T 4 PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, 1951 r .. . ii Pi 'CHOCOLATE SOLDIER': Speech, Music Students To Give Comic Operetta By HARRIET TEPPERMAN "The Chocolate Soldier," a com- ic operetta by Oscar Strauss, will be presented through the com- bined efforts of the speech de- partment and the music school, beginning at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The final production of this summer's drama season, Strauss' caricature of military romance is based on "Arms and the Man," a play by the late George Bernard Shaw. COL. POPOFF, played by Da- vid Murray, '52SM, is a comic Bulgarian colonel whose wife and daughter entertain a Swiss sol- dier while the head of the family is off to war in the Balkans. The Swiss soldier, Capt. Bu- merli, acted by John A. Wiles, SM, falls in love with Popoff's daughter Nadina. But complica- tions arise due to the fact that Nadina, played by Carole Neil- sen Wilder, Grad., SM, is al- Read and Use Daily Classifieds ready betrothed to Alexis. Alex- is is portrayed by Bill Thomp- son. Things are further confused by the plottings of Col. Popoff's wife and her niece, Mashia, played by Marilyn Krimm, Grad. SM, and Vivian Milan, '51SM, respectively. With this twosome against him, Alexis just doesn't have a chance. * * * THIS LAST production of the season is under the direction of Prof. Valentine B. Windt of the Department of Speech, with mu- sical direction by Prof. Wayne Dunlap of the School of Music. Prof. Dunlap will also conduct an orchestra composed primarily of first string players of the Univer- sity Symphony Orchestra. Tickets for the opening night performance are sold out, but tickets still remain for the per- formances which will be given on Friday, Saturday and Monday eve- nings. They may be 'purchased from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily and until 8 p.m. on performance nights. 'U' ourses Keep Pace With Times The granting of degrees to landscape architects, wood techni- cians and city planners testifies to the growing specialization of, University courses. No longer content with the standard cover-all programs of Grandpa's day, the University now offers everything from sanitary engineering to pediatrics and runs everything from a penal institu- tion to a speech correction unit. * *. * INCLUDED AMONG the recent June graduates were 11 students of Russian studies and two who studied religion and ethics, as well as real estate men, personnel managers and marine engineers. Russian, Far Eastern and La- tin American studies offering a knowledge of cultures and civ- ilizations through courses in the language, history and fine arts of the chosen area, have proved more popular than a similar course, AmericanCulture, ac- cording to Prof. Benjamin Wheeler, Chairman of the Board of Concentration Advisors. Another special interdepart- mental concentration is the Ur- ban Community program for stu- dents interested in city planning and administration. Several of these highly special- ized courses have received little or no interest since they were in- cluded in the curriculum. One of them, German Classicism and Ro- manticism, has had no takers at all, probably because of the diver- sity of the pre-requisites, Prof. Wheeler explained. * * * THE MAJORITY of the special programs are combinations of fields. These combinations include law, medicine, dentistry and com- bined science courses, such as biophysics and paleozoology. One student even listed his field of concentration in the 1951 'En- sian as "power." Radio TV LOOK and LISTEN By MARILYN FLORIDIS A full-hour radio adaptation of Daphne du Maurier's "Rebecca"' will start off the NBC radio cal- endar this week. Presented by the "New Theatre" at 7:30 p.m. today, the show will feature Eva Le Gallienne as host- ess. RISE STEVENS, star of opera, radio and motion pictures, will be guest soloist on the "NBC Sym- phony Orchestra Summer Concert Series," heard at 8:30 p.m. today. Popular operatic bass Enzio Pinza will sing the song he made famous, "Some Enchanted Eve- ning," when he guest stars on "The Telephone Hour" at p.m. tomorrow., CBS WILL HAVE a premiere today of a new morning piano series, "Keyboard Concerts." The program will be heard at 9:45 a.m. and will star American pi- anist-composer Grace Castagnet- ta as its soolist. This week's "Curt Massey Time" program will begin with selections by Oscar Hammer- stein tomorrow. The show is heaerd at 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Starring Wendell Corey in Ro- bert E. Sherwood's stage and screen play "The Petrified For- est," the "Philip Morris Play- house" program will be heard at :30 p.m. Thursday. " * * UNIVERSITY Speech Depart- ment Radio will present a fan- tasy "Mythical Merry-Go- Round," for its Angell Hall Play- house production this week. The show is heard at 7:30 p.m. Tues- days on WUOM, and 8:30 p.m. on WHRV. Scheduled for Friday is the Ra- dio Workshop Drama's presenta- tion of "Hamlet. The Shakes- perean drama will be broadcast at 4 p.m. over WPAG and WUOM. m I NZ"J . 4- "V .