THlE MI1CHIGAN DAILY j TU~sDAiY, MAY 6, l1q48 . . . ...................... . . ..... . ........ I OWL AT THE 'NAVEE': 'HMS Pinafore' Will Set Sail in Waves of Satire The sparkling "HMS Pinafore" which will take to the footlightsj May 13, 14 and 15 in Pattengill Auditorium under the sponsorship of the Gilbert and Sullivan Soci- ety is one of the most famous sa- tires in stage history. The snide remarks and pointed song lyrics in "Pinafore" have Speech Class To Visit WWJ Sixty speech and radio students will make an all-day field trip to the studios of WWJ and WWJ- FM in Detroit Saturday to get a close-up of the operation of a metropolitan station. The group will hear WWJ per- sonnel speak on all phases of broadcasting, including produc- tion, script-writing, news-gather- ing, sound effects, network rela- tions, servicing of advertising cli- ents, and television. The program was arranged in cooperation with Dick Spencer, WWJ and WWJ-FM promotion manager. Ed Wheeler, assistant general manager, Wendell Parma- lee, assistant general sales man- ager, Keith McKinney, television program coordinator and a Michi- gan alumnus, and Shields Djerk- iss, production director: will dis- cuss their work with the students. Tom MacMahon, news, editor, Margo Pheiffer, staff writer, and Selwyn Tober, sound effects direc- tor, will also speak. made official English ears burn consistently since it was first pro- duced in 1878. The audience howl- ed the very first night, and Pina- fore ran 700 consecutive perform- ances in London. 'When I Was a Lad' The great song by Sir Joseph Porter, K.C.B. explaining how he "became the ruler of the Queen's navee" has become a classic in sarcasm and a must for every bathroom baritone. English mem - bers of the "Loyal Opposition" in Parliament anxious to criticize the Admiralty Dept. still quote Sir Joseph's final advice: "Stick close to your desks and. never go to sea And you all may be the rulers of the Queen's navy." The song became so well known that the English Prime Minister actually began referring to the Ad- miralty's first lord as "Pinafore Smith." The insult was not for- gotten, either - Sullivan who wrote the music was knighted, but Gilbert and his lyrics were left out in the cold. Tickets for "Pinafore" are be- ing sold daily from 9 to 12 noon and 1 to 5 p.m. in the booth out- side Rm. 2, University Hall. Name Positions Available to Coeds Positions for counseling at the annual Wolverine Girls State, to be held Juner14ethrough 22, are now available and coeds may ap- ply in the Social Directors Office of the League as soon as possible. Sponsored by the American Le- gion Women's Auxiliary for out- standing juniors from high schools, the week's program is or- ganized to present opportunities in various vocations and to con- sider the position of women in government. This spring's Girls State session will also offer a well rounded week of recreation, sightseeing and so- cial activities. STOP... Feeding your furs and cloth apparel to the moths! Our Cold Storage Vaults and Insurance give them protection against all haz- ards. Remodeling and Re- pairing at our low Summer Prices.-. Ginsburg Furs 607 E. Liberty Michigan Theatre Bldg. Initiate Coeds To Freshman Honor Society Fifty-four University freshman women students have been hon- ored for outstanding scholarship during their first year's study. They have been initiated as members of Alpha Lambda Delta, national honor society for fresh- man women. At least a B-plus average is required for member- shio. At the initiation ceremony, Dean Alice Lloyd presented a citation to Nancy Jean Ringland as the sen- ior member of the society having maintained the highest scholastic average since elected to member- ship four years ago. The freshman members of the honor society are: Joan Auch, Ann Beck, Joyce Briskman, Janet Brown, Juanita Brown, Norma Chud, Nancy Coleman, Lois Cronlwright, Lyubica Dabich, Clara Davis, Florence Dieterle, Sylvia Folz, Ruth Frank, Flor- ence Freedman, and Doris Gard- ner. The list continues with Mary Ann Gatley, Riva Genfan, Berna Gilden, Ellen Goldstick, Ilene Haering, Lita Hagen, Barbara Hart, Mary Louise Hook, Fran- ziska Isbell, Norma