Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 21, 1968 N Tuesday. Mov 21 196~ a I records Riggs' By R. A. PERRY There is no record-company today which can produce the monthly number of releases that Columbia continues to pour onto the market. Accord- ingly, when the producers de- cide to feature one of their art- ists, they do so in an enthusias- tic and all-out fashion. May, for instance, has been declared E. Power Biggs Month and Columbia has released no less than ten re'cordings by this seemingly omnipresent Ameri- can organist. The major release in this or- gan orgy comes in a two vol- ume set comprising the sixteen organ concerti of George Fred- erick Handel. A certain amount of controversy has surrounded this set '(D3S 777-8), in which organ orgy: Baroque, Biggs is accompanied by the London Philharmonic under the aegis of Sir Adrian Boult. The Columbia production crew, at the instigation of Biggs no doubt, sought and found an authentic organ upon which Handel himself was known to have played. When Columbia thus professed sonic authenti- city, the D.G.G. Archive ,Co,' which also recently issued an integral set of the concerti, cried foul. The "Handel organ," they as- serted, had been adjusted to meet the tuning pitch of the modern orchestra, and thus Co- lumbia's claim was spurious. Biggs retorted that the pipes were only raised a fraction of a semi-tone, and that D.G.G. was merely a sour grapes company. In any case, the Handel or-$ gan of the Great Packington Abbey in Warwickshire, Eng- land, sounds sweet, rich, and justly limited in swell. Some tracker noise can be heard, but seldom does it become discon- certing. Biggs is at his exuber- ant best, and Boult hones the scaled-down Philharmonic into an incisive and idiomatic part- ner. Handel often used these con- certi, six in Opus 4, six in Opus 7, and four miscellaneous works (Grove lists twenty-one, but many are transcriptions), as interludes in his oratorios. Used thus to lighten a concert at- mosphere, the works comprise airs, dance forms, pomposo marches, and free fugues. I first came to know these lively, open, and tunefu in now-deleted Epic rec which featured the orga hannes Kohler in simp relaxed performances still enchant me. Biggs uses an older, mi thentic score and hisv abound in enriching or tation, though they ar what more serious and mined. Columbia has p full and rich sound w end-groove distortion. And there certainly not be any end-groove tion, since the record si erage only fifteen minut This bit of extravagance lumbia's part is balance ever, by the fact that the record sets sell for the two. If you wish to caution '?." . L1.:... . .. . .. 55 . ... ."V."YV:.....d...... ,'::J:.".'A'r.r:"' . a r .,,., « ........,...... A .... r..... «... :"f"rr:L:rr:::.".:~: rS...,..r.. ...... : r. :" "...,.« .:::::L . rr. ...} .. . . a. ...a. &$<.... ,..« ; ....... a...1 ..".". Sr DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ...:n:; : ...,,:::. .:::...,.,,,,r^,., ...n «~~a.v.r.. .LS1........":r rv.:.::^.1rr:a . .:.v......1: :«"J::N r x?}$1 ...^}:.:.:;? t; 7ii ^:f}.""':"}"::v ?"r: ~ti}i}$i}:%i:r? beautifl il works dulge in the enjoyable fare, cordings Volume I may serve your pur- nist Jo- poses better, for it contains the )le and thoroughly winning numbers which four to six. For Bach, Biggs will not win iore au- everyone's vote of -confidence. versions Many prefer the more convinc- namen- ing spiritual fervor of the blind e some- German organist Helniut Wal- l deter- ca, and some enthusiasts are rovided turning to the cleanly delineat- with *o ed structures rendered by the Englishman Lionel Rogg. should Biggs' approach may be lik- distor- ened to that of Leonard Bern- des av- stein - an all out enjoyment of es each. making music which sometimes on Co- subsumes, in its headlong zeal, d,' how- lighter and finer shades of e three- phrasing. price of On MS 7108, Biggs presents three Prelude and Fugues usly in- (BWV 549, 539, and 533) and the six Schubler Chorale Pre- ludes. It is the latter group of pieces, favorites of Bach him- self, which give the disc its special distinction. Published