f THE MICHfIGAN DILYT i ii L lIl 1 V YY Y Lf f.1 17 JJ' 21 .L JL f A Dramatic Training. Little Use To0 Students, Temple Claims Fdi'c 4flen d Drive Sart ed V .111 JThUe L jJ.1 UiK By S. R. WALLACE Richard Temple, the ruddy-cheeked Dr. Christens, OSU Dean, Englishman playing Ruth Chatter- To Highlight Program; ton's cockney father in "Pygmalion" Secord Will Give Talk this week, opined yesterday that uni- Secod 'Wll ive alkversity training in dramatics is a nice The ninth annual Pharmaceutical way to keep students out of trouble Conference ,sponsored by the College--but it won't teach them to act. of Pharmacy of the University of Caught for a moment at coffee be- Michigan, will be held in the Amphi- tween a dash from the Rackham theatre of the Rackham Building Building to the tennis matches, the Tuesday afternoon beginning at'2:30. white-haired Temple (whose hair at The guest speaker will be f Dr. B. present is mascara red for his role) V. Christensen, Dean of the College declared that art is born into the V. ChrstensenDan of the College theatre. of Pharmacy of Ohio State Uiver- "Of course an actor develops with sity. The topic which he has chosen experience," he admitted, "but you to present is, "Recruiting for the Pro- must have the 'heart' to start with; fession of Pharmacy." Mr. Christen- mt htaininghcanhealu tsale." sen is the author of many scientific then training can be valuable." papers and has been active in vari- In his fifty years of stage appear- ous phases of pharmaceutical associ- ances Temple has associated with ation work. . some of the theatre's great names, The second speaker of the afer- among them Sir Henry Irving. Rich- noon will be Mr. Arthur Secord of the ard Temple senior, a member of the Extension Service and the Depart- first Gilbert and Sullivan company, ment of Speech of the University of created a role in each of the famous Michigan. His topic will be, "De- operettas as they came from the pens veloping an Effective Personality." of the nineteenth century writers. Dr. Arthur C. Curtis of the Depart- Discussing the chances of success ment of Internal Medicine of the Uni- for new actors today, Temple ve- versity will be the third speaker. hemently warned young idealists to Doctor Curtis spoke at the Conference stay away from "the hotbed of in- two years ago on the topic of sulfa- trigue" that is the stage. Citing cases nilamide. This year he will discuss to prove that even acknowledged tal- another of the newer treatments for ent is overlooked, he explained that one of the common diseases, that of 70 per cent of a successful actor to- "Sulfapyridine and Anti-sera in the day is a commercial instinct and that Treatment of Lobar Pneumonia." producers are "name and type crazy." The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper Published by THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY. One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts is Truthful-Constructive-Unbiased-Free from Sensational- ism -Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 Issues 25 Cents. Obtainable at: CHISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 206 East Liberty Street Hours: 11:30-5; Sat to 9 p.m. - r The story of his association with a 19 year old actress in a Broadway play years ago illustrated his point. He thought she was very good. The director could, not agree. The girl was Fay Bainter, 1939 academy award winner. Temple lays the blame for many of the current problems on Broad- way to the fact that the theatre "is in the wrong hands." He believes that the old days of the actor-man- ager were superior in that business interests did not seem to overbalance the art. The last two performances of "Pygmalion" will be given at 3:15 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. today at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.xTickets are still available at the box office. ASU To Present Film Refugee conditions in Spain, Mexico, Chile, and Cuba will be shown in a film sponsored by the American Student Union and pre- sented at 4 p.m. Monday in the Na- tural Science Audtorium. Tickets can be obtained from any ASU mem- ber or at the door that evening. t Plans for a trip to Buffalo to visit the Curtiss-Wright and Bell airplane factories will be discussed at a meet- ing of the Institute of Aeronautical Science at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Room 1042 of the E. Engineering Building. Members of the Institute will leave Ann Arbor Friday and spend the en- tire day Saturday at these plants ex- amining the latest military planes built for the Army and Navy. Reser- vations must be in by Wednesday. * Members of the Detroit section of the Institute of Radio Engineers held a joint meeting with the Detroit Phys- ics Society in the East Physics Build- ing last night. Purpose of the meet- ing was to visit four physics labora- tories and one electrical engineering lab. * * * I t 1 yRedCross Local Chapter Receives Unsolicited Donations Unsolicited contributions which amounted to $624 have been received at the local Red Cross office in con- junction with the Washtenaw Coun- ty Chapter's drive for $3200 set as their quota in the current American Red Cross 10 million dollar war relief plan, it was announced yes- terday. Organized campaign plans are vir- tually complete, the local office said. and actual soliciting will begin Mon- day. Donations, however, may still be sent to the Red Cross Office, 600 Wolverine Building, Ann Arbor. Letters requesting the announce- ment of the relief drive have been sent to the ministers of various local churches and several have indicated that any contributions will be ac- cepted at their Sunday services. Math Picnic Postponed The Junior Mathematical Society picnic, originally scheduled for to- day, has been postponed until Wed- nesday. