THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY gents Make Appointments to Faculty, Other Posts COMMITTEE POSTS: SGC Lists Appointments For Administrative Wini Student Government Council approved appointments to its ad- ministrative wing at the meeting. Wednesday. Fred Riecker, '63, was appointed to a one-semester term as Stu- dent Book Exchange manager. John A. Scott, '61, was appoint- ed chairman of the Early Regis- tration -Pass Committee. Appoint- ed to committee membership were Judith Caplan, '61, Bruce Lipp- man, '62, and Irving Sorscher, '62. Lippman's term is one semester; the others are one year. Calendaring Posts Filled The SGC Calendaring Commit- tee will be headed by Lynn Bart- lett, '63, with Beverly Ecker, '63, as assistant chairman. Both have one-year terms. The Council appointed Art Ros- enbaum, '62, chairman of the Stu- dent Activities Committee for a one-year term. Michael Zimmerman. '63E; was appointed chairman of the Edu- cation Committee for one year, Reading Group eEnrollment Reaches 175 with Eugenia Pann, '63, as as- sistant .chairman, also for one year. Kay Warman was appoint- ed National Student Association coordinator. Brian Glick, '62, will be chair- man of the International Co- ordinating Board for one year. Marie Stern, '62, will be secretary of the board for the same term. The Recognitions Committee will be headed by Nick Sack, '62, for one year, Elections Chairman. Named Richard G'Sell, '62, was ap- pointed chairman of the Elections Committee for a one - semester term. The Council approved the ap- pointments of President John Feldkamp, '60, Executive Vice- president . .ancy Adams,.,'60, Ad- ministrative Vice-president James Hadley, '61, and Al Haber, '61, to the summer interim commit- tee. Charles Huber, '62E, Rosen- baum, and Sally J. Sawyer, '62, were appointed to the University. Housing and. Environmental Health Committee. Delegates Appointed Bill Warnock, '61BAd., was ap- pointed to the Driving Code Ad- inistrative Board for a one- semester term. Delegate status for, the NSA Congress in August was granted to Miss Adams, Haber, Hadley, Treasurer Per Hanson,.'62, Union President Perry Morton, '61, Inter- Quad Council President Dan Rose- mergy, '61Ed.,.M. A. Hyder Shah, Grad. Alternate status was grant- ed to Panhellenic President Barb Greenberg, '61, G'Sell,' Ken Mc- Eldowney, '61, Jean Spencer,''61,. Mike Turoff, '61BAd., Miss War- man and one representative from the Women's League. Feldkamp and Roger Season- wein, '61, will attend with National Executive Committee status. -Daily-James Warneka "GOLDEN FLEECING"-This scene is from the play "The Golden Fleecing" which has its last showing today. The play is a comedy and has among its cast three members from the original Broad- way showing. Actors Agree on Using PersonalE Expeecers v-- By BEATRICE TEODORO 1 "Someone who has never had a drink cannot effectively portray a drunk," Mickey Deems said. A member of the cast of "The Golden Fleecing," Deems plays a drunk scene in the comedy, in which it is necessary for him to get drunk in about two minutes. "This scene is very precisely timed," he continued. "The char- acter must pass through the deli- cate stages of being typsy to being loaded to being absolutely bombed." And to do this well, he maintained, an actor must re- member what he himself has ex- perienced when drinking. Monica Loviett and Robert Car- raway agreed that personal ex- perience had a great deal to do with a part. The three of them were members of the Broadway cast of "The Golden Fleecing" and returned for the Ann Arbor Drama Season production. i Organization Notices 11 i J - May 21, 1960 Graduate Outing Club, Hiking, May 22, 2 p.m. Meet in back of Rackham (NW entrance). * * * Mich. Christian Flwshp., May 22, 4 p.m., Lane Hall. Speaker: Dr. H. Brandt Clinical Psychologist from Detroit,: "Foundations of Happy Living." * * Scabbard & Blade, Initiation Dinner, May 22, 5:30 p.m., Union, Rm. 3KLMN. GET CASH for BIKE Bring to S.A.B. loading dock May 23-27 DIAL NO 5-6290 THRE As a young actress, Miss Lovett commented on the "aghast reac- tion" of theatre people to young "method" actors. "To me, a meth- od is a tool which arrives at the same result, even if the technique is different," she said. Carraway, a "beginning actor" from Texas, added that he always keeps his eyes and ears open when developing a part. To fully "real- ize the character" the actor gets as much as he can from the script. Then he must meet with the other members of the cast to try to make the play a unified whole. Often an individual role must not be played to its fullest possi- bilities, Deems added. An actor will get a feeling that he can bril- liantly portray a particular scene. Then he realizes that the effec- tiveness of the'play demands that the scene not be too important, in order to emphasize the following one. The actor will then have to sacrifice his "big moment" for the overall impact of the play. An actor must somehow stay within his rple, Carroway said. If he acts outside of the character, the audienice will know it is "act-. ing" as opposed to the actions of real people. All three of them agreed it is more important for the actor