PAGE TWO THEATRE U'Players Present Tennessee Williams By JOHN PERKIN sy, in conjunction with Leah Capes as her daughter Esmeralda, Uniiversity Players, in their pres- and Perry Baer as the basso entation of Tennessee Williams' Nursie,. add greatly to the im- "Camino Real," have created a pact of the play by providing the truly significant theatrical exper- welcome breath of cynicism, a ience. This is a vehicle which pre- physical element necessary to bal- sents the greatest of pitfalls for ance the distance of company of any acting- ti'oupe, a melange of fictional characters assembled on abstractions. Without the strength the Camino Real. and. commitment, yet artistic and personal distance of the. people Similarly, the other characters involved, it becomes heavy; dis- not drawn from history provide 'jointed, and. trite. The Players the arena in which the impact have taken the vision of Williams of the other characters must be and made it 'theirs,' mutating it and is generated. The first and inevitably in the .process yet giv- last character, Quixote, as played ing it life, making the vision :cor by Frank Fernandez, gives the' municable toann audece. "anm- picture of unstagnant defeat nec- ino Real' is a failure. as literature; essary to really focus the nature it'. has been made a success as of.the overall play. theatre.- ."Camino Real," directed by The level of the actirg is of the James Coakley, is a production highest order. Frederick Coffin' as of great emotional impact. Dis- Gutman, the stage rnanager of jointed by nature, filled with un- the Camino Real; is excellent, connected characters, it can only exuding a nair of enervated male- be unified by the impression it volence. Coffin is the air of -the conveys to the audience. Through tropiics which is, not ekclusively excellent performances, and ta- tropical. Mark IL Metcalf can- lented direction, the University not be sufficiently praised; for his Players create the mood, and pro- portrayal, of Kilroy, the e-champ. vide the style, by which "Camino As one who has 'walked the Real" manages to become a real road, when it was royal, as have and vital. work of the- theatre. all the prisoners of the Camino; he utilizes cold symbol to form an limnitation of life, which al- though it does not live, is none- cross theless not an abortion. THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. DECEMBER 1, 1966 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .r, ... ..... :v":. ......... .......... .^. :. ....; ...... n..r o:.:.w n~a e~r;.}."":4:itti~3}}i;;:.^":.:4"i~{:.'r}"::": v::: organizations. May lead to Tech, Di- rector. For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB.I SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- Government Trainee Program: For Cartography, Chemistry, Engineering, ,Mathematics. Oceanography, Physics. Closing date for applications March 2, 1967. 0 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan. Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organi7at,ion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-8429. Part-time Positions Open in Resi- dence Halls: Applications for residence halls positions may be picked up at the residence halls or at the University Housing Office. 3011 SAB beginning Dec. 1. Depts. of Electrical and Industrial Engineering Colloquium: Dr. Ivan Suth- erland of the Computation Laboratory of Harvard University will speak on "Current Research in Computer Graph- ics" at 4 p.m., Fri., Dec. 2, in Room 311 W. Engineering. Coffee will be served at 3:30. The public is invited. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1 Winter Term Registration - Water- _man Gymnasium: January 3 a.m.- - No undergraduate students admitted. Da OCalendar Only graduate and professional school D Instudents may register. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- January 3 p.m. through January 5- inar - "Management of Managers": Registration open to all undergrad- Michigan Union, 8 a.m. uate and graduate students accord- ing to the published alphabetical .Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem-.schedule.1 inar-"Management by Objectives Results-Oriented Appraisal Systems": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. Mental Health Research Institute Seminar-Thomas C. Schelling, Center for International Affairs, Harvard Uni- versity, "On the Analysis of Some Viol- ent Enterprises": 1057 MHRI, 3:45 p.m. Dept. of Anthropology Lecture - John T. Robinson, University of Wisconsin, "Emergence of Man": Aud. B, Angellj Hall, 4 p.m. Cinema Guild-Ron Rice's "The Flow- er Thief": Architecture Aud., 7 and 8:05 p.m. Dept. of Speech University Players Performance-Tennessee Williams' "Ca- mino Real": Trueblood Aud., 8 p.m. School of Music Collegium Musicum -Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Lyle Hecklinger, organist: Organ Stu- dio 2110, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. AAUP Meeting-Panel discussion of "The New Option to Extend CREB Benefits," Rackham West Conference Room, 8 p.m. Important that faculty members attend because the option must be decided upon before Dec. 14. American Chemical Society Lecture: Dr. Manuel. M. Balzer of Monsanto Chemical Co.,., St. Louis, Mo., will speak on' "Electrolytic Reductive Coup- ting as a Synthetic Tool," Thurs., Dec. 1, 8 p.m.. Room 1300 Chemistry Bldg. General Notices Student Government Council Approval of the following student sponsored events becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All pub- licity for these events must be with- held until the approval has become ef. fective. Approval request forms for student sponsored events are available in Room 1011 of th'e SAB. Student Government Council, 'teach- in, Dec. 1, 7 p.m. to 1 a.m., Angell and Mason, Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: Master of Arts, in Teaching, Trin- ity College, Wash., D.C.-12 mos., BA major in MAT specialization or related field (Engl. or Amer. Hist.) Miller Analogies andrGRE scores and com- mitment to teach in the inner city. Master of Arts in Teaching, George Washington University, Wash., D.C. - 1 st. sem. plus summer session on pro- fessional courses, full-salaried intern- ship during 2nd. sem. BA plus score on aptitude tests or GRE. Ford Foun- dation scholarships for tuition. POSITION OPENINGS: U.S. Army Administrative Survey, De- tachment, Fort Holabird, Md.--Intel- ligence'Civilian Career Programs, GS-7 levels entrance. BA any field, language important, recent grad or young alum. 2-3 time spent outside U.S. U.S. citi- zen, speaking ability in foreign lan- guages required. Prudential Life Insurance Co., De- troit, Mich.-Special Agents to sell life insurance, work out of Detroit or A.A. Male, Gen. Lib. Arts. Some Bus. Ad. exper., 28-40 pref. married with children. A. E. Staley Manufacturing Co., De- catur, III.-Industrial engineers, 3 lev- els. 1. Junior IE, BS/MS/IE/Ind. Ad- min. or ME degrees. 2. Indust. Engr. Same degrees desired plus 2-5 yrs. in process industry. 3. Senior IE, same degrees plus 5 or more yr. exper. spe- cialized in cost reduction projects. Wilson & Co., Inc., Chicago, Ill. - Food Service Representative, 2 yrs. food service sales. Openings in New Eng- land and upper N.Y. Great deal of travel. SeniorResearch Pharmacolog- ist, PhD in Pharmacology, Physiology :)r rel. biol. sci. Research Chemist, BS organ. chem. plus 5-10 yrs. Statisti- cal Analyst, Masters degree in stat. or econ. plus some work in related fields. Chemist, BS chem. or biol. sci. with less than 5 yrs. exper. Tax Account- ant, degree with major in acctg. Min. 4 yrs. diversified tax work, pref. with large corporation. Building Officials Conference of America, Inc., Chicago, III.-Engineer with specific trng. in building con- struction design. Plan examinations, Material Approvals, Code Interpreta- tion, serve on tech, committees of en- gineering organizations, write articles for BOAC News, speak at professional ii IUNIVERSITY PLAYERS! presents Tennessee Williams' CAMI NO REAL Tonight through Saturday 8 P.M. GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Friday noon luncheon discussion Buffet 25c (Speaker to be announced) Farm Management Supervisor Trainee Program: Closing application date Feb. 28, 1967. Jobs Abroad: Summer Placement Service has applications from U.S. Na- tional Student Association, Lufthansa for Germany only, International Stu- dent Information Service and Ameri- can Information Service. Details and applications at Summer Placement Service, 212 SAB. CINEMA II presentsi Alelinza Al ? TOlri4 v;id P~eter Ustii'zov inZ *Douglas C,* Sprigg, embodying Jacques Casanova,.: also. manazes to convey -the meaning behind his symbol, and becomes the tired old hawk. Donna Spaan as Mar- guerite Gautier, isindeed the fad- -de courtesan Camilla,,whose ro- .mantic-. shield has been removed by the theft.of grace of death.. Paula Marchese as Prudence Duvernoy, John M, Knox as the Baron, Suzanne : Young. as Lady Mlligan,' William Moore as Lord Mulligan, and-Eric Brown as.Lord Byron;all are excellent in fulfill- ing their roles as symbols by giv- :ing .meaningful substance which they must present in. order to function symbolically in, relation to the play. The unity; which Williams pro- vides for these characters can only be obtained through physical im- pact; thisis, admirably. provided. Roberta Ann Raider, as the Gyp- campus THURSDAY, DEC. 1 3:45' pm.