It THE MICHIGAN DAILY Students Require Space (Continued from Page 1) by the music school have to be instruments. Often a student may fitted into the schedules of Uni- have to house his instrument in versity buildings. Each program one building and take it to an- also needs a separate rehearsal in other to practice, the same auditorium and as a re-. With the additional space in sult most of the school's recitals the planned building, the orches- are doubled into a few programs, tra and band will be able to find Dean Moore said. rooms to use for smaller sectional The new school will be able to practices. At present the group accommodate about 850 students must practice as an entire unit. and will include a student lounge, Included in the new building faculty lounge, 175 practice areas, will be a music school concert hall comparatively sound-proof class- -something which is now non- rooms and meeting rooms for the existent. The 170 programs given professional music groups. Today Marks Playwright's Birthday; Engel Talks of O'Neill's Contribution By JEAN HARTWIG Today marks the 70th birthday of one of, if not the one most, important American playwrights. Eugene O'Neill, one-time actor, sailor, mail order house clerk, gold prospector, newspaperman, "bum on the' docks" and author of more than 40 plays, was the ringleader in the rebellion against the banal- ity of the American theater in the 1920's, according to Prof. Edwin A. Engel of the English depart- ment, author of a book about the playwright entitled "The Haunted Heroes Of Eugene O'Neill." Taking the title of his work from a passage in the play "Lazarus Laughed," demonstrating O'Neill's belief that death is the root of all evil and that all men, as "hunted, heroes," are searching for some- thing that doesn't really exist, Prof. Engel cited the poet's con- tinual preoccupation with the phenomenon of death. 4 -Daily-Allan Winder REMARKS ON O'NEILL-Prof. Edwin A. Engel discusses the relation of O'Neill's plays to his turbulent life. His plays are mostly autobiographical and show O'Neill's search for some kind of religion and his preoccupation with death. His power and vigor are some of the qualities that have made many regard O'Neill as the greatest American playwright. Play 'Rehearses' Death "The Iceman Cometh" is re-, garded as a rehearsal for the ac- tual death he was to. play in Bos- ton some 15 years later," Prof. Engel said. O'Neill supposedly died of pneu- monia in 1953 in Boston at the. age of 65. However, Prof. Engel, on a Fullbright fellowship in Copenhagen, met an American' physician who performedthe.post mortem on O'Neill's body. From. evidence indicated by the deterior- ation of the writer's brain, the physicians who examined Itre- ported alcoholism as the cause of his death, instead of the alleged. complications resulting from Par--' kinson's disease., I don't know if anybody else knows about this," he said. "It. was probably the result of O'Neill's drinking when he was still a young man. His father, his brother and he were- all very heavy drinkers." Used Serious Subjects O'Neil's most significant contri- bution to the American theater was his attempt at things never before done and his use of serious subjects in the frivolous era of the 1920's, Prof. Engel explained. "O'Neill tried so hard that he sometimes fell flat on his face," he added. The Irish-American playwright, who admired Strindberg but wasn't "psychotic enough" to write in the same way, has an allegorical qual- ity in all of his earlier plays. He was always searching for some' kind of religion-probably due to! his break with the Catholic church. Head of IGY 1o Talk Today Prof. Sydney Chapman of the aeronautical engineering depart- ment and head of the Interna-' tional Geophysical Year will dis- cuss "The Atmosphere" at 4 p.m. today in Aud. C. Angell Hall. Prof. Chapman's lecture will present . a historical resume of discoveries concerning the atmos- phere and discuss the role of the IGY in this. area. The extent of present knowledge about the at- ,mosphere will also' be discussed. Ha ircutting To please you!I It Costs No More to have the best! The Doscola~ Barbers Near Michigan Theatre His works show a strong reflec- tion of his turbulent life and are. mostly autobiographical, according to Prof. Engel. All ob his plays seem to center around his strange relationship with 'his mother, whose addiction to narcotics O'Neill could never reconcile with his belief in her affection for her family.; His earlier plays are more con- trolled than his later, efforts, in Prof. Engel's opinion. Citing "The Emperor Jones" and "Desire Un- der the Elms" as his favorites of O'Neill's first attempts, the pro- fessor said their quality of con- trolled.emotion impressed-him the most. "His emotions didn't run away with what he wanted to say," the professor explained: "In his later attempts he lowered his sights and stopped trying to write like Soph- ocles and Aeschylus." Two Plays Superior Only two plays are really super-. ior among those written in O'Neill's later years, according to. Prof. Engel. These are "The Ice- man Cometh" and "Long Day's Journey Into Night." Giving his opinion on 'Neill's Look Sharp Male students are sporting assorted beards and goatees as a contest to find the "Hairiest Hawk of 1 958" gets under way at Henry Ford Community Col- lege. Contestants began cultivat- ing their'beards Sept. 20, the, day after the school's first dance. The starting date was 1 set to enable students to -at- tend the dance "clean-shaven," according to Elmer White, HF- CC student council president. The hairiest hawk will be- chosen Nov. 14 by a panel of five faculty members and De- troit businessmen which will judge the group and announce the contestant sporting the best-looking beard. The winner will be awarded. an electric shaver and a trophy