WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1952 - THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN PAGE SEVEN Studen Ann Arbor is filled with the type of entertainment features that only a college community can offer. Lectures, concerts, plays and fine movies are available in abun- dance and many are provided free of charge. Sports, dances and house par- ties fill out the calendar for re- creation seeking students, fresh from a long session with the books. MOST LIVING groups, whether they be fraternities, sororities, co-op houses, or dormitory units, throw out the welcome mat with parties at least every month. Dur- Ing the football season, student parties are more plentiful. Nearly every week some large campus organization throws a dance for any terpsichoriali atinded students. Traditional1 highlight of the year is the J-Hop; a formal dance with big name orchestras, held betweena semesters. For the less ambitious, there are1 five movie houses in the city which provide. every type of cinematic offering. Aside from the two com-i mercial theaters on the campus, the Student Legislature operatesY a Cinema Guild which shows eith-e * * * Life-Classroom by Day, Entertainment at Night . m C # " A * * * i er foreign films or revivals of well known Hollywood movies. It op- erates generally only on weekends. livan sored operas and dramas spon- by the Inter-Arts Union. IN DOWNTOWN Ann Arbor, one theater provides low priced B films, revivals, and occasional A pictures, while another offers ex- cellent foreign and art movies. Drama flourishes throughout the year. The speech depart- ment produces student-acted plays regularly and in co-opera- tion with the music school, puts on two student-sung operas a year. In the spring the Ann Ar- bor Drama Season brings Broad- way stars to campus to act in hit plays. The Arts Theatre Club, a local professional acting company, stag- es "theater in the round" produc- tions at their third floor play- house downtown. Specializing, in a wide variety of rarely produced plays, they have attracted a wide following among students and townspeople. * * * - ADDED TO these are the var- ious student sponsored shows such as the Junior Girls Play, the all- male Union Opera, Student Play- ers productions, Gilbert and Sul- * * * ! Music minded students can have ; field day choosing which concerts to attend. Besides the concerts provided by the Uni- versity Musical Society-includ- ing the Choral Union Series, the Extra-Concert Series, The Mes- siah, the Chamber Music Fes- tival and the May Festival -- there are frequent recitals by faculty and students of the School of Music. The Univer- sity's own Stanley Quarter plays a regular series of works from the chamber repertory. Students groups, such as Glee Club, Symphony Orchestra, Band, and other choral groups, take on the most ambitious projects for their regular concerts. * * * IN MARCH, the Inter-Arts Un- ion puts on the Student Arts Fes- tival, a three day gala event which takes in all students artistic work, including music. Lectures come with such fre- quency that attending them all would be practically a full-time occupation. I In addition to departmental lectures - which are free -- there is the Oratorical Associations lec- ture series, bringing well-known speakers from all over the world. IF YOU aren't 21, tavern life is pretty well out because most of the taverns keep a sharp eye out for abusers of the state liquor laws. And the University liquor laws prohibit drinking on campus or in University housing, so you'll have to stew in your coke 'til that famed 21st birthday. For those loaded with identifi- cation, there are several bars downtown where you can get beer and wine, but Washtenaw County is dry (no liquor by the glass) so you have to adjust your taste to beer. If you tire of all these offerings, there's always the Arboretum, if you have a girl. The Arboretum, University-owned, is some sever- al hundred acres of wooded hills, absolutely unlit. 