_r GX rOtTR T nk .ty IUMIGA II DAILY SATURDAY, JULY, 24, 1954 ?AGK ?OT7R TUE MiUIIIbA~ DAIlY N[aa 4'iVal'i1JL} V IIJA4,af fwlxx av+s'x GUEST DIRECTOR ACTS: B. Iden Payne To Relive Famous Role of 'Mr. Puff' By SUE GARFIELD B. Iden Payne, guest directo in the Department of Speech thi summer, will play his most famou role in the Play Production's third play in the summer series. Under the direction of Prof William Halstead, the speech de- partment will present Richard Brinsley Sheridan's r e h e a r s a: farce, "The Critic," at 8 p.m. ir the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Wednesday through Saturday, Jul3 28-31:. It was in 1915 in New York thai Payne played his well-known role of Mr. Puff in the United States for the first time. The summer's presentation ol "The Critic" is a revival, as i was staged by Prof. Halstead ir the spring and summer of 1940. Cast of Fifty A cast of over fifty will be needed to present this "play-within-a play" with its satire of Elizabethan bom- bastic tragedy. The "Masque of the Rivers," which climaxes the per- formance will be choreographed by Prof. Estler E. Pease of the Women's Physical Education De- partment. Scenery for the production, which includes an elaborate staging of a naval battle and the sinking of the Spanish Armada, will be de- signed and executed by Jack E. Bender. Wig-making for theatrical pur- poses involves a few basic steps according to Lloyd Evans, Mary Lou Moench and Ralph Duckwall, who are asisting Phyllis Pletcher costumier for Play Productions. The first step is to cut felt and fit it to a wood head-block. The felt is shaped and then covered with liquid latex and fleshcolored Give Preview Of TV Shows Prof. Lorch, Others To Be Featured Soon A filmed interview with Pro-. fessor Emeritus Emil Lorch con- cerning his work in the recon- struction of the Beaumont Me- morial will be featured on 'Date- line Ann Arbor,' Friday, July 23, at 6:45 over WPAG-TV. The Memorial was dedicated at Mackinac Island on Saturday, July 17, presented as a gift to the people of Michigan from Michigan's Doctors of Medicine. The dedication was covered by a University Television film crew last Saturday, and the resulting film has or will be seen by most state stations. A second highlight of the pro- gram will be a demonstration by Bibi Abril-Lamarque of the pre- paration of cooling fruit drinks. The Peacock, International Champion Tennessee Walking Horse and the 1952 Coast to Coast Champion, will be the feature at- traction on 'Sports Parade', heard at 8 p.m. Friday. His owner, Keith White, will be interviewed on the program by Mary Frances Greschke. Also present will be White's son, Nelson, 14, who was the Michigan State Ameteur Champion in '52 and '53, and the Michigan Juvenile Champion in '51. Keith White, President of the Michigan Society of Federated Horse Clubs, is the owner of Shady Acres near Ortonville. A brief film will be presented which con- cerns Shady Acres. Two typical dance classes will be featured on 'Studio Sampler', Friday, July 23 from 7:30 to 8 p.m. Under the supervision of Rosemary Scanlon, Director of Dance in. the summer recreation program, one class of children from 4 to 7, and a second class from 8 to 11, will perform. Also present on the show will be a group of journalism students who are attending the High School Journalism Workshop. This is a summer clinic for high school journalists and yearbook editors. The ten students will then have the opportunity to interview Judge Jay H. Payne, Judge of the Pro- bate Court. Judge Payne is a prominent Ann Arbor citizen who is active in youth work. British Plane Crashes: 8 Live HONG KONG (Saturday) (M- A stricken British airliner with 18 aboard-six of them Americans --crashed in the sea near the Red Chinese island ofnHainan Friday and there were only 8 known sur- vivors. The eight, dazed and injured, were picked tip quickly from their rubber life rafts by a U.S. flying boat as Communist craft swarmed out from Hainan, big Communist sea and air base off the South China coast. Prof. Coyle Will -Daily-Duane Poole "WIG-MAKING BUSINESS"-Lloyd Evans, Mary Lou Moench and Ralph Duckwall are styling and making wigs for the speech department production of "The Critic," to be presented at 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 28 through Saturday, July 31 at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre in the League. Tickets are on sale for $1.50, $1.10 and 75 cents. make-up.This provides the working base for the wig. The "hair" is nylon-saran, which comes in 22 inch strands and vari- ous hair shades. The strands are cut and blued to the felt building the hair from the back in layers. They can be combed, set and even washed. The finished product might range from a man's powdered wig Paul Miller, graduate of the to an elaborate feminine coiffeur, University, will conduct the small as pictured above. 