SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1952
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
PAGE SEVEN
P ck i I _________________________________________
JACK-OF-ALL-TRADES:
Pascoe Has Busy Life
At Mendelssohn Theater
By ALICE BOGDONOFF
"I do everything around here,"
laughed Eddie Pascoe, the assist-
ant director of the Lydia Mendel-
ssohn ,Theater.
And he does. The popular jack-
of-all-trades, who has been with
the theater since it opened in
1929, does everything from throw-
ing the switches, to taking "walk-
on" parts.
With a fantastic memory for
names and play titles, Eddie, as
' he is called by the "theater peo-
ple," can reel off his favorite ac-
tresses and plays which were per-
formed at Lydia over twenty years
ago.
AMONG HIS favorites are Mar-
garet Anglin and Violet Heming.
"Sure, I've met a lot Hof profes-
sionals,"' Eddie said proudly,"
when you're over here you can't
help bumping into them."
During one drama season,
when Eddie was not too busy
taking care of equipment and
sets, he became a member of
the jury in "The Sixteenth of
January." "They still keep ask-
Campus
Ca eydar
Events Today
RELIGION-Miss Marian Win-
terbottom of the psychology de-
partment will lead a discussion on
"Religion as Experienced" at the
Unitarian Student Group meeting
at 7:30 p.m. in Lane Hall.
Coming Events
FISHERIES-Philip Wolf, pres-
ident of the Swedish Salmon and
Trout Association will speak onj
"Problems in Stream Biology" at
4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 2054 of
the Natural Science building.
y * * *
HONARY SOCIETY -The Phi
Beta Sigma biological society will
' hear Miss Martha B. Baylor of the
zoology department discuss "Bio-
logy of Viruses" at 8 p.m. tomor-
row in the east conference room
of the Rackham Amphitheater.
* * *
ECONOMICS -- Prof. Law-
rence Seltzer of Wayne Univer-
sity will discuss "Theory and
Practice of Capital Gain Taxa-
tion" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the
Rackham Amphitheater.
MUSIC SESSION-A public lec-
ture-discussion session on "cur-
riculum building in music educa-
tion" will be held -at 7:15 p.m.
tomorrow in Rm. 506 Burton Mem-
orial Tower.
* *
GLEE CLUB-The s ring con-
cert 'of the University Women's
Glee Club will be held Wednesday
at 8:30 p.m. in the Rackham Lec-
ture Hall.
-Daily-Don Campbell
EDDIE PASCOE
ing me to take bit parts, but I'm
afraid I'll blow the whole show,"
he said modestly.
Eddie, who grew up in a "small
mining town" in the upper penin-
sular, did some amateur acting
during his school years. He also
attfributes his slight accent to his
hometown. "The reason why no
one can place it is that it's a mix-
ture of around three different dia-
lects."
HE EXPLAINED that there were
Finns, Swedes, and Italians in his
town and he gradually acquired
a conglomoration of their ac-
cents.
"Once in a Life Time," the
George Kaufmann comedy which
opens at Lydia Wednesday, will
probably be Pascoe's last Speech
Department production.
Tickets for the play may be pur-
chased tomorrow at the Lydia
Mendelssohn box office. A special
50 cent rate is offered Wednesday
and. Thursday night for students.
The play will run through Satur-
day.
Canyon Lecture
To BeGiven
The wild canyon country of
Utah and Arizona will be the
theme of a lecture by Col. H. C..
Anderson of Cheyenne, Wyoming
at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday in the Archi-
tecture Auditorium.
The lecture is open to the pub-
lic and free of charge.
Authority on Korea
To SpeakTonight
George A. Fitch, a YMCA officer
in the Far East and civic worker in
Korea since 1945 will speak to
Korean students at 8 p.m. today in
the Madelon Pound House at the
corner of Hill and E. University.
Picking Ike
Successor
Found Hard
WASHINGTON-(P)-Top mili-
tary leaders are finding the deci-
sion on a successor to General
Dwight D. Eisenhower extraordi-
narily difficult-even though they
are reported to feel that Gen. Mat-
thew B. Ridgway is the man for
the job.
Officials said yesterday that one
of the complications in making a
final decision is the fact that Kor-
ean truce negotiations are in a very
critical phase. No one can tell
whether Ridgway a few weeks
hence will be conducting a limited
war, continuing peace talks or
managing the United Nations'
side of an armistice.
ANOTHER DIFFICULTY is the
fact that Gen. Eisenhower's pre-
sent chief of staff in the North1
Atlantic Alliance Command in Eu-
rope, Lt. GCn. Alfred M. Gruen-
ther, has pcwerful supporters as
Eisenhower's successor. These sup-
porters include Eisenhower him-
self, members of Congress-and men
in the Pentagon.
