PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN lA~lyV QT!TnA V n a ItIP1.~J. V5jLJ.ER i, IUP ias a Lmi~ati l rPaeont.I -3 LiVLAX, NVYtSi 1ULJ6 4, 196-, Backstage ' By MARJORIE BRAHMS is considering adding to and re- The ilbrt ad Sllivn ~ vamping the idea behind the So- ciety, the oldest co-ed extracurric- ciety, artisticddirector Gershom ular activity .on campus, and one Morningstar said recently. of the most colorful, will present With an eye to the future, Morn- "Princess Ida" in a four-day run, ingstar discussed an expansion of Wednesday through Saturday, this the present format to include "the week, thus making their produc- gap between MUSKET and opera," tion score all but two of the G&S citing such things as "The Beg- shows. gar's Opera," works by Offenbach, Victor Herbert and Sigmund Rom- The Society, operating with a berg. devoted cast and a faithful audi- The next show, tentatively ence, people who come back year scheduled, will be "Utopia Limit- after year to see the productions, ed," one of the Gilbert and Sul- livan operettas rarely done. Morn- M a Lauds ingstar said it was "dated and ex- m ands pensive to put on," but he has re- written it to up-date it. "One of the major problems the H nsociety has to cope with is that it in u amust compete with other student productions and so has had tolim- it itself to the most popular oper- 01 Slankar ettas" Morningstar explained. "The Mikado" has been performed By JEFFREY R. CHASE several times and "H.M.S. Pina- By JFFRE K. HASE fore" four times. The complex, meaningful, and "Now with the coming of the beautiful, yet puzzling movements, Association of Producing Artists, especially those of the hands, face, the University Musical Society and eyeballs, and the rhythmic operas and the other productions reaction of the feet are the two on campus, Ann- Arbor is building things which a first-time observer theatre-mindedness, so we can ex- should notice while watching the periment more in the future," Shankar Hindu Dancers, Prof. Wil- Morningstar predicted. liam Mam of the music school Citing the recent $6.1 million said. grant given to theatrical groups Their style of dance relies upon around the country by the Ford pantomimic gestures of the parts Foundation, Morningstar explain- of the body and the rhythmic or- ed that "before Gilbert and Sulli- ganization which underlies these van can ever reach its full poten- significant motions. The total ef- tial it will need substantial finan- fect' is not just folk dance, but a cial backing. We plan to apply fr highly sophsiticated and intellec- a $50,000 grant with hopes to hire tual art form, Prof. Malm ex- a professional orchestra and tech- plained. nicians." He remarked that the complex This year the society is putting iterplay between the instrumental- a libretto in the program since ists and the dancers is difficult for "so much of Gilbert and Sullivan the novice observer to grasp. The goes by so fast that people miss orchestra improvises on a compli- most of the words," Morningstar cated melodic pattern, "raga," said. coupled with an intricate rhyth- Commenting on the state of the mic structure, "tala," while accom- society's finances, Morningstar panying the dancers. said that last semester $1,000 was All totaled, the performance re- lost in the Detroit tour due to the 'quires a high degree of involve- newspaper strike. The society now ent for both the participants and has a loan from the University the audience, Prof. Maim added, which it hopes to repay this semes- Uday Shankar is the main ter. source of Indian dancing in Amer- ica. The man responsible for re- viving the classic dance arts of India and introducing them to the " rr" * western world, he made India real-n is g ui T tion ize the need for a rebirth of the ancient Hindu dances, which had all but disappeared except in a Charles F. Gray, Democratic few courts and temples. candidate for 2nd District repre- This resulted in a 'considerable sentative, attacked rising tuition revival of this art and its intro- at state colleges recently. devial o th art s iIn a speech given to business Auction into the western world. and professional groups in Ypsi- Shankar, dancer, choreographer, lanti; Gray said- that "higher tui- and great exponent of the arts of tion costs at colleges and univer- India, is constantly exploring new sities are discriminatory against ways of using the ancient medium b o t h minority and economic of Hindu dance and music in a groups. In fact, this is a civil vividly theatrical, but still authen- rights question as well as an edu- tic manner, Prof. Malm said. cational question." ll|lW -HELD OVER 1111111 SEC 4D BIG WEEK F f11DWnner of 1o D - a Academy A wards "BEDT PICTUREOF THE YEARI NEW YORK FILM CRITICS' AWARDJ "WEST SIDE STORY' IS A CIN. EMA MASTERPIECE! THE PER- FORMANCES ARE TERRIFIC!" - Bosley Crwther, New York Times Schedule of Performances Mon.