THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRWAY, MAY It. * TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY.. MAY 10 i iaiY411 1 1Li1 .Jury; Social Change Affects Opera College Roundup MAY FESTIVAL MUSICIAN: 4' Biggs Notes Organ History, Structure . . , two main types of opera - the Wagnerian music drama and the Verdi opera of psychological con- flict. Wagnerian music drama is characterized by unbroken orches- tration, while the characters are used as symbols of larger univer- sals, Prof. Grout said. The Verdian opera depends, however, on vocal themes as channels of communica- tion. The characters represent general human types. Early Works The effect of Wagner may be seen in the early works of Richard Strauss. Prof. Grout referred to Strauss' "Electra" and "Salome" as examples of this influence in the early 20th century. Strauss' later operas fall into a different category. "Ariadne auf Naxos" and "Arabella" and "Cap- riccio" all fall under the heading of neo-classical opera, he said. Stravinsky's "The Rakes Prog- ress" also is patterned after the neo-classical tradition in music, which is more restrained than the further advanced musical forms of the 20th century. Further classification of 20th century opera divides into the traditional, comic, political, Soviet, new line and experimental opera. Traditional Operas Gian-Carlo Menotti, Benjamin Britten and Francis Poulenc wrote traditional operas. Britten's operas "Peter Grimes" and "The Turn- of the Screw" also fall under the traditional heading, Prof. Grout noted. Kurt Wiel's works during the late 1920's were political operas. Soviet opera would include Proko- fiev's "War and Peace." Carl Orff's "Antigone" and "Qepidus Tyrannus"-with their great intensity, use of speech and chanting-fall under the experi- mental heading. Prof. Grout concluded by cit- ing Blomdahl's opera "Aniara," a By MARGARET LOWE NEW YORK-The Columbia University Student Peace Union and Committee for Disarmament are circulating a petition to pro- test campus fallout shelters. The petition cites the inadequacy of the program for saving even a small fraction of the campus popu- lation in the event of a nuclear attack. The petition asks that presidential permission for the es- tablishment of campus fallout shelters be revoked. PROVIDENCE-Members of the Brown University chapter of Pi Lambda Phi unanimously voted to sever, connections with its na- tional organization and become a local fraternity. The chapter felt it was getting nothing in return for contributions of time and money which were made to the national fraternity and that the national did not actively and ef- fectively support local ideals. * * * CORAL GABLES, Fla.-Univer- sity of Miami President Henry Stanford recently approved a pub- lications board resolution forbid- ding university publications from carrying advertisements of enter- prises which deny service to tain groups of students. * . * cer- I PROF. DONALD GROUT ... opera forward looking opera whose scene is set in a spaceship. After playing an example from "Aniara," Prof. Grout said opera will continue to exist in the future but he declined to predict the forms it might take. Scientists Conduct Studies During Scaling of Everest Alpha Kappa Psi business pro- fessional fraternity awarded its annual honorary membership to Gov. George Romney Wednesday night at the business administra- tion school. At a ceremony attended by Uni- versity President Harlan Hatcher, Dean Floyd A. Bond of the busi- ness administration school and members of Alpha Kappa Psi, Romney was presented with a certificate and a gold key for be- ing an "outstanding leader in busi- ness and civic affairs." DIAL 8-6416 (EDITOR'S NOTE: This explana- tion of the scientific aspects of the successful American Mt. Everest ex- pedition was written for the Asso- ciated Press by Melville Bell Gros- venor, president and editor of the National Geographic Society, the sponsor of the expedition.) By MELVILLE BELL GROSVENOR President and Editor of the National Geographic Society WASHINGTON -- The first Americans to scale Mt. Everest, the monarch of all mountains, undertook the most intensive sci- entific research ever attempted in an earthly. setting as high and hostile. Studies, supported by th'e Na- tional Geographic Society