PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1951 ' f ',M' N+N ny ylcy ,s, E$F"P °6SYia' H Los : e h l , Slsty . X6.'4' IGIRAD4IIX FANTASY: LOOK and LISTEN 'The Enchanted' Opens Wednesday Radio By MARILYN FLORIDIS Presenting a full-hour radio dramatization of Bud Schulberg's popular novel, "The Disenchant- ed," the "NBC New Theatre" will open the NBC evening calendar for Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The story deals with the crack- up of a hard-drinking, talented novelist, who was too weak to dis- cipline himelf or his talent. HEARD IMMEDIATELY after- wards at 8:30 p.m. "The NBC Sym- phony" program will present two young musicians, Claudette Sorel, pianist, and Adele Addison, so- prano, as guest soloists. Selections for the program will include "Con- certo No. 1 in F Sharp Minor" by Rachmaninoff, and the aria "De- puis Le Jour" from Carpenter's opera "Louise." Musical highlight for Monday will be the "Boston Pops Orches- tra," conducted by Arthur Fied- ler, heard at 10:00 p.m., NBC. The Overture-Fantasy of "Romeo and Juliet" will spotlight the show. * * * STARRING AS the airman in the radio version of the film fan- tasy, Robert Cummings will ap- pear in "Stairway to Heaven" on the "Screen Director's Playhouse show for 10 p.m. Thursday, NBC. Baseball fans will be glad to hear of a new show on NBC which will feature Jackie Robinson, sec- ond baseman ;for the Brooklyn Dodgers. The show, called "Jackie Robinson Platter-Up Club," is set for Saturday at 9:30 a.m. Robin- son will introduce ball players, play records and conduct a quiz program. Slated for Sunday is song- writer Johnny Mercer, singing some of his own compositions, on the "Peggy Lee Show" at 7:30 p.m. over CBS. * * , THE SECOND show of the ser- ies "The Nation's Nightmare" will be heard over CBS on Thursday at 8:30 p.m. This show is unique in that it will use actual recorded statements of underworld figures for its program. The series deals authentically w i t h organized crime. The University Speech De- partment Radio's schedule for this week will be highlighted by the presentation of a psychologi- cal suspense thriller, "The Key," heard over WUOM at 7:30 p.m. " Tuesday. WUOM has also announced two interviews to be aired at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday and Friday. Vincent Hillyer, husband of the sister of the Shah of Iran is ex- pected to clarify several points re- garding the Anglo-Iranian oil sit- uation and the threat of Com- munism to Iran on the Tuesday show. Scheduled for Friday is a panel discussion on aiding the past-40 handicapped worker. Under the direction of visiting lecturer Philip Lang, "live" music will be heard on the Radio Work- shop Drama's presentation of a murder mystery entitled "Today." It will be heard on Friday at 4 p.m. The show will be directed by Vic Hursitz. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) La p'tite causette meets Monday from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m., in the South Room of the Michigan Union Cafeteria. Pi Lambda Theta tea and program July 23, Monday, 7:15 p.m. Rackham Building East Conference Room. Sarita Davis will talk about her recent exper- lences in Germany. Hillel: Coke hour from three to five in the Library at Lane Hall, Wednesday, July 25. This Week: Wednesday through Sat- urday, July 25-28, at 8:00 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, the De- partment of Speech presents the comic- fantasy, The Enchanted, by Jean Girau- doux and adapted by Maurice Valency. The Enchanted, which opened in New York in January, 1950, was adapted from Giraudoux' Intermezzo which was pro- duced in Paris in 1933. Tickets are on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office daily from 10 a.m.-5 p.m., on days of performance until 8 p.m. Congregationa>-Disciples Guild: Tea on the Terrace, 4:30-6:00 on Tueseday at the Guild House, 438 Maynard St. Classical Coffee Hour, Tuesday, July 24, at 4 p.m. in East Conference Room, Rackham Building. All students of Classics and friends are invited to at- tend. TV By MIKE BOOM Although the show has been on the air for three weeks, we didn't get around to viewing CBS's high- ly-touted "Amos 'N' Andy" until last Thursday night. A huge press release extolling the program showed TV column- ists across the nation united in their praise, and Thursday night we became a member of the clan. "Amos 'N' Andy" have long pro- vided a treat for radio listeners' ears, but the television