n THE MYICHIG.# flDAIY 71 a Tv ~v D( NOW OORS OPEN+ THAT WONDERFUL GUYFROM 'NOTIME FOR SERGEANTS' IS GOOFIN'-UP THE COAST 6 ' a DIAL NO 2-2513 'U' TV Series To Discuss New English Towns Today 1AD OWI! "New Towns" of England will be the topic for consideration on! the University television series, "Understanding Our World," to be seen at 9 a.m. today on WXYZ- TV, Detroit. Prof. Leonard Eaton of the architecture college will relate the story of a 19th-century English- man, Ebenezer Howard. who pro- tested the grov-th of slums in in- dustrial towns and developed a --"-. u n The conclusion of the program will be devoted to a stuGy of the British plan begun in 1946 which is turning Howard's dream into reality Discuss Intellectual Apathy The intellectual apathy toward' American literature by citizens of this country will be the subject discussed by Prof. Glauco Cam- bon, American literature professor .:t the University of Pavia in Italy, . \ r., re _ Qylsei: sal ' ! 0 D Cad MAN -IEU i ,i WALTER MATTHAU E Eo i)E PIZZA PIZZA PI plan to build "garden cities," in- on the University television series, corporating the best of city and "Accent" which will be seen at country life. 9:45 a.m. today on the same chan- Prof. Cambon, to be interviewed -UAby Prof. James O'Neill of the romance languages department, will describe the effect American literature has on the Italian peo- p ple. The Italian man in the street, J-5 5 Prof. Cambon said,."has read more Faulkner than your own American man on the street." Choral Union To Present Latin Group "South of the Border" cul- ture will appear in Ann Arbor when the National Orchestra of Mexico presents the fourth concert in the Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Conducted by Luis Herrera de la Fuente, the orchestra will play "Sensemaya" by Silvestre Revueltas and "Concerto No. 2 in F Minor. Piano and Orches- tra, Op. 21" by Frederic Chopin. Jose Kahan will be pianist. Also on the program is "Hua- pango" by Jose Pable Moncayo and "Symphony No. 5, Op. 47" by Dmitri Shostakovich The first Latin American group of its size and stature to visit the United States, the or- chestra is touring the country to make the music of Mexican composers known to the rest of the world. They have performed 250 Latin American debuts and over 80 world debuts, including play- ing at the World's Fair at Brus- sels in commemoration of the Mexican Independence Day. They have also made a brief European. tour. Information and tickets may be procured at the office of the University Musical Society in Burton Tower. Author Margaret Webster Appears In Shavian Roles for Lecture Series By JEAN HARTWIG Well known actress, director and author Margaret Webster will supply Ann Arbor's dramatic en- tertainment this week. Delivering the third show in the University Lecture Series Thursday. Miss Webster will in- corporate George Bernard Shaw's wit and philosophy in dramatic form entitled "Pictures from a Shavian Gallery" in which she will depict some of the play- wright's most famous women Miss Webster, who comes from an established English theatrical family, was born in New York, where her father was fulfilling a theatrical engagement. When she was three years old, she travelled' to England where she remained for the next 29 years. Parents Objected to Career "I read 'To be or not to be' as soon as I could read 'the cat sat on the mat', " she writes in her book, "Shakespeare Without tears," explaining that her par- ents objected to her stage career Under the watchful guidance of her mother, stage and screen ac- tress Dame May Whitty, Miss Webster, who saw her first play when she was four years old, had, several "walk-ons" in mob scenes and watched every, performance avidly from the wings. Her first taste of acting camei when she recited the prologue of FREE DELIVERY- THE PRO NO 5-5705 MENU COMPARE SIZE! Most of All Compare QUALITY! Small Medium Large 12-in. 14-in. 16-in. CHEESE .. .. ........$1.00 $1.50 $2.00 CHEESE and PEPPERONI ... $1.25 $1.75 $2.25 CHEESE and CANADIAN BACON $1.25 $1.75 $2.25 CHEESE and HAM .......$1.25 $1.75 $2.25 CHEESE and GREEN PEPPER ....$1.25 $1.75 $2.25 CHEESEandANCHOVIES ......$1.25 $1.75 $2.25 CHEESE and MUSHROOM ......$1.25 01.75 $2.25 CHEESE and HAMBURGER ..... .