THE MICHIGAN DAILY Cyclotron s Home THEATRE NOTES: Stage Plays Highlight Christmas ! By MICHAEL HARRAH As New York City digs itself out from' under all that snow, the Broadway stage is reportedly suf- fering little attendance loss, if. indeed any at all. The Christmas, season finds a number of new titles on theatre marquees on New York's famous thoroughfare, but a few of the older ones still remain. Stage productions top the list, the first offering is "Camelot," the new smash hit by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, which is billed as the "most beautiful show in the world," and is sold out until April. it's playing at the Majestic Theatre. New Offerings On the available list there are other nlew offerings. Sir Laurence Oliver is back stateside to star with Anthony Quinn in "Becket," based on the life of English arch- bishop Thomas Becket. 'Seats are available at the St. James Theatre until Dec. 17. After that it moves Just off Broadway to theĀ° Royale Theatre, a block up the street. Lucille Ball opened yesterday at the Alvin Theatre in "Wild- SGC T osto NSA Group The National Executive Com- mittee of the United States Na- tional Students Association will meet at the Michigan Union Dec. 26-31. The meeting is sponsored by Student Government Council which approved the event Wed-' nesday night. In other action, the Council approved a motion to co-sponsor the Asian Foundation Book Drive with the International Students Association. The SGC agreed to contribute $75 to the drive to help meet its costs. The Council also directed. its Finance Committee to consider the possibility of a "contigency fund" proposed by Philip Power, Grad.. Power said the problems of Chal- lenge and Americans Committed to World Responsibility in getting initial financial support to sus- tan them in the first months of their existence was the reason for epnsidering establishment of the fund. cat," fresh in from rave reviews in Philadelphia. This replaces "The: West Side Story," whose cast will soon join its National company, already on tour in the Midwest. Allan Drury's Pulitzer Prize winning novel "Advise and Con- sent" has been turned into a play by the same name at the Cort Theatre with Ed Begley, Henry Jones, Kevin McCarthy, and Jud- son Laire. Almost all the Ngew York papers have praised it., Varied Fare Other dramas include Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke in "The Miracle Worker," based an the life of Helen' Keller; Joan Plow- right and Angela Lansbury in "A Taste of Honey"; Celeste Holm in a, new comedy, "Invitation to aF March", Julie Harris in "Little. Moon of Alban," by James Costi-. gan; James Daly and Barbara Baxley in "Period of Adjustment," by Tennessee Williams. "My Fair Lady," now starring1 Michael Allinson and Pamela Charles, has become a permanent fixture at the Mark Hellinger Theatre; Ethel Merman still has "Gypsy" at the Imperial Theatre; Mary Martin continues in Rod- gers . ard Hammerstein's "The Sound of Music," at the Lunt- Fontanne. Bendix Takes Over William Bendix has taken over Jackie Gleason's role in "Take Me Along," a musical "Ah Wilder- ness;" television quizmaster Bert Parks has replaced Eddie. Albert in "The Music Man;" and "Fiorel- lo," a musical story of New York's fiery Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, continues at the Broadhurst Theatre. Detroit Presentations' So much for the eastern sea- board. On the shores of Lake St. Clair, Detroit boasts Jack Paar's Dody Goodman and veteran dead- panner Buster Keaton in "On( Upon A Mattress," at the Sh bert Theatre (soon to be to down, by the way.) The Cass Theatre headlines world premiere with Tom Noonoi Barbara Britton and Pete Ma shall in "How to Make a Man." Host Ballet After a record breaking engag ment at the Metropolitan Ope House in New York, The Roy Ballet (formerly the Sadler We Ballet) will be in Detroit aroul New Year's "with "The Sleepir Beauty" and "Swan Lare." Across another lake (Michigan and on into the Windy City (Cl cago), "Flower Drum Song" h made its way across the Appal chians to the Shubert Theatre. Oriental settings seem to be t: order of the day as Gertrude Be and Sir Cedric Hardwicke (t: original Broadcast) star in ' Majority of One," at the Erlang Theatre. The "Ballets Africains," whi. raised a storm in New York Ci because of the costumes (or lac of them) last year, is running int much the same trouble in Chicag However, the show "will go on" the Blackstone Theatre. 