PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1952 PAGE SIX Second Bill Of One Acts OpensToday Drama students will show the products of their laboratory work at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater when they present the semester's sec- ond bill of one act plays. Works on the agenda include "Sham," by Frank G. Tomkins, a satiric comedy on modern liv- ing, the Greek tragedy by Euri- pides, "Medea," and a serious character drama, August Strind- berg's, "The Stronger." Tickets can be obtained at the Lydia Men- delssohn box office for 30c. S* * ENTIRELY produced, directed and acted by -students, the one- act productions are arranged to provide interpretative freedom as well as stage experience for the students involved, according to Prof. Claribel Baird, of the speech department, one of the faculty ad- visors. "High men" of the current student production group are directors William Hadley, '52, Yvonne LeDuc Barnes a n d George W. Irving, Grad. To them has fallen the main re- sponsibility for staging and pro- duction. They have been aided by mem- bers of direction classes, who have discussed directing problems with the three thespians and their casts, and by the faculty advisors who, according to Prof, Baird, al- low the amateurs a free reign. D I R E C T OR'S interpretations sometimes "bother" the advisors, the professor admitted, but the end product is entirely the stu- dents. Even after the curtain comes down tomorrow, the laboratory session will not have ended. Next week, directors, and production crews will be praised or con- demned at the ritual "critique session" where speech students; and faculty can present their criticisms. Members of the casts for the current productions include Joel] Sebastian, '54, Elaine Rothman, '53, Ray Richardson, '52, and Phyl- lis Seput, '52 Ed, in "Sham"; Sue Ralston, '53, and Gene Bohi, '53, will portray Medea and Creon in "Medea" and Shirley Messing, '51, Frances Castiner, Grad., and Hel- en Mazneff, '53, in "The Strong- er." jGtP iTryouts Preliminary tryouts for singing,- dancing and speaking parts in the Junior Girls' Play production will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. today in the League.J THIS IS A DOG'S LIFE? Animals Provided with Ideal Shelter * * * * * * * * Campus Calendar Events Today Former Congressman Albert J. Engel will speak to the Public Ad- ministration Social Seminar at 8:30 p.m. in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. His subject will be "Congres- sional Control of Bureaucracy." Michigan Secretary of State Fred Alger will speak to the Young Republicans at 7:30 p.m. in the League. Alger is an avowed candidate for the Republican nomination fro governor. * '4 * Prof. Edgar Anderson, Engleman Professor of botany and head of Missouri's Henry Shaw School of Botany will deliver a lecture on the origin and evolution of Indian corn at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. * * * A meeting to elect officers for the coming semester will be held by the BEACON Association at 8 p.m. at the Union. * *4 *4 Station WUOM will carry a re- broadcast of Governor G. Mennen Williams' opening address before the State Legislature at 1 p.m. * * *4 The Newcomers Child Study Group of the Faculty Women's Club will meet at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. E. F. Moon. Two recordings, "Mealtime Troubles" and "Mrs. Green Goes Shopping," will be played. Dis- cussion will be led by Mrs. Moon. Mohammed Kashis Alghita will be honored at an International Center tea, from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. today in the Union. Alghita, who recently received a doctorate of physics, is returning to Iraq to assume a professorship of physics at the University of Bagdad. I By Order of the Federal Authorities I - MUST BE DISCONTINUED- EVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD TO THE BARE WALLS!! * , ,* EMBODYING everything from radiant-heated floors to an isolation ward and nearly com- pleted clinic, the new $100,000 shelter of the Washtenaw County Humane Society provides an ideal place where homeless animals may receive care and be put up for adoption. The shelter was built last spring with a gift from the Matthaei Foundation, a charity fund, and has housed more than 2,800 ani- (A $35,000 Stock Going for $15,000) mals-including two lost horses and a few tame skunks-since that time. Hundreds of people, many of them school children, visit the shelter weekly. Lots of them, like the lad above, come to adopt ani- mals. Others enjoy viewing such innovations as wooden "beds" for the kittens and self-operated plexiglass doors which enable a dog to venture out on an open runway whenever he wishes. Prospective pet adopters are aided in their choice by a member of the shelter's staff who discuss- es the animal's disposition with them and who also decides whe- ther the person wanting the pet will provide a pleasant home for it. To adopt a pet from the shel- ter, adoption papers must be sign- ed in which the new owner prom- ises to take good care of his ani- mal and to return it to the shel- ter if forced to give it up. After a few weeks, a check is made, either by personal visit or a mailed questionnaire, to find out if the animal and his new owners appear happy with each other. A look at the numerous letters of thanks received at the shelter, however, indicates that the major- ity of people are well-satisfied with the results of their visit to the "Orphanage." 'A I The Men Who Knox HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! H-U-R-R-Y! H IM UISY RYNIN SHO *e STOCKS A RE RUNNING OUT! S SfRl U EERA AH 1~ I buy when prices Six Speech Contest Finalists Give Winning Talks in Forum are 20%/"Of F Whether you BUY OR SELL try FOLLETT'S for Used Books For the first time in spec h de- partment history, the finahFs of Speech 31 Semi-Final Contest were presented as a forum yester- U' Student Wis NY Scholarship Jack M. Lipson, '52, has been awarded a $3,000 scholarship to any New York state dental school as a result of a competitive ex- amination taken in October. Hundreds competed for 14 such scholarships given in New York state. Lipson plans to attend Col- umbia University or the University of Buffalo. day, instead of the usual final eli- mination contest. The forum was held at 4 p.m. yesterday in the Speech Depart- ment Assembly at Rackham Lec- ture Hall. 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