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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

June 02, 1950 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1950-06-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

- FE.IDAt, 1~ *, iBS4I

1~

I ______________________________U ______________________________

Shaw's, Play'
Will Feature
All-Star Cast
The Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
will become the scene of national
interest to the theatre world when
George Bernard Shaw's "Getting
Married" plays a one week stand
here beginning June 12.
After the last performance for
the Drama Season, the entire pro-
duction will depart on a national
road tour which will include many
midwestern cities and the west
coast.
Sometime next fall the show will
settle down for a Broadway run
in the newly established American
National Theatre Academy play-
house.
Cedric Hardwicke, Mady Christ-
ians, Dennis King, Judith Evelyn,
Arthur Treacher, Ralph Forbes,
John Buckmaster, Colin Keith-
Johnston, Margaret Bannerman,
and Dora Sayers are included in
the all-star production.
The play will be directed by
Hardwicke, who has just com-
pleted starring and directing in
another Shaw revival, "Caesar and
Cleopatra," for the Broadway
theatre.
Tickets for "Getting Married"
and the musical drama, "The
Barrier," which will open a six-
night run Monday at Lydia Men-
delssohn, are on sale at the
theatre box ofice.

GRIEF STRICKEN:
MSC 'Spartan' To Hold
Last Rites forGargovle

Now that Garg is down for the
count, the Spartan is going to
tramp on him.
Michigan State's humor maga-
zine, grown bold on hearing of
Gargoyle's recent demise, is invad-
ing this campus to hold funeral
services for the little horned de-
mon at noon today in front of the
General Library.
The Happy Spartan Mortuary
Service will arrive shortly before
noon, complete with hearse and
funeral procession, according to
Dick Smith, the magazine's busi-
ness manager.
"We are really stricken with
grief at this bereavement to the
student body of the University of
Michigan," Smith murmured, "and
we can only hope that we can in
Textbooks Needed
The campus-wide drive for
books for the Textbook Lending
Library will begin on June 5 and
continue until June 15.
Receptacles will be placed in
student residences for the collec-
tion of any 'type of college text-
book, whether in current use or
obsolete.
The Textbook Lending Library,
located in Angel Hall study hall,
loans textbooks to students whose
financial situation indicates that
they are in need of such a loan.

some way relieve the tears of your
mighty institution."
Despite the burial plans there
is some doubt on campus as to
whether Garg is actually dead.
Although the Board in Control
of Student Publications recently
discontinued publication of the
humor magazine, a group of stu-
dents plan to publish Gargoyle un-
officially next fall. They hope
eventually to get the magazine
back under the Board in Control.

Photogs

DAILY
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
(Continued on Page 5)
Chandler, 1025 AH; Cherniak, 1209
AH; Cook, 102 Ec; Coyle, 1025 AH;
Culbert, 2203 AH; Donaldson, 3017
AH; Edwards, 2013 AH; E. Engel,
2003 AH; Everett, 212 AH; Fel-
heim, 1025 AA; Goodman, 3017
AH; Gross, 215 Ec; Hampton, 205
MH; Hendricks, 101 Ec; Hend-
ricks, 2016 AH; Hill, 225 AH; How-
ard, 1018 AH; M. Kelley, 4003 AH;
J. Kelly, 4203 AH; Klomp, 231 AH;
Lamberts, 205 MH; Maloff, 2231
AH; Marshall, 205 MH; McCue,
231 AH; McLeod, 2225 AH; J. Mil-
ler, 2014 AH; P. Miller, 2 Ec;
Moon, 2 Ec; Newman, 3017 AH;
Orel, 215 Ec; Paterson, 4208 AH;
Robertson, 231 AH; Rogers, 3010
AH; Ross, 202 SW; Savage, 2215
AH; Weaver, 2003 AH; Shedd, 22-
25 AH; Simpson, 225 AH; Slatoff,
1025 AH; Slote, 1007 AH; Earl
Smith, 209 AH; Edgar Smith, 101
Ec; Sparrow, 2219 AH; Speckard,
3231 AH; Van Syoc, 229 AH; Walt,
18 AH; Walton, 102 Ec; Weimer,
2225 AH; Whan, 200 SW.
Make-up Examination for both
English 1 and 2:
Mon., June 12, 7-10 in 2225 AH
Doctoral Examination for Shih-
Hua Tsao, Mathematics; thesis:
"On Groups of Order g-p2g' ", Fri.,
June 2, 3006 Angell Hall, 2 p.m.
Chairman, R. Brauer.
Doctoral Examination for Mi
Lee, Electrical Engineering; the-
sis: "The Electromagnetic Fields
generated in Rectangular Cavities
and Wave Guides by Various Types
of Sources", Fri., June 2, 2514 E.