-Mental Health Re- search Institute Semrinar. Thomas C.:Schelling, Center for 'Interna- tional Affairs, Harvard University, "'On the Analysis of Some Violent Enterprises": 1057 MHRII. 4:00 pm.-Department of An- thropology Lecture. John T. Rob- inson, University of Wisconsin, "Emergence of Man": Aud. B, An- gell H.ll. 7:00 and 9:05 p.m.-Ron Rice's "The Flower Thief": Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-Tennessee Williams' "Camino Real" : Trueblood Aud. 8:00 p.m.-Gilbert and Sullivan Society presents H.M.S. Pinafore in :Mendelssohn Theatre. Jules Duss'i's TOPKAPI (TEci INICOLOR) One of the finest Combinations of syspense anad coinmedy on film. FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7 and 9:15 P.M. Aud. A, Angell Hall 5Oc I.D. Required TONIGHT at 8 P.M. WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! LAST Today 2 at 1:00-- DAYS 43:00-5:00- NO 2-6264 7:05-9:10 Ln *RLan *JoV DR~in awn TL R IGN O tn13 RIVER T3CHNICODR j A t~fAUNLERSAL PCTUR E is Cdor Ann Arbor.. a distinguished event r*r*.r .*r* * r* *r*"* * " "*r*"* r r** . . * *.. . r "9* * * **9r*r*r*"*r* EXCLUSIVE LIMITED ENGAGEMENT 3 SEVEN DAYS ONLY MAX voc sYDOW as Jesus STARTING SATURDAY December 3rd DOROTHY MCGULRE asMary JOHN WAYNE 4 as The Centurion x CLAUDE RAINS - j ~~as Herod the Greatiscv Filmed in 7 DAYS ONLY ULTRA PANAVISION® TECHNICOLORo Beginrying SATURDAY Read and Use Daily Classified Ads 0 Law School Representative: Prof. Frank Miller from the Washington Uni- versity School of Law, St. Louis, Mo., will be on campus Mon., Dec. 5, to talk with any students interested in attending that law school. Individual appointments may be arranged for that afternoon in Room 1223 Angell Hall. Academic Costume: Can be rented atI Moe Sport .Shop, 711 North University Ave. Orders for Winter Commencement Exercises should be placed immedi- ately. CHILDREN'S DANCE WORKSHOP Performs Thurs. Dec. 1 8 p.m. Public Library with Ann Arbor Dance Theater DELIGHTFUL DON'T MISS Trueblood Auditorium Box Office Open Daily 12:30-8 P.M. 0 ,i I r 1 q~t rr 'v 'ifl;.; }X;g Yr":"} .v:r v { .}vti1;;.w~i.;;r:.pt" {,; ;a:.,@:;::5;?{"" %y?:2,f,.} :} ; " A o. };.... ..... ...: "O. ORGAN I7AT-ION NOTICES r::} 'yA} r . S. ...ne'"r v4 "%::1:::::"':: .: x::: .... ......,Gaa7:"S - .."... r:."}Ci" rk+;..}. n. .r:"fr~rrr..: Xf~r 4 . ...................."..."}J.:" .::;:t""} rl. .S C. {: l. .. r " Y ..4 .?4 ti L:' USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to. offi- cially recognized and registered" student' organizations.only. Forms are: availabie, in Room 1011 SAB.; * * * Christian Science Organization, Tes- timony meeting, Thurs., Dec. 1, 7:30- 8:30 p.m., 3545 SAB. U. of M. Chess Club, Meeting-chal- lenge board will be set up, election to fill vacancy, Dec. 2, 7:30 p.m., Room 3-D, Michigan Union. * * * Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance with instruction open t everyone, Fri., Dec. 2, 8-11 p.m., Barbour Gym. * *' *, Le Cercle Francais, Le Brratin-en- joy a French atmosphere, Thurs., Dec. 1, 3-5 p~m., 3050 Frieze. * * * Engineering Council, Meeting, Dec. 1, 7:30 p.m., 3529 SAB. B'nai B'rith Hillel, Hillel Deli House, Prof. Edward Stasheff, Dept. of Speech, presents an illustrated talk, "Anten- nas :and Antiquities," 'Dec. 4, 5:30 p.M., '1429, Hill. Cali 663-4129 for reser- vations. METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PRESENTS A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS ZIIWAGO IN PANAVISION* AND METROCOLOR Nights Except Sunday at 8 P.M. Sunday at 7:30 All Night Seats $2.25 Matinees on Sat. & Sun. at 1 1:30 Sat. Mat. $1.50 Sun. Mat. $2.25 0 I THE JIM KWESKIN JUG BAND "HIGH-GAUGE PERFORMANCES, GUTS, INGENUITY, FLAMING ARROWS, DYNAMITE AND HOT LEAD!" r _ a "HELL-FORA LEATHER ACTION AND ADVENTURE!" -N.Y. TIMES HIGHEST RATING! N.Y. DAILY NEWS 0 "The kind of film one thirsts for! -LIFE MAGAZINE ~. BURT LANCASTER LEE MARVIN" ROBERT RYAN JACK PALANCE RALPH BELLAMY thCLAUDIA CARDINALEJ -All a - .. 7 a I