18th Century theatre orchestra. Costumes for "The Critic" will Ce be 18th Century for the first act, Tickets for the play may be pur- while the Elizabethan costumes chased from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at will be used for the "play-within- the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box the-play," according to Miss Plet- office, daily. They are priced at cher. $1.50, $1.10 and 75 cents.N Aid to Unemployed Reaches $52,728' By PAT ROELOFS Unemployment c o in p e n s a - tion paid to 1,400 Washtenaw county residents in June amounted to $52,728. Rex Nottingham, head of the Employment Security Commission office for Washtenaw County, re- ported that during the first six months of 1954, more unemploy- Introduce Bill T o Create New Cabinet Office WASHINGTON (R)-Rep. J. Ar- thur Younger (R-Calif) Friday in- troduced a bill to create a De- partment of Urbiculture at a Cabi- net level. By urbiculture, he said, he means he wants a department de- voted to the problems and the wel- fare of city people. "I'm serious about this," Young- er said. "When the Department of Agriculture was set up, 75 per cent of our people lived on farms. "Now around 75 per cent of our people live in urban communities, and it's time we were doing scien- tific research and study on their economic and social problems: "There is, for example, a defi- nite for a study of the proper use of urban land." Obviously, with Congress strug- gling to get out of town, Younger's bill isn't going to get anywhere this session. But he figures it's a good time to throw the idea in and see what happens. Younger says he has no quarrel with agriculture. But he says he has noticed that congressmen f r o m agricultural districts always are able to speak with authority whereas the city congressman is at a disadvantage. Two Students Get T agge Art Awards, Two students in the University's College of Architecture and De-; sign have been awarded Arthur C. Tagge Scholarships of $325.00 each, it is announced by Dean Wells I. Bennett. The are: LeRoy B. Miller, and; Paul Henry Krueger.r The Arthur C. Tagge Scholar- ships are given to upperclassmen showing exceptional aptitude and ability in architecture, design or landscape architecture. Move Made To Bar TV From Court Newspaper Code Being Considered LANSING-o)-Television Cam- eras would be virtually barred from all court rooms under a new code adopted by the State Supreme Court. The Supreme Court disclosed it had adopted a new canon of judi- cial ethics at the request of the State Bar. At the same time, the State Bar of Michigan said it is considering a proposal for a newspaper code covering the reporting of investi- gations, arrests and trials. No Television in Court The Supreme Court canon ad- vises lower courts not to permit the televising of court proceed- ings. An exception is the tele- vising of naturalization ceremon- ies conducted under the supervis- ion of the court and in such a way as to demonstrate the "dig- nity and seriousness" of naturali- zation. The new code is an amendment of a former canon which forbids the taking of photographs during court sessions or during court re- cesses and radio broadcasting of court proceedings. The State Bar Journal said its Board of Commissioners would meet in Detroit July 30 to consider a resolution aimed at a new canon governing newspaper handling of trials and arrests. If approved by the commission- ers, the resolution would be sub- mitted to the annual meeting of the State Bar. Resolutions Content The resolution said "the pre- sumption of innocence and other rights of the accused, though deeply rooted in American tradi- tions of individual liberty, are gradually being undermined in the minds and attitudes of the American people by certain poli- cies and practices of many news- papers and other media of com- munication." The resolutions said that there is a problem of "reconciling the conduct of newspaper publications and other media of communication with an adequate recognition of the rights of an accused." It asked the bar to authorize a committee to "enter into negotia- tions with the representatives of the newspapers and other media of communication regarding the re- porting of investigations, arrests and trials, with the view of adopt- ing suitable and effective canons and codes of conduct." Two Faculty Members Add To Publication Prof. James V. Neel of the In- st mute of Human Biology and Prof. William J. Schull of the zoology department are listed as contribu- tors to "Statistics and Mathematics in Biology," a new book released this week by the Iowa State Col- lege Press. This book represents the collect- ed writings of 44 leading workers throughout the country, and is a summation of material presented at the Biostatistics Conference at Iowa State College in 1952. Ac- cording to the editors, the 640-page book synthesizes theh concepts and methods of biology with the con- cepts and methods of statistics and mathematics. "A Description of Studies on the Potential Genetic Effects of the Atonic Bombs in Japan 1. Or- ganizational Aspects" is the title of the chapter written by Prof. Neel, while Prof. Schull contribu- ted a secion on "A Description of Studies on the Potential Genetic Effects of the Atomic Bombs in Japan II. Analytical Problems." On the first floor of the Na- tural Science Building stands a curious looking little gadget with a souped up balancing mechanism. It is called a seismograph and standing a perpetual vigil