PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY v . . .:. ... ... l:'2. I ARTS AND LETTERS: Hostage' Rejects Social Convention DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN By GAIL BLUMBERG "The Hostage" by Brendan Behan can be called a frank, rowdy and abandoned farce; im-. pudent in nature, yet thoroughly~ laced with a sardonic, sometimes bitter attack on human folly; re- ligion, politics, economics, respec- tability, the pointlessness of war; in short, a complete rejection and reaction against convention. The play is set in a Dublin? lodging house where Leslie, a young English soldier captured by the Irish Republican Army is held as hostage in reprisal for an Irish patriot shortly to be hanged by the British in Belfast. The storyl shows him in terms of his effect' on the members of the lodging house, exploring the conflicts be- tween their natural human affec- tion for the boy and'their devo- tion to the cause of Irish unifica- tion. In speaking of Behan's play, which will be performed by the Association of Producing Artists beginning Sept. 30, director Steph- an Porter described it as a social attack against old rigid ideas and points of view. The major charac- ters in the play, he explained, are inflicted with leftover hatreds and bitterness. They are guilty of foggy, irrational and confused thought. Old Hatreds Their resentment of the English and the memory of the past war with England, which should be old business, keeps recurring. Their warmth and compassion for the young soldier is stifled by old conditioned reflexes, which as Behan declares, are inhuman. "The Hostage," in keeping with its attack on conventionality, re- jects the stage conventions as well. The play is a free-form spon- taneous work, Porter said, as he began an explanation of its crea- A lP Campus TUESDAY, SEPT. 29 8-11:30 a.m. and 1-4:30 p.m. - Health Service will offer flu shots to students and staff. The fee is $1 for students and $1.50 for faculty and staff. Noon--Gov. George Romney will deliver a speech on the steps of Hill Aud. 1-10 p.m.-The American Asso- ciation of University Women wil' hold their Twelfth Annual Used Book Sale in the shop room of the Student Activities bldg. 4:10 p.m.-The Center for Near Eastern and North African Stud- ies will sponsor an illustrated lec- ture by Prof. George F. Houran of the history department on "Mosquesand Fortresses of Is- lamn" in 203 Tappan' Hall. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibiflity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publica- tion, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satur- day and Sunday. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, Day Calendar Administration Bldg., before 4:30 p.m.. Wed., Sept. 30, 1964. Mail Early. MaillPayments postmarked after due date, Sept. 30, 1964, are late and sub- ject to penalty. Identify mail payments as tuition and show student number and name. Doctoral Examination for William Ar- nold Brown, Physics; thesis: "Oscilla- tor Strengths of Lead Spectral Lines: A Shock Tube Measurement," Wed., Sept. 30. 629 Physics-Astronomy Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chairman, Otto Laporte. r Bureau of Industrial Relations Per-, Next Week: Wed through Sat., 8 p.m., sonnel Techniques Seminar-Lee E. Trueblood Aud. (Frieze Bldg.), 'the + Danielson, professor of industrial re- University Players, Dept. of Speech, pre- lations, "Fundamentals of Modern Em- sent Paddy Chaeyfsky'c exciting Bibli- ployment Seledtion Methods": Third! cal drama "Gideon." Box office open Floor Conference Room, Michigan Un- 12:30-5 p.m. daily next week, 12:30-81 ion, 8 a.m. p.m. performance nights. Tickets: $1.50 Junior High School Student Council and $1.00. Conference - Registration, Rackham Tickets also acallable at that time Lobb, 8:30 ta.m.' h for all individual performances of the University Players. Next production i IllusratedLecur T I Moliere's 'The Imaginary Invalid." a..lstrate .Ject,f r Un1 r flt U The five Distinguished Faculty Achieve- ment Awards and the six Distinguished3 Service Awards for Instructors and As- sistant Professors will be presented ai this meeting. A reception will be held7 in the Michigan League Ballroom im- mediately after the conclusion of the, meeting. Woodrow Wilson Fellowships: Nomi- nations for Woodrow Wilson