Jaksec, Yvonne Johnson, Carolyn Kaplan, Jeanne Lange, Ellen Leepman, Valeria Lemper, Marjorie McLain, Renee Melnikoff, Edith Merlin and Joan Meyers. Others are: Lillian Miller, Shir- ley Miller, Rosanne Mitshkun, Louise Moore, Nancy Natnagel, Renate Oppenheimer, Daphne Porter, Phylliss Portwood, Shirley Rosenfeld. The list concludes with Eliza- beth Ross, Eleanor Scott, Anita Seiler, Alice Shannon, Joyce Si- mon, Mary Stein, Pamela Wagner, Joan Willens, Cecilia Woodworth, Eva Zaretsky and Marcia Ziskind. Keller's Music To Be Played "Overture 1947," composed by Homer Keller, University music school instructor in Theory and Composition, will be performedhat Rochester, N. Y. today by the Eastman-Rochester Symphony in their annual festival of American music. The work was first performed last November by the Nashville Symphony Orchestra, conducted by William Strickland. Keller, who will go to Rochester to hear the performance, recently completed "Symphony No. 2," dedicated to the University Sym- phony Orchestra. He is working at present on a large choral-orchestral composi- tion commissioned by the Wash- ington Cathedral Choral Society for presentation next season. A group of plants called "carni- vorous plants" obtain the nitrogen necessary to their growth from the decaying bodies of insects which they trap, says the World Book Encyclopedia. I S h b d l a t a F 'a L TAFT SMILES-Sen. Robert A. Taft smiles as he casts his ballot in Tuesday's Ohio primaries. Returns gave him a victory over Republican hopeful Harold Stassen, though not as large as he had predicted. POLISH THOSE AGATES! Young Marble Expert Gains Repeat Win in Local Tourney Wilson Cites Bone Graftiu g Poitenfti ihi Hi' Refrigerated Bones Will KeepSix Months New uses for bone grafts have been developed with refrigerated bone, according to Dr. Philip Dun- can Wilson, clinical professor of orthopedic surgery, College of. Physicians and Surgeons, Colum- bia University. "Bone banks can be established in much the same way as blood or eye banks," the doctor said. "Bone can be kept in storage for as long as six months. It behaves just as well as fresh bone taken from the patient's own body." Fractures that fail to heal are treated with refrigerated bone, Dr. Wilson pointed out. A new proce- dure called a sleeve graph has been developed in which a hollow bone graft is slipped over two ends of bone that otherwise would not come together. Something which has not been attempted before is to replace a whole bone of a finger with an identical one from the bone bank," he said. "This allows normal fin- ger function to be restored." "Not many of the cells of this refrigerated bone are alive-but neither are the cells alive when we transplant bone from the pa- tient's own body," he explained. "This bone merely serves as a framework for the construction of new bone. The refrigerated bone is gradually absorbed and replaced by living bone." Dr. Wilson pointed out that bigger sources of bone are needed. Occasionally they can be taken from amputated limbs, but the supply is small, since so many amputations are done for condi- tions that make it unsafe to use the bone. Philosophers Give Students a IBreak If you're majoring in philosophy or taking any courses in that sub- ject, you're probably enjoying an unexpected vacation from class this week. The mass migration of philoso- phy professors to Chicago for the midwest conference of the Ameri- can Association of Philosophers has left i their unhappy students with "time on their hands." Some fortunate students will have no classes from today until Monday, as a result of the exodus. Naturally, they all plan to spend their time studying for their phil- osophy finals. ORCHIDS TO EUSTICE: Old Bones Show Life When Glee Club Skeleton Performs fBy HAROLD JACKSON, Jr. A young man named Eustice is an intricate part of the Uni- versity Men's Glee Club - but he doesn't sing, he rattles. While none could say Eustice will be alive and kicking when the Glee Club begins its Annual Spring Concert at 8:15 p.m. Saturday in Enlgish Author To Speak Today Stephen Spender. English poet and critic, will lecture on "Mod- ern Poetry in the Modern