4 WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY :. CUPID THWARTED: Curtis Forced To Delay Honeymoon for Tour ELRUIEfl How would you like to go on your honeymoon without your wife? That is the situation in which Anthony Curtis has found him- self. * * * CURTIS, a young motion pic- ture actor recently elevated to stardom, explained the details while in Ann Arbor Sunday to pro- mote his latest epic "The Prince Who Was A Thief." The New York-born actor la- mented the fact that he won't see his wife, MGM's curvaceous Janet Leigh, for another 13 days. They were married three weeks * * * ago in New England and on the next day Curtis began a five weeks personal appearance tour. "What's even worse," said Cur- tis, "is the fact that our tour is covering practically the same itin- erary we had planned for our honeymoon." Accompanying him on his visit here was his co-star in "The Prince Who Was A Thief," former Detroiter Piper Laurie. Nineteen year old Miss Laurie, who exhibits a pleasing personality besides her more obvious charms, spent most of her afternoon in a State St. movie theatre handing out auto- graphed photos that showed her reclining in a tree. SPOTTED AMONG the long lines of grade and high school stu- dents waiting to receive Miss Lau- rie's photograph were several Uni- versity students. When asked what he planned to do with the likeness, Bill Oles, '54,, said "The tree in the photo is extremely rare and should un- doubtedly help me in my botany course." An interview with the two young stars by local disc- ockey Ted Johnson brought out the fact that both enjoy their Hollywood ca- reers, despite the early hours, bruises received on the set, and such unforeseen emergencies as Curtis' postponed honeymoon. The two stars, shepherded by veteran Universal Studio publicity man Frank McFadden, left for their next stop, Monroe, after Cur- tis had attended to a very import- ant detail. He bought several china figur- ines for his wife in a local store. "Sort of a pre-honeymoon gift," he said, obviously thinking of how to soothe his wife for the missed honeymoon. New Fire Station Appears Certain It looks as if Ann Arbor wil at last get the much talked of and long awaited second fire station in view of the action taken last night by the City Council. The councilmen approved the Fire Commission's recommenda- tion to buy four lots on the south side of E. Stadium Blvd, near Packard as the proposed site for the new station, despite a protest petition. Eighty - four property owners signed a petition protesting the proposed location. Francis W. Shilling, attorney for th petition- ers, requested a "full-dress hear- ing," charging that the Fire Com- mission was "lacking in finesse in not obtaining the views of the residents of the area" before tak- ing the option to buy the lots. Counsel Workshop Set for Six Weeks The 1951 Guidance Workshop, under the direction of S. C. Huls- lander, counselor trainer, and Del- mont H. Byrn, assistant director, will be in operation for the six week period ending August 4. The workshop day is divided in- to a lecture period followed by dis- cussion, the showing of films re- lated to guidance problems, and individual and committee work. LOST AND FOUND LOST-Rose gold ladies Bulova wrist watch. Back engraved with Frank to Joyce. Call 3-1511, Ext. 526. )99L FOR SALE GOLF CLUBS--Matched set Joe Kirk- wood clubs, 4 irons, 2 woods. Never been used. $30.95. Ph. 2-8692. )149 BE PROFICIENT IN GERMAN. Set of 15 discs for $20.50. Cost $55.00. Phone 2-3028. )148 1947 HARLEY-DAVIDSON 45 cu. in. mo- torcycle.Excellent condition. See it at Howell's on South U. Call John Lauer, Univ. Ext. 2198. )146 WOMEN'S GOLF CLUBS - 4 matched irons, 1 wood. Brand new. Never been used. $24.95. Ph. 2-8692. )145 FOR RENT MODERN APARTMENT on Half Moon Lake. Boat and utilities furnished. July through September. Chelsea 7607. )38F APARTMENT-Complete kitchen, utili- ties provided. Men preferred, near campus. Call between 5-7 p.m., 6336. 906 Greenwood. )37F ROOMS FOR RENT GIRLS ROOMING HOUSE Large studio type room. Two closets, Two beds. Community kitchen. Be- tween campus & hospitals. Ph. 2-2826. )81R ROOMS FOR RENT CAMPUS Tourist Home. Rooms by Day or Week. Bath. Shower, Television. 518 E. William St. Phone 3-8454. )1R SHARE APARTMENT with Grad Stu- dent. Save on meals. $8 week. Big yard, continuous hot water. Call 31791. )80R WASHTENAW AREA - Pleasant single room with private lavatory and toilet. Gentlemen preferred. 2-3868. )77R ROOM AND BOARD FOOD FOOD FOOD - Home cooked meals for men. Excellent food and coffee. 1319 Hill. )4X BOARD AT FRATERNITY HOUSE - Short block from Law Quad, corner Hill and Oakland. Eating schedule at your convenience. Really good food. Ph. 2-1634. )3X TRANSPORTATION DRIVING '49 CHEVROLET 4-door sedan to Los Angeles July 6. Want passen- gers. Gene Jeacobson University Es tension 2612, Home 2-0664. )37T HELP WANTED WANTED-Capable reader to read for blind student. Between 9 a.m.