Fellow- ships for first year graduate 'work leading to a career in college teaching1 are due October 31. Only faculty mem. bers may nominate candidates. Eligible for nomination are men and women. of outstanding ability who are seniors. or graduates not now enrolled in a graduate school, or graduates now in the armed forces who will be free to enter a graduate school in 1965-66. Sen- iors who next semester will be double enrolled in the Literary College and in the Graduate School are eligible. To give nominees sufficient time to prepare and' submit the required credentials. faculty members are urged to send in their nominations as early as pos- sible, although letters postmarked Oc- tober 31 will be accepted. Letters of nomination should in- clude the student's field of concentra- tion, his local address and telephone, and should be sent to Dean Richard Armitage Graduate School, the Ohic State University, 164 West 19th Ave. Columbus, Ohio. Seniors interested in advanced study; and a teaching career whose academic performance merits nomination for Woodrow Wilson fellowships may con- sult the campus representative, Prof Morris Greenhut, 2634 Haven, concern- ing qualifications and procedures. Student Government Council Approval of the following student-sponsored events becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All pub- licity for these events must be with- held until the approval has become ef- fective. Approval request forms for student' sponsored events are available in Rm. 1011 of the SAB. Young Republicanes Students for Romney Committee - Gov. Romney speaking Sept. 29, 12 noon, Hill Aud. steps. Placement PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad students, please:call 764-7460 for appointments with the following: WED., SEPT. 30- John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., Detroit, Mich.-Will interview at Bureau on Sept. 30, afternoon only, Positions in Insurance for degree ma- jors in Gen. Lib. Arts,. Hist., Philo., Psych. Make appts. at 3200 SAB or 764- 7460. Bus. Ad. candidates will be in- terviewed in the morning of Sept. 30 at the Bus. Ad. School. Make appts. at 254 Bus. Ad. Bldg. rating for exper. or MS. Eli Lilly and Co., Indianapolis, Ind. -various openings in scientific fieiW including: 1. Sr. Plant Biochemist. Male PhD in Biochem. 2. Associate Statisti-I cian. Male or female, BS, trng. & exper. in biostatisties & math, 3. Organic Chemist. PhD in organic chem. or MS in organ. chem. with BS in chem. en- gineering, SUMMER PLACEMENT: Summer Placement Service opens Oct. 1 in Room 212, Student- Activities Bldg. Hours will be: 10 a.m. to 12 noon and 1:30 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Start early to look for your summer job. This is especially true for stu- Kiehi Ogawa, Assistant Prof. of Eco- Note: If you plan to interview with nomics, Osaka iCty University, Japan, , the organizations that will visit the Sept. 30. General Div. this year, be sure to reg- Dr. LJudevit Jonke, Professor of Ser- ister as soon as possible. Forms avail- bo-Croatian, director, Inst. for Linguis- able at 3200 SAB. tics, University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia,. Oct. 1-4. POSITION OPENINGS: Miss Maria Theresa Onecco, Director. Fatima Community Center Group .Wrk City of Benton Harbor, Mich-Assist- Prof. and :supervisor, School of Social ant City Engineer. BS CE. Exper. not, Work, Colegio Mayor de Cundinamarca, necessary. Bogota, Colombia, Oct. 4-6. Alco Products, Inc., Schenectady, N.Y. Abou-El-Fettouh El Ghamri, Librar- -Various positions available for En-I ian, United States Information Service, gineering grads, including Service, Die- Alexandria, Egypt, Oct. 4-7. sel, Industrial. Exper. req. in some 4 Professors, Dr. Hildebrandt, Dr. Och- openings. Several locations. oa, Dr. Marciani, Dr. Quipano, Univer- Federal Civil Service-Geologists. De- sity of San Marcos, Lima, Peru, Oct. 6- gree with major in geology or related 10. field. Exper. not necessary, but higher dents interested in working fe government. We have positions c for business, industry, the govern resorts, camps, hospitals, secre social service, recreation, summer tre, sales and other types of work. Part-Time Employment The following part-time jobs are .tble. Application for these jobs c made in the Part-Time Employmer fice, 2200 Student Activities Bldg. ing the following houirs: Mon. Fri,. 