-r --e.---.-.-.,r - - -.- K' PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1951 RIDE GOETH BEFORE FALL: Cheerleader Finds Unicycling No Players' Set Production Warren Blasts Kefauver At Governors' Conference By MIKE SCHERER Sitting on top of the world is easy compared to staying on top of a unicycle for long, claims Duncan Erley, '52E. Erley, a varsity cheerleader, put on a one-man show last Sat- urday when he and his blue and gold unicycle made their debut before the Michigan State game. * * *, HIS PERFORMANCE was marred slightly by a rather violent fall from the precarious one-' wheeler, but he claims the tumble was intentional. "It was all in the act," he said, "but that field is harder than-I thought." Erley plans to put on an even better show this Saturday when 2,280 high school cheerleaders invade Ann Arbor for the Mich- igan-Stanford game. The pep leaders will sit in the end zones and assist Coach Newt Loken's Varsity yell-getters cheer the Maize and Blue to victory. Erley claims that every spring for eight years he has had some sort of urge to master the art of riding a unicycle. Last May he found one for sale and began to realize his ambition. THE FIRST few weeks were marked by numerous spills as he pedalled back and forth on Hill Street. Once he fell and broke a pedal, halting the practice ses- Sions for a week. Erley claims that his desire To Sell Road G ame D Iucats Students interested in attending the Cornell and Illinois games will be given an opportunity to procure tickets on the Wolverine Club Specials beginning Oct. 15 at the Administration Building. Game tickets and housing will also be available for those who need them. As in past years, these special student privileges a r e sponsored by the Wolverine Club. For further information, students may call Bob Golten, 3-8508. { For Oct. 25 --Daily-Mike Scherer LICENSE TROUBLES--Ann Arbor City Clerk Fred J. Looker (right) scratches his head in wonder as he searches for a statute licensing unicycles as Duncan Erley, '52E, watches. Erley was seeking a license for the vehicle he will ride Saturday at the Michigan-Stanford game. * * * * * * to ride the unicycle has ebbed slightly since the coming of fall, but he will persist in his pre- game entertainment. His latest ambition is to ride the cycle while juggling three duck pins, which he hopes to do before football season is over. Yesterday Erley ran into diffix culties when he applied for a li- cense at the office of Ann Arbor Ctiy Clerk Fred J. Looker. There were no unicycle applications to be found in the clerk's office. BESIDES, THE vehicle was not equipped with brakes, lights, re- flectors and other required safety equipment. It was suggested that Erley fill out half a bicycle li- cense application, The problem was solved when City Clerk Looker suggested that a license wouldn't be required if he stayed off city streets. Erley promised that he would confine his riding to stadiums and Lrater- nity house living rooms, and went pedalling merrily up Huron Street. U' Marching Band Movie To OpenHere Saturday University students will have an opportunity to see the official pre- miere showing of a movie short featuring the Michigan Marching Band when it appears Saturday i STUDENT SPECIAL (8 MONTHS) TIME u iF # 0 " " $2 $3 Subscrip.tions for a]1 Magazines taken U IriChS ... ANN ARBOR'S BUSY BOOKSTORE through Tuesday at the Michigan Theatre. The short, "Here Comes the Band," will herald University Band Week which will be climaxed Oct. 13 when 100 high school bands join the Marching Band on the field for a half-time performance during t h e Michigan-Indiana game. Movie-goers will have a chance to see what goes on behind the scenes asa, football show is plan- ned and rehearsed, and finally as is appears in the stadium. The shooting of the film took place last. fall during the Michigan-North- western game and last May on the campus. TYPEWRITERS RENTED +. ,, i " SOLD BOUGHT REPAIRED STUDENT SUPPLIES G.'. Requisitions Accepted on Supplies Only Webster-Chicago Wire Recorders MORRI LL'S 314 S. State St. Ph.7177 fountain pens repaired Lead roles in the Student Play- ers' opening fall production, "Two Blind Mice" by Samuel Spevack, have been announced by director Marie Wilson. Opening at the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater on October 25, the story concerns the efforts of two middle-aged ladies, the "two blind mice," to perpetuate the long- abolished Federal Office of Medi- cinal Herbs. CREATED BY Theodore Roose- velt and the late husband of one of the mice," the office is being threatened by annihilation by an irate senator, played by Gene Bohi, who abolished the office, and a four-man commission represent- ing the Department of State, the Army, Navy and Air Force, por- trayed respectively by Joseph Ga- don, Mickey Walker, Maurice Heller ahd Jim Miller. The predicament is resolved by a mischievous newspaper- man, Roy Strozzi, with the aid of his ex-wife, Barbara Enelow. Playing the title roles will be Ann Husselman and Marie Gilson. Among the members of the sup- porting cast are a Dixie rhumba teacher who rents one of the spare offices, Ann Beale; her bashful pupil, Mitch Cahill; Dr. Henry McGill, fiance of the ex-wife, Ed Prenner. ALSO APPEARING are the newspaperman's former editor, Jim Brodhead; the senator's naive nephew, Richard Rosenfeld, and Dave Edwards as an ex-marine sargeant. now running a parking lot. Three comedy roles, small speaking parts for men, are still. open. One is a pants presser who rents the office next to the rhumba teacher, and the other two are a curious mailman and a visitor who returns at inter- vals to have his car parked, Also needed are men for the promotions staff, headed byJames E. Brodhead, who will distribute posters and take part in a limtied publicity campaign starting next week. Law BooKs Contribute Aid To Research Three books published by the Law School in the last three months constitute one of the most important additions made to legal research during the past summer, according to Dean E. Blythe Sta- son. Published as a part of the Law School Research Program, the books were financed with funds donated from the William W. Cook Endowment Fund. Two of them were writtenbydUniversity professors. "Administrative Agencies and the Courts" by Prof. Frank E. Cooper, visiting