TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1966 TUE MIChIGAN JlAILY SUNDAY. DECEMBER 4. 1986 IV Brilliant Soloists Perform in the 'Messiah'; Chorus Comments on Annual Presentation By JOYCE WINSLOW oeience at Hill is different from A,-nor residents as w(,ll as students Moynagh, soprano. Carol Smith, Thomas Paul, bass soloist in the singing at the Philharmonic. "The Many members of fhb chorus have mezzo-soprano, and Loren Dris- University Musical Society's an- fan shape of Hill," Paul said, "pro- periormed this work here numer- coll, tenor. nual performance of Handel's duces more audience rapport than ous times. Miss Moynagh's credits include "Messiah," waited just inside the the rectangular shape of Philhar- Mrs. Celena Vlisides, slight grey- the major opera companies in the stage door of Hill Auditorium Fri- {monic Hall. More of the audience haired woman, has suns; the "Mes- U.S. and Italy. Miss Smith is a day evening at the conclusion of is around the stage at Hill and siah", here for 22 years, Lester leading artist with the New York the program for his car to be the atmosphere is warmer. In a McCoy conducting each time. She. City opera company and has sung brought up to take him home. He long rectangular hall the per- like most, thought that the Inter- with 19 orchestras. wore a heavy winter coat and former is very far from most of lochen Arts Academy Orchestra. Loren Driscoll was a cowboy in kept a scarf over his face, except the audience." was "exceptional." Nebraska before he began his when speaking, to protect against Just before leaving, Paul com- Mrs. Millila, wife of a University operatic career. Mr. Paul has ap- the bitter cold. mented on his role in the "Mes-, engineer, enjoyed singing the peared with many U.S. and Can- Paul had specia praise for Hill 25a 30i mhe sid. Messach "'Thanks be to God," which was adian opera companies, Pau hd secal raseforHil 2 o 30ties" h sid."ad a new for the chorus this year. Mary McCall Stubbins was or- auditorium, "I love this place," he time with different people. Every said, "The acoustics are marvelous. time the work has been moving Brilliant solo performances were ganist and Marilyn Mason harp- I have sung at Philharmonic Hall and I become very involved in it." given by Thomas Paul, bass, Joan sichordist. in Lincoln Center before and after Chorus Comments - it was improved upon, and I still The "Messiah" is a moving ex- - like Hill better. perience for the audience, and, Paul noted that the singing ex- chorus, which is composed of Ann BEAT BOOKSTORE PRICES F This Week's Events I 'WEDDING BAND' TO OPEN Shown in a dramatic moment from the World Premiere of "Wedding Band" are (left to right) Marcie Hubert, Katherine Squire, Ruby Dee and Clarice Taylor. Also starring in the performance is tthe modern jazz star, Abbey Lincoln, winner of the Best Actress Award at the World Festival of Negro Arts. "Wedding Band," an original drama by Negro plawright Alice Childress has been selected as the New Play Project for 1966 by the Professional Theatre Program. Miss Childress' earlier work, "Trouble In Mind," was well received in an off-Broadway run some seasons ago. She was a member of the original cast of "Anna Lucasta" and author of a col- lection of short pieces entitled "Like One of the Family." This im portant civil rigths commentary with its import of Negro importance and equality in the performing arts opens for seven performances on Wednesday, Dec. 7 at the Mendelssohn Theatre. BERKELEY PROBLEM: Nonstudents Live in Unreachable World, BERKELEY, Calif. (P) -Berke- ley's nonstudents live in a world of shabby apartments, crowded coffee houses, beards and intel- lectual ferment - convinced they have as much right to participate in University of California affairs as any registered student. By day and night, they are seen in what has been called the city's "underground," blocks of old homes, shops and bookstores. Like students, they saunter up to the big university campus, and some- times engage in protests that are limited by the administration to those enrolled. Their attire is casual - beards, battered' sport coats, sandals, slacks. None of them carry the registration card the university issues to the 27,500 young men and women enrolled at Berkeley. Outsiders To Chancellor Roger Heyns and Gov.