sLr THE MICHIGAN DA ILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1951 AL RUN SOON: Load Shows Will Give b'ikado' Group Polish in the Gilbert and Sullivan e~a ro~n. mahna in ty bits the Pattengill Audi- m stage next week with their iction of "The Mikado," II be brimming with exPeri- that doesn't come from or- .y rehearsals. get that bit of extra work ti makes for a polished pro- .on, the cast is performing show before the Hillsdale riber of Commerce Friday, in Detroit's Rackham Audi- m Saturday, and should be neat shape for the local run tor James Ueberhcordin. * *-* HE MIKADO" concerns the irous adventures of Nanki- the son of the Japanese em- r~, who runs away from a a marriage to an elderly spin- mial Schoolh riniversary > Be Marked ['he School of Dentistry will .rk its 75th Anniversary and mnecoming Celebration tomor- v with a day long program fea- 'ing speakers, luncheons and iferences. L'he program will open at 9:30 ri. sit Rackham Lecture Hall ~h addresses on the develop- nt of dentistry and on the hool of Dentistry by Deans leritus Marcus L. Ward and ~ssell W. Bunting. * * * FOMORROW morning's pro- im will also include an address Prof. Arthur B. Gable of the dversity of Pennsylvania on he Future Outlook of the Air- asive Technic on the Practice Dentistry." Dr. Francis A. Arnold, Jr., As- >ciate Director of the National ristitute for Dental Research a Washington will conclude ie morning program with an ddress on "The Present Status !' the Water-Fluoridation Stu- les." rhe Dentistry Homecoming will ntinue with a luncheon at 12:15 n. at the Urgion. At this meet- - President Alexander G. Ruth- n and Provost James P. Adams 11 make addresses. Also histori- I pictures of the School of Den- try will be shown. Roberto de la Rosa, Cultural ~nt wil be the luncheon's fea ced speakers He will speak on e subject, "The Other Amern- a Way of Life." At 3 p.m. the Homecoming cele- ation will move to the dentistry ilding for group conferences. There will be a program for wo- m at the Homecoming begin- ig with a luncheon at 12:15 p.- at the League and continuing the errant son and Mary Jo Jones will play Yuxn-Yum, the pretty school-girl who attracts the regal eye of roving Nanki-Poo. Also cast are James Fudge as Ko-Ko, David Murray as Pooh- Balh, Vivien Milan as Pitti-Sing, Donald Stout as Fish-Tush, Barbara Johnson as Beep-Bo, Frances Morse as Katisha, and David Tolan as the Mikado. A chorus of 30 and a 25 piece orchestra under the direction of William Boyer will add volume to such favorites as "Flowers That Bloom In The Spring" and "Three Little Maids From School" for which the show is well-known. As an added attraction, a cur- tain-raiser by Sullivan and Bun- nand entitled "Cox and Box" will precede the major presentation. It is a farce concerning a shyster landlord who trys to rent the same room to a man working nights and one working days. wily landlod and Fank Pornreta and Jim Ensign are the lodgers. Tickets for the performances are on sale daily from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Administration Bldlg. A special student rate of 90 cents for all seats has been estab- lished for Thursday's pe'rform- ance. Friday and Saturday tickets will be 90 cents and $1.20. Events Today ELECTION - Senior education school students may vote for class officers from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the first floor of University Ele- mentary School. DISCUSSION -- The UNESCO Council will sponsor a discussion on "Ghandi and Non-Violence" at 7:30 p.m. in the International Cen-. ter./ Participants will include DeWitt C. Baldwin, director of thie Stu.- dent Religious Association, and two students from India, Naya Deb and Hiru Shah, Grad. Coining Events LECTURE-Prof. Albert P. Lu- per, of the University of Iowa, will speak on "Portugese Music" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Rackhamn Amphitheatre. BLOODMOBIL - A Red Cross "bloodmobile" will be here from noon until 2 p.m. Friday in front of the Women's Athletic Bldg., to accept donations to the Red Cross bloodbank, LECTURE--Vera Brown, De- troit Times columnist, will speak at the luncheon meeting of the twenty-fourth annual Michigan Interscholasti Press Association To Launch 'U' NA ACP Walter White, executive secre- tary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, will speak at 1 p.m. Friday in Kellogg Auditorium to launch a membership campaign for the newly-formed campus chapter of the NAACP. The chapter's application for University recognition was passed yesterday by the Student Aff airs Committee. This is the first timne the NAACP has had a chapter on this campus. "One of the main reasons we decided to form a local chapter was to provide a centralizing ele- ment for student interest in prob- lems of discriminations and to handle racial problems," Edward Dawley '52L, president of the new chapter said. "The NAACP has developed workable methods of combating racial problems, and this chaptei- will give students a chance to par- ticipate in campus problems and to gain practice for problems in later life.", Walter Clements, '52L, t h e group's temporary secretary, said the heads of all major campus or- ganizations have received invita- tions to join the NAACP member- ship committee. The NAACP is the largest na- tional civil rights organization. It has had such famous members as Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Ralph Bunch, Harold Ickes and Walter Reuther. White will be honored at a luncheon in the League prior to Friday's meeting. To Make T or Of AirBases The Men's Glee. Club will take an extended tour of Air Force bases in the West and Midwest during the next two months. The first tour will include two concerts at Scott Air Force Base, Ill., May 26 and 27. Two C-57's from the Base are scheduled to pick up- the men at Willow Run and bring them back the next day in plenty of time for Monday classes. A more extensive tour of Air Bases in Kansas, Oklahoma, Tex- as, Colorado and Wyoming