THE MICHIGAN DAILY ____________________________________________________ 1 EWERYONE INVITED: Revived Fraternity Week To Feature Panel 'Talks Four activity-packed days will mark the first post war revival of the all-campus. Fraternity Week next Tuesday through Friday. Sponsored by the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic As- sociation, Fraternity Week is pri- marily designed to further a bet- ter understanding of the problems and functions of affiliated groups. EXCLUDING THE House Presi- dent's Dinner Thursday evening, the week's social events will be op- en to the public, and all interested parties, affiliated and unaffiliated, are urged to attend by Chairman Bob Vogt. The kickoff meeting - with talks based on the general theme of Fraternity Week - will be held at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Rack- ham Building. Miss Audrey Wilder, Dean of Women of Albion College, Mrs. U niersit Offers Rare Book Course Among the variety of courses that the University Extension Ser- vice offers is one in rare book col- lecting. Colton Storm, who is at present teaching the extension service course in rare books here in Ann Arbor, defines. a rare book as one that is important, desirable, and hard-to-'get. His course is de- signed to get the aspiring collector off on the right foot. * * * "AND FOR the person who does get started in a collection of his own, what at first glance seems to be nothing more than a time- consuming hobby quite often de- velops into a fascinating game," said Storm. "It seems," said Storm, "that people derive much pleasure in knowing that they own a book which was originally handled by the author himself, or per- haps even read by his close friends before its publication." For the person just beginning a collection, Storm suggests that he start with a particular subject, preferably one with which he is already quite familiar. "IF A PERSON decides to make gis. subject for collection the same as The field in which he is oc- cupied, his hobby could very well become a valuable business as- set," added Storm. ' Groups, Trio To Spark Dance Festival Campus modern dance fans will have a chance to see the latest form of choregraphic art at the first Dance Festival to be held May 19 and 20.1 T h e Dudley - Maslow - Bales Dance Trio from the New Dance Group in New York will spark the Saturday performance, while the Friday night show will bill the Ballet and Modern Dance Clubs in a combined program. USING FOLK DANCES as the basis for their productions, the New Dance Group has become one of the leaders in the field of Mo- dern dance, according to Margaret Lloyd, writer of the Borzoi Book of Dance. Sophie Maslow, Jane Dudley and William Bales are three of the brightest lights of the com- pany. After turning impresario in 1942, the Trio toured the country and received rave re- vues in papers from New York to New Orleans for their fas- cinating dance interpretations of the social issues of the day. The other half of the twin bill, the Bullet and Modern Dance Club were reactivated after the war by Prof. Juana de Laban. Suffering from the redirection of peoples' activities during the per- iod of combat, they had become extremely inactive. The Festival is being sponsored by Inter-Arts Union, and tickets for both performances will go on sale next week, according to Don Harris, '52SM, publicity chairman for the group. Russel Strickland, chairman of the Delta Gamma National Pro- ject Committee and Dean Ray Warnock, vice-chairman of the National IFC will be the speakers. Jake Jacobson, outgoing IFC president will moderate. A PANEL discussion on the "Function of Affiliated Groups at Michigan" will take place at 3:15 p.m. Wednesday in the Union. Speakers on the panel will be Dean Walter Rea, Dean Ray Warnock, Prof. Edward Ham, Jake Jacobson, outgoing Panhel President Betty Jo Faulk, Jim Gregory, Theta Delta Chi, and Marge Flint, Alpha Phi. The mo- derator will be John Ryder, Del- ta Tau Delta. Wednesday evening the 12th an- nual IFC Sing will move into the limelight in Hill Auditorium. Ten houses, winners of the preliminar- ies, will compete for the coveted trophies given the top three groups. A SECOND panel discussion - "The Relationship of Affiliated Groups to the Administration and Alumni" is scheduled for 3:15 p.m. Thursday at the Union. Participating in the panel will be Dean Charles H. Peake of the Literary College, John P. Gwin of the Office of Student Affairs, T. Hawley Tapping, General Secretary ofkthe Alumni Asso- ciation, Dick Morrison, Delta Tau Delta, Mary Riggs, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Jim Smith, Chi Psi and Quent Nesbitt, Phi Kap- pa Tau. Fraternity Week will come to an official close with the IFC Ball Friday evening. Individual house parties, however, are expected to continue the observance over the weekend. Tempest' Troupe Due HereToday Arrival of a troupe of actors in- cluding such well-known Broad- way stars as Vera Zorina and Ar- nold Moss in Ann Arbor today will be the first step toward the pro- duction of William Shakespeare's "The Tempest," opening