as the Geology Department's "watchdog" to record the "moans" and the "groans" occuring under the - earth's surface. Whenever an earthquake or tre- mor hits any section of the globe, the seismograph picks up the sound waves as they are cast up through the underlying areas be- neath the earth's crust. t As the slightest vibrations trans- mitted through the earth come F near Ann Arbor, the seismograph faithfully picks them up and auto- matically records them on a photo- graphic plate in a dark room in back of the instrument. Once each day staff geologists develop the negative to determine if there have been any noticeable varia- tions. The balancing mechanism on the seismograph is so delicate that large trucks driving past the build- SEI ing and trains traveling through Ann Arbor leave indications of mine their passing on the graph. Ann I Once an earth tremor is record- other ed, Unviersity geologists deter- tions Seismograph Records Earth Tremors 1A rc v ment compensation wages have been paid than during the entire year of 1953. July figures tallied thus far show that 1,500 pesops are now receiv- ing unemployment compensation in the county. The increase of 100 [persons on this lit is attributed to "seasonal vacation and regular periodic production changeover" by Nottingham. Increase Over Last Year Last year during the month of July, $14,260 was the amount paid unemployed people in the county. The over-all increase in unemploy- ment is the result of lapsed defense contracts in the area. Earlier this year, City Council members requested that this area be considered a "distress" area in terms of numbers unemployed. R. J. Barden, member of the staff of a local finance company, yesterday said that "many people believe incorrectly that there is an increase in loan requests when un- employment goes up." He said that laborers laid-off are considered "out-of-work," and few ask for loans. "They don't want to obligate themselves when tmere is no way to pay off loans" Barden remarked. He continued "when there is an unstable labor market as there now is, the volume of business a loan association does decreases." Finance companies will make loans to persons considered only Food Costs Up Since January WASHINGTON (R-Rising food prices edged living costs up slight- ly in June to the highest point since January and close to last October's peak. The government Bureau of Labor Statistics Friday reported its in- dex rose one tenth of 1 per cent. This brought the index to 115.1 per cent of the 1947-49 average, compared with 115.0 in May and October's 115.4 record level. Generally speaking, living costs are holding stable. They are only. one half of 1 per cent above a year ago. Statistics Commissioner Ewan Clague said the outlook is for "continued strength" in con- sumer prices without much change either way. Higher prices for fresh fruits and coffee led the June food price ad- vance of four tenths of 1 per cent. Fresh vegetable prices were down. temporarily unemployed in some cases however, according to Bard- en. "If we know the people who are temporarily out of work, we may be able to give them our services" he concluded. Loan Extensions A member of a local bank staff told the Daily that there have been some extensions in loan payment dates made for unemployed per- sons. He said that few banks in the area will make loans to un- employed people because they will have no means to repay the loan. How To Find 'Great Bear' To Be Shown 'Storytime' will depart from its usual narrative technique on Mon- day at 6:30 over WPAG-TV, when it presents a program about the Big Dipper. The story will be done in pan- tomime, using a shadow box. It will explain to children how to make the Great Bear out of the dipper, something which few peo- ple are able to do. It will also give a brief history of the Big Dipper, explaining what people in other lands thought it was. The program will conclude by urging the children to go outside after it becomes dark in order to discover the Dipper for themselves. The program was written ny ana will be directed by Ann Remley. Musical Program 'The 310 Weekly,' at 7:30 p.m., will feature Professor Sigura Ras- cher of the University School of Music. Accompanied by Patricia Arden at the piano, Professor Ras- cher will present a saxophone con- cert which includes: Henry Pur- cell, "Two Bourroes"; Francis Sch- ubert, "The Bee", George Gersh- win, "Prelude No. 2"; Mondonville, "Tambourin;" Glaser - Rascher, "Carnival of Venice Variations". Professor Rascher gave the first instrumental TV broadcast in Eng- land in 1936. SMOGRAPH RECORDS SOUNDS OF TRAINS AND BUSES the distance it occurred from cards to the University. In this Arbor and mail a postcard to manner coordinates can be plotted seismographic recording sta- and the location of the tremor dis- which in turn mail their covered. V FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833-Washtenaw Ave. 9:30 A.M.-Sunday School 11:00 A.M.-Sunday Morning Service July 25-"Truth" 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 literature may be read, bor- rowed or purchased. The Reading Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday evenings from 7 to 9 p.m. and Sunday aftbr- noons from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw, Phone NO 2-0085 Edward H. Redman, Minister 8:30 P.M.