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February 16, 1958 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1958-02-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Theatre Notes

Tomorrow Last Chance
For Renting Art Prints

[TA CLAUS-Albert Warnhoff, a man vho has gained a
onal reputation for the thousands of Christmas toys he has
le for children in Ann Arbor hospitals and throughout the
on, demonstrates one of his animated toys. He was recently
ored liy the President.
ly'S 'Santa Claus' Honored
President, -Rosicrucians

thing nice has happened to
Claus.
t Warnhoff, the 69-year-
n Arbor gentleman, who for
s has been making Christ-
Ys for unfortunate children
Arbor hospitals, and all
nation, has recently added
nore honors to his already
nt collection.
?s more, two of these came
o other than President and
isenhower. The. third was
ard from the Rosicrucian
Christmas, Warnhoff took
it from his usual voluntary
o construct a miniature
complete with/ buildings,
s and people. He even ani-
it with clock mechanisms.
, he sent it off to the
>wer grandchildren as a
aa present. A few days
e received warm thank-you
r6m both the President and

The President's ,rote read, in
part, "The Congressman (Meader'
R-Mich.) has told me . . . of how
much happiness you have brought
to the children of your community;
by toys such as these. I am con-,
fident that you .have found great
satisfaction and Joy in your pro-
Sect and I congratulate you."
The Rosicrutian award desig-
nated Warnhoff as a "Humanist."
An accompanying, letter stated
"Your activities carried on in be-
half of others in Ann Arbor were
carefully noted over a period of
many years. Your deeds for child-
ren have been heralded far and
wide and we want to take this op-
portunity to add a note of appre-
ciation to the thousands of others
you have earned and won...
And so the man who has earned
the title of "Santa Claus" in Ann
Arbor is returned some of the
happiness he has given.

By ROBERT JUNKER
Ann Arbor theatre-gers will not
have the opportunity of viewing a
local production until the speech
department and the School of
Music present Verdi's opera,
"Masked Ball," Feb. 26 to March 1.
Those interestedin live produc-
tions, however, can travel to De-
troit where Tennessee Williams'
"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" opens
at the Schubert Theatre for a
one-week run. Victor Jory, who
has appeared in Broadway and
road shows for two decades, will
portray Big Daddy.
The plot centers ,around Big
Daddy, a dying old man desiring
an heir he can admire. His method
of obtaining an heir forms the
central conflict of the story. Big
Daddy's drunken son, played by
William Daniels, and his wife,
played by Olga Bellin, add sexual
maladjustments to the tale.
Fight for Inheritance
Jean Inness will appear as Big
Mama, wife of the rich plantation
owner. Big Daddy's impending
death causes a family struggle for
his money, and the entire play is
filled with choice four-letter words
which add to the decadent South-
ern atmosphere.
The original unexpurgated third
act will be included& In the Detroit
performance, which should add to
the shock of the ending. George
Brandt, well-known for his Detroit1
work, will produce.
-Following "Cat on a. Hot Tin
Roof" to the Schubert will be "The
Tunnel of Love" starring Larry
Parks and Marsha Hunt. The suc-
cessful comedy comes to Detroit
direct from a one-year run on
Broadway. It will open Feb. 26.
Detroit Symphony
The Detroit Symphony Orches-
tra,, under the direction of Paul
Paray, will perform at 8:30 pm.
tomorrow in Hill Auditorium, This
performance will close the orches-
tra's tour of Southern citieswhich
String fellow
To'Give Tal
William Stringfellow, attorney
for the East Harlem Protestant
Parish in New York, will speak on
"Trhe, Vocation of Students in a
Space Age" at 1 p.m. today at the
Bethlehem Evangelical and Re-
formed Church.
The program is part of a cam-
pus-wide Universal Day of Prayer
observance.
Stringfellow, on a nation-wide
tour- of major law schools, is
speaking under the auspices of the
University Christian Federation.
City ToConstruct
New Post Office
Construction of the long-pro-
posed Ann Arbor United States
Post Office on W. Stadium Blvd.
now appears near, city Postmaster
Oswald J. Koch reported.
Bids for building on the 4-acre
site will be opened March 31, the;
U.S. Post Office Department an-
nounced.
Plans for thse post office began
in August, 1954, when Congress
considered a proposed $1,850,000
"multiple agency" federal building
project.