$1.25 $1.75 $2.25 COMPARE PRICE! Most of All Compare QUALITY Delivery Guaranteed Hot in Portable Electric Ovens ..... i I I FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, 1Aichigon Telephone NO 8-8014 MIRRORS-FURNITURE TOPS AND GLASS REPLACEMENTS DUTCH BOY PAINTS AND VARNISHES 11 Evolution Seen "The Evolution Story" will com- prise the first segment of the University "Television Hour" broadcast at 10 a.m. today on WWJ-TV, Detroit. Part of the "Science: Quest and Conquest" series, the program will be presented by Prof. Marston Bates of the zoology department. In his discussion he will compare a turtle, unchanged by evolution, with an extinct flying reptile and the modern horse which developed from a small fox-like creature. The second half of the "Televi- sion Hour" will be devoted to a discussion of priceless Chinese art pieces by Prof. Max Loehr of the fine arts department and Prof. James Crump of the Far Eastern languages and literature depart- ment. Art Featured The program, which is part of the "China: The Dragon and the Star" series, will feature art objects loaned to the television studios by art museums and private collec- tors, The professors will discuss and comment on the ancient examples of China's cultural heritage and the condition of art and literary movements in Communist China today. a Nativity play when she was' eight years old. She made her first professional appearance four years later. After a "spasmodic" education under various tutors and at a Lon- don dramatic school, she met FOR SOLAR RESEARCH: NSF Donates $4 Million ft The National Science Founda- tion has donated $4 million to R. McMath of the astronomy de- ' build a soar telescope, it an- partment headed the group which7 COMPLETE AUTO GLASS SERVICE American and Foreign Cars (Auto Glass Phone NO 3-5369) MARGARET WEBSTER--Among the many stage appearances of English actress-director-author Margaret Webster, her perform- ance in "Twelfth Night" is one of the most well-known. Here she appears with Helen Hayes and Maurice Evans, who performed with her in many plays. I AMPLE FREE PARKING SINCE 1884 if -- -" MARGARET WEBSTER nounced recently. The receiving group is the As- sociation of Universities for Re- search in Astronomy, Inc., (AURA), of which the University is one of eight participating mem- bers. The 80 x 60-inch telescope will be built as part of a $7,545,000 national astronomical observatory on Kitt Peak in the Quinlan Mountains of southwestern Ari- zona. AURA President Prof. Robert Sculpture Gift To Be Erected The modernistic sculpture given .o the University by the Class of 1958 will probably be erected in the lobby of the Undergraduate Library the first of the week, Irv- ing E. Palmquist, assistant Uni- versity architect, said yesterday. Explaining that the large slate slab which will serve as the base of the structure arrived last week, he said the contractors will begin work in a few days. As soon as the three by seven foot slab is set in the floor, the statue will be erected. did preliminary design work on the solar instrument at the Uni- versity's McMath-Hulbert Observ- atory at Lake Angelus, near Pon- tiac. Prof. Keith Pierce of the as- tronomy department, who assisted in the design, has gone to Tucson to organize AURA's headquarters there. "The solar telescope will be several times larger than any now in existence," the" NSF report stated. It will be about twice as powerful as the one now in use on Mt. Wilson in California, the NSF claims. Located on Reservation The United States Congress has appropriated $1 million to build a road to the observatory site, which is located on a Papago In- dian reservation. Completion of this road will allow construction of the instruments and buildings to begin, with completion expected within one year to 15 months. AURA has leased 2,400 acres surrounding Kitt Peak, a moun- tain sacred to the Papagos, ac- cording to the NSF report. AURA was formed in 1957 with Prof. Leo Goldberg, chairman of the as- tronomy department, heading the organizational committee. The funds for the telescope were granted last December and BRILLIANT ACTRESS, DIRECTOR, AUTHOR In An Exciting Dramatic Program of Bernard Shaw's Most Popular Works "PICTURES FROM A SHAVIAN GALLERY" or Telescope, the Kitt - Peak site chosen in March. Participating members of AURA include the University, California, Chicago, Harvard, In- diana, Ohio State, Wisconsin and Yale. Employ%,ment Figure Show Job Increase Employment in the Ann Arbor- Ypsilanti area has increased .7 per cent since last month, but 7,000 workers, 10.3 per cent of the: 67,000 labor force, are unemployed. These. figures were given in the Michigan Employment Security Commission's September report, "Labor Force and Employment' Estimates." The report' predicts unemploy- ment will reach 10.4 per cent by mid-January, In September, 1957, there were 2,400 unemployed, or 3.5 per cent of the labor force, according to the MESC report. Area employment in manufac- turing industries increased from 16,600 in August of this year to 17,200 in September, indicating that much of the employment in- creasemcame. from factories. However, manufacturing indus- tries employed 21,500 workers in September, 157. This was 4,300 more than a6e employed by these industries now. The report shows there werej 57,100 wage and salary workers in September 1957. This September the figure had dropped to 52,300. Former Dearl Inaugurated TICKETS: Thursday, November 13 -8:30 P.M. General Public .................... .