PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY r IDAY, JULY 3, 193 SHORTS OF DISTINCTION: Actor-Playwright Does Research Here By GAYLE GREENE Though he says his only claim to distinction is a pair of Bermu- da shorts which attract shocked stares from local inhabitants, Don Symington, Spec., is unique among Summer Session students. He is a playwright who supports himself by acting, whose previous university education consists of several weeks at Princeton and whose University courses are cho- sen to provide background re- search for his next play. ACTUALLY it's better not to talk about a play before you write it, Symington says. Sometimes you never do write it or someone else beats you to it," he explained. Action of the play will center around a foreign student in a large mid-western university, his acceptance of the university and it's acceptance of him. "What could be more logical than to investigate a mid-west- ern university, Symington rea- soned, as he enrolled in classes in Shakespeare, modern drama and mythology this summer. A trip to the Far Eastern stu- dies department showed him he could fit Muslim religion and mod- ern Arabia into his program. This, coupled with tours to Saudi Ara- bia, will provide background for his leading character. Winning two thousand dollars in the Irish Sweepstakes when 15 years old, indirectly influenced Symington in his choice of profes- sion. "I used part of the money to go to New York and saw five plays :n three days. It was the first thing that had ever made any impression on me," he said. He didn't begin writing plays immediately, however. "It took a few years before I was far enough gone to attempt to be- come a playwright," he ex- plained. With only high school dramatic experience, Symington took a five hour train ride from Baltimpre to New York and began to look for a job as an actor. IN THREE months he had found a role in a play which" opened on the road and closed on the road." The next few months were spent in summer stock, in "Pygmalion" with Gertrude Lawrence and then in "Big People" which was also a "fSop," leaving Symington to find a job. "I sold hair combs all over New York," he said. He then went into a Charles - Laughton play which "lasted for a brief two weeks," leaving him Cinema Guild Adds Showing Don Hunt, manager of the Stu- dent Legislature Cinema Guild, has announced a new policy of three instead of the ,usual two show times for summer film pro- grams. Three complete films will be shown each night, Thursday, Fri- day and Saturday, at 6:30 p.m., 8 p.m. and 9r30 p.m. and one each Sunday at 8 p.m. in Architecture Auditorium. Today's film program features James Stewart and Marlene Diet- rich in "Destry Rides Again," a satire on Hollywood westerns. SRA Outing This Weekend First of the summer's recreation- al Intercultural Outings sponsored by the Student Religious Associa- tion will be held this weekend at the Saline Cooperative Farms. The group plans to spend Sat- urday night at a Youth Hostel lo- cated at the farms. They will leave Lane Hall by car at 2 p.m. Satur- day. Anyone interested in joining the SRA Outing may contact Doris Harpole, Assistant Activities Direc- tor at Lane Hall. X We feature I rr.::x: :: a ammametieo-mmaoe anva ceaceeanoa se Hush Box LONDON- AP} -A British jukebox firm announced yes- terday it is supplying clients with a model which will deliver three minutes of dead silence. Putting a coin in theslot and pushing the proper button will turn up a record which just spins, emitting neither music nor conversation. Services Set For Drowned Student Today Funeral services for Rusi Sig- anporia, a 26-year-old graduate student from Bombay, will be held at 4 p.m. today at the Staffan- Hildinger Funeral Home. 513 E. Huron St. Siganporia was found drowned Sunday at Bishop Lake, four miles southwest of Brighton. He appar- ently became separated from the group while swimming away from the public beach. Siganporia's parents are living in Bombay. They have requested that the body be laid at rest in Ann Arbor. The Indian Embassy and the Tata Foundation also granted permission that Signa- poria be buried in the United States. Parsi Services will be conducted for Siganporia, an adherent of the ancient Persian religion, by Jer D. Daboo, Grad., also a Parsi. Siganporia, a chemical engineer- ing student, came here last Sep- tember on a J. N. Tata Fellowship. Interment will take place at the Forest Hill Cemetery. 1 Astrophysics Talk "Galaxies: Their Composition and Structure" will be . discussed by Walter Baade from the Mount Wilson and Palomar observatories at 2 p.m. today in 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Writer Calls Poetry Love .Poetry is really being in love with life," Lesley Frost. daughter of poet Robert Frost told her au- dience in the closing lecture of the Symposium on Writing yes- terday. Miss Frost, an author herself, who served on the editorial board of Doubleday, Doran went on to say that poetry is also a celebra- tion, in all the definitions of the word. According to her father, "A po- em begins in delight and ends with wisdom." She believes that "any great poem is as much like prayer as anything." In regard to grief and tragedy M'iss Frost remarked that there are two kinds of people in the world and they're both pessi- mists, only one is an optimistic pessimist and the other is a pes- simistic pessimist. 