8 a.m. til 12 nnon and 1:30 Employers desirous or hiring stu for part-time or full-time tem! work, should contact Mrs. Jennis NO 3-1511, Ext. 3553. Students desiring miscellaneou jobs should consult the bulletin in Room 2200, daily. -Drug Data Services needs sale resentatives part time. Pre backgrounds: persons with sal perience, pharnacy student registered pharmacists. A c needed, hours flexible. High missions. For information, call 665-3172 most mornings be 9 and 10 a.m. i - - STEPHEN PORTER tion. It was based on the personal experience of Behan his early in-c volvement with the Irish Republi- can Army and his years of Dublin pub-life.c It was first produced by the Theatre Workshop in London un- der the direction of Joan Little-, wood, who was trying at the time. to break down traditional conven-c tions in her actors. She took thef script from Behan's dictation which left her great freedom in shaping the play. Free Speech Miss Littlewood encouraged her actors to improve the lines-to be frank and free, taking from their own experiences. Much of the language is bawdy and shocking, ' often a mixture of blasphemy, ob- scenity and irreverence. In ad-c dition, all gradations of sexual ex- perience are presented. The first production and all those following bear the marks of her work as much as those of its author, Porter declared. Tech-3 niques and perspective are shifted in the middle of a scene. The actor is in character one moment, and is almost another personality: the next. The address is first between characters then to theI audience, and next to the actors. as actors. In the middle of a1 serious speech, there is a pausei for a joke or a song. The set, which Porter describes as semi-realistic, represents two rooms, one of which is designated by a raised platform with an imaginary connecting wall. At times the characters pass right through the barrier-oblivious to it, while at other points they are very careful to mark out the proper entrance to the room. In much the same way, actors step off the stage and roam about, seemingly at will. Continuity The large quantity of ad-lib material in the play and the ac- companying music, which was never notated has been passed on by people connected with the original production and added to in subsequent presentations, Por- ter pointed out. "The Hostage" has since run successfully on the Broadway and off-Broadway stage. The printed play bears only a hollow resemblance to the final work; thus APA actors Donald Moffat, who toured with the Broadway production and Paddy Croft, who originated the role she will be playing, were able to com- municate the material of the orig- ills~a~e acure unversit yec-- ' ture sponsored by Center for Near I Box Office Opens: Man., Oct. 5, True- Eastern and North African Studies: blood Aud (Frieze Bldg .) for tickets Lecture II on "Turkish and Mughai to all individual performances of the Architecture" with color slides of the University Players, Dept. of Speech. two lecture series on Mosques and First production is Paddy Chayefsky Fortresses of Islam, by Dr. George ,pro ciniradd nhich F. Hourani, professor of Islamic His- exciting Biblical drama "Gideon" which tory of the University, Tues., Sept, 29, will run Wed. through Sat., Oct. 7-10. 4:10p~m, i Roo 20, TppanHal. jBox office open 12:30-5 p.m. daily, 12:30- 4:10 p.m., in Room 203, Tappan Hall.. 8 p.m. performance nights: Tickets: $1.5C Doctoral Examination for Mao-Shiu and $1.00 for Ded. and Thurs. per- Lin, Electrical Engrg.; thesis: "A Study: formances, $1.75 and $1.25 for Fri. and, on the Anti-ferromagnetic Transitions at. of Three Iorge Compounds at Low Tem- University Faculty and Staff Meeting peratures," Tues., Sept. 29, 3201 E. President Hatcher will give his an- Engrg., at 9 a.m. Chairman, D. M. nual address to the faculty and staff Grimes. _on Mon. evening, Oct. 5, at 8 p.m., Woodrow Wilson Fellows: Past and in the Rackham Lecture Hall. All staff present, campus representatives, past members and their wives are invited. and present members of the Regional _ Committee, and interested members of the facultyeare invited to a reception RI on Tues., Sept. 29, in the West Confer - G. RGA N ,ZAT 1iON ence Room, Rackham Bldg., at 8 p.m Wives or husbands are also welcome.: Foundation