-elect Ronald Reagan, they are outsiders who provoked a classroom strike by deliberately breaking 'a campus rule against nonstudents creating disturbances. Six of them were arrested Wednes- day in a protest against Navy re- cruiters setting up a table on campus. "I'm more'a part of the com- munity than the chancellor is," said Mario Savio, 23, one of those arrested. This long-haired, thin, intense forner New Yorker is the best known of the hundreds of young men and women who live around the university but don't attend it. ly active and suspended," she said. Savio, who has the ability to fire up student rallies, left Berkeley after the 1964 free speech revolt he helped lead. He is back now, refused admittance to the school but enthusiastically whipping up support on campus each day for the latest protest. Savio was one of those arrested at the Navy table. However, those active in the student strike say he is not the leader. Standing in the rain, Nigel Young, 27, a sociology graduate student, looked sourly up at an auditorium where Savio was mak- ing a speech and said, "There's sort of a division between the workers and the talkers." As for thensixtarrested, Young said "these nonstudents' are ex- students who have either beenj kicked out or are trying to get back in." "The people involved once were students," said protest leader Karen Lieberman, 23, a pretty New Yorker suspended from Berk- eley last June for manning a pro- test table along with some young men not registered at the univer- sity. "They are nonstudents now simply because they were political- Berkeley's nonstudent commun- ity-the "underground"-is divid- ed between people like Savio who once were UC students, but drop- ped out temporarily, and those who have no connection with the school at all. The latter are the "hippies," bearded, barefooted people whom Miss Lieberman said refuse to take part in any protest. "The people who are the hippies, the beatniks, never get involved," she said. "They're living in a dif- ferent world." The nonstudent group has its own coffee houses, its favorite bookstores and its own newspaper; the Berkeley Barb, 'an irreverent weekly published in an old house several blocks from campus. Hard at work at the Barb office Friday, business manager Michael Korman, 27, told why he quit a business job a few years ago and came to Berkeley. "I think Berkeley is the most intellectually alive and stimulating place in the United States," said Korman. SUNDAY, DEC. 4 2:30 p.m.-Handel's "Messiah," University Choral Union and In- terlochen Arts Academy Orches- tra: Hill Aud. 7:00 and 9:05 p.m.-Buster Kea ton's "Sherlock Junior" at the Architect Aud. TUESDAY, DEC. 6 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music will feature Elizabeth Manion, mezzo-soprano, and Eugene Bos- sart, pianist, in a recital at Rack- ham Lecture Hall. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 7 4:15 p.m.-The School of Public Health will present Karl Evang, director-general of',IHealth Serv- ives, Royal Norwegian Govern- ment, discussion "Social Medicine in a Welfare State," in Auditorium C, Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music will present the annual Christmas Concert featuring the University Choir and Orchestra, conducted by Maynard Klein at Hill Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The Professional Thea- tre Program New Play Project Per- formance will give "Wedding hBand," at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.] THURSDAY, DEC. 8 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will run Rene Clair's "Le Million" in the Architecture Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The Travel Film Se- ries will present "Inside and Out- side the Iron Curtain" in Aud. A, Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m. - The Professional Theatre, Program New Play Pro- ject Performance will give "Wed- ding Band," at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music will present the University Sym- phony Orchestra in a concert con- ducted by Theo Alcantarilla at Hill Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The University Musi- cal Society will present the New York Pro Musica in "The Play of Daniel, at the First Methodist Church. FRIDAY, DEC. 9 .7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will offer Rene Cl~dr's "Le Million," at the Architecture Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The University Musi- cal Society will present the New York Pro Musica in "The Play of Daniel," at the First Methodist Church. SATURDAY, DEC. 9 2:30 and 8:30 pm.