the Extra Concert Series at 8:30
p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium.
This is Miss Anderson's first
American engagement since re-
turning from a tour of the Far
East, Central and South America.
Tickets are priced at $3.00, $2.50,
$2.00 and $1.50, and are on sale
at the University Musical Society
office in Burton Tower.
ENDING TONIGHT
ON THE
BIG SCREEN

[DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the University
of Michigan for which the Michigan
Daily assumes no editorial responsi-
bility. Publication in it is construc-
tive notice to all members of the
University. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552
Administration Building before 3 p.m.
the day preceding publication (before
11 a.m. on Saturday).
FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1954
VOL. LXIV, No. 77
Notices
1954 Parking Permits: All those eli-
gible to park in the restricted areas on
the campus may now obtain permits
by application at the Information Desk,
Second Floor Lobby, Administration
Building. Please present 1954 Michigan
Certificate of Registration. The per-
mit is a decalcomania and should be
placed in the lower right hand corner
of the rear window as you face the
car from the outside rear. Should the
decal be mutilated while being affixed,
all parts must be returned before a
duplicate will be issued.
Parking permits issued for 1953 will
be honored until March 5 if attached
to 1953 or 1954 license plate. After
March 5 all cars parked in restricted
areas which do not show the 1954
parking permit will be considered as
Illegally parked.
-HerbertG. Watkins, Secretary
Application Bianks for Phoenix Pre-
doctoral Fellowships, for 1954-1955, are
availablein the Graduate School Office.
Applicants should be well advanced in
their graduate studies and should pre-
sent plans for research or graduate
study leading to research in some field
dealing with the applications or impli-
cations of atomic energy. Research pro-
jects may be in the fields of nuclear
physics and chemistry, in the use of
radiation or fission products in the
.medical and biological sciences or on
the effect thatatomic energyedevelop-
ments will have on government, eco-
nomics, philosophy and culture. Com-
petition will close Feb. 14, 1954.
Attention Senior Engineers. Those en-
gineers who plan to graduate in Feb-
ruary, June, or August of 1954 can pay
their class dues at either of the fol-
lowing places. West Engr. Bldg., Engr.
Mechanics Office, Room 201. East Engr.
Bldg., Chemical Engr. Office, Room 2028.
Art Print Loan Collection pictures

are to be returned to 510 Administration
Building from Jan. 11 to 15 between
9 and 12 a.m. and between 1:30 and
5 p.m. A fine of five cents a day will
be charged for overdue pictures. Next
RACKHAM GALLERY EXHIBITION,
Feb. 3-5; sign up for prints Feb. 8 and
9. Each student must bring his or her
own validated ID card to reserve a pic-
ture. A rental fee of fifty cents per
picture will be charged. Each student
will be allowed one picture until fur-
ther notice.
Master of Arts in Teaching. A pro-
gram in the Division of General Stud-
ies, providing liberal and professional
training for a teaching career in (1)
Junior Colleges (2) Secondary Schools
(3) Elementary Schools (Foreign Lan-
guages only in Elementary Schools) is
being offered by Yale University. A
five-year program is being developed,
including a four-year B.A. degree with
a major in the student's proposed field.
of teaching as well as the basic courses
In Education and followed by a fifth
year leading to the M.A. degree. Qual-
ified men and women, graduates of
colleges of liberal arts or scientific
schools, may enroll for the fifth year
of this program. A few scholarships of
$500 to $1500 are available for deserving
students. Application for scholarships
must be made before Feb. 15, 1954.
Further information may be obtained
at the Graduate School Office, and if
desired, an appointment can be ar-
ranged with Mr. Douglas W. Peter-
son, Assistant to the Director of the
program, for January 27, in the Rack-
ham Building.
PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS.
Monday:
Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co., of
Detroit, will have a representative at
the Bureau of Appointments on Jan.
11 to interview February and June
graduates, Bus. Ad., and LS&A, for
Sales.
Tuesday:
Canada Life Assurance Co.twill visit
the campus on Jan. 12 to talk with
Bus. Ad and LS&A graduates, both Feb-
(Continued on Page 4)
DAILY CLASSIFIEDS
READ AND USE
i-