professor of Law, was published early in August, and "Our Legal System and How It Operates" by Prof. Burke Shar- tel was released on Sept. 1. Prof. Shartel's book is designed for use by freshmen, and presents the basic structure and functions of our legal system. The third book published un- der the Legal Research program presents the first in a series of collections of Summer Institute lectures. The volume, "The Con- flict of Laws and International Contracts," is a compilation of the lectures of ten distinguished legal scholars from all parts of the world. -Daily-L. Wilk OFFICIAL WELCOME-President and Mrs. Harlan H. Hatcher are shown being welcomed for the first time to the International Center by B. V. Govinderaj, retiring president of the Indian Stu- dents' Association. Following speeches made by President Hatch- er and Govinderaj at the Association reception last night, movies of India were shown and refreshments served. CANINE EXODUS: Second Fraternity Mascot Banned from A.nn A.rbor GATLINBURG, Tenn. -- (1) - Gov. Fuller Warren of Florida de- nounced Sen. Estes Kefauver (D- Tenn.) yesterday as a "madly am- bitious political shyster," but Re- publican Gov. Val Peterson of Ne- braska called the Tennessean a "grand American." Warren's outburst came in the final session of the 43rd annual Governor's Conference as the state officials were discussing problems of organized gambling and crime. * * * GOVERNORS of several Mid- western states also met briefly yes- terday, to form a regional confer- ence of governors. Michigan's Gov. G. Mennen Williams was elected chairman of the group. No name was selected for the group, and Williams said the or- ganization will be open to gov- ernors of neighboring states who want to come in. At the Governors' Conference in Tennessee, Warren did not call Kefauver by name, but he left no doubt he was hitting at the Ten- nessean with such terms as "that ambition-crazed Caesar" and that "shyster politician who is running desperately and, I believe, futilely for the Vice-Presidency of the United States." * * * KEFAUVER headed the Senate Investigating Committee which re- ported that Florida was one of the major centers of organized gam- bling and crime in the United States. The report indirectly point- ed a critical finger at Warren. Warren later told reporters he had meant to say Kefauver was running for the Prlesidency. The Florida Governor's attack on Kefauver-one ,,f several he has made since the crime investi- gation-was quickly answered by Peterson who said it grieved him to hear "this attack on Senator Kefauver:" "SENATOR Kefauver is a grand American and he and other mem- bers of the Senate Committee did a grand job," Peterson said. A short time later the gover- nors elected Peterson chairman of the conference to succeed Gov. Frank J. Lausche, Ohio Democrat. The next convention may be held next spring, possibly at Gla- cier or Yellowstone National Park. * * * THE GOVERNORS began head- ing for home after adopting a series of resolutions including a OK'd by UN Committee "Buzz," Chi Phi Fraternity's three year old boxer mascot, has been banned from Ann Arbor streets forever, destined like "Ma- jor," Lambda Chi Alpha's mascot, to go the way of all old dogs. Agreement of the fraternity to find a new home for the dog out- side of Ann Arbor resulted from a complaint by Officer Walter E. Schmid of the Ann Arbor Police Department. a c M * THE INCIDENT occurred last Thursday when Officer Schmid Scrugg S Gets Borden TPrize Jack G. Scruggs, '51P, was awarded the $300 Borden scholar- ship at an annual assembly held by pharmacy students Tuesday. The award is made to the phar- macy senior who has the highest scholastic average preceding the senior year. Speakers at the assembly were Dean Thomas D. Rowe, Alfred Germer, president of the senior class of the pharmacy school; Shirley Wood, president of the stu- dent branch of the American Pharmaceutical Association; John Kathe, president of the Union; and K. Kitaaki, president of the local chapter of the Rho Chi so- ciety, national pharmacy honor- call for Congress to make "ade- quate provision for a well-conceiv- ed civil defense program." This resolution also urged a program of indemnity for civil r defense workers who might be killed in line of duty. The conference formally ap- pealed to Congress to give the states the right to determine whe- ther relief rolls shall be published. A nti-War Pla.n was riding his three-wheel motor- cycle on S. University. The dog reportedly chased him, and twice attempted to bite his left leg. Of- ficer Schmid asked that the dog be shot for "vicious habits." Shortly before the case was to appear before Judge Francis L. O'Brien in the Ann Arbor Municipal Court, attorneys for both the fraternity and the city, along with representatives from Ann Arbor Police Department agreed to settle the case out of court. The settlement came on condi- tion the fraternity find a new home for "Buzz"-more formally known as "Jessellen's the Viking" --outside the city. At the Chi Phi house, Norm Spencer, '52E, said last night that no definite home for the dog had yet been found, but that "Buzz" would probably accept an .nvita- tion to stay with a brother's f am- ily in Saginaw. Dean Stason Will Speak to Judges Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Law School- is scheduled to be the principal speaker at a luncheon before the Twelfth Annual Con- ference of Federal Judges of the Sixth Circuit Saturday in Cincin- UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-'}_- A broad scheme of quick collective action by all nations against ag- gression was given UN committee approval yesterday. The plan of the UN Committee on Collective Measures, in brief, :alls for: 1. Use of regional defense forces, such as the North Atlantic Pact forces, for defense against aggression if asked by the UN. 2. Creation of an executive military authority made up of a state or states which would direct the military forces against the aggressor. 3. Political measures, such as appeals to the parties to negoti- ate their dispute, severance of re- lations with an offending state, or its suspension or expulsion from the UN. 4. Complete cooperation by UN bodies on economic and financial restrictions against an aggressor. 5. 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