(.,:>: ap;: "' - \ fI { Se{: , /L By MIKE BOOM Many summer session students who have seen television for the first time during these hot months after a lifetime in the backwoods of the Upper Peninsula have fearfully asked us if TV is always like this. Fortunately, we can answer in the negative, for this summer's TV offerings have been pitifully lacking in quality. Few of the shows which began as "summer replacements" will ever progress beyond that status, and several aren't even finishing out the sum- mer. "AMOS 'n ANDY" took to the airways this summer after a four- year search for a cast and a tre- mendous amount of advance pub- licity. Critics praised the show but the public has not gone overboard for it. Now the National Association for the Advancement of Color- ed People has attacked "Amos 'n Andy" for using stereotyped Negro portrayals much like the movies used to do. It will be interesting to see what action CBS takes, because it is impossible to rewrite the show. It is filmed in Los Angeles and the programs for the next 25 weeks have already been made. * * * CBS' OFFERINGS have not been successful in general. Oscar Levant did not hit it off well with critics or the public on his Sunday night "Guest House," and Dur- ward Kirby has been trying to keep the show moving for the past month. "Summer Theatre" kept Mon- day nights alive for the first few weeks of the summer, but it is now doing repeats of "Studio One" shows that weren't too well-received in the first place. The other networks have not fared too well either, as more and more TV sets are being switched off earlier each evening. NBC, remembering Ransom Sherman's success last summer as the re- placement for "Kukla, Fran, & Ollie," came up with a strange young gentleman named Ernie Kovacs. After the first few weeks, Ernie's style became somewhat tiresome and he has yet to ap- proach Sherman in our estimation. Clearance of Spring & Summer wearables * at Reductions of 1/2 original price - many items far below! SPRING COATS Short and long-gabardines, suedes - many lined for late fall wear. Orig. 39.95 to 65.00. Now at 1/. price. Groups of DRESSES Silk prints, shantungs, honans, ray- on crepes, prints, sheers, bembergs, cotton laces. Orig. 14.95 to 39.95 at 1/ price. Evening and dinner dresses included. I'l SPRING SUITS 1 00% wools in checks and gabar- dines -pastels, greys, tans, a few dark shades. Orig. 39.95 to 65.00. Sizes 9-15, 10-20. -* Smo YOUR FIGURE WITH THE NEW HI-WAIST A 4i r ounce party and girdle with a 1 i,2 inch cuff above the waist that molds and controls with- out binding or rolling. Front and back satin elastic panels with power net sides flatten tummy and slim the hips for that longer look that fashion demands. Small, medimn, large in white, pink, and black X00 and 750 / Yearly SUMMER SUITS Special group of famous-make wool and rayon suits, many dark checks, good for fall wear at 18.00. Sizes 10-20, 14-24. Special group Summer Suits at 1/2 price, orig. 16.95 to 29.95. s .1 4. A -41 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Groups of DRESSES-Cottons, voiles, chambreys, tissue ging- hams, broadcloths, picolays, linens at 7.00, 10.00, 13.00. Orig. 8.95 to 25.00. Sizes 9- 15, 10-44, 12-24. SLIPS - Group of beautifully lace-trimmed nylon tricots 7.00. 3 Groups of GOWNS-Rayon crepe and tricots. 2.98, 3.98, 5.95. Sizes 32-44. Groups of BLOUSES-Cottons, linens, rayon crepes, Tub-i- nyl's, silk prints.--Orig. 3.95 to 10.95 -- at 1.98 to 5.00. Sizes 32-44. 3 Groups SLIPS-Cottons and rayon crepes, lace trimmed. 1.98, 2.98 and 3.98. Sizes 32-44. SKIRTS - Cottons and rayon gabardines-checks and plaids. Orig. 5.95 to 10.95 at 2.98 to 3.98 and 5.00. Group of PETTICOATS-1.98 and 2.98-Cottons and rayon crepes. Orig. value to 3.00. ODDS & ENDS in gloves of 98c. Group of COSTUME JENYELRY at 49c and 98c. Y ;. (Continued from Page 2) Student Recital: Charles Fisher, graduate student in piano, will be heard at 8:30 Wednesday evening, Aug- 8, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, in a program of works by Bach, Mozart, Debussy, and Schubert, played in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. Mr. Fish- er is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman, and his program will be open to the public. Coming Lectures Monday, August 6- Biophysics Symposium. 1300 Chemis- try Building. "viruses: Structure, Re- production, and Origin" (cont.), S. E. Luria, University of Illinois, 4:00 p.m.; "Phage Activation and Reproduction Excitation of Sensory Cells," M. Del- bruck, California Institute of Techno- logy, 7:30 p.m. Biophysics Seminar. "Exploratory Work with InfraRed in Bacteriology." Prof. H. M. Randall, Dr. E. Fowler, 11 a.m. 2038 Randall Laboratory. Tuesday, August 7-- Biophysics Symposium. 1300 Chemis- try Building. "viruses: Structure, Re- production, and Origin" (cont.), S. E. Luria, University of Illinois, 4:00 p.m.; "Structure of Proteins," J. L. Oncley, Harvard University, 10 a.m., 2038 Ran- dall Lab. Linguistic Program. "The Present Stage of Romance Linguistic Geogra- phy," Henry R. Kahane, University of Illinois. 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphi- theater. 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