they have undertaken during the
last three weeks.
The program will feature the
overture to "A Midsummer Night's
Dream" by Mendelssohn, the
Chausson Symphony in B-flat ma-
jor, excerpts from La's "Man-
ouna" suite and Gershwin's "An
American in Paris."
The last time the orchestra ap-'
peared at Hill Auditorium was in
1948. Paray, considered one of the
world's great conductors, had his
musical career interrupted by
World War II. After the war he
served as guest conductor for
several European and American
orchestras.
In 1951 he became the conductor
of the Detroit Sympohny and has
guided it through its growth and
development into one of the coun-
try's leading orchestras.
city Delivers
Annual Report
Copies of Ann Arbor's first an-
nual report on city functions are
being mailed to householders, bus-
iness arqd industries.
Prepared under the supervision
of, City Administrator Guy C.
Larcom, Jr., the 25-page booklet
describes the functions of the
variodus city departments during
the last fiscal year.
About 25,700 copies of the book-
let have been printed for distri-
biution.

Tomorrow from 1 to 5 p.m. is'
the last time students may rent
prints from the Art Print Loan
Collection on the third floor of
the Student Activities Building,
The collection is sponsored by
the Office of Student Affairs and
Assistant Dean of Men John Bing-
ley.
The collection consists of ap-
proximately 600 framed prints
from the Renaissance to contem-
porary art. Artists from Botticelli
and Degas to Van Gogh and
Picasso are featured.
Students may rent the prints
for the entire semester for a nom-
inal fee ranging from .25 to $1.25,
depending upon the size and the
quality of the print.
Other stipulations for renting
the prints are that students are
limited to renting one picture per
III card and that the prints be
returned one week before the last
day of' classes. i

The prints range in value from
five to 60 dollars. Any prints left
will be rented to University fac-
ulty and staff on Tuesday and
Wednesday from 3-5 p.m. in Rm.
5 28, SAB.

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"Karl Marx Would Disown
Boviet Russia"
Read why in the February
15 issue of the Weekly Peo-
ple at the Ann Arbor Pubic
Library and the periodical
room of. the University Li-
brary. Also on sale at Mar-
shall's Book Shop.

1

I

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DAVID COPPERFIELE
Fred Bartholomew
W. C. Fields
Lionel Barrymore
Basil Rathbone
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Subscribe to
The Michilgan Daily

TIME IS RUNING OUT!
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Arbor Primary Elections
Planned for Tomorrow .

ansdGod
created
woman"

rs from two of Ann Arbor'
rds will cast baflots in pri-
elections tomorrow.
ests in the First and Fourth
will determine which can-

To Send

egates

To 'U'

esentatives from nine Prot-
Michigan colleges ,will
the Association of Church-
1. Colleges Conference on
lay.
University Committee on
Relations has invited thirty
nts, deans and administra-
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an College, Albion College,
"ollege, Calvin College, Em-
1 Missionary College, Hills-
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send emissaries.

didates in those wards will repre-
sent their parties in the spring
election for City Council posts.,
In the First Ward, Arbie Clever
and Richard Dennard, incumbent,
are vying for the Democratic none.
ination. John-Reynolds and John
Schneider are seeking the Fourth
Ward place on the Republican.
ticket.,
Dennard was elected to a one-
year Council term last year. He is
the Council's representative on
Ann' Arbor's Human Relations
Commission and works as a cus-'
todian at Tappan Junior High
School.
Clever was a coupcilman from
1934 to 1940 and operates a con-
struction and coal company.-
In the Fourth Ward, the two
Republican candidates are seeking
nomination for the Council post
which will be vacated when in-
cumbent, Ronald Hinterman re-'
signs in. April.

.. much more
than American
audiences are
used to seeing
of what 23-year-old
girls are made of!"
-LIFE Magazine

t
33

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the
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Business and Editorial
T ROUT MEETNGS
Attend One of These. Meetings:

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.. . Next Attraction
MARIA SCHELL in "The Last Bridge"

Thurs., Feb. 20 at 4:15

I

EDITORIAL-Wed., Feb. 19 at 4:15

Thurs./ Feb. 20 at 7:15

STUDENT
ZIONIST ORGANIZATION
FIRST MEETING
PROGRAM
1. Announcement of program for coming semester
2. Discussion: Interaction between American Jewry
and Israel
3. Israeli Singing and Dancing-Refreshments
Sunday, Feb. 16 ... 7:30 P.M.
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