-"Creative Arts in Modern Living" -a lecture series and public discussions, spon- sored by the Unitarian Adult Group Rhoda Lopez-Potters' Guild of Ann Arbor, speaking on "Art of Ceramics in Today's Life" ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Sts. Masses Daily at 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M. - Sun- day at 8:00 A.M., 10:00 AM., 11:30 A.M. Novena Devotions-Wednesday Evenings-7:30 P.M. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH William and State Sts. Minister-Rev. Leonard A. Parr 10:45 A.M.-Sermon: "The Goal of the Christian Life" Rev. Flora May Wueliner preaching. 2:30 P.M-Annual summer reunion at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Rich at Clear Lake-meet at the Guild House, transporta- tion provided. THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY in Ann Arbor presents a series of informal talks on Theosophy every Thursday at 7:30 P.M. at 6561 Warren Rd. If interested call Miss Neutz, NO 2-6295, 736 S. State St., for reservation or transpor- tation. Public is cordially invited. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 East Huron, Phone NO 8-7332 Rev. C. H. Loucks, Pastor and Student Counselor 10:00 A.M.-Student Class discussing, "What the Bible Says About Fellowship with God" 11:00 A.M.-The Morning Worship Service, Ser- mon: "Son's of God" 3:00 P.M.-Outing at Bruin Lake, with Donald Allen speaking on Stanley Stuber's book, "A Primer on Roman Catholicism for Protestants" 6:00 P.M.-Guild discussion and meeting FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH AND STUDENT CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Henry Kuizenga, Minister Charles Mitchell, Assistant Minister Donna B. Lokker, Program Assistant William S. Baker, Minister to Students 9:15 and 11:00 A.M.-Sermon: "Saints Out of Sinners" Dr. Kuizenga preaching. 2.00 P.M.-Westminster Student Fellowship out- ing, meet at the church. ST. ANDREWS CHURCH AND THE EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division St. 8:00 A.M.-Holy Communion 9:00 A.M.-Holy Communion and Student Breakfast at Canterbury House 11:00 A.M.-Morning Prayer and Sermon 6:00 P.M.-Student Supper Club 7:00 P.M.-"The Church in the News"-"The Church in China" 8:00 P.M.-Evensong in The Chapel of St. Michael and all angels, followed by a coffee hour. Friday, July 30--Cars will leave Canterbury House for weekly swimming party and picnic at 4:00 and 5:00 P.M. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Pastor 10:45 A.M.-Worship Service, Sermon: "Our Christiar:.ife" Rev. Theodore Schmale preach- ing. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDATION 120 South State Street Merrill R. Abbey, Erland J. Wangdahl, Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers 9:00 and 10:45 A.M.-Morning Worship Ser- vice, Sermon: "When Religion is Not Enough," Dr. Abbey preaching. 9:30 A.M.-Informal discussion group-Pine Room 3:00 P.M.-Student group meet in the Wesley Lounge for outing picnic, swimming, volley- ball-all students welcome. Welcome to Wesley Foundation. Rooms open. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod' Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday- 9:45 A.M.-Bible Study, I John 5 10:45 A.M.-Service, with Holy Communion, Ser- mon by the pastor, "Accounting for the Hope That Is in Us" 6:00 P.M.-Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, Fellowship Supper; followed by illus- trated talk by Miss Lorraine Behling, cur- recently on furlough from her work as a tech- er in our Church's HongmKong Mission. Tuesday- 7:30 - 11:00 P.M.-Pastor and Mrs. Scheips will have an Open House. Friday- 6:00 P.M.-Married Couples Potluck Supper at the Center, MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan Streets Rev. George Barger, Minister 10:45 A.M.-Morning worship. Rev. Richard Leh- man, guest minister. Sermon: "Getting to Know Him." Nursery school during the ser- vice. 9:45 A.M.-Church school. CONGREGATIONAL-DISCIPLES STUDENT GUILD 2:30 P.M.-Annual Guild Summer Reunion pic- nic. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (National Lutheran Council) Hill and Forest Avenue Dr, H. O. Yoder, Pastor Sunday- 9:30 A.M.-Bible Class-Study of Galatians 10:30 A.M.-Worship Service- 4:00 P.M.-Meet at the Center for picnic. Tuesday- 7:30 P.M.-Discussion lead by Prof. George Mendenhall on "The Bible and Our Culture." 4 -k ._ k. i. - * i For Worry-free Trips, Use TRAVELERSCHECKS Travelers Checks offer both convenience and safety for your vacation trips., You can cash them almost anywhere-Hotels, Restaurants, and Stores--and because only YOU can cash them, you can enjoy away-from-home security, too. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets, Phone NO 2-1121 Win. C. Bennett, Pastor 10:00 A.M.-Sunday School 11:00 A.M.-Morning Worship Service, Sermons will be broadcast over station WPAG during July. 7:30 P.M.-Evening Worship Service Thursday at 7:30 P.M.-Prayer Meeting with N. Paul U. Gupta. director of Hindustan Bible N BUY THEM AT THE CHURCH OF'CHRIST .530n wp+ct Sne, 11 I1 II 1 11 11 i