WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951 .-THE MICHIGTAN fAILS ....54JY5.E .....~ I X pk txr, aa . ,. . Independence Day Preview i I PICTURE NEWS * * ?, # JUNIOR 'HOTRODS'-WilRogers, 16, of Redwood City, Cal., looks over some tiny autos he has fashioned out of tin cans. In background are several prizes he has won with his work. 'COLLEGE CAPER' - Nancy Bastian, University of Chicago co-ed, performs on the trapeze in "A Midnight Fantasy," a gymnastic-musical show in which students annually participate. '4 -Daily-Robert Lewis THESE WOMEN WILL BE JOINED TODAY AT PALMER FIELD BY DROVES OF STUDENTS CELEBRATING THEIR INDEPENDENCE O'' . First Quartet Concert Set For Tuesday The first performance of "Piano Quintet, Op. 47" by Wallingford Riegger, which was composed on the commission-of the University especially for the summer Quartet series, will highlight the first of three concerts by the Stanley Quartet, at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 10, in Rackham Lecture Hall. In addition to music school fa- culty members Gilbert Ross and Emil Raab, violinists; Robert Courte, violist; and Oliver Edel, cellist; John Kirkpatrick of 0or- nell University, guest lecturer in piano, will be featured in one of the selections. * s s COMPOSER RIEGGER, born in Albany, Georgia, in 1885, receivedi his musical education in the Uni- ted States and Germany. He has achieved much renown recently, as a composer, with performances of his "Third Symphony," which won the New York Music Critics' Circle Award in 1948, and his widely played "Second String Quartet." The other selections to be part of the concert on July 10 are "Quartet in F Major, Op. 77, No. 2" by Haydn, and "Quartet in G Major, Op. 161" by Schubert. Other concerts will be presented on July 24 and Aug. 7. All concerts will be held in Rackham Lecture Hall and are free of charge. City To Be Site of Most 'U' July 4 Celebrations Conference Discusses By SANDY SCHLAGER f "Most University students plan1 to observe the Fourth of July rightt here in Ann Arbor," according to the ticket agent at the New York Central Railroad Station, . whof states that there has been a sur- prisingly small amount of railroad tickets sold. * * *J WITH CLEAR weather prelict-x ed, many students have plannedi "activities of a group nature" at: nearby lakes. For those who in- tend to drive, the Washtenaw, County Sheriff's Office and the Ann Arbor City Police Department Spanish Group Tea Planned A welcoming reception for all Spanish students will be held by the Spanish Society at 8 p.m. to-I morrow in the East Conference; room of the Rackham building. Prof. Charles Staubach, chair- man elect of the romance lang-; uage department for next fall and, Prof. Laurence Kiddle, acting head of the department will present a general outline of the MA and Doctorate program which the de- partment offers. A social meeting with refresh- ments will follow. extend their usual warnings. There have been no fatalities as yet over the long Fourth of July weekend and Deputy Sheriff Wagner of the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Of- fice states that motorists can avert accidents by "Simply observing the common courtesies of the road and keeping speed down." For those who are unable to en- joy the privileges of an automobile but plan to spend the day hiking in the wooded areas around Ann Arbor, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, Di- rector of the Health Service, warns against stepping into poison ivy. The University Golf Course expects one of its heaviest ttrn- outs of the year, according to harry Kaseberg, manager of the course. On previous holidays ac- tivity has been heaviest in the morning and early afternoon and begins to taper off about 2:30 p.m.," Gaseberg says, "This gives students an opportunity to enjoy a free afternoon." Palmer Field and tennis courts throughout the city anticipate a large turnout. Those who tire of the round of activities that Ann Arbor has to offer can observe a parade in near- by Ypsilanti, where Governor Men- nen G. Williams will lead the fes- tivities. A double header baseball game in Detroit between the Tigers and the Chicago White Sox may at- tract some students. Short Story In teaching the short story to high school and college students, the central concern should be with the story itself, a group of high school and college teachers agreed Monday. The teachers were part of a panel which led a discussion of "Teaching the Short Story" at the second meeting of the Conference of English Teachers held in the Assembly Hall of Rackham. TEACHERS ALBERTINE Loom- is of Highland Park Junior Col- lege and Ray W. MacLoughlin of Trenton High School were in agreement on the importance of the historical aspect of teaching fiction, but they differed as to ap- proach. "I prefer to stress the aesthetic approach to the short story bring- ing in the historical element to lend more meaning to the story," Miss Loomis said. She believed that the general trend was away from the historical approach. MacLoughlin declared that the historical approach was the most important aspect of teaching the short story and a knowledge of the author's background was "essen- tial to the student's understanding of the story." Read Daily Classifieds ' HUNGRY AS A BEAR'-Two polar bears in the Rome Zoo prove the popular expression as they stand up and beg for bread with outstretched paws: while others wait for food. MEETING OF THE WATERS -Yolande Betbeze, Miss America of 1950, pours water from Hudson River into Seine symbolizing Franco-American friendship on bi-millenium of Paris. Eiffel Tower and miniature Statue of Liberty are in background. 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