PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1951 PAGIIMIIE FOURmmmII IIIIIIIIIAIIIIIITIIIIIIIIIRDAYI JULY 21, 1951 Il DDT TO ICE CREAM: Local Dramatists Beset By Unusual Problems DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN leader, 8:00 p.m. All meetings held at for piano, violin, viola, cello and bass. Michigan Union, third floor. The general public is invited. By MIKE BOOM Such things as DDT bombs, ice- cream bars, and low-flying air- planes hold no fear for the usual theatrical production. However, they are of special con- cern to Shirley Loeblich, director of the Ann Arbor Outdoor Theatre Association's presentation of "Any- thing Goes," which opened Thurs- day night and will be presented at 8:30 p.m. tonight and tomorrow in the West Park bandshell. AS ANN ARBOR'S first outdoor musical comedy, the show has had to overcome many unusual diffi- 'U' To Hold. Conference Foreign Educators, Students To Attend Fifty educators from foreign countries will be on campus Mon- day and Tuesday for a Summer Conference on Intercultural Edu- cation. The educators, who are from France, Mexico, Egypt, England, Holland and Australia, are in this country to study the American educational system and techni- ques, according to Prof. Claude Eg- gertsen of the education school, director of the Conference. * * * IN ADDITION, Prof. Eggertsen said, the Conference will be at- tended by both foreign and Am- erican students from the' Univer- city who are enrolled in areas of study most closely related. The conference is sponsored by the School of Education's Workshop in International Education. The purpose of the Conference, according to Prof. Eggertsen, is largely to extend to the visiting teachers of other lands an oppor- tunity to discuss some of the edu- cational problems and techniques involved in mutual understanding. Walter H. C. Laves, visiting professor of political science and former deputy director of UN- ESCO, will open the conference with a talk on "Issues in Edu- cation for Intercultural Under- standing," at 10 a.m. Monday. Other outstanding speakers of the conference will be Charles S. Johnson, president of Fisk Uni- versity, and Prof. J. A. Lauwerys of the University of London. Conference meetings will be held on the third floor of the Union. They are open to the public. culties, according to Miss Loeblich. "For example, the DDT bombs were needed to prevent any insect invasions," she said, "but so far the cool evenings have eliminated the bugs for us." The ice-cream bars are part of the financial investment of the production, because refreshments are being sold to add to the pro- ceeds, all of which will go to the Ann Arbor Civic Orchestra's Inter- lochen Scholarship Fund. The cool weather . has been a hindrance, keeping the ice cream sales down to practically nothing. The group was especially lucky in the matter of low-flying air- planes. "Only one plane passes over the park all night," said Miss Loe- blich, "and it comes in the middle of the finale. I just instruct con- ductor Paul Williams to have his orchestra play as loud as possible, and we drown the plane out." * * * THE CONSTRUCTION of the bandshell itself' offered problems to the production. A specially- constructed spot-light ended light- ing difficulties. A clever inno-, vation was having the "sailors" in the cast move the revolving flats for scene changes. A problem peculiar to "Anything Goes" itself was also overcome by Miss Loeblich and her staff. A false beard was needed to match the two Pomeranian dogs which appear in the show. Afterj trying chalk, make-up and vari- ous other methods, Miss Loe- blich hit upon a solution she terms "highly secret." The music of Cole Porter re- ceives top treatment in the pro- duction through a 35-piece orches- tra and a special amplifier system for the actors. Tickets for the remaining two performances are on sale at the gates of the bandshell. The "Fair- grounds" bus-line runs by the en-j trance to the park. Del Toro To Talk At ClubMeeting j Prof. Julio Del Toro of the ro- mance language department will speak on "The Problems of a Man- aging Editor," at the meeting of the Sociedad Hispanica at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the East Conference room of the Rackham building. A member of the department since 1921, Prof. Del Toro is edi- tor-in-chief of the Modern Lan- guage Journal, and a past presi- dent of the National Federation of Modern Language Teachers Asso- ciations. ON GUARD-Lea Barrett, pretty 18-year-old lifeguard at Adams Park swimming pool in Atlanta, Ga., has only a knowing smile for the pleas of young mermen to "Save me! save me!" 