GE six TIHE- MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 1944 I U U' Broadcasts Are Announced The Methodist Church Choir under the direction of Dr. Hardin A. Van Deursen, will take part in the Hymns for Victory program to be heard at 9:15 a.m. today over station WJR. "The Heavens Are Telling" from the Creation by Joseph Haydn and several other selected Easter hymns will be presented. At 2:40 p.m. tomorrow, over the same station, Professor L. D. Carr, of the sociology department, and Pro- fessor Waldo Abbot, director of the Broadcasting Service, will debate up- on the question of whether the Amer- ican people are able effectively to solve social problems, such as juven- ile delinquency. Dr. Carr believes that the nation has been caught un- prepared to answer social questions on many occasions, both in the past, and in the present war emergency. TRICKS AND PRANKS: Zeta Barbour Will Portray Tony in Goldsmith's Drama Martha Cook ill~ P) I I irk W , Briggs Strikers Resume Work "She Stoops To Conquer," a story of two love affairs and of Tony Lumpkin, will be presented by Play Production of the speech department from April 12-15 at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Tony, the boisterous son of Mrs. Hardcastle, will be portrayed by Zeta Barbour who will be remembered for her effective performance of Dromio in "The Comedy of Errors." Tony has been described as 'a composition of tricks and mischief" by his stepfather, but his mother, striving to excuse him, says he is on- ly a "poor, consumptive fellow merely possessing a sense of humor." The tricks and pranks that Tony plays on his friends are many and varied. One of his most masterly is that of directing two gentlemen, Marlow and Hastings, to the Hard- castle home, and telling them that w 11 resent f #A V 4 U - .T-4 U 4 a Music Progyram At the State . .. At the Michigan .,. Women of Martha Cook will pre- The new picture opening today at John Steinbeck's "Lifeboat" is an sent a program of typically Ameri- the State is "Government Girl," a interpretation of the experiences can music including both voice and instrumental selections at 7:30 p.m. presentation of the hectic life in the of nine people adrift in the open today at the International Center. nation's capital. sea. The program has been arranged by Olivia de Havilland in the title role The entire action in this film, op- Mrs. Leona Diekema, social director portrays a conscientious secretary ening at the Michigan today, I takes of the Martha Cook, and George Hall, and is teamed with Sonny Tufts, the place in one boat. assistnt te irector of the Inter- business executive who comes to This production by Alfred Hitch- national Center. It will be directed by Marjorie Gould, '44SM. Washington as a dollar-a-year man. cock presents a characterization by "The Star Spangled Banner," and The supporting cast includes Tallulah Bankhead, who makes her "America" will be the opening and James Dunn, Anne Shirley, and Jane I return to the films in the present pic- closing numbers. Others wil be songs Darwell. ture. which depict various sections of the country and two popular University songs. The first part of the program, "Music America Likes To Sing," will be presented by a chorus of girls from Martha Cook accompanied by Pat Potter, '44.IrN.. qh)1 r 3 1 DETROIT, April l.-/P)-After a two-day work stoppage that made several thousand workers idle, pro- duction was resumed today at the Briggs Manufacturing Company's Outer Drive plant which makes ball turrets for bombers. Production was halted'for the sec- on day at the Gyro Compass division of the Chrysler Corporation's main Dodge plant. A labor dispute was re- sponsible for the strike, according to a Company spokesman, who said that the Compass, division was closed after two balancers were sent home for re- fusal to do work assigned them. ZETA BARBOUR . . plays Tony Lumpkin ]PRIORITY s CHI k" We have a new and lovely selection of delicately sheer crepe afternoon dresses any- one of which you will be proud to own. They come in a variety of "dressy" styles in: Black ... Lilac Delicate Powder Blue Dark Blue . . . Grey Look Smart -- Win His Heart the house is an inn. The situations which arise from this prank prove both amusing and embarrassing and set the pace for Goldsmith's comedy. Tony has the "strength of a bull, the appetite of a horse, and spends his evenings at The Three Pigeons, a tavern, where he is free to drink, flirt, and play practical jokes. "She Stoops To Conquer" is repre- sentative of Goldsmith's interest in rural England with its squires, roomy inns and friendly hospitality. Tickets will go on sale April 10 at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office. Mail orders are being accepted now. Ruthven Marks Birthday President Alexander G. Ruthven celebrated his 62nd birthday yester- day in New York where he is attend- ing the annual meeting of the Alum- ni Club of New York. He will return; to Ann Arbor tomorrow night. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Life." A cost supper will be served. The program will conclude in time for servicemen to reach quarters for evening muster. Coning Events Bacteriology Seminar will meet Tuesday, April 4, at 4:30, Rm. 1564 East Medical Building. Subject: "Current Investigations of Antibiotic Substances." All interested are in- vited. Junior Research Club: The April meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 4, in the Amphithea- tre of the Rackham Building. The program will be given by Elmon L. Cataline of the School of Pharmacy and by Frederick H. Test of the De- partment of Zoology. Michigan Youth for Democratic Action will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Rm. 316 of the Union. Dr. Francis Skillman Onderdonk, author and lec- turer, will discuss "From United States to United Nations." Motion pictures and lantern slides will be shown, and a discussion period will follow. Public is invited. In the.second part, "Music Ameri- ca Likes To Hear," Lucretia Dell, '46, will play a piano solo and an ensem- ble group with Dorothy DeVries, '44, Carol Fries, '44SM, and Edith Hel- berg, '44, will play several popular American selections. Refreshments will be available at the snack hour which will follow the program. Hillel To Give Film Program Alfred Hitchcock's British made "Secret Agent," will highlight a mo- tion picture program to be presented at 7:45 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation. Other pictures to be shown on this program are "The River," a docu- mentary issued by the U.S. Office of Education, as part of the Federal Security Agency, and an old Charlie Chaplin comedy, "The Floorwalker. "The River," the story of the.Missis- sippi, was produced some five years ago and was shown in theatres throughout the country, having run at the New York World's Fair in 1939. They're all talking about the SUNDf4Y North Lounge Michigan Union OCIDaL Sunday 3 to 5 rA Bombers, block-busters, torpedoes, tanks, guns, grenades, machine-guns are not the only weapons the leaders of our Armed Forces use to win victory. They use-men-men who speak different languages, who can question prisoners, get information from natives, read enemy papers, diaries and documents, interpret in negotiations, understand enemy propaganda and do a thousand vital services to insure victory. j r! Co u sINS 4k 4 218 SOU-1rii STATrE I _ -,,..c.. . ,..- ., - .. r .--- . ._.. __ ____o. -- _ . - ____ ___ _. --a----.- = °.- s = - - - --=- " ter... _ , , __. _ - , _ J . .r. 'i' +*s.. .. i = Sri __ ^ . '_"' ^ ' r - t - , .w,_ _,,, - y o ? -_ t ' ' " _ _ . . _ 7 _ .. .. THE MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION ANN RBOR, MICIL SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 1944 erans in readjusting and re-educating for civilian life, 2. Religious education and 3. International edu- cation for the purpose of learning to understand other nations. Then, speak- r< ing directly to Council Y members, "You're not re- sponsible .for the terrible :mess that the world is in now, but unfortunately you're going to inherit the troubles ... problems must be solved by you or not at all." 'U' TRACK TEAM in the university division of the second annual Purdue Re- lays, climax of the indoor track season, scored in all but one event for a total of 49 points. Notre Dame, last year's winner, got only 17 1-3 points for fifth place. Purdue took second place with Illinois close behind. * * * 'U' SWIMMERS tried hard, got second place in team standings. Main rea- son was Alan Ford of Yale. He made the 100-yard free- style in world's record time of 49.7 seconds, won for himself the American permanent world govern- ment." As for the flag, "I believe that many Ameri- cans today pay too little attention to the concepts of the United Nations, and I thought that a symbol, such as this flag, would help arouse more interest in the United Nations." Architect, author and lec- turer on international af- fairs, Dr. Onderdonk will speak soon on "From Unit- ed States to United Na- tions" at a meeting of Michigan Youth for Demo- cratic Action. *1 * * TAYLOR HENRY, Asso- ciated Press correspondent, who recently returned on the Gripsholm after in- ternment in Germany, spoke in Ann Arbor last week. "The 12,000,;000 members of Germany's slave army may prove an 'Achilles Heel' to the Naz- is," he said, and, "in the event of a German collapse these people are going to take the most ghastly re- venge known in human history." He said German morale is still "good," that "our air raids are doing In yo now tuniti 9 n yg bring $PAs9 L BlGA who t and ~OV~.P2$A You I .ARAfIC folio osan* surasseLIN( tROsWsiAN AAAN A faci Lingua SW AUA.........millinn ANOTHER LANGUAGE quickly, easily, correctly LINGUAPHONE t~ta,~ METHOD In peace, the opportunities for men and women who speak another language cover the widest range; with the armies of occupation, and in business. Prize positions will be open to men and women in every field-administrators, interpreters, office. workers, secretaries, engineers, foremen, mechanics, liaison, relief and health workers. gr own home in spare time you can prepare for war and peace oppor- es. The world-famous Linguaphone s you the VOICES of native teachers guide you by easy stages to understand SPEAK the language of your choice. earn by EAR. You, simply LISTEN and & the text with your EYES-you repeat what you HEAR and in an amazingly short time you are actually CONVERSING! It's as easy and pleasurable as learning a new sang! Save Time, Work and Money. With a Linguaphone set at your side you can study anywhere any time at your ease, alone or in a group. "PUDDLES" and PUP-Wearing a GI cap and a thoughtful look "Puddles" guards her offspring "Tiny Tim" as he pops his head out of a field shoe at Parris Island Marine Base. -AP Photo. GUAPHONE-LANGUAGE MASTER TO THE WORLD ulty of 250 of the foromost language professors of the leading universities collaborated to make the phone Conversational Method the easiest and quickest way to master a new language. More than a hnmA-studv students, men and women of all anes and in all walks of life have profited by Lingua- fessor. He is Dr. Francis the 33 United Nations and