-12 noon. 85c per hr. Call 2-2217. )57H BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING WANTED to do in my home. Experienced. Ph. 7590, 830 S. Main. ) 32B THE STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY does not advertise its special student- educator rates on Sunday because3it is closed. )31B WASHING, finished work, and hand ironing. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone 2-9020. We spe- cialize in doing summer dresses. MISCELLANEOUS AT LIBERTY-German 11 and 12 in- structor does tutoring and translatiop. A. R. Neumann, 2-7909. )14M Read Daily Classifieds I '4 4 44 i PERSONAL I STUDENT would like tutor for Physics course. Bonus if student passes course. Call Isadore, 2-1937. )58P WANTED - Information regarding the whereabouts of the Byrle Abbin Cup. Two Desperate Coeds. Write Box 38, Michigan Daily. )57P x -Daily-James Butt RIGHT AS RAIN-Aunt Eller, played by Norma Stolzenbach, Grad. (center) is in the midst of prov- ing to Mr. Peck, Wm. Taylor, Grad., that as usual women are always right. Laurie, Curly and Ado Annie, played by Delores Rashid, Grad., Jim Bob Stephenson, Grad., and Donna Benson, '52, look on with mixed reactions to this scene from "Green Grow the Lilacs" which will open at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre tonight. GREEN GROW THE LILACS: Pioneer Drama Will Premiere Today ANN ARBOR VISITOR-Piper Laurie, 19, new Hollywood star, wore considerably more than this when she visited Ann Arbor Sunday. To Head Confab T. Hawley Tapping, general sec- retary of the Alumni Association and president of the American Alumni Council, will preside over the thirty-sixth annual national conference of the A.A.C. July 9-12. Continuous Daily from " ' 1 P.M. ALL DAY 5c JULY 4ths By HARRIET TEPPERMAN LYNN RIGG'S play is well- In keeping with the pioneer known for its simple, authentic spirit of Independence Day, the representation of the people who speech department will present lived on the prairies in the days t h e opening performance of before 1900-before civilization "Green Grow the Lilacs," a play invaded the West along with rich in American frontier humor, statehood. tonight at Lydia Mendelssohn The play tells of Laurie, played Theatre. by Delores Rashid, Grad., who is Because Prof. Claribel Baird, courted by rugged Curly McClain the director, felt there had been a and mysterious Jeeter Fry, roles revival of interest in cowboy bal- played by Jim Bob Stepheson, lads and square dances on cam- Grad., and Ted Heusel, Grad. pus, she chose "Green Grow the Forthright Aunt Eller, played Lilacs" as the first play of the by Norma Stolzenbach, settles all season. the complications that arise, in Professor Claims Educators Will Win Share of TV Space -Lost Edwmmmw Day Today- Educators, currently fighting for their share of television chan- nels, will emerge victorious by the end of the year, according to Ed- ward Stasheff, a visiting professor of speech. "The Federal Communications Commission has tentatively allot- ed ten per cent of the potential All A's Received By 25 Engineers Twenty-five students of the en- gineering college received all A's in the spring semester of 1951, it was announced today. They are: James W. Brummer, '31, George R. Curry, '54, Robert E. Frese, '51, Edward O. Gilbert, '52, Elmer G. Gilbert, Donald H. Groelsema, '51, Dale D. Haskin, '52, Kenneth C. Hendershot, '52, Barry Henning, '53, John C. Hen- sel, '52, Jack R. Jennings, '52. The list continues with Loren B. Johnston, Jr., '52, Thomas E. Kriewall, '53, Lawrence R. Mack, '52, James R. Mellor, '52, Robert H. Miller, '52, Ralph C. Peterson, '51, Stanley B. Reynolds, Jr. Others are Robert L. Reensch, '52, Dean R. Smith, '51, Bruce W. Swanson, '53, Donald E. Tackett, '53, Frederick M. Waltz, '54, Ron- ald E. West, '54, Franklin H. Wes- tervelt, '52. channels for non-commercial use," he said, "and the final decision is being held until the report of the Joint Committee on Educational Television has been made." Ss * " * STASHEFF, WHO is television supervisor for the New York City Board of Education, is teaching a TV research program for graduate students here during the summer session. Stasheff emphasized that TV researchers are getting in on the bottom floor by starting their collection of data while the industry is still young. Because it is difficult to find+ records after an industry has its start television records are1 ing kept from the beginning. old got be- spite of the intervention of Donna Benson, '52, who plays the comic, awkward Ado Annie. The unadorned plot is decor- ated with a cowboy atmosphere of songs, square dances-known as "play parties" in the play- an harmonica and an old-fash- ioned reed-organ. There is a great deal of history behind the folk songs and dances. One story tells of the origin of the Mexican word "gringos," which they applied to the white