and sci- entific agencies of the government including the National Science Foundation, ranged from the growth of glaciers on 29,028-foot Everest to the psychological reac- tions of exhausted climbers. Results of the studies are ex- pected to be particularly useful in solving the human problems of the United States space program. On the frozen slopes of Mt. Ever- est, men have been isolated at their difficult task in an unnatu- ral environment; just as small groups of men will be secluded in space-exploring capsules. Seven Groups The numerous scientific experi- ments that were to be performed on Everest were grouped in seven major projects: 1) Investigations into the ef- fects of extreme stress and stim- ulus on a man's behavior, spon- sored by the Office of Naval Re- search. A clinical psychologist asked the men hundreds of ques- tions, probing into their thoughts to determine what psychological changes were taking place. as they climbed to the highest slopes; 2) Group communication under increasing stress, sponsored by the National Science Foundation. A sociologist planned to use light- weight tape recorders so that the climbers' conversations and com- ments can be studied afterthe ex- pedition. The findings are ex- pected to be valid for any similarly isolated, highly motivated group engaged in military or civilian task under severe strain; Physiological Studies 3) Physiological studies, spon- sored by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Uni- versity of California "to clarify the nature of the adaption syn- drome and to examine the changes in responses when physiological limits are exceeded." It is hoped, with the help of the radioactive isotopes, to measure the changes League To Present 'Pajama Game' The Soph Show for 1963-64 will be "The Pajama Game." Spon- sored by the League,'the show has in the past presented such musi- cals as "Bye Bye Birdie," "Guys and Dolls" and "Bells Are Ring- ing." that took place in the men's adrenal glands;1 4) A glaciological study for the National Geographic Society. Ice+ appears in identifiable annual1 layers, like the rings of a tree, on the Great Khumbu Glacier which flows downward from 23,000 to about 15,000 feet at the base of the Everest group of mountains. The glacier's vacillations in recent de- cades suggest that it is extremely sensitive to climate; 5) Collection of ice samples from the layers for a continuing research project on tritium, a rare form of heavy hydrogen, by Nobel Prize-winner Prof. Willard F. Lib- by of the University of California at Los Angeles and his staff. The; ice samples, melted and preserved in polyethylene bottles, will be analyzed to determine whether some of the tritium comes directly from the sun during solar flares; Solar Radiation 6) Measurement of solar radia- tion at 20,000 to 26,000 feet- altitudes highier than these meas- urements have ever been taken on the earth's surface; and 7) Meteorological observations to be carried out by the entire ex- pedition. ORGANIZATION NOTICES SGC Cinema Guild, Petitioning for sponsorships (grants of money to quali- fied student organizations) for Septem- ber, 1963. Obtain forms and policy from Miss Helmer, SGC Offices. Peti- tions should be in Cinema Guild's mailbox (SAB) no later than 7 p.m., May 10. Interviews May 13. Applicants will be notified of the time of their interviews. * * * Cercle Francais, Lecture, 3 p.m., An- gell Hall, Aud. C.; Final Banquet, 5 p.m., League; May 11. For banquet res- ervations, call Peggy Ormond, 6117 Markley by Fri., May 10. * * * Congregational Disciples E & R Stu- dent Guild, Cost luncheon discussion: "Algerian Bumble"; Prof. James Meisel, May 10, Noon, 802 Monroe. ** * Joint Judiciary Council, Petitioning for council position, petitioning ex- tended until May 13. Pick up petition from Mrs. F. Lyndon, 1011 SAB. Inter- views for five available positions May 14. * * * Mich. Christian Fellowship, Faculty squash, May 10, 7:30 p.m., Union. * * * U. of M. International Folk Dancers, Dance meeting, May 14, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill. ** * Alumni Association Board of Student Governors, Selection of officers, coffee, 9:30 a.m., meeting, 10 a.m., May 11, League, Henderson Room. The University of Michigan Chapter of the American Association of