'SEWER MONEY': ber Acknowledges eGuilt in Fleecing Hoax The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Bldg. at 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication. SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 18-S Academic Notices School of Business Administration: Students from other Schools and Col- leges intending to apply for admission for the fall semester should secure ap- plication forms in Room 150, School of Business Administration, as soon as possible. All applicants for the doctorate who are planning to take the August pre- liminary examinations in Education, to be held in Room 4009 University High School Building, from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 N, August 20, 21. and 22, 1951, will please notify the Chairman of the Committee on Graduate Studies in Education, Room 4019 University High School, im- mediately, Doctoral Examination for Homer Ward Schamp, Jr., Physics; thesis: "Anionic Self-Diffusion and Electrical Conduction in Sodium Bromide", Saturday, July 21, West Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 10:15 a.m. Chairman, Ernst Katz. Doctoral Examination for Ivan Dale Steiner, Social Psychology; thesis:, "Some Effects of Perceived Primary Group Pressures on Attitudes Toward a National Issue", Tuesday, July 24, 3121 Natural Science Bldg., at 3:30. Chair- man, Daniel Katz. Doctoral Examination for Samuel Kel- ly Clark, Engineering Mechanics; thesis: "An Investigation of the Punching of Medium-Carbon Steel," Tuesday, July 24, 411A West Engineering Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, P. F. Chenea. Mathematics Colloquium Professor D. G. Bourgin, of the Uni- versity of Illinois, will speak on "Map- pings of Some Function Rings" at the Mathematics Colloquium on Tuesday, July 24, at 4 p.m., in Room 3011 An- gell Hall. Events Today Michigan Christian Fellowship swim- ming and box social, Pinckney Recrea- tion Area at Silver Lake. Transportation provided. Meet at Lane Hall, 3:00. Call Wilma Warburton, 38664. Congregational - Disciples Guild: Prof. Dwight C. Long of the history depart- ment will discuss present-day Europe as he saw it during the spring semester in Vienna-an informal Fireside, 7:30- 9:00, Guild House, 438 Maynard. All, students welcome. The Department of Speech presents The Young Ireland Theatre Company in a series of Irish plays at the Lydia Mendelssohn T h e a t r e, Wednesday through Saturday, July 18-21. Lauded as Ireland's most outstanding theatrical group, the company will give four eve- ning performances here and two mati- nees. Their repertoire of one and two- act plays includes W. B. Yeats' Words upon the Window-pane, and Purgatory; J. M. Synge's Riders to the Sea, and Shadow of the' Glen; Lady Gregory's Rising of the Moon; and Sean O'Casey's Shadow of a Gunman. By arrangement with the Internation- al Theatre Exchange, The Department of Speech presents The Young Ireland Theatre Company of Dublin in Synge's "Riders to the Sea" and also Christo- jher Casson, son of Dame Sybil Thorn- like, in a program of Irish ballads sung with harp accompaniment. All evening performances begin at 8:00 p.m. Thursday and Saturday mati- nees begin at 3:15 p.m. Tickets for all performances may be purchased at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office, open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., on days of performance until 8 p.m. Lectures Today Speech Conference, sessions in Rack- ham Amphitheater. "Speech: A Bridge or Barrier to Effective Human Rela- tions." Paul Bagwell, Executive Vice- President, Speech Association of Amer- ica, and Chairman. Department of Writ- ten and Spoken English, Michigan State College. 9:00 a.m. "Wanted-Teachers of Speech." Or- ville A. Hitchcock, Executive Secretary, Speech Association of America, and Professor of Speech, University of Iowa. 10:00 a.m, "Voice Communication Research for the United States Navy." Mack D. Steer, President, American Speech and Hearing Association, and Director, Speech and Hearing Clinic, Purdue University. 11:00 a.m. Luncheon. "Challenges to Our Speech Profession." Wilbur E. Gilman, Presi- dent, Speech Association of America, Chairman, Department of Speech. Queens College. 