'U' Alien Students Required
To Register at Post Office
University students who are not
United States citizens must regis- gration and Naturalization, giv-
ter with immigration officials be- ing details as to why he is late.
fore January 31, Postmaster Os- Inexcusable alibis may result in
wald J. Koch said yesterday. imprisonment, fines, or deporta-
All aliens must fill out cards at tion according to notices sent to
one of the local branches of the non-citizens by immigration au-
Post Office, which are located at thorities last week.
220 N. Main St., Nickels Arcade
and E. University St.
Th 1cSteinbeck
KOCHI REPORTED that thus F l T B
far registration has been "pro- Film0ToBe Given
ceeding in good fashion" and that
approximately 800 persons had Featuring James Stewart, Rich-
filed with local authorities. Last ard Conte and Lee J. Cobb, "Call
year, 1,648 reported during the Northside 777" will be the Student
registration period here .Legislature Cinema Guild film at
The Postmaster emphasized 7 and 9 p.m. today in Architecture
the fact that no registrations Auditorium.
will be accepted after the Jan. Henry Fonda will star in John
31 deadline, and that 'if a reg- Steinbeck's"The Grapes of Wrath"
istrant is late, he must contact at 7 and 9 p.m. tomorrow and 8
the U. S. Department of Immi- p.m. Sunday.

1
t
t
s
i
3

MICHIGAN DAILY
Phone NO 23-24-1
HOURS: 1to 5 P.M.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .60 1.34 1.96
3 .70 1.78 2.94
4 .90 2.24 3.92
Figure 5 average words to a line.
Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST - Black Persian muff near A.
Lloyd. Call 5010 Lloyd. Reward. )83A
LOST-Sheaffer maroon pencil. Please
contact John Hatgis, S.Q. Ext. 575.
Reward. )82A
FOR SALE
1952 NASH RAMBLER station wagon.
New Year special $1045. Ask for Benny
at the used car lot, 222 West Washing-
ton. Phone 2-3163. )247B
BRAND NEW Webcor phonograph and
tape recorder. Excellent buy. Call
NO 3-0521, Extension 627. )88B
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Sox,
39c; shorts, 69c; military supplies.
Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )14B
RADIO-PHONOGRAPH table combina-
tion, 3-speed changer, $60. NO,3-2554.
1946 CHEVROLET 2-door. This week
special. Ask for Smitty at the used
car lot, 222 West Washington. Phone
NO 2-3163: )246B
BABY PARAKEETS-Various colors, $8
each. New and used cages and bird
supplies. Mrs. Ruffins. 582 S. 7th.
)196B
1949 OLDS 2-DOOR - Very clean $795.
Chevrolet Car Lot, 222 West Washing-
ton. Phone NO 2-3163. )245B
GUARANTEED
BATTER I ES
AND OLD
BATTERY
BATTERY STORES ASSOCIATED
Liberty and Ashley )242B
I MUST BE NUTS
Take advantage-1939 Ford, good con-
dition. Best offer. Call NO 3-0410
between 6 and 7 p.m. )231B
"PURCHASE FROM PURCHASE"-Solar
auto-focus 21 by 31 enlarger. Display
model, regular $109.50, $85. Purchase
Camera Shop, 1116 S. University.
)248B

FOR SALE
1938 PONTIAC 2-DOOR-New motor $65.
Chevrolet Car Lot, 222 West Washing-
ton. Phone 2-3163. )244B
ALL OAK Fire Place Wood. Any length.
NO 3-4575. )250B
ARGUS 35mm Camera, case and tripod,
$15.00. Burns, Phone NO 8-7398. )249B
DOUBLE COIL SPRINGS, $8.00; Steel
Folding Cot without mattress, $8.00.
Upholstered adjustable reclining chair
with footstool, $10.00. Two large side-
boards, $10 each. Large walnut veneer
table and five chairs, $20.00. Coal hot
water heater, $5.00. Swervii top chrome
stool, $4.00. Phone NO 2-9020. )258B
FOR SALE-Large size Tux. Leave note
in Box 231 Anderson, East Quad. )251B
FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR RENT -- Male students.
Double end suite. Kitchen privileges.
Half block to campus.417 East Liberty.
)21C
ROOMS FOR RENT
LARGE sunny front room for 1 or 2 girls.
Some baby sitting desirable. NO
3-8490.
ROOMS FOR RENT - Male students.
Double rooms and suite. Kitchen
privileges.Half block to campus.)417
East Liberty. )22D
ROOM for rent for man. Four blocks
from campus for month of January.
Call NO 2-9625. )24D
OVERNIGHT GUEST ROOMS
Rooms by Day or Week
Campus Tourist Homes. Ph. NO 3-8454
518 E. Williams St. (near State)
)25D
LARGE DOUBLE ROOMS NEAR UNION
Cooking privileges. Men students. Now
or Feb. 1st. Ph. NO 3-8454. )26D
ROOM for rent for male student. 1516
Dexter. Call after 5:00. NO 2-6705.
) 27D
PLEASANT ROOM for men. Basement
single with stove and refrig. Near
hospitals, Rackham, School of Music.
Ph. NO 3-0746 or NO 3-0166. )28D
ROOM AND BOARD
WANTED - Single room with private
bath, entrance. Call NO 3-1511, Ext.
726, after 6 p.m. )9E
PERSONAL
? EUROPE?
Thinking of a tour next summer?
We have a good one that will be
mostly composed of Michigan stu-
dents! Call Tom Leopold or Ruedi
Gingrass at NO 2-3256. )49F

