THE MICRIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1951 U PIPE-PUFFING WALSH LEAVES: Ten-Election Winner Quits'U' Spotlight Cast of Drama Festival Gets Additional Players LOOK and LISTEN ... with HARRY REED 0 a-- a 4 An impressive list of supporting players has been added to the casts for the Ann Arbor Drama Season's five plays. Philip Tonge, Noel Leslie, Royal Beal, Norman Shelly and Jon Dawson will appear in "Captain Brassbound's Conversion" which will initiate the season's run Tues- day. Stars of this play are Edna Best and John Archer. TONGE WHO will appear in all the productions, and Dawson have both been members of the resident company of the Drama Season for Peace Treaty To Be Subject Of TV Hour -Daily-Malcolm Shatz THOMAS "PERENNIAL PIPE" WALSH1 * * * * * * new organizations with discrim- inatory clauses in their, constitu- tions, was adopted almost unani- mously by delegates from 350 member schools. Other projects where the fa- mous Walsh pipe has fumed are: Democratic state conventions; the Crusade for Freedom; the Case Club, where he has been a senior judge; the Jefferson- Jackson Day dinners; and the faculty grading program. Wash began cutting down on campus activities last fall "to tie up a few loose ends in Law School" but retained his place in the lime- light by continuing to "take out my frustrated journalism on the readers of The Daily letters col- umn" and retaining his seat on the SL. As a convincing and lucid letter- writer he gained many readers, but it was on the floor of the SL that he earned the highest respect of his fellow students. Presenting an average of two motions per meeting over a five year period, he was well-known for his painstak- ing, legalistic orations. Fellow legislators recall the time when Walsh was required to give his name at the beginning of a term on the legislature, concurred and somebody piped up: "That's the shortest speech Walsh ever made." Last Generation of Semester To Be Larger, Emphasize Art Japan and the forthcoming peace treaty will be the subject of Telecourse Four, "Lands and Peo- ples of the Far East" on the Uni- versity's television hour at 1 p.m. today over WWJ-TV. Robert Ward of the political science department, who recent- ly rettrned from Japan, will dis- cuss the subject. Women's athletic activities will be featured on the campus tele- tour. Prof. Margaret Bell of the phy- sical education department and Marie Hartwig, physical education supervisor, will discuss the Wo- men's Athletic Association with Marilyn Thisted, '51, and Abby Funk, '52, student officers of the association. Films of various women's athle- tic clubs will be shown. On telecourse six, "Retailing and the Customer," lesson four, "Salesmanship" will be presented, and skits will illustrate various selling situations. ICampus Calendar Coming Events PROF. FRANK BEACH of Yale University will give a lecture un der the auspices of the psychology department entitled "Physiologi- cal Control of Reproductive Be- havior" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Kellogg Auditorium. PROF. T. K. COWDEN, head of the Department of Agricultural Economics at Michigan State College, will speak on "Agricul- tural Programs and Problems," at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphitheatre. THE PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY will feature Dr. Charles Newton as guest speaker at their next meet- ing at 7:30 Wed., May 16, in Rm. 1400, Chemistry Bldg. An Ann Arbor physician, Dr. Newton will speak on aspects of a private practice. An informal discussion will follow the talk. Deadline Extended The Union has extended the deadline for fall semester orienta- tion leader applications to noon tomorrow. Students interested can get ap- plications in the Union's student offices. several years, and are currently appearing in the famous ANTA Album in New York. Beal, a veteran actor of both the stage and screen, has been in the road company of "Death of a Salesman" for the past two years. Leslie first appeared in Ann Arbor with the Ben Great Players in 1913 and since then has worked both as a . director and actor in innumerable pro- ductions here. The cast of "Captain Brass- bound's Conversion" have been re- hearsing in Ann Arbor since Mon- day. I SCHEDULED TO arrive tomor- row are the players for the second production, "Ring Around the Moon," which stages Lucille Wat- son. Four actors who played in the New York presentation with Miss Watson will appear in the Drama Season production. They are Cynthia Latham, Betty Low, William Allyn and Neva Pat- terson. Also included in this cast will be Leslie, Boris Marshalov and Grace Kelly. . APPEARING WITH star Henry Daniell in "The Cocktail Party," will be Madeleine Clive, Edward Ashley, Miss Patterson and Pame- la Simpson. Miss Simpson ap- peared here last year in "The Win- slow Boy" with Basil Rathbone. Engaged for the last play -of the season is Whitford Kane, currently active as a television actor. Working with him will be Ray Boyle, Oliver Thorndike and Miss Simpson.hBethel Les- lie is the star of this show. Both season and single tickets are still available. The season ad- mittance will be sold through Fri- day. The costs are $12, $9.60, $7.20 