$2.50-$2.00-$1 .00 Students f.. . . ..".i.". . . . . . . ......n$1.50-$1.00-$ .75 Maurice Evans, then a clerk in a music publishing house. They act- ed together in an amateur pro- duction of Shaw's "Major Bar- bara," Miss Webster's professional ca- reer began with a small part in "The Trojan Women" featurng Sybil Thorndike, Next playing the gentlewomani John Barrymors production of "Hamlet," her ca- reer began in the dark when the lights went out for three minutes immediately .after her first en- trance on the stage, Commenting on Iher yexperenesa with various repertory companies, she writes in her book, ,'You had to learn to play Lady Macbeth up and down a fire escpae and von- vince an audience of irreverant children that y ou were really sleepwalking at he same time."' After playing with Evans. In "After All." and with Sir Joln Gielgud,-who recently appeared at the U n i v e r si t y, in "Musical Chairs," she got her first direct- ing assignment. She had charge of drilling 800 'women in an out- door performance of "Henry VIII.'" "Richard III" Turning Point The turning point in her carer came in 1937 when she staged Evans' Broadway performance of "Richard II," which set an. all- time record for the play. , Under her direction "Othello," featuring Paul Robeson and Jose Ferrer, ran for 296 performances on Broadway to set a new Amer- ican record for a Shakespearian play. Critics called hr the "best 41- rector of the plays of Shakes peare that we have" from her staging of "The Tempest" starring a ballerina and an ex-boxer. More recently she has directed "The Merchant of Venice" a~t Stratord- on-Avon and "Measure for Mea- sure" at the Old Vic Theatre. She has directed or acted in many other productions including "Family Portrait," "The Cherry, Orchard," "Alice in Wonderland," "St. Joan" and was the first wo* man ever to stage an oera, 'Don Carlo" at the Metropolitan Op- era Company. Tours Nation Touring her own Shakespeare company through 34 states and ;hree provinces of Canada, Miss Webster has been awarded honor- ary degrees from Smith College, itutgers University, Russell Sage College and Lawrence College. Miss Webster, who has "played everything from Greek tragedy to a Ray Bolger revue," says that her dream is to live in the country, raise cabbages, study iRussian and walk the dog, "But," she ads, "I also have to eat. Hence Shakespeare," Society To Initiate Utiiversity Regent University Regent Leland Doan will be. among five industrialists initiated Tuesday into Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering society. Initiation for the industrialists. along with 70 University students will be held in the Union at 5 p~m. Doan is president of Dow Chemical Co. COMING --TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18-8:30 P.M. ELEANOR ROOSEVELT General Public-$1.50, $1.00 Students-- $1'.00, 75c, 50c Box Office Open 10 A.M.-5 P.M. Monday thru Friday U. OF M. PLATFORM ATTRACTIONS HILL AUDITORIUM The Class of 1961 presents CONTINUOUS C I TODAY A PUS N DIAL FROM 1 P.M. No 8-6416 "A FINE DRAmAfTICfilm! yRULY POTENTI 1t fairly quivers with emotion. Kim Stanley is brifliant I" * .4-Soso" Cv,.4w, NTM. , *8 "So powerful that it she-'! ' - a; 7 with a serious inter in the e * * "Th kiind of fim that begins where the others stop. The Oyofs y d. emetato. is a rik ahe con ke it" - .., w. - A*:OFbEXTRAORT: : MR1 ~PADDY PICIUI: AEREANED CAYEFSKY: -Avery WO0EtR"" Iachieveeant.~ PARTY1" 4KM : -rn..-.. "C.4, 'STANLEY " - " ** ' -4MQ !fM m i N l~ br ** - b, e .e e,. U. eeu .. * . "' "ANYTHING t 1 t 4 f i c GOES 1I,, Charles E. Odegaard, former dean of the University literary col- lege, was inaugurated Friday as the new president of the Univer- sity of Washington. Odegaard, 47 years old, said in his inauguration speech higher education is society's "insurance policy" for a guarantee of a better future. "All our universities, the young in years in company with the ancient and venerable, must build around our civilization that wall of intelligence and understanding needed to restrain the eroding forces of ignorance and brutish- ness which could engulf us all," Odegaard said. The former dean who left here last spring for the new post, suc- ceeds Henry Schmitz as the 'Uni- versity of Washington president. w. 11958 SOPH SHOW Ginterna qild Tonight at 8 DICKENS' "A TALE OF TWO CITIES" , NOW , , ,, I DIAL NO 2-3136 NOVEMBER 13,14 ane 15 at 8:00 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre I THE WHOLE BAITTLE-ScARRED LOVE-ScORCHED SAGA OF THE ,I I I US. MARINES! I w ~w __ ____ -~ -