'U' Publishes Guidebook For Students Huron Land Site of New ' U' Campus (Continued from Page 1) round an out door court yard. The planting of trees and flow- ers in the courtyard was com- pleted during the summer ses- sion. Haven Hall is devoted to the offices of literary college faculty while Mason Hall contains row upon row of classrooms whose large windows overlook the cam- pus. s C C ALONG WITH classroom and office buildings, four large modern auditoriums have also been ap- pended to marble fronted Angell Hall. Four million dollars in state funds were appropriated to foot the bill for the entire project. The largest of the University summer session construction projects was the expansion and revamping of the Natural Sci- ence Building. Returning students will find the Natural Science Auditorium com- pletely overhauled with the many levels of the old ceiling replaced with one overhead level. A new movie projection box and new flooring and lighting system have also been added and all of the seats have been ripped out and replaced. The forty year old structure has been provided with two new elevators and an expanded library. A women's swimming pool which will take up the first floor of, a Women's Physical Education Building is now under construc- tion. If the building plans con- tinue according to schedule the pool should be ready fof dips by students returning from Christmas vacation. The rest of the building will be constructed later. BUSY NOTE TAKERS COMPRISE MAIN PART OF UNIVERSITY'S EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM Forty-six leaflets in the Uni- versity's award winning "Guide- book for Planning an Education at the University" have now been published, the Admissions Office has announced. The leaflets, which describe oc- cupations and careers along with University courses which prepare for them, are bound in looseleaf notebooks and distributed to high school counselors and libraries. In- dividual leaflets are sent to stu- dents upon request, or may be picked up in the Admissions Of- fice., TWELVE OF the fifteen Univer- sity schools and colleges are rep'- resented by one or more leaflets published to date, while others deal with specific departments, areas, housing, finances, ROTC and student life. According to Clyde Vroman, Di- rector of Admissions, the guide- book will be an invaluable aid in explaining University facilities and programs for counselors and pros- pective students. Champion of bicycles .., bicycle lof champions ISA Foreign StudentsClub International understanding and cooperation are the aims of the programs sponsored by the Inter- national Student Association. The ISA represents the 900 for- eign students on campus and works directly with the Interna- tional Center. It is well known to all students as sponsor of. the all- campus dances each year, the In- ternational Ball and the Monte Carlo. ORIENTATION week plans are extensive for the foreign students as organized by the ISA to assist the students in adjusting to the new campus environment. Special meeting and programs have been planned in addition to the mixers and teas. Attendance by both the foreign and American students at these programs is encouraged by the International Center and the ISA. >(0 '. ,X : t : U ~ e )i t' =t ')G ! 0 BREAKFAST 0 LUNCH 0 FOUNTAIN SERVICE n: "where students meet- i to chat and eat" BETSY Ross SHOP - in Nickels Arcade RELAXING STUDENTS GATHER TOGETHER AT A NEARBY CAMPV SITE FOR A FEW HOURS OF FELLOWSHIP AND SONG DeLuxe Shirt Service I Raleigh Sprts Toarst Gents:21" and 23" frem. Ladies: 21" frames only wear with pride. - - MEMS = - r t' f R Jr oy. .: " j F jl f .SPeicati.ns: Frame: entirely brazed up. Wheels: 26" x II" Stainless Steel Spokes. bears: Sturmey-Archer 3-Speed Gears with trigger control. Brakes: Raleigh safety.caliper front and rear brakes. Tires: Dunlop narrow tread tires. Finish: High gloss baked black enamel on "Bonderised" rust- proofed surface: bright parts chrome plated. Fittings: Kitbag, Tools, Pump, Reflector. 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CHESTER BOWLES Recent Ambassador to India "OUR BEST HOPE FOR PEACE IN ASIA" October 30 TYRONE POWER, ANNE BAXTER and RAYMOND MASSEY and large supporting cast in the brilliant dramatization of Stephen Vincent Benet's "JOHN BROWN'S BODY" November 11 HON. TRYGVE LIE First Secretary-General of the U.N. "HOW TO MEET THE CHALLENGE OF OUR TIMES" February 9 HANSON BALDWIN Military Editor of the N. Y. Times "WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?" February 18 MRS. ALAN KIRK Wife of Adm. Kirk, Former Ambassador to Russia "LIFE IN MOSCOW TODAY" March 2 HON. HERBERT BROWNELL, JR. Attorney General of the United States "OUR INTERNAL SECURITY" March 24 AGNES MOOREHEAD and ROBERT GIST Stars of stage and screen in "SORRY, WRONG NUMBER" and other dramatic selections SEASON TICKET PRICES-Main Floor, $7.50-First Balcony $6.50 I. TIE THAT PEOPLE SEE Here Is Shirt Finishing AT ITS REST.. . Washed sparkling clean . . . Ironed to perfection by our experienced operators ... 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