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December 03, 1961 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1961-12-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

I

F

Citizens Give

PdWw

CHOREOGRAPHER-DANCER-Merce Cunningham and his leading dancer, Carolyn Brown, will
appear with his dance company at 8:30 p.m. Monday at the Ann Arbor High School. Cunningham
was the 1961 recipient of the National Dance Magazine Award for outstanding achievement. The
Dramatic Arts Center is sponsoring the program.
PROGRAM NOTES:
Dance TroupeTo Present Recital
-

Merce Cunningham, choreo-
grapher-dancer, will appear with
his company at the Ann Arbor
High School Aud. at 8:30 p.m.
Monday under the auspices of the
Dramatic Arts Center. Cunning-
ham was the 1961 recipient of the
National Dance Iagazine Award
for outstanding achievement.
Carolyn Brown will appear with
Cunningham as his leading dancer.
Henry IV...
On a completely new Elizabeth-
ian stage in Trueblood Aud. in the
Frieze Bldg., the University Play-
ers will present William Shake-
speare's "Henry IV, part I."
The show, which will run from
Dec. 6-9 and 11-12, is the third
in the 1961-62 Playbill series.
The new stage structure to be
used, replacing the Trueblood pro-
scenium, is designed after the
Elizabethian stages of Shake-
speare's own times.
The production includes a min-
imum of properties and scenery.
Woodwind Quintet.,.
The University Woodwind Quin-
tet will present a public concert
at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham
Lecture Hall.
The principal production of the
program will be the premiere per-
formance of Alan Jovhaness'
"Wind Quintet," Op. 159," com-
missioned by the University and
dedicated to the University's
Woodwind Quintet.
Other numbers on the program
will be "Quintet, Op. 79" by August
Klughardt, and "Quintet in E-flat,
Op. 16."
Public Recitals.. .
Two students plan public re-
citals at 8:30 p.m. in Lane Hall
Aud.
Carol Fenwick, '62SM will play
piano compositions today, and
Glen Johnston, '62SM will play
a trombone and bass trumpet
Monday, Dec. 4.
Cellist Recital...
Prof. Jerome Jelinek, cellist, will
give his first public recital at
8:30 p.m. Thursday in Aud. A
Angell Hall. He will play numbers
by Inigi Boccherini, Johannes
Brahms, Claude Debussy and El-
liott Carter. Jelinek will be assist-
ed by Rhea Kish on the piona.
Students Play...
Thomas Cultice, Grad, and Jane
Hirschmann, '62, will give public
recitals on Friday, Dec. 8 and
Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in Lane
Hall Auditorium. Cultice, a bari-
tone, will sing compositions by
Alessaroro Scarlatti, Samuel Bar-'
ber, Johannes Brahms and Wil-'

liam D. Ravel. Miss Hirschmann, a
pianist, will play compositions by
Johann Bach, Ludwig Beethoven,
William D. Ravel and Frederick
Chopin.
Cinema Guild ...
"No More Feeling" the winner
of theCreative Film Foundation's
Award of Exceptional Merit will
be presented at the Cinema Guild
Thursday and Friday at 7-9 p.m.
On Dec. 9, 10 from 7-9 pim.
"Lust for Life" with Kirk Douglas

and Anthony Quinn will be pre-
sented by the Cinema Guild.
Talkies .
Prof. George Kish, of the geo-
graphy department, will discuss
the events that followed the uni-
fication of Italy on "Unity and
After," the fifth in a series r of
ten programs in the University
Television series, "The Story of
Italy." The program will be broad-
cast at 12:00 noon Sunday, Dec.
3, on WWJ-TV.

Viewpoints
On Con-Con
By ANN SCHULTZ
J. Don Lawrence, delegate to the
Constitutional Convention and
representatives from 15 local civic.
and political organizations attend-
ed a discussion on Con-Con, chair-
ed by Arthur Eastman, at the
Ann Arbor public library yester-
day.
The main topics of considera-
tion were: education, discrimina-
tion, the Michigan court system,
labor unions, libraries and finan-
cial aid.
"The constitution is supposed
to beaan instrument, a frame-
work, and our aim is to come up
with the best one possible," Law-
rence said.
Legislative Action
"Some people want to leave all
things of a more specific nature
entirely to legislative action-some
go to the other extreme."
Supporting a broad, unrestrict-
ed constitution were the League
of Women Voters, the American
Civil Liberties Union, and the
AFL-CIO.
Lawrence Prakken of the ACLU
stressed the necessity of "preserv-
ing American freedoms and main-
taining the separation of church
and state."
Liberalized Constitution
Kenneth Beer of the AFL-CIO
mentioned no specific issue but
said he was in favor of "liberaliz-
ing the constitution."
Ralps G. Ridenour and Robert
Carr, representing the Parent-
Teacher Organization's Legislative
Council and the Ann Arbor Teach-
er Association respectively, agreed
that there should be no public
support to private schools.
Ridenour said that every child
should be educated, but the extra
financial burden is "the price the
individual must pay if he wants to
send his children to private
school."
Carr expressed the need of
"some constitutional provision for
adequate support of schools, eith-
er by earmarking or by some spe-
cial statement i;,the constitution."
Donald Felz of the Ann Arbor
Council of Churches showed con-
cern over discrimination.
When asked if he wanted the
constitution to includehan inter-
racial clause, he said that the is-
sue had "not been subjected to
approval by church groups, but I
am certain it would be received
with sypmathetic concern."
Challenge To Hold
Program Meeting

[

117 East Washington

JAZZ comes to the
FALCON BAR for you

ofMc a lSTUDY ABROAD
University o chan
New Program to France
UNIVERSITY OF PARIS
UNIVERSITY OF FLORENCE
UNIVERSITY OF MADRID
PANEL DISCUSSION
led by DR. JAMES GINDIN

I

I

every Tues., Thurs., & Sur.
8:30.12 midnightU
BASS, PIANO, DRUM
otfthe 90koft

NO 8-7936

TUES., DEC. 5
WOMEN'S LEAGUE

7:30 P.M.

