-~i' ~ ,Mim.>1.dm. .uipiu.L I.EFr.EJ '!'Mi. PI T!1 fi/7.7' THI~ MrE'IIrd~ A ~1 I~ A IT ~ "AGE TIiREE Davis Lists FOOD DISTURBANCE SHOWS: Lecturers Residence Hall Communications Break Down -Daily-Leonard Cyr PAST ERA.- D. J. Mallory still practices a craft pretty much. outmoded in this modern age - harness and saddle making. His shop, opened by his father in 1891, is the last of five or six that once did a thriving business in Ann Arbor. Harness Shop: Remnant OfAn Arbor Past Er In Semina By ALLAN STILLWAGON A new series of public lectures on contemporary literature has been announced by Prof. Joe Lee Davis of the English department. Donald A. Hall will deliver the first of the Monday afternoon ad- dresses Feb. 25, "Criticizing the Contemporary, with a Comparison of Robert Lowell and Richard Wilbur."' Prof. Edwin M. Mosely of Wash- ington and Jefferson follows on March 11 with "The Pseudonyms of Christ in the Modern Novel." He is a Renaissance scholar and was co-editor of the Rinehard edi- tion of Elizabethan Fiction. Dean of the Salzburg Seminar in American Studies, Richard W. B. Lewis of Rutgers will dis- cuss "The .Heroic Image in Gra- ham Greene and Albert Camus", April 15. "The Grotesque in Modern Am- erican Literature" will be dis- cussed by William Van O'Connor April 29. Prof. O'Connor is the author of Climates of Tragedy and The Tangled Fire of William Faulkner. The author of Freudianism and the. Literary ,Mind, Prof. Freder- ick J. Hoffman of Wisconsin, will present "Literary Views of Mor- tality in the 20th Century" May 6. "Ulysses, the Divine Nobody" is scheduled for examination by Prof. Richard Ellmann May 13. The series will end May 20 with Amos Wilder's "Protestantism and Contemporary Literature". Mr. Wilder, the elder brother of playwright Thornton Wilder, is Hallis Professor of Divinity in the Harvard Divinity School. ernment "good," occasionally "choice." Utility grade meat is used for hamburger. Until recently it was also used for stew but be- cause of complaints it has been withdrawn. Food service buys most of its goods direct from the distributor, and charges the residence halls a seven per cent mark-up to cover costs. At one time it was eight and a half per cent but increased effi- ciency cut costs. Food accounts for 25.8 cents of each student dollar. Residence halls spent 1,262,000 dollars for food last year. Abuse Undeserved It is unlikely food service de- serves the abuse heaped on it by student. A second problem area lies in the dieticians, who prepare the menus. Their job is complex. In (Continued from Page 1) addition to preparing menus, they supervise the entire production of the meal, order food, plan sched- ules and time food so it spends a minimum time in warming pans. Yet many residence halls dieti- cians have limited experience. Turnoveris about eight per year. Because of the turnover and other difficulties, morale is often not high. Most dieticians are requested to live in the dormitories for "emer- gency" purposes. Rationale behind this is that the University can save them tax money by offering them room in lieu of salary. Not Much Choice The dieticians who don't want to live in dormitories have little choice. It was customary last year for dieticians who worked extra time to add it to their vacation period. But last year a new regulation was introduced which said they must make up days off within 30 days of the extra time they work- ed, or it would be void. This made many of the dieticians uphappy. According to Miss Kathleen Hamm, Chief Dietician of Resi- dence Halls, the University tries STAR STUDDED:* IHC-Assembly Show Plans international Festival' Event The IHC-Assembly Show will be presented at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 22 in Hill Auditorium and will feature an "International Festival" starring Ted Heath, June Christy, Al Hibbler and the Eddie Heywood Trio. Last year IHC and Assembly sponsored the hypnotist Franz Pol- gar. sored event consists of posters with the performance's date, Feb. 22. Co-chairmen of the event are Margaret Brake, Assembly special projects chairman and Drake Duane, vice-president of IHC Pub- licity Will be handled - by Ruth Alkema, Assembly public relations chairman and Fred Channon, IHC public relations chairman. to hire dieticians who meet the not always able to get these people. requirements of the American So it must