'Bell Book a By FRAN SHELDON Dramerama, theater tailored to fit the play and the audience is a featured convenience of the Sa- line Mill Theater. Directed by Warren Pickett, founder of the Arts Theater herel at the University, the theater will offer at 8:30 p.m. today its first presentation, John Van Druten's comedy of witchery "Bell, Book and Candle." PERFORMED BY a profession- al acting company, the play deals with witchery black cats-and re- luctant telephones. Located eight miles from Ann Arbor on Route 112, the theater is an ex-soybean mill which has been equipped with a Greek arena type stage. Completely surrounding the stage, no seat in the audience is more than four rows from the action. In addition, the theater has rd Candle' duled for this summer. The first, "Bell, Book and Candle" will run through July 19. George Bernard Shaw's "Arms and the Man" is the second production of the theater, slat- ed to run from July 21 to Aug. 2. Following this will be "An- gel Street" by Patrick Hamilton, Aug. 4 through 16. As its final offering the Saline Mill Theater will present the po- pular Oscar Wilde work, "The Im- portance of Being Earnest." After each play arrangements have been made whereby the com- pany will discuss its performance with the audience. Tickets for the theater are available at Marshall's bookstore. X-Ray Diffraction Meet Continues The Symposium on X-Ray Dif- fraction will continue today with a lecture on "Frontier Transforma- tion and X-Ray Diffraction of Crystals" by P. P. Ewald of the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute at 9 a.m. in 1400 Chemistry Bldg. He will be followed by William N. Lipscomb of the University of Minnesota who will speak on "Ex- perimental Studies of Crystal Structures" at 10 a.m. Saline Group To Present Speaker Hits Art Schools Art departments in universities lack experienced, developed artists and the controversy needed for stimulation, according to Ralston Crawford. Speaking in the Rackham Uc- ture Hall yesterday on "An Art- ists Notes." Artist Crawford said, that although the Modern Art movement developed outside of European and American universi- ties it is now accepted by them. A student, he felt, is unlikely to be really creative for a long time but because educators are anxious to show that they can develop creativity, many unim- portant works are exhibited. The modern artist, particularly in America, works in an atmos- phere of indifference or even hos- tility, and must overlook the finan- cial shortcomings of his profes- sion, the artist said, Speaking of his own work the artist called it "abstract or non- representational." He told his aud- ience that many of them might find it bothersome because "un- familiarity is always annoying." But with pictures, as with people, he said long contract and thought- ful observation is important be- fore a critical judgement can be given. ;. Miss Frost explained it is up to been designed with the readers to seek a poem or a that enables staging; symphony that lightens our con- arrangements to be fusion, fit the needs of each Between the ages of five and FOUR PLAYS have twenty, she pointed out, something hnnn t~ g ~thncamar a flexibility and seating changed to production. been sche- Daily-Lon Qui DON SYMINGTON . . . "aren't there any male writers in Michigan?'' * * * hunting for steadier employ ent again. This time he becaxfie a room-clerk at the Plaza Hotel. He toured with the Barter The- arer of Virginia for a year and went overseas with the American production of "Hamlet." * * * . AT THAT TIME Symington was working on a dramatic adaption of an Evelyn Waugh novel and decided to stay on in London to finish it "I went to see Waugh with the idea of convincing him my adaption was brilliant, but, un- fortunately he thought otherwise," Symington relates. He returned to New York and went into "Caesar and Cleopat- ra. Then followed over 75 weeks of stock work all over the eastern seaboard and later a role in "Dream Girl" with Judy Hol- liday. A year in Europe followed and Ceylon became the background for his next play which got him an agent, membership on the New Dramatists' Committee, but no money, Attendance at the luncheon giv- en in conjunction with the Univer- sity's writing Symposium has dis- illusioned him somewhat. "There were about three men in a crowd of 140 women," he related. "Aren't there any male writers in Michi- gan?" he asked. happens to our entnusiasm and we need to regain the excitement of life. This can best be accom- plished by teaching children po- etry. AFROTC To 1old Study Coference The Uni-versity will play host to military instructors from 20 mid- western colleges and universities at a meeting to be held during the first two weeks in August to study the new training plan for Air Force ROTC cadets. Lt. Col. Samuel R. Beckley of the air science and tactics pro- gram will direct the conference. Councit Postpones Dairy Rule Action Proposed new city milk ordi- nance action has been postponed until July 20 to allow attorneys to gather information intended to show that certain provisions of the ordinance conflict with State laws. The delay was granted Wednes- day by the City Council after a hot two hour debate on the pro and con of the proposed ruling. The most controversial issue is the one requiring dairies to put hooded covers on all milk con- tainers under the three-gallon size. A EVERYONE WELCOME to a BIG PICNIC TOMORROW at SILVER LAKE 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. SWIMMING " GAMES s FOOD * FUN Meet at Lane Hall 11 A.M. (Sponsored by Michigan Christian Fellowship) 4. 4 ON SALE NEXT WEEK f +i i7 A including names home 1 , al Ann Arbor addresses and ddresses and phone numbers students of Summer Session y ett pA you can always match ;For great fashion effect at little cost, pick your writing paper in the size, tint and texture you like best and use it always." We'll have separatelv nackaned