-Tues. -Wed.-Thurs. at 2 and 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat.-Sun. at 2, 'U 6:45, 9:25 p.m. Weekday Matinee 90c Nights and Sunday $1.25 Children All Times 50c BUDGET REPORT: Peace Corps Notes Cost Per Volunteer Paleontologists Cite Value Of New Mammoth Fossil HINDU DANCE-Uday Shankar is bringing his new Hindu dance company to Ann Arbor-with a full complement of native musi- cians and dancers. They will appear in Hill Aud. Tuesday. rog am Notes (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a three part series on the prog- ress of the Peace Corps.) By BARBARA PASH In its presentation to Congress for the fiscal year 1962, the Peace Corps estimated the all-inclusive cost per volunteer to be approx- imately $9,000. This figure has proved to be valid to date, and the corps be- lieves that it continues to be the best estimate for the annual cost per volunteer. However, its com- position has changed somewhat from the original estimate. In this analysis, the budget is divided into two principle parts: continuing costs of the 5,100 vol- unteers entering training prior to the end of August, 1962, and fully or partially financed with the 1962 funds; and costs of the estimated 5,260 new volunteers en- tering training after the end of August, whose entry into service is financed with 1963 funds. Summer Training The corps has found that train- ing for most projects has to begin during the summer months. The reasons for this are that the larg- est category of volunteer jobs is teaching, and the school year in most host countries begins in the fall. Also, summer training enables members of high school and col- lege graduating classes to plan their senior year on Peace Corps service after graduation. It per- mits teachers to be recruited aid enables the Corps to make max- imum use of college campuses as training sites. Thus, the natural program phase of the Peace Corps is from tle beginning of September of any year to the end of the following Rev. Martin Luther King, Negro integrationist leader from Atlanta, Ga., will deliver two discussions on issues involved in integration in Hill Aud. tomorrow. At 4 p.m. he will consider "Moral Issues in Dis- crimination," and at 8:30 p.m. he will speak on "What Does the American Negro Want?-The Fu- ture of Integration." The lectures are sponsored by the Office of Re- ligious Affairs and the Special Projects Committee of the Michi- gan Union. Television Offerings.. . The Television Center will pre- sent Prof. Samuel Estep of the Law School at 8 a.m. today on station WXYZ in a discussion of the legal problems raised by the development of nuclear energy. At 8:30 a.m. on the same station fac- ulty members - will examine the democratic guarantees of personal liberty and the right to safety and security of the individual against arbitrary government actions. At 12 p.m. on station WWJ Professors Guy Palazzola of the architecture school and Victor Miesel of the history of art department will dis- cuss and illustrate composition in painting. French Popular Songs. Marc and Andre, from the Na- tional Popular Theatre of France and L'Ecluse, Literary Cabaret in Paris, will perform in a recital of French popular songs at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Trueblood Aud. Music Programming . . Abram Chasins, music director of New York Times station WQXR, will discuss "Music as a Force for National Survival" at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Lane Hall. This is part of 'a conference on "Music Pro- gramming for Educational Radio," being sponsored Tuesday and Wed- nesday by Station WUOM Hindu Dancers ... Uday Shankar and his Hindu Dance Company, with a full com- plement of musicians and native instruments, will present the fourth attraction in the Choral Union series at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Aud. They will perform a variety of classical and folk dances. Paleontology *... Prof. Norman D. Newell of Co- lumbia University will deliver a Sigma Xi Ermine Cowles Case Memorial Lecture on "Crises in the History of Life" at 8 p.m. Wednes- day in Rackham Aud., sponsored by the Museum of Paleontology and the geology and mineralogy departments. Gilbert and Sullivan.. .. The Gilbert agd Sullivan Socie- ty will present "Princess Ida" at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday through Sat- urday in Lydia Mendelssohn. 