TRANSPORTATION
FREE TRANSPORTATION East for one
or two persons who will drive my car
to New Haven, Conn., earliest date
possible after Jan. 15th. Call U-M Ext.
2449 or NO 2-6403. )38G
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED-Young lady for part
time work at soda fountain. Swift's
Drug Store, 340 S. State. Phone NO
2-0534. )57H
GIRLS WANTED-Part or full time of-
fice work and typing. Call NO 8-6988.
)58H
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPEWRITERS! Portable and Standard
for rent, sales, and service.
MORRILLS
314 State St., Phone NO 8-7177
WASHING, Finished Work, and Hand
Ironing. Buff dry and wet washing.
Also ironing separately. Free pick-up
and delivery. Ph. NO 2-9020. )21
RADIO SERVICE
Auto - Home - Portable
Phono and T.V.
Fast and Reasonable Service$
ANN ARBOR RADIO AND T.V.
"Student Service"
1214 So. Univ., Ph. NO 8-7942
11z blocks east of East Eng. )51
YOUNG MAN, M.A. 1 yr. PhD, English,
U. of M. Now working in engineering
research. Would like to work at home
editing, arts, science, literature, ad-
vertising, ghost - writing, secretarial
services. NO 2-8257. )231
EXPERIENCED TYPIST-Fast, reason-
able service on term papers. Ph. NO
2-9214. )251
TYPING - Reasonable rates, accurate
and efficient. Phone NO 8-7590. 830
So. Main. )31
APPLICATION PHOTOGRAPHS while
you wait at SNIDER STUDIOS, 213 So.
Main St. )161
WANTED TO RENT
WANTED-TWO GIRLS to share 4 room
apartment. NO 3-0884. )5K
WANTED-ROOMMATE to share 3 room
modern apt. with undergraduate wom-
an. Call NO 3-1204 after 5. )6K
MISCELLANEOUS
THE FALL ISSUE OF GENERATION Is
now on sale at the Union, League,
and local bookstores.
ALTERATIONS
ALTERATIONS on ladies garments.
Ph. NO 2-2678. Catherine St., near
State. Alta Groves. )1N

f

I

SNDERSON
FRANZ RUPP, PIANIST
SUNDAY, 8:30 P.M.
JANUARY 10
HILL AUDITORIUM
-Tickets $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, $1.50
at
UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY
Burton Memorial Tower

C1'eaSLquild
Presents
"CALL NORTH SIDE 111 "
JAMES STEWART
RICHARD CONTE ... LEE COBB
Friday 7:00 and 9:00

TODAI
THRIJ SUN

DAY Sa
WANDERER . . . FIGHTER . . . LEGEND ...
THE GREAT SOUTH PACIFIC ADVENTURE!

Fri. 6:30
., Sun. 1:30
Sc - 18c

r r
r
,
i
i
pER
a *RIM ARMIS

HENRY FONDA
If In
"6 UAPES OF WRATH"r
Saturday 7:00 and 9:00
------ ------------- -----
50c
Architecture Auditorium

r.

I

AR

ALSO
DRAMA THAT EXPLODES IN YOUR FACE!
a --=OEM

I

a

TODAY
THRU SUNDAY

ORPHEUM

Fridays 6:30
Sat., Sun., 1 P.M.
60c

DELICIOUS FOOD!
DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERE!
at
RESTAURANT

"THIS IS THE STORY
HANDFUL OF MEN .
... THE CRUEL SEA!

OF AN OCEAN, TWO SHIPS AND A
.. THE ONLY VILLAIN IS THE SEA

- .:....
,..
,

I

S~ MLL ~Ai.

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