when Bach was 61, the chorale preludes derive from instru- mental movements of the can- mmas. Ar- tatas and they exhibit the same Morocco, range of dramatic feeling, not sion spec- mere compositional agility, that Ile, radio- , reactor the cantatas do. phy and Moving from the ecstatic. trom, nteters. d int dolor of Bach to the splendor c gauges. of Spanish ceremonial music oil chem. requires a change in organ bia, radi a- sound as well. In Historic Or- gans of Spain (MS,7109), Biggs io -_ sys waxes gloriously on the great math plus cathedral organs of Toledo, Se- engineer govia, Salamanca, and Madrid. st. mgmt an. Cost Little of this comnmemorative tors and music is profound (Soler, Seix- mer prod- as, Valente, Pasquini) and the chem, de- organs themselves are rightly arporation, highlighted. al Engrs., The organ of Toledo Cathed- BS plus ral emerges as an enormous Smist, B fusty bagpipe that whines and ngrg. Me- growls, spotlighted by the spe- o yrs. Ac- cialty of the house, the trumpet rnal Aud- in acetg reed stops. Segovia too pos- or, data sesses an organ of unique sound exper, and when it is singing out So- Chicago, ler's "pop goes the weasel" son- ct, Natur- ata in A, few will not want to join in the march. WASHINGTON (CPS) - A pass the Senate. But the amend- Senate subcommittee completed ment faces several obstacles to hea ings this week on a Consti- adoption which were brought out tutional amendment to lower the in the subcommittee testimony. voting age to 18. A big problem in getting the Affected would be 12 million bill through the Senate may be persons between the ages of 18 the argument that the decision and 21, 47 per cent of whom are on a minimum voting age should college students. Only Georgia be left to the individual states. and Kentucky have lowered the Several opponents of the bill ar- voting age to 18, while Alaska gued that 18-year-olds should not and Hawaii, when entering the be given the vote because they do Union, had voting ages of 19 and not have many other legal rights 20 respectively. of citizenship, such as making draft eligibility. They argued that if 18-year-olds 'were being asked to die for American foreign pol- icy objectives, they ought' to have a role in shaping those objectives. The recent wave of student demonstrations may also prove to be an obstacle, especially in the House, which recently voted to deny federal aid to students who participate in unlawful campus demonstrations. At the hearings, opponents of the bill, including Sens. Spessard Holland (D-Fla.) and Jack Mil- to i The bill is sponsored by 44 sen-; ators, including Majority LeaderX Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) and Minority Leader Everett Dirkson3 (R-Ill.), and thus seems likely to Florida Stat contracts and marrying, with rout I parental consent. ler (R-Iowa), said that the dem- Supporters responded that 18- onstrations show a lack of ma- year-olds do have many adult re- turity on the part of many 18, 19, sponsibilities, including their and 20-year-olds, who "are prone to take an extreme point of view and push their ideas to the ex- ex clusion of all others," acc'ording to Mller. perhaps the greatest obstac~le 4 Lowered voting age bill faces tough battle in Congress, states The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which Tpie Michigan Daily assumes no edi/or- lal responsibility. Notes should be sent in TYPEWRTTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. before 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 Only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For miore ififormation call 764-9270. TUESDAY, MAY 21 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"The Management of Managers No. 59": North Campus Commons, 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Basic Firemanship Training Course 1 - Morning Session, Civil Defense Center, 8:30 a.m. Baseball - U-M vs. Central Michigan University, Ferry Field, 3:30 p.m. Department of Psychiatry Lecture - Natalie Shainess, M.D., Asst. Clinical Professor, New York School of Psy- chiatry,, "Images of Woman: Past and Present, Overt and