College Roundup

By SANDRA SANDELL
ALBUQUERQUE - The elected
heads of the University of New
Mexico's Pan-Hellenic Council and
the Inter-Fraternity Council pub-
lically endorsed a new conserva-
tive campus political party spon-
sored by the Young Americans for
Freedom.
Marty Mullins, Pan-Hellenic
president, and Ron Betenbough,
IFC president, urged support of
the party in a joint memo attach-
ed to a letter from the campus
chapted of the YAF.
The new student party, the YAF
letter announced, will be "dedicat-
ed to those conservative prin-
ciples which have made our great
country the world symbol of free-
dom."
* * *
MINNEAPOLIS - A Russian
flag, flying in front of the Uni-
versity of Minnesota Union, was
burned by an unidentified man,
After igniting the flag, the man
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES

ran down the steps of the build-
ing and leaped into a waiting car.
The flag marked the entrance
to the Russian medical exhibit.
Malcolm Wiley, academic vice-
president, apologized officially for
the incident. Dr. Viktor Zhandov,
director of the exhibit, accepted
the apology and said he was sorry
the incident had happened.
* * *

EUGENE - Arthur Fleming,
president of the University of
Oregon, stated that the univer-
sity should not refer students to
any landlord who discriminates
on the basis of race, creed, or
color.
"We should make whatever in-
vestment of time and money need-
ed to insure strict adherence to
this policy," Fleming said, in re-
gard to the university's policy of
removing the names of those land-
lords who discriminate from uni-
versity listings.
A new proposal passed by the
student Senate would requireland-
lords on the off-campus housing
lists to sign a statement declar-
ing that they would not discrimin-
ate against prospective renters.

U
GOING HOME
FOR
SEE
THE
UNION TRAVELFILE
(U.S. MAP)
In Front of the MUG
Gi esa quil
TONIGHT at 7 and 9
D. W. GRIFFITH'S
THE
BIRTH OF A NATION
with Lillian Gish, Henry B. Walthall,
Mae Marsh, Wallace Reid, Donald Crisp.
Miriam Cooper
ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM
50 cents

1

;,

;{

Challenge will have a mass
meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in
Rm. 3511 SAB to discuss and plan
for next semester's program en-
tiled "The Challenge of Higher
Education."

p

i

Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stud. Club,
5:30 p.m. Supper followed by fellowship
& devotions with guest chapters; Dec.
3, 1511 Washtenaw.
* * *
La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, Dec.
4, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB.
U. of M. Folk Dancers, Meeting, In-'
struction & Dancing, Dec. 5. 7:30 p.m.,
1429 Hill.
Wesleyan Guild, U.C.F. Advent Serv-
ice & Christmas Party, Dec. 3, 7 p.m.
Wesley Lounge.*
Women's Senate, Weekly Meeting,
Dec. 5, 4:15 p.m., League, In the "Cave."
Graduate Outing Club, Hike, Dec. 3,
2 p.m., Rackham, Huron St. Entrance.
* s* *
Congre.-Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, Ad-
vent Service & Christmas Party in con-
junction with U.C.F. & International
Committee, Dec. 3, 7:30 p.m., YMCA,
Multi-purpose Rm.
Newman Club, Communion Break-
fast, Dec. 3, 10:45 a.m., Newman Center.
Speaker: Fr. Malcom Carron, S.J,, Univ.
of Detroit, "The Relation between
Catholic Students in Catholic Campuses
& Catholic Students in Secular Cam-
puses."
* * *
Lutheran Student Assoc., Topic: Guide
to Decision-Discussion on Ethical
Values, Dec. 3, 7 p.m., Hill & Forest
Ave.
International Students Assoc., Classi-
cal Music-listening & discussion, every
Sunday, 7:30 p.m., International Cen-,
ter.

NOW

a

DIAL
NO 8-6416

a story set ii Paris...
where a generation of rebellious youth lives
with its desires, and its dreams.
a new film by Marcel Card
"A
-d
h -e -
PASCALE PETIT." JACQUES CHARRIER

I

....-.

Tues., Dec. 12th
ON STAGE IN PERSON
TYRONE GUITHRIE'S
PRODUCTION DIRECT FROM
THE STRATFORD FESTIVAL OF CANADA
"A SMASH SHOWI-A HOWLING SUCCESSI"
-Toronto Telegranm
GILBERT and SULLIVAN'S
PI RATES 'PENZANCEN
COMPANY OF SO WlTH ORCHESTRA

11

L

r+ . .... i ., .

)FROSH
n WEEKEND

I

g

INFORMATION
MEETING
for ALL
FRESHMAN
WOMEN
TUESDAY, DEC. 5
/_ r n i

i

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