12:15 p.m., Michigan Union ballroom. Coming Lectures Monday, July 23- Conference on Intercultural Educa- tion. "Issues in Education for Inter- cultural Understanding," WALTER LAVES, Visiting Professor of Political Science and former Deputy Director of UNESCO, 10 a.m. Panel Discussion: WILLIAM CLARK TROW, Professor of Educational Psychology, member of first American Edudation mission to Japan, STANLEY HOCKEY, lecturer in Educa- tion, University of Durham, England, A. N. J. den HOLLANDER, Chairman Department of Sociology, University of Amsterdam; ABDIL REHIM RASHWAN, teacher of Methods of Teaching Eng- lish, Teachers College, Egypt, ROBERT L. BRACKENBURY, Assistant Professor of Education. Film Forum: "Boundary rines," WESLEY MAURER, Chairman, Department of Journalism, discussion Linguistic Program. "Scope, Place, and Development of Linguistics." Roman Jakobson, Harvard University. 2:00 p. m., 25 Angell Hall. Conference of English Teachers. "Teaching the Essay." Cleo Woods, Creston High School, Grand Rapids: Anna Yambrick, Northern High School, Flint; A. K. Stevens, University of Mich- igan. 4:00 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Education Lecture. "Leadership .in Using Community Resources." C. O. Fitzwater, Assistant Director of Rural Service, National Education Association. 4:00 p.m., Schorling Auditorium, Uni- versity High School. Federico Ghisi, Head of the Depar't- ment of Music, University of Florence, Italy, 4:15 Monday afternoon, July 23, in the Rackham Amphitheater. Dis- tinguished musicologist, Dr. Ghisi will lecture on "Italian Ars Nova." Open to general public. Tuesday, July 24- Conference on Intercultural Educa- tion. "The resolution of Intercultural Tensions in Schools," CHARLES S. JOHNSON, President, Fisk University, 10:00 a.m.; Panel Discussion; RICARDO AVALOS SCHUMACKER, Teacher of English, Secondary Schools, Mexico City, MICHAEL CHIAPETTI, Assistant Profes- sor of Education. 'Arizona State College, CHARLES S. JOHNSON, President, Fisk University, EDGAR G. JOHNSTON, Pro- fessor of Education, Wayne University, GEORGES L. MIALLON, Professor, Sor- bonne, Paris, 2:00 p.m., Michigan Union, Third Floor. "G.I. Education for Amer- ican Children in Germany," SARITA DAVIS, Librarian, University Elemen- tary School, Schorling Auditorium, Uni- versity High School. "The Development of an International Educationist," J. A, LAUWERYS, Professor of Comparative Education, University of London, 7:30 p.m. Panel discussion: CHARLES C. FRIES, Professor of English, J. HAROLD GOLDTHORPE, Director, Fulbright Pro- gram, U. S. Office of Education, CHARLES MILLS, Director, Department of Public Education, Australia, MADE- LEINE PAULE MOXEIX, Professor, Uni- versity of Lyon, France,, Michigan Un- ion, Third Floor. Linguistic Program, "Sound a n d Meaning." Roman Jakobson, Harvard University. 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphi- theater. Concerts Stanley Quartet. The second program in the current series by the Stanley Quartet will be played at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 24, in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall, with Helen Titus, piano, and Clyde Thompson, string bass, assisting. The program will open with Haydn's Quartet in C major, Op. 74, No. 1, fol- lowed by Bartok's Quartet No. 6. The program will close with Schubert's Quin- tet in A major, Op. 114 ("The Trout"), Special Organ Recital by Robert Ellis, 4:15 Sunday afternoon, July 22, in Hill Auditorium. The program will include Le Corps Glorieux by Olivier Messiaen, Metamorphosis by Willard Elliot, Pas- torale by Jean Roger-Ducasse; Variation- en und Fuge uber ein Original Thema, Op. 73, by Max Regar. The general pub- lic is invited. Student Recital: Walter Evich, stu- dent of violin with Gilbert Ross, will present a program at 8:30 Wednesday evening, July 25, in the Rackham As- sembly Hall, as partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Mas- ter of Music. It will include composi- tions bynMozart, Brahms, and Ernest Bloch, and will be open to the public. Quintet Program Postponed. The pro- gram by the Woodwind Quintet, prev- iously announced for Monday evening, July 23, in the Rackham Lecture Hall, has been postponed until Thursday eve- ning, the 26th. Coming Events Conference of English Teachers. July 23. Monday, July23- Band Conductor's Conference 9:00 a.m. Teaching the Woodwinds, Rackham Amphitheatre. 1:00 p.m., Summer Workshop Band, Hill Auditorium. 3:00 p.m., The Junior H. S. Band, Hill Auditorium. 