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November 03, 1957 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1957-11-03

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

I

STHE MICHIGAN DAILYN

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 19,7

>nomic Outlook Meeting
ens At Rackham Monday

The director of the bureau of
>nomic research at the Univer-
y of Illinois, V. Lewis Bassie,
I1 open the fifth annual Confer-
ce on Economic Outlook tomor-
v with an address titled "A"
neral Preview of the Outlook
t 1958."
['he two-day conference, under
e sponsorship of the economics
partment, will draw business
n and economists from around
e country. It is being held in the,

rt Unique
dy Project
Brown U.

Rdckham Building, but is open
only on a fee basis.
Following B a s s i e tomorrow
morning will be Dexter M. Kee-
zer, director of the McGraw-Hill
economics department who will
speak, on "The Outlook for Capi-
tal Formation."
Speaking in the afternoon will
h University S3urvey Research
Center program director John B.
Lansing. His address is titled "The
Outlook for Consumer Behavior
for 1958."
He will be followed by Prof.
Daniel Suits of the economics de-
partment speaking on "A Statis-
tical Model of Economic Activity
as Applied tc 1958."
Prof. Wolfgang Stolper of tl:v
department of economics will
speak following the Conference
banquet on "The Economic De-
velopment of Free vs. Communist
Germany."
Prof. Lester V. Chandler of the
Princeton University economics
department will speak on Tues-
day with Prof. Warren L. Smith
of the economics department on
"The Outlook for Monetary Pol-
icy."
Gerhard Colm, director of the
National Planning Association,
will conclude the conference with
"A Summary of Views Reflected
by the Conference."
Public Health
To .Be Topic
Of Lectures

Concert Set
By Baroque
Music Trio
The Baroque Trio will make its
first appearance in Ann Arbor this
year at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, in the
Rackham Lecture Half:
The program will include trio
pieces by Handel, Bach and Leon-
ardo Vinci.
Both Tuesday's concert and the
second, to be given during the
spring semester, are open to the
public without charge.

(Continued from Page 4)

Concerts
Final All-Bach Organ Recital. Prof.
Robert Noehren, University organist,
will conclude his series of 16 programs
covering the organ music by Bach at
4:15 p.m. Sun., Nov. 3, in Hill Auditor-
ium. The series was begun two years
ago and has been presented in four
groups of four programs. The final
recital will include Bach's Prelude and
Fugue in 0 major, Chorale Preludes
"My Soul Doth Magnify the Lord,"
"Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide,"
and "Comest Thou Now, Jesus, From

Freshmen engineering students
at Brown University this year will
have the experience of 20 engineer-
ng seniors to draw on as part of
a unique student teaching project
which is aimed at teaching new
students how to study.
The project was initiated be-
ause "we get too many students
who really haven't the least idea
of how to'go about studying," Prof.
Daniel C. Drucker, chairman of"the
ngineering division at Brown, said.
The 100 freshmen are broken
up into groups of five and a stu-
lent teacher, supervising the
roup, devotes one hour a week
o discussion basic courses, attends
ectures with the new students
and gives freshmen a half-hour
>ersonal conference every week.
The student teachers, who are
>aid $600 for the year's work, also
trade homework and go over the
;tudents' papers with them.
Law Lecture
To Be Given }
Andrew G. Haley and Welf Hein-
'ich, Prince of Hanover, will dis-
:uss "Law of the Age of Space"
3t 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Archi-
ecture Auditorium.
The lecture is being presented
ooperatively by the Law School,
he Student Bar Association, and
he Engineering Research Insti-
ute.
ft...Fountain Pens
School Supplies
Chairs
Typewriters
Electric
Standard
Portable
Desks - Files
Comptometer Dictation Machines
MORRILL'S.
314 S. State St.
Since 1908 Phone NO 3-2481
"NEED MORRILL SUPPORT"

