SUNDAV, OCTOBER 24,1954 THE MICHIGAN DA4Y .mCZ. m. jrjt% jmi N'Vz a Alumni Visit Sparked by Colorful Homecoming Display P ageantry HAYDEN HOUSE SHOWS FOOTBALL MOVIE Three Plays Set To Open Thursday Three productions are now in rehearsal for the speech. depart- ment's First Laboratory Playbill to be presented Thursday and Fri- la yat the Lydia Mendelssohn The- ater. Under the direction of Edward Andreason, Grad., "Lord Byron's Love Letter" a one act play by Tennessee Williams will be pre- sented. Gladys Riddle, Grad., will play the old woman, the spinster will be Susan Serotte, '55, Flor- ence Greenberg, '56, will be the matron, and Robert Thompson plays the husband. "Over the Teacups," by Percival Wilde includes in the cast Marga- ret Kausch, '56, as Mary Beards- ley, Shirley Tepper, '57, as Miss Young, Joan Tubbs, '55, as Emile Tucker and Henrietta Hermelin, '55, Mrs. Polhemus. William Teu- fel, Grad., is directing the play. The fight scene and the reconcil- iation scene from Clare Boothe's "The Women" are being directed by Geraldine Adams, Grad. Mary Davey, '57, plays Mary, Myra Topless, '57, will appear as Sylvia, Valerie Schor, Grad., as the Countess, and Marjorie Frogel, '56, as Lucy. Crystal will be portrayed by Florence Gutman, '57, Peggy by Sue Thomas, Sadie will be Judy Brown, '55, the Debutante, Elaine Jepson, '56 and the Dowager, Pauline Baumler, '56. Victory Puns Supply Theme By MICHAEL BRAUN Starting early Friday evening and going on into the wee hours yes- terday, the sound of the hammer and the strains of Glenn Miller's "Little Brown Jug" were heard throughout the campus area. The music came from phono- graphs placed out on the lawn to keep workers happy as they saw- ed wood, molded paper mache and stuffed thousands of paper napkins into chicken wire for homecoming displays. "Minnesota Falls" While most displays were con- cerned with solid objects, the bre- theren of Beta Theta Pi had ano- ther problem. "If our pumps don't give out with 300 gallons of water a minute for the waterfall, we're sunk" said Beta display chairman Denny Larkin, '57. The Beta display was a waterfall that bore the le- gend "Minnesota Falls." During the game the kids of Ann Arbor were having a field day with the displays. At the Chi Phi house two little girls had climbed onto the displays and were incongruous- ly sitting in a cardboard inclosure that represented the stadium. A "flying saucer" bearing the words "Michigan Martian over Minne- sota was hovering above. Kids Not Frightened Someone passed by and asked the girls if they were afraid the flying saucer would fall. The girls informed the inquirer that they weren't. At Tau Delta Phi a paper mache stork was flying over Ann Arbor and cirgling a stadium. In its mouth was a brown jug wrapped Prof. Paul W. McCracken, of the business administration school, and eight of his students will be guests of the Economic Club of Detroit at a luncheon tomorrow in the Veterans' Memorial Bldg. Assistant Secretary of Defense Donald A. Quarles will speak on "Which Resources Are Strategic." The students attending are Ed- ward Belcher, Glen D. Daffern, '55 BAd., Keith Horngren, Grad, Andrew Kaul, '55 BAd., Kenneth Perkins, '55BAd., Ronald E. Ritz- ler, '56 BAd., Peter Rosko, Grvr!, and John D. Ziolkowski. Van Gogh Expert To Lecture Here "Vincent Van Gogh, the Man and His Works" will be discussed by Jacob B. de la Faille at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Auditorium B, Angell Hall. De la Faille, a native of Leeu- warden, Holland, is an authority on modern Dutch art, particularly Van Gogh. He has lectured in most European countries. This is his fifth American tour. L - the of 95 Weekend Celebration Planned For Union's 50th Anniversary Approximately 250 former Un- ion Executive Board and staff members will meet here next week- end for the Union's Golden Anni- versary celebration. Dedicationrceremonies for the new Union addition will highlight the activities. Alumni will register from 3 to 6 p.m. on Friday in the Union lobby. After registration they'll be shown through Union offices to see how staff activities are conducted now. Public dedication ceremonies for the Union addition will start at 10 a.m. in front of the Union. Speak- ers will include University Presi- dent Harlan H. Hatcher; Edward Parker, first Union president; and Tom Leopold, '55, union president. An anniversary banquet will be held at 6 p.m. in the Union Ball- room, with Chester Lang, vice- president of General Electric Corp., acting as toastmaster. Other speakers will include President Hatcher, Parker, Leopold and Ho- mer Heath, first Union business manager. Entertainment will be provided by the Union Opera, Mimes, and the Men's Glee Club. An all-campus Anniversary Ball strating at 9:30 p.m. in the Ball- room will end the weekend acti- vities. The dance is informal, and women will have late permission Hart To Appear -. Phillip A. Hart, Democratic can- didate for lieutenant governor, will make his only Ann Arbor appear- ance at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Bach School, 600 W. Jefferson. The rally will also feature J. Henry Owens, Democratic state senatorial candidate, in addition to all county candidates. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THURSO. y (Continued from Page 4) Starting Tomorrow Our Monday Hours Will Be 9:30 A.M. to 5:45 P.M. Starting Friday, October 29 Our Friday Hours Will Be 9:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. Watch the Daily every Friday for our extra The Congregational-Disciples Guild: 6:00 p.m., Supper at the Congregational Church (reservations). 7:00 p.m., Pro- gram. speaker-Mr. Morse Saito: "Chris- tian Faith in Japan." The Geneva Fellowship of graduate age young adults will meet at 5:45 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church for supper. Following this at 6:45, an excellent film on prejudice, "High Wall" will be shown. Graduate students are cordial- ly welcome. Coming Events The Russian Circle will meet Mon., Oct. 25, 8:00 p.m. at the International Center. Refreshments will be served and there will be informal singing of Russian songs. All students interested in Russian are cordially invited to at- tend. The Undergraduate Mathematics Club will hold its next meeting in room 3B of the Michigan Union at 8:00 p.m., Mon., Oct. 25. Miss June Stone will speak on "Non-Rigid Transformations in the Real Plane." WCBN-East Quad: Business meeting for all staff members 7:15 p.m. sharp, Mon., Oct. 25, at the studios. Attend- ance is required. Hillel: The 3 H's are coming......., La P'tite Causette will meet Mon. from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. in the wing of the Michigan Union cafeteria. ci on n'y parle que francais. Venez tous. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: Tues., 4:30-5:45 p.m., Tea at the Guild House, La Sociedad Hispanica will hold its weekly "tertulia" Tues., Oct. 26, in the North wing of the Union Cafeteria from 330 tn 5A0 nm Frutv mem. OCTOBER 28 From 9-12 and 1-4 5 Convenient Locations * DIAG " ENGINE ARCH " UNION " WOMEN'S ATHLETIC BLDG. ',"i' !,B , , ?i, I