PAGE SI THE MiJCHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1945 ___U_ ASSOCIATED PRESS PU CTURE NEWS ETHEL ISENBERG . ..as Gertie ANNETTE CHAIKIN DOROTHY MURZEK . . . as Miss Wheeler . . . as Miss Shea "What a Life" To Open Today (Continued from Page 1) cipal, the final curtain goes down with Henry saved from total disgrace. Hit on Broadway Clifford Goldsmith's com edy, which gained fame as a weekly radio sketch, has been a sensational suc- cess of Broadway and on tour. Though fond of a joke, the author's treatment of the adolescent and his struggles at Central High, shows that he is not lacking in sympathy for his victims. Under his jesting there is a genuine fondness for the human stuff in adolescent youth. Mr. Goldsmith spent some time lecturing in Phila- delphia High Schools where he re- ceived his inspiration for Henry Ald- rich. The play will be presented at 8:30 p.m. today through Saturday. Tickets may be purchased at the theatre box office. A special student rate is being offered for the performances to be given tonight and Thursday evening. Fourteen members of Zeta Phi Eta, honorary woman's speech fraternity, will usher at the opening perform- ance. Harriet Risk and Marilyn Run- dies will be the head ushers. Grad Sees Europe In Intelligence Duty Lt. Albert P. Blaustein, '41, who was formerlS with the 54th Battalion, has spent the last six months with the Counter Intelligence corps filling duties in 20 different cities of France, Germany, England, Belgium, Italy and Austria. Lt. Blaustein, who is now on leave at his home in Brooklyn, expects to go to Japan on more intelligence activities. Sailors' Future Status Revealed Michaux Announces Choices Now Open (Continued from Page 1) have completed less than seven se- mesters will have the following op- tions: assignment to inactive status in the NROTC Program at any uni- versity in the country which has a peacetime unit, providing they are acceptable to the academic authori- ties; or assignment to general duty in enlisted status until eligible for discharge. V-5 trainees now under instruction in V-12 Units will remain on active duty until July 1, 1946 unless earlier found qualified for transfer to pre- flight training. Housing Office Set Up for Vets The Community Volunteer Organi- zation will act as a central housing bureau for Ann Arbor, surveying the housing situation and listing any available space for rental, Mayor William Brown announced after a special meeting yesterday. Private citizens and commercial property owners will be asked in a door-to-door campaign to list un- used space with the bureau, which will occupy CDVO offices in the Ar- mory, for rental to veterans who are unable to find housing. Various community groups will be asked to participate in the housing drive, while individuals will be asked'E to help conduct the survey and to do necessary clerical work. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from. Page 5) will hold a meeting on Dec. 13, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 151 of the Chemistry Building. Professor Robley C. Wil- liams of the Physics Department will speak on "Three-Dimensional Elec- tron Microscopy." The public is cor- dially invited. Faculty Womens Club - MUSIC SECTION will have a pot-luck sup- per tomorrow night at 6:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Marshall Snyder, 615 Oswego Street. New members will be guests of the section. Prospective Foresters! The Fores- try Club is anxious to contact all men who plan to enter the School of Forestry and Conservation. Please make a special effort to attend the meeting of the Forestry Club at 7:30 Thursday evening in room 2039, Nat- ural Science building. Two new log- ging films will be shown and refresh- ments will be served. La Sociedad Hispanica will have its 'Ensian picture taken Thursday, Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m. in 316 Michigan Un- ion. Following, at 8 p.m., Mr. Staubach's talk on "Life in Bogota As Seen by A Yankee Professor" will be given in Kellogg Auditorium that same eve- ning. The Geological Journal Club will meet on Friday, Dec. 14, at 12:15 p.m. in Room 4065, Nat. Sci. Bldg. Program: Professor Emeritus W. H. Hobbs will speak on "The Scab- land and Okanogan Lobes of the Cordilleran Continental Glacier and their Lake Histories." All interested are cordially invited to attend. T E A F O R Y A N K S A T 0 X F O R D - Jill Cousons (right), from Leigh-on-Sea. Essex, England, pours tea for two Americans at a GI study in St. Hugh's College, Oxford, England. Sgt. Dick Tonkin (left) of Detroit, Mich., and Pvt. W. T. Farry (center) of Maricopa, Calif., are taking an eight weeks course at the University with the U. S. Government paying their expenses. N I G H T I E- Marilou Neu- mayer of Chicago models a nightgown of brushed rayon in- tended for winter nights. / J ) T E N N I S A C T 1 0 N - Australian tennis stars John Bromwich (left), and Bobbie Barnes play in, Sydney tourney, S T O W A W A Y' I N B R I G-Capriccio, cocker span- iel, peers from behind bars in brig of USS Boise after being smuggled aboard ship by a GI, Set moor Gellman of Brooklyn. Sketched: Alt-wool robe checked in soft pastels. Sizes 9 to 15. I U D G E-Chief Justice Sir Geoffrey Lawrence (above) of the Nuernberg trials is the "toughest" character in the courtroom, reports AP writer Wes Gallagher. H 0 M E L E S S I N B E R L I N -Eleven of 16 members of' three families who live in this bunk-tiered room in Berlin wait for a pot of soup to cook on the stove. All are homeless. ivae Von fHeard! About Kern's College Trunk? it's a gay haven for gals who want campus-approved fashions and furbelows . . . okayed by Kern's College Fashion Board. So if you're worried about what the folks or great-aunt Effie are giving you for Christmas, why not give them a gentle shove to the College Trunk? And drop in yourself and see the wonderful holiday fashions! KERN S--FOUTI(T IFLOOR I .7vti", T