THE MIUHIAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEP TEMBER 25, 1955 CAPTAIN RICHARD D. ZERN,-USN Captain Zern Will Teach In NROTC Program Capt. Richard D. Zern of the United States Navy assumed his he was with the Atlantic Fleet as duties this fall as professor of an Aide and Chief of Staff to Naval Science at the University. Rear Admiral Walter E. Moore. Before coming to the University Went To College He was graduated from the DAC .lansHigh School Academy of the DACL~ Plans Western Illinois State Teacher's College, Macomb, Ill, and went to Seven Plays the College for one year. S After graduation from the In 1United States Naval Academy in n "95 1927, Captain Zern attended the Naval War College; the Post- Ann Arbor's professional arena Graduate School of the Line, theater, the Dramatic Arts Center, United States Naval Academy and will offer a varied program during the Fleet Anti-Submarine War- its 1955-56 season. fare School in Key West, Fla. A tentative list released by the He has also served numerous Center's board of directors includes duty stations on battleships, cruis-. six plays with another still to be ers and a submarine tender as well announced. as being in the Office of the Chief "Thieves Carnival" by French of Naval Operations, playwright Jean Anouilh, a comedy Serves in War which enjoyed success when it was During the Second World War, produced off Broadway last year he served on the cruiser MARBLE- has been scheduled to open the HEAD in the United States' season on Oct. 21. Asiatic Fleet, and spent the last Other productions will include three years of the War in the Anton Chekov's "The Seagull," Western Pacific on the so-called "Breakup" by the Scandinavian "fast battleships" such as the playwright Krog, and a work by WASHINGTON and IOWA. Moliere which has not yet been He has also toured with the Asen dSixth Fleet, participated in the Also included on the Center's Far East and Indian ocean area program will be a twin bill pre- opratnd prior ote Krea senting W. B. Yeats' version of operations prior to the Korean Sophocles, "Oedipus Rex" and conflict. Yeats' original play "Purgatorio." Some of his awards include the Dryden's work entitled "All for Legion of Merit with the Combat Love" is also scheduled for pres- "V", the Navy Unit Commenda- entation. tion, American Defense Service The plays will run for three Medal, Asiatic-Pacific Area Medal weeks each at the Masonic Temple. and the Philippine Liberation Ribbon with two stars. Captain Zern is married and his son Richard is scheduled to enter the University as a Junior this fall. Change center Social Plans This summer saw an innovation in the International Center and the International Students' Asso- ciation, allowing the students themselves to plan their social events rather than go through the University administrative board. President John A. Wallwork from Great Britain and vice-presi- dent B. V. Govindaraj from India were elected last June on a pro- gram including that "Internation- al Students Association take over all International Center social ac- tivities and carry out an effective program with thhe financial as- sistance of the Universty" On July 1, the International Center, a University administrative branch, announced its reorganiza- tion which included a relinquishing of the planning and conducting of a socialy program (or foreign stu- dents. Another important change was the doubling of counseling staff time available to the students. Honor- Roll Dedication Set Today Dedication ceremonies for the Washtenaw County memorial hon- or roll, containing the names of 498 servicemen who died in two wars and the Korean fighting, will be held at 2 p.m. today in the main lobby of Washtenaw's new courthouse. A $1,700 plaque, erected and sponsored by the Washtenaw County chapter of the Gold Star Mothers and the Washtenaw County Council of Veterans, was installed in the lobby Thursday. Invocation at the dedication will be delivered by the Rev. Fr. Joseph P. McElgunn of St. Thomas Cath- olic Church in Ann Arbor, chap- lain at University Hospital and the William H. Maybury Sanitor- ium at Northville. The Rev. Glenn E. Baumann of St. James Evangelical and Refor- med Church of Dearborn, a former chaplain with the Fifth Marine Division in the South Pacific, will deliver the main address. Mr.hBaumann was chaplain with the 28th Marines of the Fifth Division, a unit in which many Ann Arbor men served. He was present at the famous flag-raising ceremonies on Iwo Jima. Jack L. Craven, commander of the Washtenaw Council of Veter- ans, will perform the introduc- tions. Two wreaths will be placed on the honor roll and taps will be sounded by Fred Bentz, chaplain for the Ann Arbor Post of the Vet- erans of Foreign Wars. A color guard from the American Legion Post of Dexter will be pres- sent during the dedication. The plaque is five by seven feet, of cast bronze and contains room for 150 additional names. At the top of the plaque is the inscription, "In loving memory of those from Washtenaw County who gave the supreme sacrifice." An inscription at the bottom says, "Presented by the citizens of Washtenaw County." Chrairman of the honor roll committee is Esther Heusel and members are Oscar Berkley of Milan, Craven, Louise E. Brown, Gertrude Murkensturm and Anna Markey. 'Forum Group Sets Sessions On Freedom Approximately 25 discussion groups sponsored by the Ann Arbor Freedom Forum will hold two or three meetings during October. Maintenance of national security while protecting individual rights will be the general problem to be considered by the groups. "Freedom of Speech, Press and Assembly" will be the topic for the week of Oct. 10, and "Con- gressional Investigations" will be considered the following week. The evenings of the discussions will be decided on by the individual groups. "The Loyalty Program" is the topic suggested for a third, option- al discussion. Chairman of the Freedom Forum group in Ann Ar- bor is the Rev. W. R. Schutze. Editor Schedules Campus Courses Distinguished Pulitzer Prize win- ner Leland Stowe will be on came pus this fall to teach aspiring journalists the best way of follow- ing in his footsteps. An author as well as a news- paperman, Stowe has won medals for foreign correspondence and war correspondence from schools and institutions throughout the country. For this semester, Stowe is leav- ing his position of roving editor of Reader's Digest to teach two courses and hold a seminar for graduate journalism students. In February, he will return to his editorship. f' i 4 !- t' STUDENTS Welcome Back! Come in and Browse Around. Your credit is good here. HERE'S OUR "BACK TO COLLEGE" SPECIALS: KHAKI CHINO SLACKS $400 OXFORD SHIRTS s/o r, n