hire "food service sup- Dietetic Association. This includes ervisors" instead who learn as they basic undergraduate courses in work. dietetics. In South Quad, the head dieti- However, there is a shortage of j cian has had one year of intern- dieticians and the University is I ship and one year of other work beyond school. Her two assistants have less. More Mistakes This means more mistakes will be made in the quantities of food prepared, proper cooking time. and reheating. A major complaint in dormitories is food runs out too early, or it is not hot enough. The dorms themselves have lim- ited facilities. West Quad, for in- stance has its kitchens in the base- ment and dining rooms above. Food must be transported by a slow freight elevator, giving it a chance to cool. However, the business staff has recently co-operated with student committees and several menu changes have already been made. The administration is now work- ing on a choice menu program. According to Schaadt, there might be choice menus in the near fu- ture, if all the problems can be ironed out. isic estiva ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN ITALIANO IAN I, Violinist FF 1, Violinist .LI, Violist SI, Cellist from 'memnor )) 15, 8:30 P.M. ... .........G. B. Vitali . .. . . . ..'... M. Neri rOp 92 ..... Prokofieff -, Op. 74 ......Beethoven Y 16, 8:30 P.M. 465 ...........Mozart .....Valentino Bucchi >. 1 0 ...........Debussy 7 * M S f1 h-k1 L t } i l+> By PHILIP MUNCK The invention of the automo- bile marked the end of the horse and buggy era. But a little of that age still lives in the D. J. Mallory Harness Shop in Ann Arbor. - In an old building a grey haired man still makes harnesses and saddles for the vanishing number of work and saddle horses in lower Michigan. M al l o r y has witnessed the change to auto. "I've seen a lot of things change but still I kind of like the pld times better," he reiinisced. Once harness .making was a booming business. In 1891, when Mallory's father started the shop, there were four r five other har- rness shops in Ann Arbor. All of them have gonie out of business. Tanned leather of 65 years hanging from .the walls give his shop a nostalgic odor. On either side of the door are hides waiting to be cut up and sewed together to make saddlery. The leathers are of different thicknesses and stiffnesses to make .various parts of the har- nesses and saddles. In the front of the shop and to one side hang all lengths of buggy- and bull-whips. "A lot of young men buy the bull whips as a stunt. They just try to learn to make them pop " Once these whips were used to drive teams of oxen across the 'country but now there isn't much use for .them. Most of the shop's business comes from making saddles and accessories for pleasure horses. "There are a lot more people who have a riding horse these days." Mallory also repairs leather goods. A lot of hours go into producing a single saddle ' or harness. The leather must be cut to size and shaped before it can be sewed together. Then any tooling must be carefully done :y hand. Not many people iearn to work -leather these days Mallory says. "There isn t anyone learning to be craftsmen these days. Fellows just go into the factory and run machines .Tsed to 1e that you had to start from the bottom and spend seven or eight gears learn- ing a traf e, but ncw everyone xva!nts to start at th" top.' The day of the horse is paste and will never return. The 'time is past when the fields were plowed by a farmer and a team of horses, never to come again. But a harness shop remains a living reminder of an earlier age. Musket Petitions MUSKET Executive Commit- tee petitions are due Feb. 15 in the Union. Original scenarios for the 1957 MUSKET show are also due Feb. 15, and the completed scripts are due May 15. MULTIPLE VITAMINS with folic Acid and B-12 100 .. .. Reg. *. * * *$ 3.Q0 200 500 " " f r " " w*e s.".". . .$ 5 .c2DE * w w " * ws "* ws * S * S *$ V V 1101 South University I U Monday Last Day to Mail C A N D i E S rt/P 2O SOtt .C CaPe e Cc' ) E I 1 . - e .e hea s packed with a pound of fresh, delicious chocolates ... ' , $ $ Other "Hearts" 75c to $6.50 ;.a: t c:Z) .. ft. .: :a::.v :::: .. ::::::::............... . v S. "k. >>,. :. :+ ;' %. .'+'v" . ' :: ti.;fR v' >:_ . y ' } i .+ .; 'Ky. : j X n '5:. . <; ..>s ,. y ":k :: i The Michigan Daily assorted chocolates t I I El U