Uni- versity Professors will hold its final meeting of this academic year Tues., May 14, at 8:00 p.m. In the East Con- ference Room of the Rackham Bldg. Prof. George Peek will moderate a panel discussion on "Can the' Faculty be Effective in Determining Education- al Policy at the University Level?" Par- ticipating in the discussion will be Professors Heady (political science), McKeachie (psychology) and Brubacher (higher education). A short business meetin gwill precede the discussion. AAUP members and other interested faculty are cordially invited to attend. ALBUQUERQUE-University of New Mexico voters have decided to retain affiliation with the Na- tional Student Association. COLUMBUS-The Ohio Legis- lature is reviewing a bill to es- tablish state-wide policy on col- lege campus guest speakers. The bill requires that speakers must not be subversives and that their' speeches must be for the "best educational purposes." * * * SYRACUSE-The Syracuse Uni- versity Interfraternity Council re- cently voted to oppose all hazing and to refer all hazing cases to its judicial board for action. It defined hazing as "any action taken or situation created by a fraternity intentionally, on or off the fraternity premise, to produce bodily injury, public embarrass-; ment, morally degrading or illegal action." * * * PROVIDENCE-Atty. Gen. J. Joseph Nugent warned students at Brown University to confine reading of Henry Miller's "Tropic of Cancer" to the campus. He threatened to arrest anyone who "leaves the campus with the book in his pocket-unles he's using it in some course up there." * * * PRINCETON - The Princeton campus has quieted down after a riot Tuesday by 1500 students- one-third of the university's en- rollment. The three-hour spree caused considerable property damage in the town and resulted in the up- rooting of an iron fence around President Robert F. Goheen's home. Fourteen students were ar- rested. Across Campus The world premiere of "Still Are New Worlds" by Prof. Ross Lee Finney of the music school will be featured at 8:30 p.m. today in the second concert of the May Festival Series. Pianist Grant Johannesen will play Wallingford Riegger's "Varia- tions for Piano and Orchestra" and Schubert and Liszt's "Fan- tasia for Piano and Orchestra (Wanderer').* Thor Johnson will conduct the orchestra and the University Chor- al Union in Verdi's "Te Deum." He will also conduct "Still Are New Worlds," which Edwin C. Burrows will narrate. Behavior .. . Prof. Harry Harlow of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin will deliver the psychology department's sec- ond John Shepard Lecture on "The Effect of Early Experience on Heterosexual and Maternal Be- havior" at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud. A. Assembly .. . Eugene Ormandy, director of the Philadelphia Orchestra, will speak at an honors assembly at 3 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Choose Staff For '64 Ensian The following people were ap- pointed to the 1964 Michiganen- sian junior staff,: James Zimmer- man, '66, sports copy editor; Ellen Ramee, '64, house groups layout editor; Gale Maynard, '65, house groups copy editor; James Klein, '66, sales manager; Joan Wolf- sheimer, '66, organizations layout editor; Claire Aitken, '64, art lay- out editor; Ricky Wachtel, '66, sales manager; Iris Brauer, '66, art copy editor; Erica Olson, '66, or- ganizations copy editor; Connie Witucki, '66, schools and colleges layout editor; Patti Joseph, '66, associate copy editor; Margaret Franks, '64, schools and colleges copy editor; and Michael Sawdey, '66, photography editor. By JEFFREY K. CHASE The first American congrega- tion which had an organ consid- ered it only a "box of whistles with the devil inside," and were all for "throwing it in the harbor," organist E. Power Biggs said re- cently. The first organ in America was an English import brought here by Thomas Brattle in 1713 and given to a Boston church, Biggs said. In 1759 Thomas Johnson built View1rs Costs O f Hospitals Hospital costs cannot be cut unless several basic trends in American society are reversed, As- sociate Director Ernest C. Laetz of the University Hospital said yesterday. He cited four economic trends which make the outlook for even a leveling-off of hospital costs ap- pear "bleak." 