here May 15. "The Tempest," which deals with a strange island, a banished duke, magic and shipwrecks, is scheduled for a four-night run. It will be the first production of this year's Ann Arbor Drama Season. * * * VERA ZORINA and Arnold Moss, co-stars of the production will be met at Willow Run Air- port by members of the Drama Season. In the production here they will play the roles of Ariel and Prospero which they perform- ed with considerable success in 1945 on Broadway. John Alexander, the Caliban of the play, will arrive with his wife by automobile from New York, while John Macaulay, Jon Dawson, Truman Smith, and Wallace Acton will arrive by train. REHEARSALS FOR Shakes- peare's "The Tempest" will begin tomorrow under the direction of Valentine Windt who is the di- rector for the whole season. Windt's job is to coordinate actors, music, dance sets and costumes to present a polished performance at 8:30 p.m. May 15-opening night at Lydia Mendelssohn for the play. Robert Mellencamp will be in charge of sets, Emma Mellencamp costumiere and the University Lit- tle Symphony directed by Wayne Dunlap will play for the perform- ances. PDCTURE NEWS ASSOCIATED PRESS A :, T E X A S S A P - C A T H E R E R-Rosemary De linger, of Tyler, Tex., gathers sap in the Middlebury College, Vt., maple grove for the annual student maple "sugaring-off" party. E X C H A N C E S T U D E N T S - Women's RAF members arrive in New York on the Queen Elizabeth to study at U. S. air fields under an exchange agreement. Left to right: Flight Officer Joyce Borlase, going to Lackland Air Base, San Antonio, Tex.; Squadron Officer Mary Goodworth, to Wash. lngton; F. O. Gillian Campion, to Scott Field, Ill.; and F. O. Audrey Penfold, to Mitchel Field, N. Y., A4 1, i I Ir with DOLORES LASCHEVER I, 11 !k Lik the ties a man wears or the Heatter is particularly noted for K places that he frequents the styles of the various radio commentators are distinctly personal. They identify the men as much as their voices, as readily as the products their sponsors advertise. * * * TAKE LOWELL THOMAS for example. His affable "Good eve- ning, everybody," and his optimis- tic "So long until tomorrow," are trademarks. But so are his short clipped sentences, his phrases - set off by periods-that aren't even sentences and his transitional phrases between stories more of- ten thanwnot merely a conversa- tional "Well." He also uses a particular kind of story and treatment. It's a drama- tic treatment, a featurizing style which often brightens up a dull story. * * * THEN THERE'S Gabriel Heat- ter, the traditional "Voice of Doom" of the American people. Invariably he begins his com- mentaries with the well-known "There's bad (or good, as the case may be) news tonight" and proceeds to give his listeners the implications of the day's hap- penings. his dramatics, for his emotional vocabulary which leave his listen- ers with a feeling of inevitable damnation. He does make them think, however, although it may not be about what he intended. * * * "THIS . . IS THE, NEWS" is Edward R. Murrow's identification mark. But he is equally known for the obvious sincerity in his pre- sentation. He, too, uses short clipped sentences. But, whereas Thom- as's broadcasts are a buddy- to-buddy sort of thing, Murrow's sentences.have impact, sharp and piercing. He gives the f eel- ing that he cares intensely, but it's not an emotional kind of intenseness like Gabriel Heat- ter's. FULTON LEWIS, JR., doesn't use transitions between stories. He merely pauses for an instant, as if to take a deep breath and hold his nose before he dives into the next story. His peculiarities of presentation can probably best be summed up by a phrase which belongs to him alone: "Now, you know I don't like to delve into personalities, but...." MISS SPRING FEVER- Got high blood pressure arvd a light- headed feeling? Chancesware it's spring fever, the same way you'll feel when you look at Anne Fran- cis, NBC radio and television star, who has been crowned "Miss Spring Fever" by the Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association. S H A K E R S H O W - Mrs. John Hopkins, of Atlanta, Ga., holds salt and pepper shakers from Germany'and Okinawa, part of her seven-year collection from 48 states and foreign countries. IN TRAIN INC-Joan KANSAS REUNION Harrison, South African swim- - Gillian Cockburn hugs doll Wing champion, climbs out of after Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thomnp- the Olympic Pool in Aucklaid, son rode 400 miles to' Kansas New' Zealand, while training for City, Kans., to return it from Empire games scheduled there, tourist camp where she left .it. Be Wis -Cottonize I at A A A PA INTER TURN S TO C E R AM I C S -Guy Resse, one-time painter, one of the 450 new ceramic artists in Paris. works on a vase using his wife as a model in their studio apartment. SUBMARINE ESCAPE S UIT - Anew inflated submarine escape suit worn by a British Navy man at Portsmouth, England, holds a bulb which lights when immersed in salt water. Dress?? Cousins? IT'S A PLEASURE TOBE "Yes!" I I - ~ ~ ' v: i ..