version gives the eyes a great deal of en- joyment, too. The radio scripts are easily and hilariously adapted to TV, as shown by Thursday's episode deal- ing, with Kingf ish's attempt to steal a rare nickel from unsuspect- ing Andy. The four-year search for a cast has paid off handsomely, for they are the exact images of the radio characterizations. The situation comedy and dia- logue seems fresh on the new medium, and even the kinescoping is of top quality. Take a look any Thursday at 7:30 p.m. on Chan- nel 2. * * * AT 5:00 THIS afternoon, a timely discussion on Korea will take place on "Mrs. Roosevelt Meets the Public." Senators Paul H. Douglas (D., Ill.) and Harry P. Cain (R., Wash.) will take oppos- ing views on the program to be seen on Channel 4. NBC has come out with two new mystery dramas, when it appears to us that there are already too many of this type being produced. "Assignment: Manhunt" on Sat- urdays at 9:30 p.m. and "The Door With No Name" on Fridays at 8:00 p.m. are the new Channel 4 of- ferings. OSCAR LEVANT got the "hook" from CBS after two weeks as an insulting host on "Guest House," seen on Sundays at 8:00 p.m. on Channel 2. Durward Kirby re- ceived a promotion from the net- work to be the new MC. He's a personable fellow who should rise to new heights (besides his own 6'3"). CBS seems determined to flood the TV and radio scenes with the tear-jerking quiz show, "Strike It Rich." They now have the show scheduled for a half-hour each Wednesday night and a half-hour each week-day morning on TV, with another half-hour every day on radio. The show has people with sad problems as contestants. Forin- stance, on one show last week there appeared a little girl who had lost her dog, a young man who needed an operation, and a mother who wanted to erect a memorial to her son who was killed in Korea. It's too much to sit through much of this and have a happy day. -Daily-James Butt MAY I HELP YOU?-Dean Walter B. Edmondson of the School of Education is shown assisting Bernice Lirones, Grad., make her choice of free reading material. The free books and prints are being given to education students as part of Edmondson's "Share the Book Plan." Approximately 5,000 books have been given by professors and instructors to their students. English Confab Will Be Held In Rackham The fifth conference of high school English teachers will be held at 4 p.m.htomorrow in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Participating in the discussion will be Miss Cleo Wood, from * * * IFS, ANDS, BUTS: Experts Say UMTBil Loaded with Difficulties By The world Staff of The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The President's five-man Universal Military Trainng Commission says it probably will send Congress its plan for a national security training corps in September. When UMT finally will go into effect no one knows. First, Congress must okay it-and UMT will be dynamite with an election year coming up. But that may be nothing compared to the merry-go-round of ifs, ands and buts that UMT must ride after that. UNDER THE Universal Military Training and Service Law, Con- gress or the President must reduce the terms of service for draftees under 19 to six months. Yet this will be impossible if the armed forces are to be kept at 3,500,000 men. Defense officials have said armed strength could be reduced- if a well organized and well trained reserve could be called up at short notice. But there can't be any such beefed-up reserve until UMT goes in- to effect and starts shunting train- ed men into reserve units. c, :::::><:: ;;<;:<:: And UMT can't go into effect until world conditions permit a IMPORTED gamble on reducing the size of the armed forces. fn Which comes right back to the ( India Prints problem of cutting service for un- Suitable for beda der-19ers, which can't be done etc., etc. V Incidentally, the UMT commis- IN D IA A sion. now in the Pentagon, wants By HARRIET TEPPERMAN "The Enchanted", written by the celebrated French playwright Jean Giradoux, will open at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre as *the next offering on the speech department's list of. summer plays.1 Translated by Maurice Valency, "The Enchanted" is a witty, hu- morous fantasy about a young French schoolteacher named Isa- bel who believes she can converse with a ghost. PLAYED BY Dorothy Gutekunst, Grad., Isabel hopes that through the ghost, played by Ted Heusel, Grad., she may be able to rid the community of many of its