THE MICHIGAN DAILY To Perform Here Tomorrow rksongs will at 8:30 pm. iquet hall of gn Wars. gham, Ala., in her home s of Joe Tur- Leadbelly. i school glee Angeles, she- .. should have hope that she ther Marian t an aversion one, she says, Rainbow First itoday as a folk- a broke into profes- ainmerft in a West ction of -"Finian's i tour got as far as , where she received f contempaorary folk- rst major job as a egan with the open- Francisco night club year. She followed month's engagement and an appearance in nerama Holiday," in ang the sea chant ion Widespread e her reputation was both with folk sing- ete Seeger and Harry d with the general Welsh Actor To Appear InReading, Using a desk and chair as props and a screen displaying the name Dylan Thomas, the noted Welsh actor and playwright Emlyn Wil- liams will create a feeling of a complete theatre in an unique one-man performance at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. Williams' performance, "A Boy Growing Up," is based on stories and sketches of the life of the Welsh poet, Dylan Thomas, in the third production of the current lecture course series. Williams will make no attempt to impersonate Thomas but will develop his program as a story teller of the episodes which high- light his works. The Welsh poet is regarded as one of the greatest lyric writers of the century. "A Boy Growing Up" attempts to show the warm and humorous side of the often- fiery Welshman. Williams won acclaim in Lon- don two years ago with a presen- tation' of "A Boy Growing Up." He brought the program to New York this fall where it has proved suc- cessful. Williams has acted in the Brit- ish theatre for 25 years. Many of his stage appearances were in plays which he wrote. Tickets for this performance are available at the A411l Auditorium Box Office. Stowe To Talk About Sputnik Prof. Leland Stowe of the jour- nalism department will lecture on "The Sputnik and America's Cri- ses" at 11 a.m. today in Auditorium C, Angell Hall. Prof. Stowe's talk, open to the public, is a regular' lecture for his Journalism 230 class, "Current World Affairs and their Back- ground Events." Another open lecture from the same course will be presented Dec. 5. The title has not yet been announced. THREE CHANGES LISTED: Hilberry Asks Revision Of Educational Methods Get your tickets NOW! to the America must take a "new look" at education methods'in light of Russian scientific progress, Presi- dent Clarence B. Hilberry of Wayne State University told hist faculty members recently. President Hilberry proposed three specific improvements to be made in higher education: higher eitrance requirements, higher fac- ulty salaries and re-evaluation of courses and teaching methods., Drastic measures must be taken, he said because American college curricula have "remrained essen- tially unchanged since Hiroshima," while those of the Russians obvi- ously have not. He proposed changes to give the taxpayers "assurance that their children and grandchildren will be given a better education in 1970 than in 1957. "As a result of the Russian achievements, a new respect for the college teacher in America is inevitable," President Hilberry con- tined. He proposed specifically that Wayne State University refuse to teach freshmen information they should have learned in high school. Instead of closely directed study, he urged that freshmen be given "an hour or two in the library" and be tested on their reading. Comparing salaries in the teach- ing profession with those in indus- try, President Hilberry declared the situation "critical," and said improvement was "imperative to the national welfare." Your Palm I Tells Their Fortune 1 I:l Glee Club Combined Concert with Ohio State This Saturday at 8:30 P.M. Hill Auditorium Tickets at Administration Building $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 . i .. .e w ri h r .. N , , BLUES SINGER--Odetta, who accompanies herself on th, guitar, will present a program of work songs, blues and ballads at the VFW hall tomorrow evening. vision appearances a year, and schedules concert tours. Odetta, a perfectionist, may work as long as a year on a single' song before offering it to the pub- lic. When she does introduce a song, her admirers say, it becomes. Odetta's, for few other folk singers attempt to challenge her suprem- acy with a song. United Jewish Appeal Nov. 19-21 CeFASCINATING!... HIGHLY ROMANTIC! .. . INTENSELY IDYLLIC!" -Crowther, N.Y. Times ' ABSORBING DRAMA!" -Pelswick, Jour-Amer. CSTRANGELY BEAUTIFUL STORY!",. -Beckley, Her. Trib. uns r Tra- I tele- ugh Discusses Change -College Relationships, Hungary Fihn Showig Set For Tonight An original film of the Hun- garian revolt last year will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Sponsored by the International Center, the film was made possible through the efforts of the Asso- ciatiox of Hungarian Students in the United States. Thousands of feet of film were edited and pieced together to show the events leading up to and dur- ing the bloody revolution. The ma- pority of film was smuggled out of the country by refugee Hungarian soldiers. It will be the first time the film has been shown in Ann Arbor. Admission is free. MARINA VLADY 4 STE ORCERESS) Aft r. Bruinbaugh, consultant to :uthern Regional Education yesterday discussed the ing attitudes of four-'year 'sities toward community es, and the areas in which r changes are still