and $4.80 for evenings and $7.20 and $4.80 for mtatinee per- formances. Single tickets are available for all performances for $3.00, $2.40, $1.80 and $1.20. All seats may be obtained at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office or by sending a mail order to the Ann Arbor Drama Season, in care of the League. Literary College Holds Final Talks The last Literary College Con- ference of the year will be held from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. Tuesday, in Rm. A-B of the League. Dean Hayword Keniston will' report to the students and faculty present on the results of the stu- dent faculty evaluations that were carried on last year. This will be the first open report made to the students concerning this informa- tion. He also will discuss the major and significant results and the present and future use of the eval- uation results. A period will follow his presen- tation for questions and sugges- tions. Alpha Delta Phi, the oldest col-" lege sorority in the world, will re- ceive tribute on Ronald Colman's "Halls of Ivy" show at 8 p.m. Wednesday over WWJ. Maxine Blake, the national president, will present Mrs. Col- man with an award for her por- trayal of the wife of a college president. The show itself has gathered enoukh awards to fill several columns. RALPH BUNCHE, UN official recently named as graduation speaker, will appear on Kate Smith's TV show Tuesday. The director of the department of Trusteeship will be interviewed by Ted Collins. * * * FOR A GOOD breakdown of what it takes to produce a TV show, the Look magazine now on the stands offers a good eye- opener. It shows that it takes 131 people 331 man hours to stage each "Fred Waring" show. This doesn't include 51 non- staff people, scenery builders, packers, seamstresses and truck- ers who put in another 144 man hours. All this for a production number averaging two minutes five sec- onds in time. It takes that much to make music look as good as it sounds. AN NBC RELEASE claims Bob Hope claims he recently visited a large army base in California where the GIs don't like to date the local 'girls. Seems the girls all work as lettuce pickers, and on dates all they do is feel the boys' heads to see if they'd fit into the A crates. NBC did not report any of the GIs''actions. Jane Morgan, "The Girl from Paris" according to her radio show title, comes from New England, naturally. If you can't pay a coach enough, get him a radio program and let him sound off there and earn some money to boot. Yale's Coach Herman Hickman, a 300 pound Phi Bete who talks like he just fell off a Tennessee mountain, is a good example of this. Between interviewing celebri- ties and spinning tales of the South, the chunky coach at OUR'WINDOW PANE CHECKED BLOUSE I., ,,, Generation will make its last appearance for the year on Wed- resday when the 96 page issue will be sold at various points on campus. The emphasis will be placed on art, and more people, including several new contributors, will be represented in this issue than in any previous one. Thirty pages will be devoted to a variety of art, 0IMPORTED ARTICLES CC INDIA ART SHOP 0 330 Maynard Street New Haven keeps up with sports in the off season. This year he's going to master-mind the East- ern All Stars gamde at Chicago this July. A RUMOR is making the rounds of radio columns, magazines, gag shows and other quiet sources that Groucho Marx has grown his own mustache and given his old greasepaint one the go by. This sounds like a great move, because millions of people might drop their teeth if they saw their comic idol nude on the upper lip region. No more falsies for Grou cho. and several pages will feature photography. 9* s HIGH SPOTS of the art sec- tion include a painting entitled "Indecision," by John Goodyear, '52 A, and "Head of a Woman" by Judy Feinberg, '53A. There also will be a double page spread showing sketches of the mural in: the Coffee Shop at the League, while a photograph of a sculp- ture by Hal McIntosh, '51A, will be a part of the photography sec- tion. A short story, "Mr. Thomason, The Barber," is the contribution of Jack Ferris, Grad., who receiv- ed a Hopwood award for it last summer. Dick Burgwyn, Grad., who has acted in many of the speech de- partment productions, has writ- ten an article, "Square Deal for the Circle," in reply to "Arena Theatre 1951" which appeared in the last issue. Featured poetry will include "Homage to Rose Se- lavie" and "Women" by Frank O'Hara, Grad. Read Daily Classifieds Han To Speak On Korea here Pyo Wook Han, First Secretary of the Korean Embassy in Wash- ington, will speak at 4:15 p.m. to- morrow in Architecture Auditor- ium. Han's address on "Korea Meets the Challenge of War" is spon- sored by the political science de- partment and will be open to the public. Born in Korea, the secretary has received degrees from Syra- cuse University and Harvard Uni- versity and was associated with the Division of Orientalia of the Library of Congress in Washing- ton. He has served as Korean dele- gate to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Na- tions as well as acting as alter- nate observer at the UN from Korea. 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