-The Profes- sional Theatre Program will give a New Play Project Performance of "Wedding Band," at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present Ingar Berg- man's "Brink of Life," in the Architecture Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The University Musi- cal Society Peformance will pre- sent the New York Pro Musica in "The Play of Daniel" at the First Methodist Church. Buy or Sell THRU THE MARKET CALL 665-3303 ANYTIME or Come and see us on the Second floor of the Union 3- P.M. P.S. We also deal in rides home and any kind of merchandise under the sun. A FREE SERVICE OF UAC ANP SGC urr.r rwir r DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN' 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 organization notices are not' accepted for publication. For more information call 764-8429. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4 Day Calendar University Musical society Concert -Handel's "Messiah," University Chor- al Union and Interlochen Arts Acade- my Orchestra: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - John Peterson, organist: Organ Stu- dio, 2110 School of Music, 4:30 p.m. Cinema Guild-Buster Keaton's "Sher- lock Junior": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. School of Music Concert - Robert Noehren, organ and Keith Bryan, flute, "Organ Music -of the Twentieth Cen- tury": First Baptist Church, 8:30 p.m. Botanical Gardens Open House - University Botanical Gardens, 1800 N. Dixboro Road, 2-4 p.m. Faculty, stu- dents and general "public are invited. Free bus service provided between Main Campus and the Gardens leav- ing from Hill Aud. (Zone 6-corner of N. University and Ingalls) every half- hour starting at 1:30 psm. General Notlices Women's Research Club: Mrs. Ger- trudie Kurath, dance ethnologist, will speak on "Festivals for the Nature Spirits and the Christ Child," Mon., Dec. 5, 8 p.m., in West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Hopwood Contest for Underclassmen: Manuscripts must be n,the Hopwood Room, 1006 Angell Hall, by 4 p.m., Wed., Dec. 7. PLANS FOR WINTER COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Saturday, Dec. 17, 1966, 2 p.m. Time of Assembly-1:15 p.m. Places of Assembly-Regents, Presi- dent and other executive officers, min- ister, speaker, candidate for Regents' citation, and candidate for honorary degree, in the Kalamazoo Room of the Michigan League where they may robe. Deans and other administrative, of- ficials taking active part in the exer- 6ises, in the Hussey Room of the Michigan League, where they may robe. Members of the faculties in Room 2071 Natural Science Bldg., where they may robe. Students of the various schools and colleges, in Natural Science Bldg. as follows: Section A-Literature, Science, and Arts' - Front part of, auditorium, west section. -Education-Front part of auditor- ium, center section. -Architecture-Front part of audi- torium, center section (behind Educa- tion). -Law-Front part of auditorium, east section. Dearborn Campus-Front part of au- ditorium, east section (behind Law). Section B-Graduate - PhD candi- dates, Room 1053. -Masters candidates, rear part of auditorium. Section C-Engineering-Room 2054. -Business Administration - Room 2042 -Music-Room 2033 (north end). -Public Health-Room 2033 (behind Music). -Pharmacy-Room 2033 (behind Pub- lic Health). -Nursing-Room 2033 (behind Phar- Macy) . -Dentistry-Room 2033 (behind Nurs- ing). (Continued on Page 8) CONTINUOUS TODAY FROM 1 P.M. 1 THE JIM KWESKIN JUG BAND of Vanguard Records DIAL 8-6416 Phone 482-2056 Entax" On. CARPENTER RDs FREE HEATERS-OPEN 6:30 p.m. NOW SHOWING _ a . . . . "Highest Rating !" -N.Y. Daily News Friday Saturday Sunday GIE1BUIY IrOUSB 330 Maynard Door opens at 8 00 p.m. $1.50 per person .I BURT LANCASTER LEE MARVIN- ROBERT RYAN -JACK PALANCE RALPH BELLMYw.CLAUDIA CARD)INALE] m. PROFESSiONALS A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE . PANAVISIONtTECHNICOLOR" Soundtrack album on Colgems Records. ¢EACP OO Shawn at CINMACOE CLO b i 9:20 Only SINATRA TREVOR.:.;: HOWARD Shown at 7:05 Only COO I . I TONIGHT ONLY Guild House 802 Monroe Mon., Dec. 5th Noon Lunch 25c "Bull Session" TONIGHT at 8 P.M WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! I CINi GUILD SHERLOCK JUNIOR (dir. Buster Keaton---1924) Buster in a classic dream sequence, imagines he is a great detective! SHORTS: "The Dippy Dentist" I I For Ann Arbor ...adi, 1 stinguished event! EXCLUSIVE LIMITED ENGAGEMENT AREMAING I k METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PRESENTS A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION DAVID LEAN'S FILM "Sure, Mike" "Safecrackers" r El I r I I lwmlmmi 7MM-*Pvl- 1