'Two Players'... Helen Hayes and Maurice Evans will present excerpts from 17 Shakespearean plays in "A Pro- gram for Two Players" at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Aud., un- der the auspices of the Profession- al Theatre Program. Canadian Ballet... The National Ballet of Canada will present the second attraction in the Extra Series 8:30 p.m. Fri- day in Hill Aud. Included in the program will be "Concerto in D minor for Two Violins" by Bach, choreographed by Balanchine and Weill's "Judgment of Paris," chor- eographed by Tudor. Saxophone Recital... Ronald Attinger, Grad, will pre- sent a degree recital on the saxo- phone and oboe at 8:30 p.m. Sat- urday in Lane Hall Aud, Folk Music,... Jesse Fuller will appear in a folk music concert at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in Trueblood Aud., as part of a series being sponsored by the Folklore Society to bring outstanding folk music talent to the campus. Guild House Serves Campus Through Seminars, Classes By RUCHA ROBINSON There is a door in Ann Arbor which is open to everyone. Behind this door lies the chal- lenge of discussion, or the relief of solitude. This door leads into the Guild House. The Guild is an organiza- tion sponsored by the Congrega- tional, the Disciple, and the Evan- gelical and the Reform churches. Guild director and Congrega- tional minister, the Rev. J. Edgar Edwards, assisted by Nancy Prime,' Spec, and Barbara Austin, '64, stresses that the Guild services, personal counseling, discussions, and classes are open to every stu- dent. Belief in Maturity Rev. Edwards also emphasizes the importance of scholarship. T h e "challenging discussions" Guild holds demonstrate his be- lief in the maturity and percep- tion of the student. Among the discussion groups held at the Guild are the Tuesday and Friday lunches which provide a speech by an outstanding member of the faculty, or a visitor, followed by a discussion period. The Tuesday lunch centers on a matter of ultimate concern while the Friday lunch picks one specific area of this problem for consideration. The Guild also holds informal discussions. Once a month an out- standing leader in some field is invited to what is called a Fire- side, to state his opinions on any- thing. Among the noted men who have participated in this program. are Norman Thomas and Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn). On Sunday evenings the Guild holds a class entitled "Faith, In- quiry and Intellect," which is a To Hold Seminar In Bio-Engineering A seminar for students and fac- ulty members itnerested in the University's bio-engineering pro- gram will be held at 4 p.m. tomor- row in Rm. 311 West Engineering Bldg. Professors Robert C. Juvin- all and J. Raymond Pearson of the engineering college will speak on "Some Current and Potential Biological and Mechanical Re- search Topics for Engineers in Physical Medicine." August, with the majority of vol- unteers entering training toward the end of this period. Make Commitments Planning for this summer, intake requires that programs be fully developed, applicants recruited and all commitments made at least two months before the volunteers are scheduled to enter training. This means that, the necessary contracts with private agencies and universities for project ad- ministration or for the training of volunteers must be signed at least this far in advance. Programs utilizing approximate- ly 5,110 volunteers are almost completely developed and will re- quire the full $30 million ap- propriated for the fiscal year 1962. Of the $63.75 million requested for the fiscal year 1963, $32.39 million are required for the con- tinuing costs of this portion of the program. It is anticipated that two-year contracts with private agencies and universities involving a total of 1,060nvolunteers will have been signed by the fiscal year 1962. Budget Finances The 500 volunteers entering duty during the fiscal year 1962 under contract administration with pri- vate agencies and universities are financed for two years at