SUNDAY, JULY 8, 1951 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY Yi LOOK and LISTEN MILLER ADAPTATION: Ibsen Tragedy Will Open Wednesday Radio By MARILYN FLORIDIS (.> TV A new weekly series of programs from 9:15 to 9:30 a.m. Sundays, called "Words Men Live By" will1 start the radio schedule for NBCl this week. The program, narrated by Mel1 Brandt, will bring to radio listen- ers the words by which men of all ages, religions, and creeds have, lived. ENGLAND'S FORMER Prime Minister's daughter, Sarah Chur-l chill, will be starred on "New The-i atre" which will be heard at 7:30s p.m. today. , Nathan Milstein, celebrated violinist, will be guest soloist onI tre "NBC Symphony Orchestra Summer Concert Series" with, Maurice Abravanel as guest con--t ductor at 8:30 p.m. A discussion of "What Have the' MacArthur Hearings Proved" by Senators John J. Sparkman (D., Ala.), Robert S. Kerr (D., Okla.), Harry P. Cain (R., Wash.), and William F. Knowland (R., Calif.), will be heard on the NBC program, "American Forum of the Air" at 10:30 p.m. CO-STARRING IN an original musical play, "Casey at the Bat," Gordon MacRae, baritone, and Dorothy Warenskjold, soprano, will sing and act out the story behind Casey's famous strikeout. The show will be heard at 8:00 pm. tomorrow. CBS will present "Summer in, St. Louis," featuring excerpts from Johann Strauss' "Die Fleder- maus," broadcast from the stage of the Municipal Opera at 3:30 p.m. today. The.University speech depart- ment will also be providing lis- teners with entertainment over WUOM and WHRV. Highlighting their productions will be the "Angell Hall Play- house," heard Tuesdays over WU- OM and directed by Prof. Garnet Garrison. The object of this play- house is to experiment with vari- ous types of writings. Their pro- gram for Tuesday will be an origi- nal science fiction story, written by a University graduate Max Kelly and called "Fog." A MONDAY through Friday presentation will be the "News Program" heard at noon with stu- dents commenting on world af- fairs over WHRV. Heard on WUOM at 5:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday will be "Down Story Book Lane." This is a student written, cast, and lirected production. Transcribed from the Univer. sity studios, the "Dramatic Chil- dren's Story" will be heard at 8:45; a.m. over WWJ. This is another "Down Story Book Lane" produc- tion. By MIKE BOOM Last year if you asked a tele- vision viewer to name a few signs that told him summer was here, he would probably have answered with "Movies . .. old movies .. . more old movies." Well, the television industry has not yet found a way to do away entirely with Hollywood's epics of the 1930's that formerly replaced all the major TV shows for the summer. However, viewers will be pleased to know that an increas- ing number of "live" productions are serving as replacements this year. AMONG THE best of this sum- mer's crop of new shows is the "Westinghouse Summer Theatre," seen on Channel 2 at 9 p.m. Mon- day. It replaces "Studio One." probably TV's most consistently' excellent dramatic presentation, and does a very creditable job. Comedies, mysteries, and lighter works will be featured, and there are promised several repeats of past "Studio One" successes. Next week, John Mc- Quade (TV and radio's "Charlie Wild") and Margaret Hayes will star in a mystery, "Nightfall." NBC has kept in the lighter vein in providing a relief show for "Kukla, Fran, and Ollie," seen on Channel 4 at 6 p.m., Monday through Friday.aThey now offer a new personality, Ernie Kovacs, in a show that is hardly describable. Ernie himself says it's "a short show . . . it just seems long." On some nights Ernie deals in his forte, subtle satire, but on others he explodes with boister- ous corn. All in all, this mixture of comedy, songs, and music is fine fare for summer dinnertime viewing. * * FRED WARING'S summer suc- cessor is a production called "Guest House," viewed on Chan- nel 2 at 8 p.m., Sunday. Although the studio was filled with over a dozen top enter- tainers and theatrical personali- ties for the premier show last week, Oscar Levant had little trouble stealing the spotlight. By HARRIET TEPPERMAN Second in the speech depart- ment's summer series of plays, "An Enemy of the People," adapt- ed by Arthur Miller, '38, will be presented on campus for the first time at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Henrik Ibsen's long-famous tra- gedy - of which Miller's is the most recently produced adapta- tion-tells of the unsanitary con- ditions of the health baths which have become the livelihood of a small town in Norway, and how they affect two publicly prominent brothers. '. * * ONE BROTHER, a doctor, dis- Depart ments To Present Symposiums A scientific "growth and differ- entiation" symposium will be held Monday through Thursday in the School of Public Health. "The Longer Classic: Fiction" will be considered at a conference of English teachers at 4 p.m. to- morrow in Rackham Assembly Hall. Dean James B. Edmonson of the School of Education will lecture on "The Old Versus the New in Edu- cation" at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Scherling Auditorium. Prof. William G. Moulton of Cor- nell University will give the first of three linguistics program lec- tures at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Amphitheater. covers and becomes scientifically certain of the water's pollution. He mistakenly believes that he has done the town a great service and