EIGHT A EIG lIT TIlE MICIJIGiN I)AI~Y WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1961 Forgotten Wall'Keeps Hold IIn Long-Relocated Actors YEARS OF JUGGLING: I .S., Russian Firepower Set To Go Off over Berlin By HARRIS L1ECHTI Across a bridge, at the far end of a dimly-lit corridor in the "Temporary" Classroom Building is a forgotten wall. And tere, lining te wal from floor to ceiling, stretching half the width and length of the building, are some thirty years of Ann Ar- bor theatre history. Almost 150 posters, neglected and nearly forgotten, announce Speech Department and Drama Season productions in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, dating back to the early 1930's. Prof. William P. Halstead of the speech department placed them there when theatre classes first moved into TOB in 1947. During the decade which fol.. lowed, every ~theatre student on campus became intimately f amiliar with that wall. "It was always there," recalls Singer Buchanan, a teaching fellow in Spanish who was a stud'ent here during the TCB days. .I remember how we use t wander up and down the hall be- tween classes and during rehear- sal breaks, reading those old post- ers til we knew them by heart. 1t gave us a sense of identification and tradition that drew us all closer together. That wall was as much a part of our lives as the Diag, midsemesters, or the Green Room at 'Lydia.'"' The wall begins with a 1932 pro- duction of "The Adding Machine" by Elmer Rice (who later, as a vis- iting lecturer, directed a Speech Department production of anoth- er of his plays, "Dream Girl"). The posters bear the names of dramatists from Aristophanes to Tennessee Williams, and the names of stars: Madge Evans, Lillian Gish, Katherine Cornell, Burgess Meredith, Jose Ferrer, and many others. Windt Directed Many of these productions were directed by the late, beloved Val- entine Windt of the Speech De- partment, whose name now ap- pears on a memorial plaque in the lobby of Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. "TCB is an odd building, really," says Dr. Halstead. "It was origin- ally ani Army warehouse; and when we moved into it, the parti- tions between the rooms were nothing hut cardboard. I can re- member rehearsals during which props and actors went right through the walls, until we finally got plywood partitions." 'They were happy years," adds Dr. Hugh Z. Norton, director of the Seech Department's forth- comin production of "School for Hubands. Educator Says Team teaching has made the children in Madison Heights, a suburb of Detroit, glad when the school doors open in the morn- ing, and gloomy when it's time to go home. . Herbert Humbert, superintend- ent of Lamphere Public Schools in Madison Heights, told the Uni- versity's 32nd annual Summer Education Conference yesterday how this had been accomplished. "The first teaching teams went into operation in the Lamphere School District during the fall of 1960, housed in what are prob- ably the first elemientary school units specifically designed to make team teaching work," he said. Seek Individual Program He said the goal of team teach- ing is to design individual work programs for all children. "This was impossible when you put one little red school house next to another little red school house with teachers working in "We wanted flexibility built into our school system," Humbert said. "We wanted equipment accessible to the teacher.Ae ns "Team members are selected be- cause of specific abilities in lan- guages, social studies, science, fine arts and competance in group management. We try to have both men and women on each team as well as beginning, experienced and career teachers. There is no one supervisor. Humbert explained that each team is housed in a flexible clus- ter of four classroom spaces group- ed around a central workroom and teaching area, especially de- signed to these new educational Groups of as many as 120 child- ren may be gathered together for lectures, films or demonstrations, he added. Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer erlin is a timebomb wit a long, long fuse. Just when it appears about to explode into the showdown East- West war, the Communists snuff iout only to rekindle it when it suits their purposes. Russia's threat to sign a peace treaty with East Germany has this hot spot* sputtering again. Push the Button If it decided to push the button, Russia can launch 20 Soviet divi- sions in East Germany into battle. East Germany itself has six divi- sions of undetermined quality while Poland and Czechoslovakia have 28 more. While ou'tmanne d, the Allied forces probably can match fire- power, the five United States divi- sions in West Germany being equipped with all the latest tacti- cal nuclear weapons. In addition are highly regarded divisions of West Germany (7), France (3) and Great Britain (3) as well as forces from the Benelux nations. SAllies Count 11,000 In West Berlin itself the Allied garrison numbers 11,000 men, 3,000 of them GIs. Should East Germany reimpose a blockade on the air and land corridors into West Berlin (see map), the Allies would probably either reinstate the airlift they used in 1948 to supply the city or make a test of arms at the road- blocks. Tanks would push through not firing unless fired on. If that should happen, they could be the first shots of World War III. Volatile Outpost Both sides are aware of the vol- atile nature of Berlin. It is a spot vital to the prestige and military position of both the Communist and free worlds. Unlike such areas as Laos there is little room for bargaining. Every diplomatic word ex- changed has significance. Here's a rundown of the key East-West interchanges in recent years: .- . - . .- -.. -4~ LAUENBURG~~~ast GOtm any ~ 4 -- - C*ausse Hide ERESTSEND roa B ER . - I-.- *.** .*- - C.a EASo BERBLrgN * *.* *AUENCT: N * OEP NHOF ***.*. * * * T.rgrtn ** * e. ... - ... -. . G runewaid * -1 --_________-_ .. lBrandenburg Gate --_ ___ _ -- i- .~* .. -IRelcfstag - - - Marx Eng~elsP. - ..-- Al.edCotro Comm n ig. -.~::..m ! R.I.A.S. Radio Station ...................... -- - -- -........--.....--.. .---.--.- * * - * .*-*--*.- .-- *... .4 4 'S 0 1 Z 3 4 I I A Sc ~ - :.. .. .. .ree Univ. of Berlin . 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