men to the north. It seems that "Green Grow the Lilacs," title song of the play, was a favorite among the cowboys who rode the range. The Mexicans colloquiallized the first two words into the appellation "gringos." Square dances, then known as "play parties," were invented about this time by the young peo- ple due to necessity. Parents of the era completely disapproved of dancing, calling it useless occupa- tion, "inspired by the devil." Prompted by the need for some type of recreation, the young men and women invented the "play >arty," as they called it in order to fool their parents. * * * "GREEN GROW THE LILACS" was produced by the Theatre Guild in New York during the early 1930's, and was such a suc- cess in its own right, that Richard Rodgers and. Oscar Hammerstein adapted it as the basis for their smash-hit musical "Oklahoma!" Directed by Prof. Baird, the cos- tumes have been designed by Lucy Barton, guest costumiere for the summer who is on leave from the University of Texas. The Art De- signer is George Crepeau. Season and single tickets for summer plays can be purchased from 4-8 p.m. today, and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every other day ex- cept Sunday at the Lydia Men- delssohn box office. Council Boosts U' Romancej Coeds on Observatory Hill may soon be meeting what might turn out to be interesting strangers through the legitimate pretext of "two nickels for a dime," on Sun- days as well as week days, thanks to the City Council. This boost to social relations comes from a vote made by the Council Monday, which will place the planned 100 meters in the University Hospital area in service seven days a week instead of the usual six days, as an accommoda- tion to out-of-town visitors. * * * A LONE dissenting vote was cast by City Alderman John B. Melott who declared that the city is getting "nickel hungry" if it asks out-of-town visitors to pay for parking there on Sundays. The meters will extend from the second entrance of Mosher-Jordan past Alice Lloyd Hall to Ann Street on the west side and on the east from Washington Heights to Ann Street. *'~-I4 200etasla I FRESHES °. -I COOLS and RE I Serving Quality Food at Popular Prices OPEN 11 A.M. to 8 P M Daily (Except Monday) HARMONY Restaurant Liberty at Fourth Avenue . o -L I t Against your skin a chill delicious touch of snow ...a gliding fragrant coolness. This glitteringly' beautiful icicle for hot days. Goes where you go... travels nicely and icily. I E The dff# Restaurant GOOD FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES Open Daily - 7 A.M. to 7:30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS We sell for less! 338 SOUTH STATE STREET Opens Tonight! "GREEN GROW THE LILACS" a comic folk-play with music by LYNN RIGGS A r. - Starts Thursday -- BRIAN DONLEVY ELLA RAINES "FIGHTING COAST GUAR D" Holiday Price 65c ---- a I 9 MEALS 50e up Breakfast...7:00-10:00V Lunch. :. .,.11 :00-1 :30 Dinner .. . .. 5:00-7:00 MEAL MART CAFETERIA 338 Maynard, Thru the Arcade (-->O<><><><> o Read and Use DAILY CLASS IFlIEDS "We plan to do research work on such topics as the type of pro- grams that appeal to the new TV owner and programs he prefers a year after he has had the set," Stasheff declared, "and scattered studies already made show that after the novelty wears off, the type of program must be improved to hold the audience." Stasheff has been a free lance director for the American Broad- casting Company, a part-time teacher at the Teachers College at Columbia University and assistant program manager for two years at TV station WPIX. Job Registration Students, staff and faculty members are reminded that sum- mer registration for those inter- ested in obtaining employment through the Bureau of Appoint- ments will open with a meeting at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 4051 Ad- ministration Building. Frozen Custard ICE CREAM Pts. & Qts. to take home. LIBERTY CUSTARD SHOP 100 ft. from Theaters 1, Jhe Si? GC, inema i/ BEGINS ITS SUMMER SERIES WITH RIE1MIBRANIDTF j [trringj MR. CHARLES LAUGHTON ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50c (tax included) Friday and Saturday at 7:30 and 9:30 I Calkins-Fletcher DRUG CO. 324 South State Street 818 South State Street WE DELIVER Wednesday through Saturday 8 P.M. Box Office Open July 4 - 4:00-8:00 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE ( ; - i Tickets $1.20 90c - 60c NEW HOURS AT 7'te Cottage fih 7:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M. CLOSED 2:00 P.M.-5:00 P.M. DINNER 5:00 P.M.-9:00 P.M. F 3' A V -T -I L. G. BALFOUR CO. rD fArFfnflKIITh r r i n/CI\D REMINDER TO VETERANS 1 ; TYPEWRITERS Adding Machines Webster-Chicago Wire Recorders Rented, Sold, Repaired Repair work a specialty. Stationery Greeting Cards Loose Leaf Note Books Typewriter, Supplies Note Books and Paper .4. STUDENT SUPPLIES Fountain Pens * GI Bill ends July 25 h 1 . . f ; . ,: i i Ilii '