that the matter will be improved immediately. But Dr. Stockmann, played by Nafe Katter, Grad., had not coun- ted on his brother-mayor of the town-who's reaction was entire- ly different. Peter Stockmann, played by Richard Burgwin, Grad., and Bruce Nary, Grad., who plays Hovstad, the local newspaper editor, succeed in turning the whole town against the doctor. Attempting to defend his posi- tion, which is one of truth, Dr. Stockmann holds a meeting in a private home,-the only place not controlled by Havstad and the mayor. EVEN THERE, however, the side of hypocrisy is able to move the mob's spirit. They attack the home; Dr. Stockmann; his wife as played by Bernice Daniel, Grad.; and his children, played by Dennis Morley and Michael Philbin, two Ann Arbor grammar school students. At this point, branded as an enemy of the people, Dr. Stock- mann martyrs himself and his Seville Holy Week "The Holy Week in Seville" will be the title of an informal discus- sion to be presented by Richard Defendini, a member of the ro- mance language department, at the Sociedad Hispanica meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the East Con- erence Room of the Rackham Building. family. He cancels their plan- ned journey to America, and tells them that because they stand for truth they must re- concile themselves to eternal loneliness, Others in the cast include Wil- liam Taylor, Gloria Moore, Wil- lard Booth, Stan Challis and James Briley, all of whom are graduate students in the speech department. * * * ORIGINALLY TH idea came to Ibsen when he read an article in a German newspaper about a similar event. The play contains a good deal of autobiography in that Ibsen himself was being cri- ticized for standing by absolute objective truth without the com-, promises demanded by society's practicality. Miller has adapted the some- what stilted language of the lit- eral translation into free-flow- ing American colloquialisms without changing Ibsen's moral point of view. Directed by Prof. H. Z. Norton, sets for the play have been de- signed by George Crepeau, and the costumes executed by Lucy Barton. Tickets for the performances, which will be held Wednesday through Saturday night, may be purchased from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, and on performance night until 8 p.m., at the Lydia Men- delssohn box office. 'I TOP DOG HOSTELRY-Washtenaw County's new model humane society shelter has been in opera- tion for less than a month and the present guests report that they like the $100,000 layout just fine. 0 ~ ** * * o gs LifeNotSolBad At Model Animal Shelter By CAL PATTERSON Leading a dog's life, or any oth- er kind of life, at the new Wash- tenaw County Humane Society animal shelter can be pretty sat- isfactory. The present guests at the month-old $100,000 model shelter just south of Dixboro chorused agreement to a reporter that the facilities are the cat's meow. * * * A STEADY turnover of ten- nants has reduced the original booking of 47-including two ducks, a raccoon and a deodorized skunk-to a group comprised of, four cats, 14 kittens and a host of dogs, .but the four-legged residents are obviously still pretty happy about their quarters. And with good reason, too. The effoorts of Herbert Gay, shelter manager, to make them comfortable, are facilitated by Peace Arts To Be Shown A "Festival of the Arts for' As MC of a visual wInformation ihhedat4m Please" dealing with show busi- ness topics, Levant mugged, pun- ned, and insulted his way through the hour. His brash style is some- thing fresh on TV, but after 45 minutes even it became somewhat annoying. With some toning down, this show can become highly en- tertaining. Some of the top shows are stay- ing on for the summer, among them Ed Sullivan's "Toast of the Town" (Channel 2, 7 p.m., Sun- day), "What's My Line" (Channel 2, 9:30 p.m., Sunday), "Your Hit Parade" (Channel 4, 9:30 p.m., Saturday), and "Twenty Ques- tions" (Channel 2, 7 p.m., Friday). reace wil J 11 L pJ. . A71., July 15, under the sponsorship of the Ann Arbor Council of Arts, Sciences, and Professions, accord- ing to Betty Engield, Grad., social secretary of the organization. The festival will be held in the garden of the residence at 523 Packard St. It will feature an exhibition of paintings from the recent " Chicago Peace Congress, and a musical program. Dinner will be served from 5 to 7 p.m. Persons desiring dinner reservations should telephone 3- 1358 or 3-0425 as soon as possible. Persons wishing to exhibit works of art are invited to telephone Miss Enfield at 3-0425. such up-to-date aids as radiant heat, modern ventilation equip- ment, germicidal lamps, a diet kitchen and continual running water in all kennels. There are also observation and isolation wards for ailing animals, enameled bathtubs and a special nursery for the young. A 28-cage "adoption room" gives each pet an equal chance to land a new master. Hopelessly injured or diseared animals are dispatched by a mo- dern gas chamber which puts sub- jects to sleep in less than a min- ute's. time. THE DELUXE layout includes the shelter proper, a residence for the manager and a garage with an adjacent barn for wayward horses or cows. Funds for construction of the shelter were donated by Frederick C. Matthaei, Detroit industrialist. "We spent a year and a half in research," Matthaei said, "I think we are far ahead of any other lo- cality." Chances are, the present in- habitants of the shelter think so too. Alimony Hitched To Cost of Living DETROIT- VP) -Alimony, too, has been hitched to the cost of living. It seems that of the nearly 1,900' revisions of Circuit Court orders in divorce cases last year, a large majority were to help keep di- vorcees abreast of their ex-hub- bles' inflation - fattened p a y checks. Edward Pokorny, friend of the court, hastened to explain that di- vorcees usually don't rely on any government price index. But he pointed out that they have a right to petition for more alimony if there is a "material change" in their former husbands' income. Stassen Hits Post For Youngdahl ST. PAUL, Minn.