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN A meeting of Eta Kappa Nu, elec- trical engineering honor society, will be held at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Union to elect officers for the com- ing year. Newly elected members of the society are Eugene H. Beach, '41E, Harold E. Britton, '41E, and Gordon Stumpf, '41E. HANDY SERVI-CE DIETR STRAYED, LOST, FOUND-1 LOST-Fraternity pin with initials BBK, probably in vicinity if Morris Hall. Finder please call 2-1405- Reward. 438 WANTED-TO BUY--4 HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for your discarded wearing apparel. laude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 ANY OLD CLOTHING-PAY $5.00 TO $500. SUITS, OVERCOATS, FURS, MINKS, PERSIAN LAMBS, DIAMONDS, TYPEWRITERS, & CASH FOR OLD GOLD. PHONE SAM-6304. SUNDAY APPOINT- MENTS PREFERRED. 359 Handy Service Advertising Rates Cash Rates 12c per reading line for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Charge Rates 15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 13c per reading line for three or more insertions. Five average words to a reading line. Minimum of three lines per insertion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST Our Want-Advisor will be de- lighted to assist you in composing your ad. Dial 23-24-1 or stop ,at the Michigan Daily Business Office, 420 Maynard Street. TYPING- 1 TYPING-L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., Phone 5689. 374 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 34 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist and notary public-excellent work. 706 Oakland, phone 6327. 20 Ii. A ____ : r SENIORS! Just three weeks more of MCHIGAN'S Campus.... Then A MICHIGAN ALUMNUS for life ..... Will you forget Ann Arbor? No not if you use the MICHIGAN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION yours to keep alive your allegiance to your Alma Mater. HELP WANTED EARN during vacation, $5.00 and up daily selling article appealing to housewife. One at least and per- haps more for every home. Write for information to Slip-Lok. Inc., 531,2 West Huron Street, Pontiac, Michigan. 442 ARTICLES FOR SALE-3 FOR SALE-Girl's bicycle, balloon tires. New last summer, $16.50. Call evenings-2-3559. 439 A BARGAIN you can't duplicate-40 scenic acres overlooking beautiful valley-including well built six- room house-only four miles from Ann Arbor-Sacrifice for cash, $2500. Call owner evenings-6196. FOR SALE: Wardrobe trunk. Excel- lent condition. Reasonable. price. Call evenings. F. D. O'Grady, 618 N. Main. 437 WANTED - TO RENT -6 WANTED TO RENT-House for 15 students, starting in September. Write Box 12, Mich. Daily. 429 FOR RENT I TO RENT for Summer-seven-room furnished house. Available June 15. Call 2-3643. 428 425 SOUTH DIVISION Apartment for graduate students or business people-also a single room-phone 2-2352. 440 WOMEN STUDENTS: Very pleasant rooms in approved house for sum- mer term opposite Rackham Bldg. 917 E. Huron. Phone 8671. 443 SUMMER STUDENTS: Rooms from $1.75 up. Shower baths, inner- spring mattresses. Meals if de- sired. Phone 2-1196. 1022 Forest .Avenue. 436 -- MOVING - ELSIFOR MOVING & STORAGE CO. Local and Long Distance Moving Storage -Packing -Shipping Every Load Insured 310 W. Ann Phone 4297 LAUNDERING--9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 16 TRANSPORTATION -21 DRIVING new coupe to Cheyenne after exams-interested passen- gers there or intermediate points call 9414. 441 MISCELLANEOUS-20 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run list- ings of your vacant houses in. The Daily for summer visiting profes- sors. Dial 23-24-1 for special rates. Tough Hombres Get ITamedci I We like meeting up with tough guys. We mean the sort of people who are hard to please. . . people who like their food jsut so .. . and their service just so . . . and their prices just so. Because our restau- rant is jest so . . . and tough guys are tamed when they see how ex- pertly we handle their wants... and how gently we handle their budgets. WINES Bo/tled and Draught BEER 11 What the Alumni Associa- THE. FLRUTZ CfFE 1 22 W. Wash.-On the Coner We c'lose every Mondasy. tion is-What it does.will be told in these columns. See Today's Ad on the Back Page Shows Today at 2-4-7-9 P.M. NOW PLAYING! ii C W S BiGGEST JACK BENNY DUCK BENNY I I ii I r::.r ,i . .6",?:r,',i::i e.?iii i.w rr's. - I I I