Engineering Bldg., 2 p.m. Chair-
man, S. S. Attwood.
Doctoral Examination for Mil-
ton Charles George, Geography;
thesis: "The Settlement of the
Connecticut Western Reserve of
Ohio", Tues., June 6, 210 Angell
Hall, 3 p.m. Chairman, S. D.
Dodge.
Doctoral Examination for Geo-
rge Clifford Ackerlund, Education;
thesis: "Federal Attitudes Toward
Public Support of Sectarian Edu-

s

cation," Mon., June 5, 1433 Uni-
versity Elementary School, 3 p.m.
Chairman, J. B. Edmonson.
Summer School Juniors, Seniors,
and N.C.F.D.'s in the College of
Literature, Science, and the Arts:
Students enrolling in Summer
Session ,who have not had their
elections approved, must report to
1025 Angell Hall one-half day be-
fore they are scheduled to register.
Advisers' hours during registration
are as follows:
(Continued on Page 7)

r

WA

A "MUST" FOR EVERY MICHIGAN
STUDENT AND GRADUATE
THE
MIChIGATN
SOArN G BOO ""K
Containing words and music of The Victors,
Varsity, Yellow and Blue, Friars Song,
When Night Falls, and
all the other Michigan favorites.

A'

LAW - MEDICAL - PUBLIC HEALTH

-Im-ift
its

l0

:S

and SUPPLIES

04ly

1.75

At the

Overbeck Bookstore

- I

1216 South University Ave.

205 East Liberty
Operated by

Phone 2-0675
for Music-Lovers

Musicians

i

CASH
FOR YOUR USED BOOKS
Ulrich's

!I

Ann Arbor's Busy

Book Store

mmwm

S en tori
o Take a bit of
MICHIGAN
U with you!
THOUSANDS of Michigan Graduates are proudly wearing the °
OFFICIAL Michigan ring. It instantly identifies them as gradu-
ates of a great University.
WE HAVE THEM IN STOCK for immediate delivery. Your initials 0
o and last name are beautifully engraved with our compliments,
and we guarantee the quality and fit.o
STOP IN and try yours on today. There is no obligation; but if you
do decide that you must have one, a very small deposit will hold
your selection.C
DON'T DELAY-quantities and sizes are limited.
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
1319 S. University Tom and Meredith Suckling
CSU =04=<-0 =>l=om Os O G=<=>O=<- Y 04=< !o<==>O =

GOING TO GRADUATE?
T o THOSE 4,645 STUDENTS who are scheduled to complete academic work leading to a
degree within the next fortnight, the Alumni Association offers sincere congratulations and
a hearty welcome to the Michigan alumni body now numbering-more than 150,000.
You are cordially invited to join your fellow-alumni in the many and varied activities under-
taken by Michigan groups throughout the world.
For almost all of you-wherever you may choose to em-

V

THE BIRDIE TURNS - The
1950 Ensian photography staff
smiles for colleague, Ed Kozma,
who shot the picture. Top to
bottom, Herb Harrington, Ralph
Clark, Alan Reid, Burt Sapo-
witch, Pete Mann, Carlisle Mar-
shall, Wally Barth, Bud Rauner,
Barnie Laschever, Hank Tyson
and Alex Lmanian.

ONE PART OF
THE MICHIGAN CREED
WE BELIEVE that the student
should be trained as an Alumnus
from matriculation; hesenrolls in the
University for life and for better or
worse he will always remain an inte-
gral part of the institution.
WE BELIEVE that the relations be-
tween the alumnus and his Uni-
versity should be beneficial to both,
and that the mutual assistance pro-
vided by the graduates and by the
institution should be limited only by
their powers for service.
WE BELIEVE that to the person
who has obtained what he should
from his alma mater, Michigan is the
actual expression of a practical ideal-
ism-government, religion, and state
supported education being insepar-
able-; and
E BELIEVE that to the University
the alumnus is a member of a
brotherhood bound by the spiritual
tie, of faith in the ideals of education.
-Alexander G. Ruthven

bark upon your life's work-there is a University of
Michigan Club nearby. In more than 270 cities and
communities alumni and alumnae of the University have
formed into active organizations and stand ready to offer
you warm welcome and a friendly hand of assistance.

,A-

ol

An opportunity for you to keep posted on the ever-ex-
panding activities of the University, on Varsity athletics,
and on the achievements of Michigan men and women
throughout the world is yours for the asking, also.
For just $2.00-half the regular subscription rate-
graduating Seniors can assure themselves of a regular
message from their Alma Mater, edited especially for
their alumni interests, in the 900 annual pages of THE

i

4'

I

MICHIGAN ALUMNUS magazine.
The Alumni Association, official spokesman for the 130,000 graduates and former students of
the University, invites you to drop into its offices in Alumni Memorial Hall before you depart
from Ann Arbor. It will be a pleasure to furnish you with the names and addresses of the offi-
cers of the University of Michigan Club in your new vicinity.

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