needed. remarks were made at the, session of the University's nnual Conference on Higher' Ltion. other speaker was Ralph lds, director of the Division struction at Columbia Uni- y Teachers College. Fields on /"Designing Effective es in Community Colleges." mbaugh listed some of the ning problems of the rela- lip between the two types leges. organizationI Notices of this column for announce- of meetings is available to of- y recognized and registered stu- organizations only.) * * * [ations for the Regional Inter- %1 Student Relations Seminar, 8 are available in the SOC area Student Activities Bldg: Appli- are due no later than 6:00 p.m. * * * Society for Public Admin., So- minar, Nov. 21, 8:00 p.m.,E nce Rm.. Rackham. Speaker: a C. Prichard, member -of the \County Council, "Comparative and American' Local Govern- Administration." x * ,t , Basic Judaism Class, Nov. 21, m., Hl e- r Board, January Graduation icement orders taken, Nov. 21, in. to 5:00 pam., SAB. * * , niational Center, movie, Nov. 21, p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. ry in Flame," filmed during the ion of Oct. 1956. s* * a Phi, Thanksgiving Dinner, 1, 5:15 p.m., Social Hall, First list Church. Speaker: Miss Am- 1, Protestant Religious Counselor ernational Students, "Our Heri- [ Faith." International students special guests. :opal Student F oun da ti on , on at Canterbury House foliW, L 12:10 a.m. celebration of Holy union at the church. 218 N. Di- * * * ore Society, Big Sing' Nov. 21, p.m., Friend's Center Co-Op, 11l. Everyone invited. - He in6luded adaptation to new surroundings when transferring from a two-year to a four-year school, the inclusion of two-year, colleges in statewide planning and. the development of a thorough counseling service for community college students. He advocated "a plan of com- prehensive examination" to deter- mine the abilities of individual students and to serve as a Partial solution to the transfer problem. Emphasizes Counseling Program He also emphasized the impor- tance of the counseling program in the community college in help- ing students to determine their ability to handle work in a four- year institution. In this way, he said, the com- munity college can become "a screening agency," that can les- sen the flood of college applicants and direct many into technical programs who do not meet the ad- mission requirements of four- year colleges. Field called for "the exqhange of experiences and results" as one possible method of improving courses for community colleges. Have Planning Problems He explained that courses must be related to many other phases of college life. He outlined three possible ap- proaches to the designing of courses. The first he called sub- ject-centered, or one that "re- flects the logic of the subject." The second approach he labeled problem-centered, such as a sur- vey course in a sociology class. For the third, or student-cen-, tered approach, Fields gave as an example honors and research pro- grams, in which the accent is on the individual work of each student. DIAL NO 8-6416 - Starts. TODAY p { ' ilb , Nuu a ia uia DIAL NO 2-3136 A SAVAGE GIANT ON A. OPEN EVENINGS Columbia Records NEW RAY CONNIFF 's marvelous A Nothing equals fine cordovan for glistening lrlliance and long, rugged service. A shining ex- ample is this rich, wine-colored blucher, impeccably styled by French Shriner. VA MBOVEN SHOES 17 Nickels Arcade t ONLY $98 FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY TOMORROW -8:30 P.M. e { . . at . .. I S. Hurok Presents THE DISC SHOP' 1210 S. University Phone NO 3-6922 OPEN EVENINGS 5 TONIGHT! $1.00 Gilbert and Sullivan's "TRIAL BY JURY" and, "THESORCERER" EMLYN WILLIAMS A Great Actor -:Dramatic Entertainment "A BOY GROWING UP" EVERY PHRASE DOES A COMIC DANCE. IT IS NOT ONLY ENTERTAINING. IT IS A REVELATION!" - ATKINSON, Times "IN THE RIBALD, ROSE-COLORED, RUNAWAY PROSE OF DYLAN THOMAS, MR. WILLIAMS IS TRIUMPHANT. THOROUGHLY DELIGHTFUL!" - .. KERR, H.rld Tribune "AN EVENING OF IRRESISTIBLE CHARM! Memorable for the beauty and humor it evokes. The London epi- sode is a delightfully lunatic fantasy." --CHAPMAN, N.*,e "A WONDERFUL WORLD OF WACKINESSf Thomas' de- scriptions sing of the joy of life-and Williams has perpetuated that joy in brilliant measure. This is one limited engagement that should be extended for the throngs who undoubtedly will want to savor it!" - ILBERT, Mrror "GOOD SHOW! Plausibly, briskly, pleasantly, he peopled his stage for three 'acts' with these figures, thereby pulling one of the better tricks of the cur- rent theatre." - ASTON, World Tarel. at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre To Fr "TI LILLI "end Also- "The I S With at era uiI4 night at 7 and 9:20 PM. iday at 7 and 9:20 P.M. he Birth of A Nation" 5 1: all I % Illi. HENRY B. WALTHALL IAN GISH MAE MARSH WALLACE REID iorsed soely for its historical and artistic values" "La Rosa et Le Reseda" and Brotherhood of Man"- shorts :", DIAL NO 2-2513 ELVIS RESLEY his greatest! 8:00 P.M. Thursday $1.00 - Fri. & Sat. $1.30 * Musket presents tingI "Kiss Kate" aturday 7 and 9:00 P.M. Sunday at 8:00 P.M. 'ate Life.: of Henry' VIII" ngt December 11, 12, 13 ... 8:30... Michigan Theatre "if you have tended to think of the late Dylan Thomas as chiefly a rather esoteric poet, it may come as a pleasant revelation- that he was also a fresh and delightful hu- with 2=========== :? n: me rLIAD CC 1 AlM.UT M '