FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIREW: rUIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAC~ TRRU~t -V &1 Z 111Y L L' W No Natural Lyric So TL ui To ,'U Frances Greer, lyric so .EA..1J olecturer in voice in the Music, will give her firs bor concert at 8:30 p.m SiZe - S I Lydia Mendelssohn The Miss Greer sung with t "There are no natural limits to politan and Philadelph the size of the Upiversity," accord- Companies, before joinin ing to Dean Willard C. Olson of sic school faculty last S the School of Education. Her musical career span Disagreeing with those who feel quarter of a century, s increased enrollment means less her native Helena, Ark., effective education, Dean Olson sang in a Tom Thumb v remarked "As long as the Univer- Before her graduat sity can multiply classrooms, hous- Louisiana State Unive ing, staff, administrative skill and had appeared in numeroi finance it all, there's no point at roles including suchc which we can stop and say this is By continuing to differentiate Alpha Ph]* programs, Dean Olson explained, higher education can meet theDRe e needs of more people. Criticism D ay eel eof large college enrollments are based on a desire to "turn back Referring to Mayor V the clock" to the education of an Brown's denial of perm elite minority. the proposed Alpha Phi "Admission standards are as Association Tag Day, Bet high as they ever have been. There lesong, president of tid are Just more students," Univer- said that she considered sity Vice-President Marvin L. Nie- dent "humiliating an huss observed. handled." He pointed out that, without Permission to go ahea lowering its standards, the Uni- plans had been given by versity grows as- the numbers of or's office in his absenc college-age people grow. first that the Association "There's no lessening in the de- the refusal was in the n mand for people with college de- after Monday's Council n grees," Vice-President Niehuss re- "We are not bittera marked. "Instead there is need revokal," the sorority off for more." "But I wish that we had formed personally rathe Officers Elected this humiliating manner. The Association hadc Recently elected officers of the its plans for the Tag D French Club are president, Mar- was scheduled for thi. jorie Greenfield, '56; vice-presi- Monday, and was force dent, Elinor Kahn, '56; secretary, the executive secretary o Lee Joseph, '57; and treasurer, Ed chigan Heart Association Irvine, '55. plans had been cancelled for VALENTINE'S DAY...Mo VALENTINE HEART BOXES A wonderful array of chocolates packed in pper or satin-covered heart boxes-in sizes ganging from 4 ounces to 5 pounds. 50 CUP8.50 COMPLETE VALENTINE GIFT SELECTION INCLUDES fruit and Nut Hearts " Valentine Kiddie Boxes olded Chocolate Hears Novelty Condies prano To Give Concert Today prano and School of t Ann Ar- . today in atre. he Metro- hia Opera .g the mu- September. s nearly a tarting in ,when she wedding. ion from rsity, she us soprano operas as Tag ted William E. ission for Alumnae ty C. Fog- .e group, the nci- d poorly d with the the may- e, and the heard of. ewspapers meeting. about the ficial said. been in- r than in completed lay which s coming ed to tell of the Mi- that the d. "Carmen," "Madame Butterfly'," "Faust" and "La Traviata." European tours and charter membership in the Philadelphia Opera Company preceded her ca- reer with the Met. Miss Greer made her Metropolitan Opera de- but as Musetta in "La Boheme" Nov. 30, 1942. She stayed at the Met until 1951. Appears as Soloist After leaving her operatic ca- reer, Miss Greer appeared as solo- ist with leading symphony orches- tras throughout the United States. She also had a radio program for two and a half years, spent sum- mers on the operetta circuit and made recordings. Before coming to the Univer- sity, she taught privately for three years in New York. Although she is teaching, she still wants to give concerts and has recently ap- peared in Battle Creek and in Grand Rapids. A Grand Rapids music critic said of her concert that "Miss Greer has an unerring sense of how just to sing a song, whatever its proportions and text. Hers is a warm, radiant voice, ev- en in quality and always the serv- ant of the song." Included on her program today G&S Sets 'Iolanthe' Tryouts at League Tryouts will be held for the new Gilbert and Sullivan production of "Iolanthe" at 7 p.m. today through Sunday at 7 p.m. at the League. Auditions will also be held Sat- urday and Sunday afternoons at 2 p.m. in the League. Those interested in production work should call Dave Morgan at NO 3-8249. Regents Make Appointments Kent W. Leach was appointed director of the University Bureau of School Services, effective March 1, at the January meeting of the Board of Regents. Leach has been with the Bureau since January 1949. He started as a consultant and was named as- sistant director July 1, 1952. Kenneth F. Gordon, a labora- tory supervisor from San Jose, Calif., was appointed assistant pro- fessor of chemical engineering in the engineering college beginning this semester, through the end of the 1956-57 school year. Appointed assistant professors of epidemiology in the School of Public Health were Keith E. Jen- son and Kenneth Cochran. Dr. George Henry Keopke was appointed as assistant professorj in the department of physical me- dicine and rehabilitation in the Medical School. Appointed as assistant professor of dentistry in the Dental School was Dr. Jerome J. Hiniker, chief of the dental services of the Ann Arbor Veterans Administration hospital. Colonial American song books on display in Clements Library testify, contrary to current ideas, that music played an important role in early American life. The exhibit, a collection of folk songs, church music and instruc-' tional folders, was selected from the library's collection by Prof. Al- len P. Britton of the School of Music, an authority on early Am- erican music, for the American Musicological Societyconvention recently held in Ann Arbor. Most of the scores were printed for either school or church use. Currently popular words, usually folk tales or scriptures, were set to popular melodies of the time; also in the display, are short compositions by American con- Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES Colonial American Music on Exhibit posers and songs brought to Am- even today in sections of the erica by settlers of diverse nation- South. The melodies found in the alities. library's tune books are still be- Early musical customs prevail ing sung. for that Special omeone SEND FLOWERS on Valentine's Day QJOt. FLOWERS oieud GIFTS 334 S. State Phone NO 3-5049 Classical Ballet Trai1111 OF DANCE Kinderballet Through Professional SYLVIA HAMER Ta) Adagio CYCoA E Acrobatic Character FRANCES GREER . A..Lyric Sopranist will be works by Purcell, Weill, Hahn, Poulenc, Ravel and Villa- Lobos. Her concert will be broad- cast over WUOM directly from the stage of Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Accompanying Miss Greer will be Eugene Bossart, head bf the music school's accompanying de- partment. Bossart is a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music in Phila- delphia. The public may attend Miss Greer's concert free of charge. r IS ttie hox and %r skoofypi &re~ she'll be AKg) I3. N ~ I'4 y FCANDY Mday, February 14th u Favorite Selectionf amily Assortment A tempting vretyof milkand dark A choice selection of chocolates chocolates, attractively wrapped. , with soft and chewy centers 1-LB. 1-LB. BOX BOX 1*3 332 S. STATE STREET Open Sunday, Feb. 13th - 11 A.M.-4 P.M. 75 Nothing more to buy-nothing more to learn-you can start taking beautiful shots right away! With the famed Argus 75, world's easiest camera to use! 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