4:15 p.m., Drilling the Marching Band, Ferry Field. 7:30 p.m., Summer Workshop Band, Hill Auditorium. 9:00 p.m., Michigan Band Movies, 204 Harris Hall. Tuesday, July 24-- 8:00, Teaching the Woodwinds, Rack- ham Amphitheatre. 11:00, Comparison of Vocal and In-, strumental Breath Techniques, Rack- ham Amphitheatre. 1:00, Summer Workshop Band, Hill Auditorium. 3:00, The Jr. H. S. Band, Hill Auditor- ium. 4:15 p.m., Drilling the Marching Band, Ferry Field. 7:00, Band Competition Festivals, 204 Harris Hall. Michigan Christian Fellowship. Sun- day, July 22, 4:30 meeting, Lane Hall. Speaker: Mr. Robert Warburton. Sub- ject: What Did Christ Come Td Do? Refreshments following. Congregational - Disciples Guild: Mr. Blaise Leval, Professor of Vellore Col- lege, Vellore, India, will speak on "As I Saw Communism in India"-6:00 sup- per and program Sunday, Memorial Christian Church, Hill & Tappan. Roger Williams Guild: Meet at Guild House at 3:00 for swimming and supper. Discussion, Oneil Banks: "Atoms and Christians." Sunday, July 22. WASHINGTON -(P) - The f a- bulous Sam Mason admitted yes- terday that he tapped "clients" for thousands in "sewer money" on promise to bribe Washington officials. "But," he asked Senators, "what's wrong with that?" IN ANSWER, a Senate investi- gating committee turned over his testimony to the Justice Depart- ment and Internal Revenue Bu- reau, with a view to prosecution. The committee has charged that Mason fleeced "gullible victims," including two Greek Catholic priests, out of a third of a million dollars. Most of it was supposed to be used in lining up bargain dollar-a- year leases on Government build- ings. There would be a lot of build- ings available, he told his clients, Physics Seminars To Begin Monday A three-week University sum- mer symposium on physics-devoted to the study of fundamental bio- logical processes will open Mon- day. Speakers include Prof. S. E. Lu- ra of the University of Illinois, Prof. J. L. Oncley and Prof. Paul Doty of Harvard University, Prof. G. B. Sutherland of the University of Michigan, Prof. E. C. Pollard of Yale University and Prof. M. Del- bruck of California Institute of Technology. because the Government was go- ing underground to escape an atomic attack. THE COMMITTEE said Mason, 59, of New York, is really a Rus- sian-born confidence man by the name of Mussman with a criminal record a yard long. Mason, who said he once stuffed money into his hollow wooden leg, testified he had tak- en $88,000 from "clients" but said he had turned over most of the money to a mysterious "Mr. Eungart," now in Australia. He also admitted he had not filed an income tax return since 1929 because he never had any money left at the end of the year. He said he lost a lot on the ponies. Mason testified that he told his clients their money would be used as "sewer money," but that he did not use the word bribe. "But you were entering into a scheme to bribe Government of- ficials?" asked Committee Coun- sel Francis Flanagan. "Well, I can't say no," Mason replied. "You certainly can't," Flanagan shot back. "No," Mason agreed. "And you do say yes?" Flana- gan insisted. "Yes," M a s o n acknowledged. "What's wrong with that?" That touched off a roar of laughter in the crowded hearing room, Mason admitted taking money. from two Greek Catholic priests tified Thursday. But he whittled their estimates of the total take from more than $200,000 to only $88,000. He said he gave most of it to Eungart who he said was.the real go-between with Government of- ficials. He added that Eungart was in Australia but that he ex- pected him to come back and ful- fill his deals. Committee investigators told re- porters they have found no trace of Eungart. Neither have they found any Government official connected with Mason's dealings in any way. - . r 3 r Band Workshoj Representing 23 states and Can- ada, approximately 400 conductors of high school and college bands will attend a National Band Con- ductors Conference Workshop at the University next week. William D. Revelli, workshop chairman, says that about half of the band conductors who will at- tend already are enrolled in Sum- Radio Survey .Results Told Radio and television are not ef- fective means of communicating difficult ideas, according to Prof. Harrison B. Summers, director of radio programming at Ohio State University. Addressing a summer speech conference yesterday, Prof. Sum- mers said that radio