'olfl THlE MICIIGAN DIAILY FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1955 1 WUOM Fare To Featurex Much Music WUOM will present many spe- cial musical treats for its listeners this summer. On the spot broadcasts of con- certs, presented in Ann Arbor dur- ing the summer, will be the key- note of the University radio sta- tion's continued emphasis on "good" music. Tle first concert to be presented over the air will feature Emil Raab and Benning Dexter, at 8:30 pm. Tuesday. Also to be presented are such groups as the Summer Session Band, The University of Michigan Woodwind Quintet and the Stan- ley Quartet. Special Events Through the facilities of the Na- tional Association of Educational Broadcasters, special m u s i c a events from other educational sta- tions will be presented. The Little Orchestra Society, under the direction of Thomas Sherman, will be heard in a series of concerts recorded last winter on the, campus of Hunter College. .These concerts, which will be pre- sented at 2:00 p.m. every Wednes- day, feature new artists and new works. The first concert on Wednesday will include music by Gabrieli, Berg, Mahler, Enesco and Weber. Alabama College Organ Putnam Porter of Alabama Col- lege will be featured in another special, musical series. Playing the Alabama College organ, he will be heard in programs tracing the his- tory of organ music from the pre- baroque to the contemporary. These recitals will be heard at 9:30 p.m. every Monday through the summer months. Another program of special in- terest to the summer listener will be "Homage to Poets." E. G. Gur- rows, program director of WUOM will read the 'poems on the air and a; brief comment will be given by Prof. Donald R. Pearce of the English department. Age Problem Not Answered By Retirement Aged persons do not want to be set aside and told to retire. This was the one significant im- pression on experts gathered at the University's eighth annual Confer- ee on Aging, which came to an end yesterday. "We want to keep busy. We want to continue to have an active role in community affairs. We want independence," the experts were told. Government Study Efforts to satisfy the desires of the aged are already under way. The government is launching a study to determine age barriers to employment and will attempt to eliminate them. A New York group will study a suggestion that old persons who have to be institutionalized be put in "motel-like" residences so that they can "help each other and have a measure of independence." Resting Not Enough Dr. Robert E. Rothermel of the American Heart Association in New York said retirement is not the grand and glorious life younger persons imagine. "People plan and save, looking forward to the day when they can retire -and do everything they al- ways wanted to do," he said. "Then they discover after three or four months of fishing and resting they are looking for something to do." Picnic, Barndance To Be Featured A combination picnic and barn- dance is one of the events which will be sponsored by the InteTna- tional Center this weekend. Scheduled for todsv. the picnic will be hela at German Park, b- cated about six ard a half miles out of Ann Arbor on Pontiac Road. Students without rides who would like to attend the picnic . may meet ft the International Center at 5:30 p.m. where trans- portation \yil be provided. The price, including both food and transportation, is 75 cents. Another activity which the Center is -offering this weekend is a guided tour of the campus which will begin at 9:30 a.m. to- morrow and continue until noon. All students'are welcome to join the tour free of charge. Read and Use Daily Classifieds ~M a No Exit DETROIT-({A'P)-Thinking it was an open door, George Waits, a railroad gandy-dancer from Pulaski, Tenn., walked through a 7-by-11-foot window in Detroit's new city - county building today. "We don't have windows like this ire Pulaski," said Waits. Seven Plays Planned by DAC Plans for fall production at the Dramatic Arts Center are now un- der way. Seven plays are to be given dur- ing the 1955-56 season, and the company's professional cast ex- panded by two members. An announcement of the plays chosen and of the new actors will be made early in the fall, the new season getting started during the week of October 24. Community response to the DAC has been gratifying, accord- ing to Burnette Staebler, president of the Board of Directors. A spriig telephone survey of 352 member families conducted by the Center has resulted in 130 offers of vol- untary assistance. PTIr UHFR N AWs ii 1* _ , .,.... .:, i a < r - .. ,- 3s r . a i i r {' r(^+il { t GENUINE COWHIDE BILLFOLD Convenient billfold with these "plus features"-removable pass case, coin pocket, zipper ,compartment, plus a handy pocket for your credit plate. plus tax S M A L L 8 U T W I L D- One of 14-day-old wild boars, from litter of seven found when their mother was killed by a trpk. is fed in home of a German forester at Friedeburig. GERMAN T R I B U T E--statue honoring "rubble women" who helped clear war rubble in West Berlin, gets finish- ing touch by Katherina Singer as real rubble woman watches. WHITE NAVY LIGHT BLUE GREEN BLACK TAN RED YELLOW PINK TURQUOISE COTTON S For the 4th of July Weekend COTTONS FOR TRAVEL-FOR CAMPUS FOR OFFICE-FOR DRESS UP Voiles-Ginghams-Linens Chambrays-Pima--Orlon Priced from $8.95 to $29.95 and Cotton Budget Cottons . * . $5.95 Store Hours 9:30 to 5:30 -__ _Mon. through Sizes for Tiny 7's to 15 'Sat. Taller 10 - 44 Tall 10 - 12 Shorter 12 to 26n se REPEAT PERFORMANCE'0}f- DRESS AT RIGHT Tissue gingham plaid by -- Betty Hartford with a billowing full skirt nipped by a raffia belt In pink, blue and gold. Sizes 10 to 18. x x Shop in $8.95 Cool Comfort Cotton separates, too, at our Park with ease Campus Toggery-1 112 blocks at Rear from main shop. of'Shop A R M 5 F U L L -- Mrs. Hildegarde Grzimek, wife of Frank- furt, Germany, Zoo director, cuddles Baki, left, and Tomas, to prove theory that raising gorillas is like raising children. AT HOME IN A BREEZE-A Ludersl6- footer, on a spinnaker run in Great Sound, Bermuda, scampers to hold its position during an International Race Week event. SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE This season's ~Spring and Summer Styles STYLES: COLORS & S OPERAS MATERIALS * CLINERA PASTELS * CLINGS WHITES e BAREBACKS * COMBINA- SHI HEELS TIONS * ILLUSION * BEIGES H E ELS * NAVYS * FLATS * KIDS * WEDGES * CALFS * LINENS Jacquelines and .-sConnies and and Marquis Connie Lo-Heelers HEDGE - H O P P I N G B L I M P? -- Despite appear- ances, this is no low-flying blimp, but a 30-ton, 57-foot-long, 17-foot-high gas storage tank being moved through Philadelphia, | PARISIAN THREE-WHEELER--This three-wheel vehicle, equipped with bicycle wheels and a 49ce motor, is said to have reached a speed of 71 mph bk Paris testa, !IG FA noit Y Starts t.A. 1 - :gIgRgiall