FPUDAY, MAY 8, 1953 ht THE MICHIGAN DAILY a,_________________________ m PAGE THREE Ambassador IPlans Visit To Campus India's ambassador to the Uni- ted States, Gaganvihari L. Mehta, will speak at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Rackham Lecture Hall as a part-of International Week. Arriving in the morning at Wil- low Run, Mehta will spend a full day on campus prior to his ad- dress. After. a Rotary Club lunch- eon in his honor, University offi- cials will direct him on a campus tour, and the Indian group will welcome him with a dinner. The public is invited to the am- bassador's speech at the Rackham Bldg. Educated at the University of v Bombay and at the London School of Economics, Mehta has had an extensive career encom- passing most aspects of govern- mental work. His past positions include president of the tariff board of India's national gov- ernment, member of the Nation- al Planning Commission, presi- dent of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce, deputy leader of the Indian delegation to the International Business Conference, and chairman of the Nuffield Foundation Advis- ory Committee. Mehta is author of several pub- lications, among them "From Wrong Angles," ' "Perseverities" and "The Conscience of a Nation." The address Wednesday is spon- sored by Student Legislature's In- ternational Committee, w h o s e members requested government of- ficials to recommend a speaker. 'U' Furthers Plan for New TV Channel Although a University educa- tional television station will not be on the air before late 1954 or 1955, first steps in its development will be to provide for teaching equipment and presentation of programs over commercial and other educational stations. The Regents, in authorizing an application to the Federal Com- munications Commission for a li- cense to operate UHF channel 26, gave first priority of an estimated $169,000 to purchasing a kinescope and associated equipment and to rehabilitating a building for a studio and technical facilities. For the past three years the University has been televising organized courses which are presented over Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing and Kalamazoo stations. Two chief reasons for entering television, according to Arthur L. Brandon, chairman of the Uni- versity's broadcasting committee, are to train personnel for further r development of the television in- dustry and for program production and participation. Presenting edu- cational television programs over Michigan stations for all parts of the state is another reason why the University desires a television station, he added. Fifield Plans Study of Asia Prof. Russell H. Fifield of the L political science department will conduct a 15-month study of Southeast Asian foreign policy un- der a faculty research grant, ac- cording to University officials. Prof. Fifield will spend six months in Manila on a Fulbright Scholarship and then travel through five southeastern Asian Nations. During his tour, Prof. Fifield will serve as consultant to the State Department. The information gathered on foreign affairs leadership in Southeast Asia's capitals will be used by the Professor in writing a book on Asia's foreign policy after his return to America. ISA Spring Picnic Slated Tomorrow A picnic, sponsored by the In- ternational Students Association, will be given tomorrow afternoon at Silver Lake. American and foreign students desiring to go to the picnic may purchase tickets, priced at one dol- lar, at the International Center or from any ISA officer. The group plans to leave the Center at noon tomorrow. Trans- portation and food are included in * the price of the ticket. Baseball and other outdoor acti- vities 'have been planned by the group. One-Acts To Open Today' Three one act plays and special adaptations from E. A. Wilson's book "Playwrights in Aspic" will be presented by the speech de- partment at 8 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Richard Teneau, Grad., is di- rector of the four excerpts which show how various playwrights deal with the same plot. Parodies on drama by Chekov, Synge, and Tennessee Williams are included. "Address in Prague," a modern war-time tragedy will be perform- ed for the first time since Univer- sity graduate student Eugene Hockman wrote it last year. Also featured on the playbill are "Gammer Gurton's Needle," and a condensed version of "Pro- metheus Unbound" by Aeschylus. SL Movie "Rhapsody in Blue," the life of George Gershwin, will be presented by SL Cinema Guild at 7 and 9:15 p.m. today and tomorrow and at 8 p.m. Sunday in Architecture Auditorium. Featuring Robert Alda, Alexis smith, Oscar Levant and Joan Leslie, the film presents 24 24 Gershwin compositions. Hospital Week To Open National Hospital Week will be locally celebrated at the Univer- sity Hospital with an Open House, from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday in the main hospital and from 3 to 4 p.m. Sunday in the Maternity Hospital. Planned as features of the Open, House are various exhibits, dis- plays, and conducted tours through the departments of Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, and an operating room, the pharmacy, and several laboratories. A special tour of the atomic energy products laboratory is also scheduled for visitors. The general public has been in- vited to attend any or all of the Open House functions. TONIGHT AND SATURDAY ONLY Christofer Fry's A SLEEOFPIN S An Arts Theater Production at St. Andrew's Church Tickets $1.80, $1.50, $1.20 at 209 E. Washington or Bob Marshall's I