to give the impression of "a human being instead of a type. A veteran actor, Deems recalled the time when directors chose people who looked the part as the "villain" or "hero" types. This has been changed, he continued. "Audiences can laugh at a villain now." ROTC Units Plan Review Approximately 900 cadets from the three University ROTC units. will participate in the annual Tri- Service Review at 10 a.m. today at Ferry Field. During- the review, University, civil, and military officers will pre- sent 46 awards to outstanding cadets. Lt. Col. Alfred D. Belsma, chair- man of the air science depart- ment, will direct the project.' More than 175 students have signed up for the Summer Read-, ing and Discussion Program so1 far, chairman Roger Seasonwein, '61, said yesterday The topics which have been most demanded are "Greek Trag-a edy," '"Nietzsche," "young Poets" and "The Works of D. H. Law- rence."t "I'm very pleased at the great amount of student interest which has thus far been shown in the, program," Seasonwein said. "We1 shall make- every effort to accom- modate all students desiring to participate." Last year the committee faced the problem of having more peo- ple sign up than had originally been expected. If this should hap- pen this year, additional faculty will again be called upon and the program will not be closed. In addition to the sign - up sheets in the Undergraduate Li- brary, letters concerningthe, pro- gram have been sent out to the various housing units including sign-up sheets which are to be returned to Mrs. Ruth Callahan in the Student Activities Building by May 22. Council Adds Procedures Student Government C oun cil passed a motion at the meeting Wednesday designed to stream- line Council procedure. The motion, proposed by Al Haber, '61, provides for written committee reports and recom- mendations and written officers' reports. It also sets up a ruling that materials to be considered by the Council must appear in print- ed form in the members' boxes by specified times prior to meetings., This gives members an oppor- tunity to consider items before they reach the floor. A section limiting debate on an issue to 30 minutes unless a longer limit is previously set, after which time the chair automatically in- troduces a motion for postpone- ment was part of -the motion. In further action, the Council approved the homecoming budget, allocated $1,500 for the adminis- tration of the student bike auc- tion and granted temporary recog- nition to the Pelonia Club. The Council calendared wom- en's rush from Feb. 17 to Mar. 5, and extended International Week by one day to Nov. 6, and calen- dared Women's Week, sponsored by Women's League, for Oct.12 to 15. At fairly regularintervals, ap-- rpoximately once a year, Holly- wood turns out a picture desig- nated as a "sleeper." This gen erally means that the produce- ers have sunk almost all of their limited funds into making a low budget, high quality film and are unable to buy much: pub- licity for it. Its success depends almost entirely on a word of mouth campaign by the first few who see it. In some cases, such as "Marty," "Roman Holiday" and "The Killing," the film goes on to become a handsome commer- cial success. In others, notably "Paths of Glory," undoubtedly one of the very best American films, the movie -goes on sleep- ing, largely unseen. "The Happy Time" is of the latter category. A warm, touch- ing comedy, it is certainly one of the most- delightful movies of the entire post-war era, ye~t it is unknown to. any but a handful of afficionados. It is the story of an adoles- cent approaching the brink of manhood, told in terms of his bizarre, French-Canadian, fam- ily in Montreal at the turn of the century. Charles Boyer, plays the head of the household, a singing waiter with a passion for the violin, -who provides wise and perceptive counsel for his teen- age son in matters of the heart. The boy's grandfather is an engaging roue who practices his super-annuated lechery on .ag- ing widows. He firmly believes. that life lived not to the fullest is not worth living, and prac- tices his philosophy with avow- ed dedication. Louis Jordan portrays one of the youngster's uncles, a dash- ing travelling. salesman who boasts a spectacular collection of ladies' garters, while the oth- er uncle, played by Kurt Kaz- nar, is a tragic figure of sorts. Afflicted with a nagging wife, he wanders morosely through the picture clutching a huge water cooler to his breast. His life is a perpetual process of emptying the cooler of its con- tents of red wine and again re- PAID ADVERTISEMENT C INEMA GUILD P'RESENTS, The Haply Time Saturday and Sunday i ACADEMY AWARD WINNERS.G. THE PULITZER PRIZE AUTHOR ...AND NOW THE SCREEN IS STRUCK BY DIAL NO 8-64 I com iiour a ...bitil Continuous Sh 16 Today from 11 mend it to ' "A stinging satire in the ttention - - direct line of George Groz', ngty satiric _ savage cartoons, and -John McCarter, ' Y Bert Brecht and Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera'.-T m RY ows P.M. LIGHTNING! Coming: "TOBACCO ROAD" and "GRAPES OF WRATH" I ENDING Late Shov TONIGHT Tonight 1l F ALL THE GREAT f A wr e TrMAR DT I GLENN MILLER Am P.M. __ U