A third factor is that 13 other
nations have a voice in the deci-
sion and they have not been offi-
cially heard from yet. They are
America's allies in the North At-
lantic Treaty Organization, all of
whom Eisenhower has served as
Commander of American and NA-
TO forces in europe.
Eisenhower is due home by June
1, a few weeks before his cam-
paign for the Republican Presi-
dential nomination reaches its cli-
max in that party's national con-
vention. Presumably, therefore, his
successor will be named by June 1
although there is speculation
among some military men here
that his place could be filled tem-
porarily by a deputy if it became
desirable to delay a decision.
Industrialist
Dies at Home
Hotels Cited
For Safety
-J
Violations
The fi rebureau of the Michigan
State Police has cited three Ann
Arbor hotels, the Allenel, Earle and
Griswold, for safety violations and
ordered them to make corrective
steps or face legal action.
The three citations were made
after an inspection of the hotels by
a fire bureau representative.
* * *
ARNOLD C. RENNER, fire bu-
reau chief, said in Lansing yester-
day that his department "will be
fair and give the property owners
a reasonable amount of time to
comply."
Renner said he will come to
Ann Arbor in the near future to
clarify some of the requirements
if the hotel managements re-
quested.
Astern warning went to one of
the hotels which was ordered to
"discontinue the use of the build-
ing for hotel use or comply with
the following orders."
The orders were to install an
a p p r o v e d sprinkler system
throughout the building and a
steel fire escape connecting the
fourth, third and second floors
on the south end of the building.
Another hotel was ordered to
enclose their entire elevator shaft
and install self-closing fire doors
at each floor level.
Renner indicated that any legal
action taken would probably be a
joint one 'between the city and
state.
By MARV STEVENS
Selective service classifications
are divided into 17 groups and
almost every student in the Uni-
versity falls into one of them.
These designations are the root
of the selective service system. It
tells the registrant where he
stands in relation to the draft.
THE classifications which most
affect students are:
1-A-This is probably the best
known and least liked. It means
that the registrant is available for
military service.
1-0 and 1-AO--Refers to con-
scientious objectors. The first is
for registrants who are available
for non combat duty, while the
second refers to people not avail-
able for the draft but who must
work in a non-profit organization
or be employed in a position that
promotes the national welfare.
1-D - Students enrolled In
Israel Official
Will SpeakHere
Moshe Avidor, senior adminis-
trative officer of the Israeli Min-
istry of Education and Culture,
will speak at Kellogg Auditorium
at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow under the
auspices of the education school.
University Males Trapped
By Draft Classifications
--Jan Winn
* * * *
Students Asked to Submit List
Of World's Significant Books
ROTC programs are included in
this category.
1S-This is a student deferment
classification which lasts until the
end of the academic year. Accord-
ing to law, any college student
carrying a full time program is
entitled to at least one of these
deferments, provided he was never
deferred before as a student.
11-S-THIS IS the classification
which many students have. It is
granted at the discretion of the
local board as differentiated from
the 1-S which is a statuatory de-
ferment. To assist the board in
determining who should receive a
11-S status, two criteria were es-
tablished. The first is the Quali-
fication Test on which a score of
70 or higher is considered passing.
The second is a class standing of
the registrant.
A draft board is not compelled
to defer a student because he pass-
es the test or is in the prescribed
upper portion of his class.
IV-F -- Registrants who are
physically, morally, or mentally
unfit are awarded this classifi-
cation.
If a registrant receives a classi-
fication which he doesn't think he
deserves, it may be appealed by
sending a letter to the local board
indicating the student's selective
service number.
"What 10 or 15 books written in
the last 75 years or so do you
think have contributed most to
man's knowledge and advance-
ment?"
This is a question Prof. Richard
Boys of the English department
would like students to answer by
sending their own selections to
his office at 2216 Angell Hall.
LISTS OF great works are be-
ing made by several faculty mem-
bers for a book exhibit to be held
in conjunction with the inter-
departmental summer program
"Modern Views of Man and So-
ciety."
"We are trying to pick books
which have had a profound in-
fluence on our thinking-books
by authors such as Freud,"
Prof. Boys, who is chairman of
the new program, said. "Making
selections has been most inter-
esting to us, and we thought
students would like to express
their opinions too."
"We will give student selections
serious consideration when we
make final choices," he said.
The University offers a Great
Books cdorse and many educators
feel that such instruction is a vital
part of a Liberal Arts program.
t
j
Our Sportswear Dept.
Teems with Summer
Pretties
GIANT BOOK SALE
Hundreds of new titles added daily.
IA
I
Fiction, Non-fiction,
Reference Books
Halstead Harley Seeley, former
president and co-founder of the
King-Seeley Corp. of Ann Arbor
died at his home yesterday at the
age of 77.
The prominent industrialist, j
who had been ill for a number of
months, was born on a farm 40
miles from Ann Arbor. He attend-
ed Owosso High School and was . 316
graduated from the University in
1899.
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