engraved with his name and his title of "Hairiest Hawk of 1958." In connection with the beard-growing contest, a shave- off will be held during the week following the contest's end. No mirrors will be. allowed, but students may use any other re-I flective surface to aid them in shaving' off their beards. Prizes will be given at the shave-off to contestants who come closest to getting a clean shave., play "A Touch of the Poet," which is currently being produced on Broadway starring Helen Hayes, Prof. Engel said he read it while in Copenhagen and thought that the cast and producers must have' "lifted" the quality of the play to warrant such good notices from the critics. As the qualities.that make O'Neill "more and more regarded as the greatest American play- wright," the professor of American literature mentioned his power and vigor as outstanding. Although he doesn't handle the vehicle of language as well as a poet would be expected to, a certain instinct for the stage makes his plays distinctive. Wordiness A Strength. "O'Neill takes four or five hours to tell his message, while T. S. Elliot can do it in a much shorter time. This represents a wordy' quality, but is a sort of strength in his writing," he said. Prof. Engel considers O'Neill "vastly superior to Tennessee Williams" and doesn't believe that he can be compared to Arthur Miller on the basis of the few works that Miller has completed. Pointing out Willy Loman, Miller's example of the American sales- man, Prof. Engel said that O'Neil's characterization of a salesman, while. only incidental in "The Ice- man Cometh," is the superior of the two in the estimation of some critics. r Has Intensity, Honesty O'Neill, whose greatest triumph came in 1920-22 when "Beyond the Horizon" and "Anna Christie," won the Pulitzer Prize in consecu- tive years, has an intensity and honesty in his. writing that, have intrigued audiences and gritics for almost 40 years. In describing "A Touch of the Poet," one critic defines O'Neill's charm as "a sense of rich and thorough satisfaction such as al- most no other modern playwright's work seems able to give." Giles To Give Concert Today' Assistant University Carillonneur Sidney F. Giles will give a carillon recital at 7:15 p.m. today. He will play compositions for the carillon including "Fugue" by Van den Gheyn, "Ballet" by Loos, "Al- legro" by Lefevere, Van Hoof's "Menuete," and Clement's "Suite Archaique.', *Also to be performed are carillon arrangements: "favotte"' by Gluck, "Minuet in G" by Beetho- ven, "Confidence" by Mendelssohn, and "Concerto" by Vivaldi. 'U' Geologist Writes Book On Minerals., Prof. E. William Heinrich of the geology department is author of a new book published this week by McGraw-Hill. The book, "Mineralogy and Geology of Radioactive -aw Materials," deals with radioactive materials and their properties. Minerals of scentific and ec- nomic importance such as uranium and thorium are discussed inde tail. Much of the information is based on Heinrich's investigation of radioactive materials In the United States and abroad. Part of the laboratory and field research has been supported by the University's Phoenix project. The work is the first of its scope aimed at combining both the mineralogic and geologic aspects of uranium and thorium. Art Delegates. To Meet Here At Conference The twenty-second Midwestern Art Conference meets today at th University for the first time. Prof. Robert Iglehart chair- man of the art department, ex- pects about 150 delegates to attend the three-day conference. Every major university in the midwest will be sending representatives, be said. Students' work is being dis- played In the halls of the archi- tecture school. This is not a for- mal exhibition, just "what the students are doing right now," Prof. Iglehart explained. The fac- ulty is giving a more formal ex- 'the Undergraduate Library. Meetings will be held in Rack- ham Amphitheatre and the-archi- tecture auditorium. The. conference will create 'an opportunity for the exchange of ideas and'general information on various: aspects of art, stimulate continued interest in contempor- ary art problems and motivate ex- perimental a nd e r e a t i v e 'ap- proaches to the teaching of art. Music Group, Elects Lowell The Michigan Music Teachers Association has elected three fac- ulty members of the University's music school as officers. Prof. John Lowell was elected first vice-president; Prof. John Flower was elected secretary and Frank Stillings was re-elected treasurer. DIAL NO 2-2513 Ending Tonight CHARLES HENRI".;A. BOY[ V DAr . .. Plus -Disney's Great Feturette "AMA GIRLS" --- -- Friday" ---- Pulizer Prize Winner THORNTON W ILDER'S "THE MATCHMAKER" withi SHIRLEY BOOTH ANTHONY PERKINS DIAL NO 8-6416 N I Ss(HERE'S YOUR You Think for Yourself?( TO FINDUT! *ACE w w w - - -- - - - to YES NO o YES LIINO YES NODwI1 t '# YES . NO] The Man Who Thin Do you enjoy adapting yourself to new conditions? Do you always look at the directions before using a complicated new appliance? Have you ever thought seriously of spending'a long period alone somewhere . writing, painting or getting some major independent task done? When faced with a long, detailed job, do you try hard to find a simpler way. of doing it before getting started? YES DNOLII YES F NOiI YES NO For your convenience the announces winter hours: Mon. th ru Fri. 9:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Saturday . . . 9:00 A.M. to 12 noon Call us for all Airline Steamship, and Tour r -ecarvrifinn C i Week Days at 7 and 9 P.M.' Everybody inf town knew the miller's wife, and everyone knew where she was that night... So why didn't they tell the miIler9 ; YES NOL KS -t . fr Himself Knows... ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN'S FILTER. A SMOKING MAN'S TASTE! 11 I i 1-1 yr _ ::t: a~ink~. 'II