Obscured": Aud.; Children's Psychiatric Hospital, 4:30 p.m. General Notices Tuition Refund Schedule-The Reg- istrar will honor student refunds through 4:00 p.m. on the dates given below. plication blanks are available in Rm. Mr. Eikichi Otsuka, Staff member, 3014, Rackham Bldg. for thb National Placement office, Waseda University, Teacher Examinations. The next ad- Japan, May 27. ministration of the test will be on Saturday, July 6, and applications must be received in Princeton, Newa Jersey by June 14. Plc m n scopy of gentina, uranium troscopy. isotopes phys. IL eectrom Iraq, rad engrg. y Greece, Ecuador, topes in Law School Admission Test: Appli- cation blanks are available in Room 3014 Rackham Bldg. forthe Law School Admission Test. The next administra- tion of the test will be on Sat., Aug. 3, and applications are due in Prince- ton, N.J. by July-13. Foreign Visitors' The following are foreign visitorso who can be reached through the For- eign Visitor Programs Office, 764-2148. Mr. . and Mrs. G. G. Mbau, AfricanI Personnel Officer, de Beers Mines,, South Africa, May 17-25, Miss Patricia O'Connell, Public Health Nursing, England, May 22-25. Prof. Julio Vega, Dean of the School of Economics, National Autonomous1 University of Nicaragua, May 22-25. Prof. Arnold Weddle, Dept. of Land- scape Architecture, University of Shef- field, England, May 22-24. Dr. Milos Kalab, Dr. Zdenek Strmis-t ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of this column for announce- z ments is available to officially recognized and registered student organizations only. Forms are t available in room 1011 SAB. * * * Bach Club meeting, Thurs., May 23, 8:00 p.m. Guild House, 802 Monroe, speaker: Dale Bonge, "The Unseent Structure in Bach's Music," for fur-e ther information please call 769-2922 crt 769-1605.1 * * , Christian Science Organization Testi-j mony rpeeting, Thurs., 7:30 p.m., Rm. 3545 S.A.B. ka, Director and Deputy Director, In-j stitute of Sociology of Czechoslovakt Academy of Sciences, Czechoslovakia,1 May 27-28, BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS 3200 SAB GENERAL DIVISION 1 #] ;,i ii ion cee Interview Announcement: Wednesday, May 22: B. F. Navy Employment Office, Great Lakes, tems An Ill. (35 min. from the Loop) is seeking computes any degree graduates, August and De- trainee, cember, for positions in the areas of BA. Dii personnel, computer work, manage- Acct.,( ment and budget analysis, bus ad., and trainees. any engineering-fields. Appointments ucts. Te are at levels GS-5 and 7. Federal Serv- gree, col ice Entrance Exam, required and can A be given at the interview, Wednesday, Ancho May 22. Scoring will be done on the Lancaste spot. Please call 764-7460 if interested 5-,0'o e in these, and arrange for the interview. 51ntros physical, Current Position Openings RteceiWd chanical by General Division by mail and phone itors, m -please call 764-7460 for further infor- Commun mation :processin Navy Activities Employment Office, Cook4 Great Lakes, Ill. - See above for in- Ill - F+ terview arrangements, Personnel Man- alist I,1 agement' Trainee, on-the-job trng., and some classroom train. Assignments Linda in recruiting, promotions, wage and'teriais S salary admin., grievances and disciplin- son with ary actions, employee development and visual ea special training 1ianagement Analyst Midwe Trainee, analyzing, evaluating, devel- City, M, oping, advising on, or promoting im- BS. Mic privement in mgmt. policies, practices, PhD. pr methods, procedures and organization- PhD. A al structures. Chemical International Atomic Enegry Agen- lyst, que cy, Contact Bureau for further infor- ming, i mation, locations listed below. Requests producti from foreign government for expert ment si advisors/consultants in many areas of! PERT atomic energy usage. Assignments may necess.