World" at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Spender has written several vol- umes of poetry, a tragedy and a novel. Before coming to this coun- try last year, he was active in UNESCO. His most recent volume of poetry. "Poems of Dedication," has just been published. Typing Class The first session of a new course for beginning typists will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. today in Rm. 276 of the Business Administra- tion Building. Hill Auditorium, Without him, their colorful rendition of Fred Waring's "Dry Bones" would fall flat. Rattling Since Autumn The 7-year-old skeleton is the property of Bill Jensen, a med student who sings bass in the Club. Eustice has been demon- strating how "yer hip bone con- nected to yer ankle bone" since the Club was reorganized under Prof. Duey last fall. A regular member of the Club, Eustice makes all the trips and, according to Prof. Duey, does his part to keep food bills down. Dur- ing the recent Eastern trip, Eus- tice hung out the bus window and rattled right down Broadway Aye- nue in New York. Encore, Cherie In Saturday's concert, which will be the same presented during the Eastern Tour, Eustice will ap- pear at the end of the formal part of the program if the audience de- mands an encore. In addition to singing "Dry Bones," the Club will also present Fred Waring's "Battle Hymn of the Republic" as part of its hour and a half admission free concert. '! r 4 I U, WASHDAY ECONOMY Starts Here! Gangling, twelve-year-old Craig Smith smashed his way through is second consecutive Ann Ar- or Marble Championship yester- ay and is on the victory road that anded him fourth place in Michi- an last year. Craig, who is a seventh grader t the Tappan School, polished off hree opponents in the semi-fnals end finals 7-5, 7-1 and then rushed the runner-up 7-0, in Yost Meld House. The other four, who ire the champion agate-exper'ts or their respective schools, are ewis Lewig, Mach; Ralph Martin, Campus. Calendar Jones; Bob Trebicock, Eberbach; and Elmer Rush, Angell. Best in District The dusty knuckles of the Champ will square off at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Field House when the sponsors, Graf-O'Hara Post 423 VFW, will bring together the best marble shots from eight coun- ties for the district playoffs. Craig won this match too last year. "I was lucky. There'll probably be a lot of competition this year," he said. Smith practices and plays about three hours every day and admits a deep affection for the game of marbles which started as soon as he was old enough to grab a marble and snip it. National Awards Scholarship This year, if he weathers the state meet, there is the National Marbles Championship in Kansas City. The winner receives a $2,000 college scholarship. According to VFW game rules, the contestants take their places around a six-foot circle and blast away at the 13 "blackies" in the center. The winner must knock out seven, but on the last one, both the marble and the shooter must go out of the ring. 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DAMP DRY approximately 9 lbs. 30c SOAP IS FREE OUR PLUS SERVICES' EXTRACTION ONLY ready to iron without sprinkling 9 lbs. 10c COMPLETELY DRY Ready to fold and put away 9 lbs. 25c Hours- B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Dr. Valerie Juracsek, will speak on the "Emotional Aspects of Marriage" 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. Senior Ball Publicity Commit- tee: Meeting 7 p.m. today, Garden Room of the League. Wyvern: Meeting 5 p.m. today, League Chapel. 'Lecture: Stephen Spender will speak on "Modern Poetry in the Modern World," 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Bureau of Student Opinion: Se- lected students who have not been interviewed may still be quizzed between 1:30 and 5:30 p.m. and between 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. to- day in Rm. 5, Tappan Hall. Jourhalism Students: Fred Ellis, classified manager of the Ann Ar- bor News, will discuss classified advertising at 2 p.m. today, Rm. E, Haven Hall. Young Democrats -7:30 p.m., Union; report on recent Demo- cratic State Convention. 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