representative will be pres- NOTICES ent.NOIE ', ENDING WEDNESDAY Dial 668-6416 Foreign, Visitors The following are the foreign vist- tors prt'grammed through the Interna- Genera.Notices tional Center who will be on campus Use of This Column for Announce- ttils week on the dates indicated. Pro- Lecture: Felix Candela, of Mexicc I ments is available to officially recog- gram arrangements are being made by City, will- speak in the auditorium of nized and registered student organi- Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, International the College of Architecture and De- zations only. Forms are available in Center, 764-9310. sign, Wed., Oct. 7 at 3:30 p.m. His I Room 1011 SAB. 10 Science Professors, Chemistry and illustrated lecture will concern hip Biology, Central University, Caracas, works as architect-engineer-mathemati- Karate-Tang Soo oc Club of the Uni- Venezuela, Sept. 24-30. cian and builder of concrete shell versity of Michigan, Demonstration of Fukuo Nods, Ass't. Prof. of Political structures. Japanese speed (snap) style-Isshanryu Science, Tokyo Gakugei University; di- The lecture, sponsored by the Dept. Demonstration given by the Academy rector, Japanese Soc. and Pol. Studies of Archit- of the Martial Arts, Detroit. Organiza- Center; executive officer, Japanese Con- ested public. tional meeting to follow, Sept. 29, 8 gress for Demo. Socialism, Japan, Sept p.m., IM Gymnasium. 27-30. Doctoral Examination for Alexius * * * Miss Margaret Gentle, Assistant Ad- Thomas Ports, Psychology; thesis: "The Le Cercle Francais, "Chansons Folk- visor, Secondary Education, Ministry of! Meaning of Death to Children," Wed., loriques de Mme. Naudin," le mercre- Education, Lagos, Nigeria, Sept. 28-30. Sept. 30, 3410 Mason Hall, at 10 a.m. di, le 30 Sept., 8 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Aloys P. Achieng, Permanent Secre- Chairman, R. T. Cutler.* * * tary, Ministry of Natural Resources. International Students Association,] Nairobi, Kenya, Sept. 28-30. Linguistics Dept. Doctcral Preliminary German discussion, Sept. 29, 7:30 p.m. Joseph. Brncic, Supreme Court Judge. Examinations: The dates for the doe- Multipurpose Rm., Undergraduate Li- Republic of Croatia, Member of Parlia- toral preliminary examinations for the brary. Speaker: Dr. Gerald Weinburg ment, Chairman, comm. on Court Re- I Linguistics Dept. are Fri. and Sat., Nov Discussion: Germany's Political Clim- vision, Yugoslavia, Sept. 30-Oct. 3. 6 and 7. Any student who wishes to ate. Wed., Sept. 30, 7:30 p.m., Multi- -.. . take a prelim this semester must no- purpose Rm., Undergraduate Library~ tify Nthe departmental office of his in- Speaker: Dr. Jorchin Birks. Discussion: tention to do so and which exam he Germany's Cultural Scene. Fri., Oct. 2 wsetotkbeoeOt1.7 p.m.. at the International Center, [ wishes to take before Oct.1.folk-cultural program. ar Professional Theatre Program: The Nwa StdnAsoiin,"l-aEI times for the Professional Theatre Pro- Student Association, " I- gram performances of Brendan Behan's gion without God," Rev. James Tor- "'Th Hostage ,for Sun~ ;Oct.4 were res .JRv E. Gaede, Unitarian C l aJs i f i ed s WeeklyCandar; they ChurchpSpi30,8p.m., 331 Thompson. should be 3 and 8 p.m., Mendelssohn __-----________*___- -- Theatre. 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MASTROIANNI EXELSI" --e - - Cw - -ltr wr ki4SJRL~iY#8~ Th o*h~I Thursday* "HALLEUJAH THE HILLS" I'm going to the American Ass ciation of University Women's USED ,BOOK SALE Tuesday, Set. 29, 1 to 10 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 30, 9 am. to noon' STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING _ 3 Fail Semester Fees: At least 50 per cent is due and payable on or before Sept. 30, 1964. Non payment of at least 50 per cent4 by Sept. 30 will result in the assess- mnent of a delinquent penalty of $5. Payments may be made in person or' mailed to the Cashier's Office, 1015, 41 81 i DIAL 2-6264 Z 1 I I I , Shows at 2:00-5:00 & 8:15 A ENDING WEDNESDAY ga is I DIAL 5-6290 Of suspense pursuit & courage ... I A a)K N7 '3 O/ SEPTEMBER 24, 1964 SGC ELECTIONS OFFICE I Poll Wore "s JAM[ SAMUEL BRONSIUN SOPHIALOREN AUSTIN STEPHEN BOYD ALEC GUINNESS ES MASON CHRISTOPHER PLUMME D I A M Q N D " THURSDAY 0 "THE CHAL 1209 S. 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