Organization Notices
(Use of this column for announce- Newman Club, supper, Nov. 3, 6:00
ments of meetings is available to of- p.m., Newman.
ficially recognized and registered stu- * * *
dent organizations only.) Newman Club, Graduate Club Break-
fast, Nov. 3, after 9:30 mass, Newman.
** *
Russian Society, regular meeting, Nov. Westminster Student Fellowship, In-
will be served. ternational Dinner, Nov. 3, 5:45 p.m.,
wl e*e Presbyterian Student Center.
* * *
Gamma Delta, Lutheran Students Graduate Outing Club, hiking, Nov.
Group, weekly Sunday supper and pro- 3, 1:30 p.m., meet in back of Rackham.
gram Nov. 3, 6:00 p.m., University Lu- 3 :0pmme nbc fRchm
theran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw Ave. * *
Panel discussion on how the Synodical Hillel, Intermedate Hebrew Class,
budget dollar is spent. Nov. 3, 4:00 p.m., Hillel.
* * *
* * * anHillel Foundation, Advanced Yiddish
,Ukranian Students' Club, meeting, Class, Nov. 3, 9:00 a.m., Hillel Founda-
Nov. 4, 8:00pm,12Hilton
tion. * i *
* * * * * *
Hillel, Talk and Movie, Nov. 5, 8:00 Hillel, Advanced Hebrew Class, Nov.
p.m., Hillen. Speaker: A. Horwitz from 4, 8:00 p.m., Hillel.
Belleaire Home, Cleveland, "Treatment
of Emotionally Maladjusted Children." Michigan Christian Fellowship, lee-
Everyone welcome. ture, Nov. 3, 4:00 p.m., Lane Hall.
* . * Speaker; Mr. John Osward Sanders,
Congregational and Disciples Guild, General Director of the China Inland
Bible Study, Nov. 3, 9:30 a.m., Section Misgion, "What Is Sin?"
1, Memorial Christian Church, Section Deutscher Verein, meeting, Nov. 5,
2, Guild House. 7:30 p.m., Room 3-G Union. Movie and
* * * discussion by Prof. Reichart of German
Hillel, Interreligious Activities Com- dramatist Gerhart Hauptmann. Free
mittee, Nov. 3, 4:00 p.m., Hillel. to members.

Heaven to Earth;" Fugue in, C minor,
Trio-Sonata No. 6 in G major; Chorale
Preludes "In Death's Strong Grasp the
Saviour Lay," "Be Glad, All Ye Chris-
tian Men," "If Thou But Suffer God
to Guide Thee," and "Good Christian
Men, Rejoice." The program and the se-
ries will be concluded with the playing
of Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor.
The general public will be admitted
without charge.
The Baroque Trio, Nelson Hauen-
stein, flute, Florian Mueller, oboe, and
Marilyn Mason, harpsichord, will ap-
pear in its first Ann Arbor concert dur-
ing the current academic year at 8:30
p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 5, in the Rackham
Lecture Hall. Trio Sonata in D by Han-
del, Canonic Trio by F by J. 8. Bach,
and Sonata in G minor by C. P. E.
Bach. Trio Sonata in D by Graun; Son-
ata in D by Leonardo Vinci, and Trio
Sonata in C by Telemann. This pro-
gram as well as the second, scheduled
for the Spring Semester, will be open
to the general public without charge.
Academic Notices
School of Business Administration:
Students from other Schools and Col-
leges intending to apply for admission
for the spring semester should secure
application forms in Room 150. School
of Business Administration Building, as
soon as possible. Students in the pre-
business program in the College of
Literature, Science, and the Arts should.

secure the forms from a prebusiness
adviser and return the completed forms
to him.
Geometry Seminar, auspices of the
Dept. of Mathematics. Mon.. Nov. 4 at,
3:00 p.m. in Room 3017, Angell Hall.
Prof. O. Wesler will speak on "Convex
Body Theory."
AIR CONDITIONED
the
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I

This Is the way
to start the fall..,
in a drawstring Chanel-like
overblouse with a tucked
front, worn over a slender
skirt . . . wool jersey with
marquisette lining. Sizes 5-
15.
$2?9(5

The public health, school will
sponsor two lectures this week.
The National Health Survey
Program will be discussed by its
director, D. Forrest E. Linder at
4 p.m. Monday in the School of
}Public Health Auditorium.
Dr. Linder works with the Sur-
vey Program's Division of Public
Health Methods of the United
States Public Health Service.
Tuesday, in cooperation with
the School of Social Work, the
school's Division of Gerontology
will present a lecture by Dr. R. J.
van Zonneveld at 4 p.m. in Aud.
A, Angell Hall.
Dr. Zonneveld will discuss
"Health and Housing of Older
People of the Netherlands."
Local Artists
To Give Show
The second annual Christmas
Sale Show will be presented by
the Ann Arbor Art Association
from Friday through Nov. 20.
Held in the Rackham Galleries
from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, the
pre-holiday show will include a
wide-range of hand-made objects
such as toys, metal works, paint-
ings, prints, ceramics, jewelry,
sculpture, textiles, cards, orna-
ments and paper-mache figures. '

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THE
KANGAROO KEEPER
An attractive colorful ceramic de-
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use. Holds all his accessories andI
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the dresser neat as a pin.

$2.95 BED

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