1) Rising wages and supply prices force up hospital expendi- tures. Laetz asserted that firm price and wage controls on the entire business and labor com- munity would be necessary to halt this trend. 2) Another expense is incurred in developing better diagnostic and treatment facilities. Halting such research would save money -at the cost of the improvements it produces, he noted. 3) Shorter work weeks require that more money be spent in pay- rolls, if services are to be main- tained. Thus, a work week of at least 40 hours would have to be maintained. 4) Hospitals now foot much of the bill for education in the health professions. Laetz noted that the armed forces, industry and many doctors who employ nurses "have never trained a single nurse." Hos- pitals are also training grounds for doctors, and "even as trainees they are paid salaries," he added. If these costs are to be elimi- nated, "other agencies" would have to handle the training functions, Laetz said. Studies show that hospitals of- ten are run more efficiently than many major industries, Laetz con- cluded. DIAL 5-6290 We recommend that you see it frm th hpnnnin the first all-American organ in Boston's Old North Church, which Paul Revere was to make famous 16 years later. The design of this organ closely resembled that of organs in England, although it was constructed on a smaller scale. Hymn Accompaniment Because early American organs were used almost exclusively for hymn accompaniment, they did not contain many stops or coup- lers. Also because American churches contained less masonry in their construction than those in Europe, the organs did not sound as good as their. European counterparts. "The fact of the matter is, how- ever, that the organs were general- ly as good as those built on the Continent. This fact points up only too well the necessity for the appropriate placement for optimal organ tone production," Biggs pointed out. One of three characteristics im- portant to a high-quality organ is tracker action-a direct connec- tion from the keys to the pipe mechanisms. Also important are a rich specification of components, such as stops and couplers, and the placement of the wind chest (the pipe container) in a high open area. Lacks Features The organ in Hill Auditorium, although very fine, is lacking in two of these characteristics. The keys stimulate the pipes by electrical means and the pipes are, not arranged in open placement. Biggs emphasized, though, that Hill Auditorium does not permit the pipes to be fully in the open. Today, the best organs are made in Holland. They are built essen- said. But this method involves a time lag from the point at which the key is depressed to the point when the pipe responds. Biggs arrived in Ann Arbor last Monday so he could determine the stop-settings which would express, on the Hill organ, the intentions the composers specified in their stop-setting designations for the organ for which the works were written. tially on the same principle they have used for the last three cen- turies, the principle of tracker ac. tion. Electronic Age Many American companies use an electrical mechanism-typical of the age in which we live, Biggs 4 Em I DIAL 2-6264 * ENDING TODAY * HUGH O'BRIAN "COME FLY WITH ME" SATURDAY E. POWER BIGGS .. . history Eileen Heckao- Hans Conried "'Mary McCarty " Alice Ohostley " 6asNO%6a h" .sower Chamnpoi I I IL il . tt . sr',hr Ash I, r. Tonirghtat 9 P.M I M.Y. Times/N.Y. Herald-Tribune HONORED AT FOUR 1962 EUROPEAN FILM FESTIVALSI - ; r mTECHNICOLOgR NEXT MARLON BRANDO in "THE UGLY AMERICAN" r1'!"I t~' .I t I " F !mo Ku e* I Come at 7 or 9 P.M. Regular Feature Come Fly With Me Shown Both Before and After Preview AT THE THE POWERFUL DRAMA OF A FIGHTING AMERICAN IN EASTMAN COLOR the University Players U mo Gif erna !'i/4 ANNOUNCES CHANGES AND ADDITIONS TO OUR SPRING 1963 SCHEDULE: 5.4. CINEMA GUILD prejenta the last times tonight at 7 and 9 JUDY HOLLIDAY in BORN YESTERDAY WILLIAM HOLDENa MAY 15-17 G. B. Shaw's Caesar and Cleopatra Stewart Granger-Claude Rains and Vivien Leigh as "Cleopatra", MAY 22-26 THE FIRST J Z }L: k ti !t; J;:S 10 fi MAY 18-19 JOSEPH CONRAD'S Outcast of the Islands An excellent Film, directed by Carol Reed. Starring Trevor Howard, Ralph Richardson, Wendy Hiller MAY 30-31, JUNE 1 I I