'U' Students Fined On Theft Charges Three University students ye terday filed a plea of "no defens in a local court on a larcen charge stemming from a 'Septer ber theft of 80 pieces of glasswa from a local club. Each paid a $ fine. , Bradley Myers, '61, Gerald Kol '62, and Richard Buck, '61, entere pleas ofn separate charges of sir ple larceny. -.-Daily-James Warneka NEW HOME FOR CYCLOTRON-Construction is continuing on a building to house a 40 million-volt cyclotron financed by the Atomic Energy Commission. The North Campus unit will also contain the eight-million volt cyclotron now in the basement of the Randall Laboratory. The $1.05 million plant will .be completed in February. FOR F AYETTE COUNTY: Donors ontute Blood In Campus FundDrive I. BOWLING at I ANN ARBOR RECREATION STUDENT RATES MODERN - AUTOMATIC 605 E. Huron NO 2-01( By WILFRED ROY The blood drive to raise funds for the Negroes of Fayette County, Tenn. ended last night with a slow-but-steady stream of last- minute donors, Mary Wheeler, '61,_ member of the Human Relations Board, said. A total of 45 people donated, but the exact proceeds of the two- day drive are not known as yet, because hospitals pay a varying rate for each blood type. They should approximate $400. Approximately 20 others volun- teered, but could not donate for health reasons, Miss Wheeler said. The drive also received cash donations totaling more than $50. These will be sent with the check from the blood bank to the New York office of the Congress of Racial Equality, with specific in- structions on how the money is to be spent. The Blood for Fayette County Committee will decide what is to be purchased, but CORE will see it is sent, committee chairman Judith Yesner, Grad., said last night. Propose AEC Reorganize In a paper prepared for delivery at the Atomic Industrial Forum yesterday in San Francisco, Prof. William H. Berman and Prof. Lee M. Hydeman, co-directors of the Law School's Atomic Energy Re- search Project, said the Atomic Energy Commission should be split into two separate agencies. One agency, called the Atomic Energy Administration, would con- duct the AEC's operational and promotional functions in nuclear development. The other, called the Atomic Energy Board, would be responsi- ble for safety regulations. Berman and Hydeman, who for- merly work for AEC, say splitting the organization would permit in- dustry to benefit from a regula- tory system that is not "unduly burdensome." The 10 member BFFC committee is an aggragate of representatives from the Human Relations Board and the campus chapter of the NAACP who are working in con- junction with the Ann Arbor, Direct Action Committee, the cam- pus CORE affiliate, in sponsoring the blood bank. r' I Is i THE UNEQUALLED BLUES AND FOLK TEAM SUNNY TERRY AND BROWNIE McGHEE I STARTING TODAY am DIAL 5-6290 1i.0 m I Performing nightly thru tf 'ce H st. l vest1 ORCH ESTRAS by BUD-MOR 1103 S. University NO 2-6362 S Dec 3I from 9P.M. to 2A.M. Fri. and St. to 4 P.M. t '"# I CLOSED MONDAYS ki lb CAFE GALERIE 19940 Livernois, Detroit UN2-4455 north of outer drive I ENDING SATURDAY DIAL NO 8-6416 l M SHOWS- AT 7-9 P.M. I r U .0 GENEVEVE PAGE CGN-CK-eE m COLO SUNDAY Two Alec Guinness HitsI C~t.O by D LIJX SAM ATZAN EORE SERM IAN JE~ PA SN.VE also RICHARD BASEHART in "FOR THE LOVE OF MIKE" 1,' with STU ERWIN in Color I HANDEL'S, MESSIAH Westminster Recording SCHERCHEN Conducting DIAL 2-6264, JEFF JOHN DOLORES HAR TC SAT( ?DAY and URDAY i 1 - I PI to jI. . Wnt some help in your Christmas shopping? Remember, You can find everything in the Yellow Pces 0')rt 10 S UNDAY,2 ON IHE SCREEN THE HAPPIEST PLAY THAT EVER PLAYED Migter RObet4 ,e WARNER BMoS CINE MASCOPE WARNERCOLOR U LIST PRICE $17.98 I