-(P)-Harold E. Stassen yesterday blasted ap- pointment of Gov. Luther W. Youngdahl of Minnesota to the Federal District Bench as a "typi- cal Truman trick of clever poli- tics." Stassen, former Minnesota Gov- ernor himself, said he feels re- moval of Youngdahl from Minne- sota is a "brazen attempt to grab the governorship of Minnesota in 1952 from Sen. Hubert Humphrey or one of his henchmen." mide Range Of Exhibits Featured Exhibits ranging from the lowly to the sublime - swimmer's itch to the seventh. President of the University-are now on display at various museums and libraries around the campus. Students planning swimming parties at lakes near Ann Arbor would do well to note the display in the Museums Building which illustrates the process by which parasitic larvae, living in the blood of water birds, attach themselves to humans and cause a painful skin condition, known as swim- mer's itch. Methods of prevention and control of swimmer's itch are also shown. AN EXHIBIT on the first floor of the General Library pays tri- bute 'to Alexander G. Ruthven, seventh president of the Univer- sity, by showing how the campus has grown under his guidance from 1930 to 1950. Several volumes from Presi- dent Ruthven's rare book col- lection are in the library cases. After seeing the work of ex- pansion done by the seventh presi- dent of the University, students may be interested in a display showing the University a it first existed in Detroit in 1817. Pictures of the lone building in which the University washhoused and of its first president, the Rev- erend John Monteith, are now on exhibit in the Michigan Histori- cal Collection Room of the Rack- ham Building. * * * IN CONNECTION with the pro- posal to make Hawaii the 49th state, copies of the Hawaiian con- stitution, which was modeled ater the constitution of the United States, can be seen in cases in the basement of the Law Library. Also on display in this library are laws of the Indian nations. Upstairs in the Law Library the history of printing in the United States is traced, by showing a col- lection of rare first editions. An ancient version of a pawn- broker's shop can be seen in the Museum of Archeology's display "Life in a Roman town in Egypt." Six rooms in the building are de- voted to ancient Egyptian arti- facts. Daily Classifieds Get Quick Results Read and Use Daily Classifieds BUSINESS SERVICES 4 MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .54 1.21 1.76 3 .63 1.60 2.65 4 .81 2.02 3.53 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. LOST AND FOUND PARKER 51 PEN-Black and silver, gold clip on Madison, State Angell Hall. Reward. Ralph L. Christensen 2-9234. )100L FOR SALE FOR SALE-Record player automatic change; mahogany lamp table. Phone 2-8696. )150 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 WASHTENAW AREA - Pleasant single room with private lavatory and toilet. Gentlemen preferred. 2-3868. )77R SHARE APARTMENT with Grad Stu- dent. Save on meals. $8 week. Big yard, continuous hot water. Call 31791. )80R CAMPUS Tourist Home. Rooms by Day or Week. Bath, Shower, Television. 518 E. William St. Phone 3-8454. )1R GIRLS ROOMING HOUSE Large studio type room. Two closets. Two beds. Community kitchen. Be- tween campus & hospitals. Ph. 2-2826. )81R MISCELLANEOUS AT LIBERTY--German 11 and 12 In- structor does tutoring and translation. A. R. Neumann, 2-7909. )14M 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 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING WANTED to do in my home. Experienced. Ph. 7590, 830 8. Main. )32B MEALS 50e up Breakfast...7:.00-1:.00 Luc.-."..10-1:3 Dinner ..... 5:00-7:00 c o 0 MEAL MART CAFETERIA0 338 Maynard, Thru the Arcade ~l.Om O t O U THE STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY does not advertise its special rates to- day because it is closed on Sundays. Phone 2-8242 tomorrow. TYPING -- Reasonable rates, accurate work. Phone 3-4040. )35B WASHING, finished work, and hand ironing. Ruff dry .and wet washing. Also ironing separately. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone 2-9020. We ape- cialize in doing summer dresses. 4 I I " t i I Doors Open 12:45 P.M. Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. Playing Through Tuesday y g' ' l f ,'Y _. '3 .:, . r' r, H ~ a . : Special Summer Policy 44c until 5 P.M. Monday Through Friday -Starts Today- fighting a ever Sfought .?before... defin7 sub, foe and jungle. Read and Use CLASSIFIEDS DAILY The Department of Speech presents - I .._ i Learn Advertising, Finance, Layout, Circulation The Michigan Daily Business Department will have a meeting for those interested in trying out for staff jobs. i r El Arthur Miller's adaptation of "AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE" by Henrik Ibsen Wednesday thru Saturday July 11-14 at 8 P.M. III I I I Fl III I I I II I ._ ,.,a..a:r:t: '1t#:4fiiff.t: iSi2.;t.M i .47iili': : k:2 : I