evils. The story develops in a fas- cinating manner when Isabel falls in love with the handsome Supervisor of Weights and Mea- Dean Counsels On Air Rdates Prof. Herbert F. Taggart, Ass't. Dean of the business administra- tion school is flying to Washington tomorrow to testify before a Con- gressional subcommittee. Dean Taggart, a noted authority on cost accounting, has been call- ed to give his opinion on a pro- posed bill dealing with Air Mail rates. The bill would make it ne- cessary to determine the exact cost of air mail service. "Such a thing just couldn't be done," Dean Taggart asserted. "Planes carry other freight and passengers as well as mail, and you can't determine the exact cost of any one of these items. It's a technical impossibilty." Talpy Wins Fulbright For Study in France Thomas Talpy, a University stu- dent working on his doctorate in electrical engineering, has been awarded a Fulbright Scholarship. Talpy will go to France in the fall to study at the University of Grenoble. ARTICLES (fast colors) and couch covers. R T SHOP ard Street ( m- '>o0a o o~ v c sures, played by William Brom- field, Grad. The plot is further complicated by the pompous government in- spector, played by Nafe Katter, Grad., who more than adequately handled the lead in "An Enemy of the People" earlier this summer; the gentle mayor, as portrayed by Richard Burgwin, Grad.; and the understanding doctor who is played by Donald Klechner, Grad. Two gossipy busy-bodies, assist- ed by a group of school children, both help and hinder the love af- fair. Ann Drew and Joyce Bohyer, Second Quartet Program Slated Presenting the second recital in their three program series, the Stanley Quartet will again be heard at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Lecture Hall. Adding their talents also to this concert will be University music school faculty members Helen Ti- tus, piano, and Clyde Thompson, bass, in the Schubert "Quintet in A Major, Op. 114." Other selections to be played by the Stanley Quartet will include "Quartet in C Major, Op. 74, No. 1" by Haydn, and "Quartet No. 6" by Bela Bartok. both of whom are graduate stu- dents, will play the town gossips, but the list of school children has not yet been announced. * * * GIRANDOUX WON the New York Critics Award for the best foreign play of the 1949 season with "The Madwoman of Chail- lot," also translated by Maurice Valency. The campus production is being directed by Prof. Claribel Baird, who also directed the popular "Green Grow the Lilacs" this sum- mer. Costumes have been execut- ed by Lucy Barton, and the sets designed by George Crepeau. Recorded music, written espec- ially for the original production by Francis Poulenc, will be used for the campus presentation. Tickets for the play may be pur- chased from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily and until 8 p.m. on perform- ance nights at the Lydia Mendels- sohn box office. Ghisi To Lecture Federico Ghisi, head of the de- partment of music, University of Florence, Italy, will lecture on "Italian Ars Nova," at 4:15 to- morrow in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. our new I oV r Pajama Ensemble MANDARIN STYLE cotton aEXOTIC COLORING: 3 ~~ ...yellowiv with' black ... aqua with black Pajama- sleeve length 0 Coat- sleeve length O at0 2/eVAN BUREN ShV 8 NICKELS ARCADE PHONE 2-2914 ->- - ---.. . .4 PROF. A. K. STEVENS ..will head panel * * * Creston High School in Grand Ra- pids, and Miss Anna Yambrick of Northern High School in Flint. Chairman for the panel will be Prof. A. K. Stevens of the English department. The subject under debate will be "Teaching the Essay in High School." The conference is open to the public. l1i, 1V 1 il .1V~ l, WW V to move "downtown" as soon as possble. Like Selective Service, it is an independent agency and wants to avoid any appearance of being under the thumb of the military. a s t f P. 30 Mayn . . .. ... ... .....r ... .. . t . . :..... ...... . a. ?" " .....r......r.r. hr'. r v".;v"r . n. "r ..:...n... ....::. ......,... . . . . . . .. - . .s/ ..*..... . ..,..::..":."......,."....,.......,.. fr:. ..,.... . W ..V.. t L. t . Sfl.SW.V.W..144 .Y ,Y:Q « x". Read and Use Daily Classifieds V.. Nylonized DARKSEAM Nlon Hosirery 1.10 3 pr. 3.20 Regularly 1.65 pair Extra value in misty sheer 15 denier, 51 gauge Jacquard lace welt nylon hose with new dark-seam beauty . . . a line to flatter and slenderize your legs. 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