and television could be used to get across infor- mation and ideas only if the pro- grams had wide publiicty, limited their ideas to simple concepts, and used "easy" language, having emo- tional appeal. Because radio sets are found in 97 percent of America's homes, ra- dio is the greatest potential means of communication in this country, he declared. However, he stated, radio listen- ing is at best a divided-attention' activity. According to a recent Will Be Held mer Session courses at the Uni- versity. The five-day program, including clinics and demonstrations of the various band instrninents, will be held Monday through Friday in the Rackham Building. Slated for the conference will be a reading of new materials for school bands by the Summer Ses- sion Workshop Band, a demon- stration of high school marching band drilling, demonstrations by the Ann Arbor Junior High School bands and the Pontiac elemen- tary school band, and a con- cert by the University's Woodwind Quintet (made up of members of the University Music School fac- ulty). Anchor Ahoy The coeducational crew of the raft "Lethargia" hit a snag yesterday, only 24 hours after they had begun their journey to New Orleans. Near Pittsburgh, according to a United Press dispatch, the raft lost its anchor, forcing the voyagers to spend the night at their overnight mooring place on the Allegheny River. Skipper Mary Ellin McGrady explained simply that they would wait until one of the boys went in to Pittsburgh to get a new anchor. Also making the experiment- al trip are Gerry Garcia, Milton Borden, Grad., and Don Brown, '52. 'S t L. G. BALFOUR CO. FRATERNITY JEWELRY CUPS AND TROPHIES MICHIGAN SOUVENIRS O GIFTS SUMMER STORE HOURS-- 12:30 till 5:00 -. Closed Saturdays "Home of the official Michigan Rings." *<-o=> m <-o=> m <"o o=> M n /1 / if v.+' kr S 4c""". . lilt, ## ' r." :, n LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION STUDENT CENTER (National Lutheran Council) 1304 Hill Street Dr. Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor 9:10 A.M.: Bible Class at the Student Center. 10:30 A.M.: Services in Zion & Trinity Churches. Note: 8:00 Service in Zion Church. 5:30 P.M.: LSA Supper Meeting in Zion Parish Hall. Program at 7:00. Speaker-Miss Ger- trude Fiegel of Plymouth High School "The Public School Teacher and the Church." Wednesday- 4:00 P.M:. Tea and Coffee Hour at the Center. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. Subject-"Life." 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Primary Sunday School during the morning service. 8:00 P.M.: Wednesday: Testimonial Service. A free reading room is maintained at 339 South Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science liter.ature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased. Ths room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 A.M. to 5 P.M.; Fridays 7-9 P. M., Saturday 3-5 P.M. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Avenue Edward H. Redman, Minister 11:00 A.M.: Service of Worship-Rev. Edward H. Redman preaching on: "Ethical Purposes and the Present Crisis." FRIENDS (QUAKER) MEETINGLane Hall 11:00 A.M.: Sundays. Visitors welcome. CHURCH OF CHRIST Y. M. C. A. Auditorium G. Wheeler Utley, Minister 11:00 A.M.: Sunday morning service. 7:00 P.M.: Sunday evening service. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wangdahl, Eugene Ransom, Ministers 9:30 A.M.: Breakfast Seminar, Pine Room. 10:45 A.M.: Worship, "Something to Come Back To." Rev. Wongdahl preaching. 5:30 P.M.: Student Supper and social hour. 6:45 P.M.: Vespers and program. Theme: Wor- ship through Music. Speaker, Dr. Harold Haugh of the School of Music. Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, Open Daily. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 10:30: Service, with sermon by the pastor, "Andrew, Winner of Souls for Christ." Sunday at 5:30: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, Supper and Program. At 6:45 a 40 min. 16 mm. sound-color science film, "GOD OF THE ATOM", will be shown. Public cordially invited. Wednesday at 9:00 P.M.: Candlelight Vespers, survey it has been shown percent of the housewives ing something else while is on during the day. that 80 are do- the set I *~*~ *~*~r *~r*' VACATION IN MIND? /I PLAY SAFE Carry Before you go place an ad in the Classified Column of The Michigan Daily. We guarantee results by TRAVELER'S I| . CHECKS l0 : your'gofi . en:. o0q of fun-!,!, i the ; I 11