have been tentatively scheduled for eecting to be drafted immdi- ately after commencement are hoping for special permission to make the tour. Proposals for such a tour were first made by two Air Force ma- jors after bearing the Glee Club perform in St. Louis during their Spring tour. All expenses are be- ing paid by the Air Force. Clu will present it annua spring Hill Auditorium. This perform- ance, being given in honor of Mo- ther's Day, is open to the public free of charge. Theatre Club Will The Arts Theatre Club will per- form as its final offering of the season Jean Racine's tragedy "Phaedra," beginning Friday and continuig nightly except Mondays The play is based on Euripides' "Hippolytus" and concerns Phae- dra, wife of Theseus, who falls in love with her step-son Hippolytus and having achieved his downfall after he resists her advances, kills herself in remorse. Tag Day A tag today means a good time this summer for 225 Michigan boys of all races and creeds. The University's Fresh Air Camp, partly run by student contribu- tions, is a unit of the Institute for Human Adjustment designed to put underprivileged children's feet on the ground and give them two months of varied recreational activities. THE BOYS, whose ages. range from$ 8 to 14, are not all from lower economic groups. However, half of them live with one parent Set * * * * at 4 ~z~K - or none. All are referred to the camn by a social agency. The camp is under the direction of Prof. William C. Morse of the education school and is staffed by University teachers, camping specialists and counselors. Eight boys live together with a counselor in ek.ch cabin. The majority of the counselors are University graduate students in the education school and the sociology and psychology departments. * * * * THE CAMP is located 24 miles northwest of Ann Arbor on Pat- terson Lake, one of a chain of 7 small lakes near Pinckney. Property comprises about 300 acres of for-4> * * * est adjacent to a 1400-acre wild "'- life preserve and near the 100,000- acre state-owned Waterloo Recre- ~ ational Pr'oject. - Annual Fund Canmpus Groups Await Turnout Today is Tag Day. bStudent vrolunters wil an area to collect an expected $4,000 from students and additional funds from faculty and other Ann Arbor residents for the University's Freshi Air Camp for underprivileged chil- dren. MONEY collected will be used to defray about one-third of the camp's operational costs. Chsarity funds are allocated to paying for food, equipment and some staff salaries. Campus groups promotig Tag Day include the Student Legis- lature, the Union, the League, the Inter-Fraternity Council, Panhellenic, the Association of Indepen Ient Men, Assembly and Alpha Phi Omega, service fra- ternity. They hope to help boost student contributions up to the $4,000 quota. The campus has not met its quota since 1948. In 1949, student gifts ran $1,500 short of the $5,000 mark which was lowered the fol- lowing year. Last year, the goal was missed by a small margin but tow contributions from other Mich- igan citizens chopped the budget considerably. ** * BULK OF the camp's- financial needs is met by t11e University Summer Session and the Institute for Human Adjustment. Other large sums are donated by indi- vidual faculty members and Ann Arbor and Detroit citizens. Students have traditionally outshone all other groups in supplying money for the rela- tively smnall budget requirement fed by donations. No alumni group9s have contributed since Gifts from students and faculty members are used for food, plant maintenance, camping equipment, craft materials and personnel for medical service and cooking. Coun- srs are provmie foranyethe Sum mer Session while costs for gen- eral administration and research are met by the Institute. I.. BUCKET BRIGADE-This is one of the scores of student volun- teers who will man Tag Day buckets today. * * * * * * Activities include traditional camp pastimes such as swim- ming, games, overnight hikes, crafts, movies and boating. A work 'program is also provided for campers. Social agencies relate confiden- tial data to the camp concerning their charges. In turn, camp spe- cialists return a study of the boy to the agency including a daily log of his behavior and an analysis of his cabin group. . . The camp, entering its 31st year of operation, June 18, is believed to be the first of its kind in the country. Its main purpose is to help what jagencies call "in-be- tweens"--boys whose difficulties may later lead to delinquencies if not alleviated before maturity, functiondsas a workshop inhuma behavior for students interested In the welfare and adjustment of children. 2- FRESH AIR CAMPERS-Underprivileged children at the University's Fresh Air Camnp line up for a group portrait. More than 200 of these youngsters will attend the camp for two months this sum- mer. The camp, soon to be in operation for the 31st year, is designed primariy for the boys' recrea- tion, secondly, as a workshop in huinan behavior for University students. * I HENRY H. STEVENS, Inc. LONG ~ DISTANCE ~~~>;: *::4~~.~A MOVING ~ ,'...~ .......................... 4 ____________________ 4~.A.. >~V~ 1273 Broadway Phone Flint Collect 4-1684 Interstater Rati Flint, Michigan is. Stevens Lit. '40 Mona gor L IK E TH OU SA N DS O F A ME R ICA'S S TU DE NTS- M A KE T HIS MIL DN ESS T EST YOU R SE LF A ND GE T W H AT EV E RY SMOK ER WA NTS PHOTOS TAKEN CLA~ HAV S~AN~O- ' I. We own, operate and schedule our own fleet of vans for direct service without transfer. [I P REVIEW... 'As the season for America's annual music festivals draws near, and the programs and performing artists are announced, many interested and concerned persons throughout the country feel compelled, in 1951 as in former years, to raise their voices in protest. The protest is, of course, not against the American music festival as an institution, but rather against its failure to be what it prhtends to be; it is a protest largely earnest, valid and therefore justified.