AY. .TJNE 25. 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA I SUMMER PRODUCTIONS: 'Charley's Aunt' To Open. The Department of Speech has 'selected five plays with a wide va- 4rety of settings and themes for the summer session. The series will commence with a loud chuckle -- presenting the venerable farce, "Charley's Aunt", in which Ray Bolger originally starred: Starting July 2, this play, as well as the other four, will run for four days. All performances be- gin at 8 p.m, in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. "The School for Wives," the second production, is the first play Moliere wrote after he was mar- ried. It contains much sympathy for young love and natural gaiety and has been called one of Mo- liere's most zestful and unreflec- tive plays. Opening night will be July 9. Suspense Play A chan'ge of pace for both audi- ence and players will be provided when the department presents Jo- seph Hayes' suspense drama, "The Desperate Hours," starting July 23. This thriller was a smash-hit on Broadway during the 1954-55 season, and won the Antoinette Perry Award as the best play of the year. Prof. Jack E. Bender will direct both this one and "Char- ley's Aunt." The setting switches to 13th century China for "The Circle of Chalk," a play abounding with Pla Series comedy, intrigue, satire and sus- pense as the magic circle of chalk enables the judge to determine who a child's true parents are. Prof. William P. Halstead, who returns to the department after a year's Sabbatical leave spent in England and Europe, will direct this production, as well as "The School for Wives." Opera Production For the, final four performances of the season, the speech depart- ment and the School of Musiv will combine to present Bedrihh Sme- tana's comic opera, "The Bar- tered Bride." This will be the 23rd' consecutive summer that an opera will have been given. Prof. Hugh Z. Norton and Prof. Josef Blatt will be co-directors of this production that expresses the Czech national spirit in the latter part of the 19th century. Season tickets are on sale now and individual tickets will be available Monday. Superior 1U' Students Get Prizes Cash awards for outstanding achievement in economics have been presented to two June gradu- ates and one senior, Lewis A. Engman, '57, of Grand Rapids, and Brownson Murray, '57, of Bloomfield Hills, each re- ceived a Harold D. Osterweil Prize of $50. Robert L. Stahl, '58, of Park Ridge, Illinois, was awarded the $500 Sims senior honor scholar- ship in economics for the coming year. The Osterweil Prize, established in memory of the late Lt. Harold Osterweil, is awarded to the out- standing graduating senior con- centrating in economics. It is based on potential and social awareness. The Sims Scholarship was be- gun by Ernest M. and Natalie C. Sims of Elkhart, Indiana University Started YMCA, Plans Centennial Papers The University was first in the United States to organize a Young Men's Christian Association and a Student Christian Movement, De- Witt C. Baldwin, co-ordinator of religious affairs said last week. The academic year 1957-58 will mark the centennial of an organ- ized religious program at the Uni- versity. Baldwin said a commemorative volume, "The Michigan Papers," has been planned to record the history of student religious groups in America. According to the first student president of the University YMCA, Adam K. Spence, the organization was opened in December 1857. Plans for the oragnization were completed a month later and by February, March and April of 1953, references to the YMCA pro- gram appeared in campus publica- tion.. After 1910, the student YMCA ga e way to a co-ed Student Christian Association which exist- ed only until 1937 when the Stu- dent Religious Association was Sfounded, Organized student religious work at the University was responsible for starting many pioneer projects that led the way for similar work in other universities and served as a training ground for many reli- gious leaders. "Between 20 and 30 of the presi- dents and officers of the student movement here became leaders in missionary and church endeavor in many parts of the world," Baldwin said. *AS 17 ~e Ut2A 7 th Ur z~rn Thf * r1 t Survey Research Center Finds American Men Like To Work I ._ . .r.. ----- A nation-wide study conducted_ by the University's Survey Re- search Center has concluded that four out of five employed Ameri- can men would continue their work even if it weren't necessary. However, opinions vary consider- ably between those workers in the middle-class occupations and those of the working class. At. Abcording to Nancy C. Morse and Robert S. Weiss, authors of the survey, men in the former group emphasise the interest to be found in their jobs and the sense of accomplishment which comes from the success of their work. On the other hand, members of the working class, who art con- cerned primarily with physical Air-conditioned comfort is yours while having your hair cut in the latest styles. 715 North University activity, view life without working as a life without anything to do. In accordance with this line of thought, the study found out that almost half the unskilled would quit work if they didn't have to earn a living. But when all groups are studied as a whole, the level of satisfac- tion does not vary as greatly be- tween different types of Jobs as does the source of satisfaction. . I Subscribe to The Michigan Daily NOW! Phone NO 2-3241 RTHA!Dj FIRST LESSON FREE TONIGHT AT Over 400 Schools in U.S. will assist you in review or placement. 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