( vary from 3 mos. to 2 yrs., most re- Statistici quire advanced degrees and extensive or ci.i experience. Romania, gamma ray spec- or Exper troscopy. Yugoslavia, radiation chem. tree req. Bulgaria, radioisotopes. Nicaragua. health physics. Nigeria, nuclear phys. Hungary, chem. radiation dosimetry, Uruguay, U.A.R., and Turkey, radio- isotopes, (agricult.). Tunisia, neutron physics: Thailand, gamma radiography, food preservation. Singapore and Ecua dor, health physics. Austria, nuclear phys. or engrg. Peru, China, and Bo- livia, radio chem. Pakistan, spectro- neutron capture ga radioisotopes prod, geol. Mexico, emis Lebanon.and Chi (Agricult.). "Korea, srael, radiocardiogra ignetic mass spec lation protection In w/exper. in nucleoni radioisotopes in so Radioblol. Cyprus, entomology. Colom sm. Goodrich, Akron, Oh al., physical sci. orn r exper. Industrial BBA, math or Indu stribution Statistici degree. Field audi Sales trainees, consu chnical Librarian,c rmputer exper. r Hocking Glass Co r, Ohio - Industri xper. Electrical Engr s.Electronics Spedi syst., 0-5 yrs. Che ChE or Ceramic er Engr., BS plus 5-10 s, BS, no exper. Inte An. 1 yr. exper, BS ications Coordinat g, degree plus 5 yrs. County Civil Service, orest Preserve Distri nat'l. sci. BS degree resigns following protest TAILAHASSEE, Fla. (CPS)- however, held an emergency meet- Florida State University President ing and refused to accept Chain- John Champion resigned this pion's resignation. Champion has week in the wake of a censorship not responded to the board's ac- dispute over the use of four letter tion, but many observers think he words in the campus literary will make his resignation stick. magazine, but the board of re- Others say he can be persuaded{ Dents has refused to accept the to stay. resignation. Three of Champion's assistants Champion resigned after the resigned along with him. arts and sciences faculty, repre- senting the largest college in the university, held a special meeting Wednesday & Thursday to discuss the administration's DEPARTMEN censorship of student publications. STUDENT LABOR The faculty . tabled by a vote of pres 175-165 a motion to censure the MAID TC president and demand his resig- nation if he would not reverse by EUGEN his decision to censor an article written for the Legend, the liter- ary magazine. r 4:10 P.M. T OF SPEECH ATORY THEATRE sents )MARRY E IONESCO WARFS LD PINTER .4, of all is the problei of getting the required three-fourths of the state legislatures to approve the amendment State legislatures have been ex- tremely reluctant to lower the voting age below 21. The legisla- tures have been reluctant to even -but the voting age on the ballot in many states. In 43 states, leg- islatures,hhave considered propos- als to put the voting age on the ballot, but only 11 have done so. by HAROL The, president announced his resignation only 30 minutes after the faculty vote. "In view of this sentiment, I hereby tender hny resignation, effective immediate- ly," he said. His statement also said, "It is evident that It no longer enjoy the confidence of a major segment of this university faculty." The Florida board of regents, 22nd and 23rd May Admission Free ARENA THEATRE, FRIEZE BUILDING W Atchinson Instructional Ma-C--- 5ervic, Monroe, Mich. - Per- some sales exper. and audio xper. preferred, will train. j st Research Institute, Kansasa o. - Biologist-Bacteriologist, robiol-Virologist-Immunologist, ef, Physiologist-biochem., MS/ analytical Chemist, MS/PhD. SEngr.BS/MS plus 0-3 yrs. r Associate, Operational Ana-j ueing theory, linear program- nventory theory, simqlation, on sched. Associate Manaae-I systems Specialist, CPM and techniques, computer exper. Chemical Physicist, PhD. Bic- an, adv. degree in engrg., math fld. Human Factors En[iner rimental Psychologist, adv. de- Kind of Refund 100 % Withdrawal Reduction, course load 50% Spring- Summer Term Spring' 1z Term Summer Tr Term Shows at 1,3, 5, 7, & 9:05 DIAL 5-6290 p a simaa NO iID K[~iDY Mi ORO KENNEDY to die!" S811MuR P0Mo8COIRODON EASTMANCOwR COMING FRIDAY: "P.J." incluang BET TRROD STEIGER j THECf'R MRAIO esCH RO CRA SIDNEY POITIER ROD STEIGER nIHE NORMAN IEWISON-WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION N EORNIEALTE sF TIEdPNIChl T IN MMTOMWCOLOR byiLuxe 'i':'.vv :,: ,;. fl" 'f, ,.. ...'l' u " i '9+"r" G.. e Y'2 .:. ?hM1. .. rsK,.,,4, :soz7t"xa, *.. .....wr .a c - I A o'