the time the contract is signed, and thus no funds are budgeted for the fiscal year 1963. It is planned to finance for two years with fiscal year 1963 funds some 600 volunteers entering duty during the last ten months of fiscal year 1963 under contracts with private agencies and univer- sities. The 1963 budget charge for these volunteers is $10,000 each or a total of $10.80 million. Also planned are to have some 990 volunteers enter in the last ten months of the fiscal year 1963 in direct, administration projects. At a cost factor of $9,000 per man- Syear, this gives a 1963 budget charge of $3.96 million. Sign Provision President John F. Kennedy's $63.75 million request makes prb- vision for the entry into service in July and August, 1963 of ap- proximately 3,670 volunteers. The fact that 400 volunteers will have completed their two-year terms of service by the end of August, 1963 means that the net summer input will be only about 3,270 volunteers. This level of activity for the first two months of the fiscal year 1964 is only slightly higher than the level projected for early 1963, when 2,710 volunteers are expected to be available for ser- vice. It follows from a judgment made as of the close of the calendar year 1961 that the Corps program should attain the level of 6,700 volunteers by 1963 and that pro- vision should be made in the 1963 budget as in the 1962 budget for the continuation of the Corps ac- tivities during the summer months of 1963 at a level not substan- tially different from that during the summer months of 1962. Further experience with the program-particularly in terms of foreign demand and volunteer availability-may indicate within the next six to nine months that the level of activity now envisaged for the first 'two months of the fiscal year 1964 should be increas- ed or decreased. Plan Meeting Of LSA Group The literary college steering committee will hold an open meet- ing at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Angell Hall Conference Rm. At the session, the committee will discuss certain planned pro- grams or changes pertinent to col- lege, including the changes in reg- istration and classification, and possible improvements in the col- lege's counseling systen. It will also look into a suggested "course evaluation booklet," and discuss the tentative plans for the proposed "New College." By GAIL BLUMBERG A new mammoth specimen has been 'unearthed in southwestern Michigan. It is "as complete a mammoth specimen as ever was found in Michigan," according to Prof. Claude Hibbard, director of the Paleontology Research Museum. University paleontologists were called in on Oct. 18 to investigate this new fossil find at Eau Claire. The remains were those of the Jeffersonian Mammoth of the female species. Not quite half- of the bones were found, but most of the skull with several upper teeth asso- ciated Was preserved. This is the first time a skull has been found in a Michigan specimen. Prof. Hibbard has expressed the hope of raising enough funds to make a Carbon-14 testing, a dating procedure, on the skull. Such a testing would also be a first for Michigan mammoths. ''Begns Work On New Building Ground was broken Friday for an office building, the first struc- ture in an $8 million aerospace and electronics complex to be lo- cated on a 62-acre site on the edge of North Campus. Ann Arbor Folk and Jazz Society presents . gear FO 6be le heard -A Saturday, Nov. 10 at 8:30 P.M. ANN ARBOR HIGH Wesley Prillwitz of Eau Claire (15 miles east of Lake Michigan) found the fossil remains while dredging a bog area for an irriga- tion pond. ORGANIZATION "NOTICES Baha'i Student3Group, Open House, Nov. 4, 3-5 p.m., 31 E. William. Congregational Disciples E & R Guild, "Does 'Faith in Christ' Have Pertinence to Academic Inquiry?", Rev. R. Fuller, Nov. 4, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Croup, International Night, Supper at 6 p.m., Nov. 4.1511 Washtenaw. Speaker; Pastor Lee, 6:45 p.m. Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, Nov. 5, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. * * * Unitarian Student Group, Meeting, Nov. 4, 7:30 p.m., 1st Unitarian Church. Speaker: Dr. M. Gold, "Undetected Ju- venile Delinquency." Wesleyan Guild, Seminar, 10:15 a.m . Pine Room; Worship and Program, 7 p.m., Wesley Lounge; Nov. 4; Open House, Nov. 5, 8-11 p.m., Jean Robe's Apt. Lutheran Student Assoc., Film: "Mar- tin Luther," Nov. 4, 7 p.m.. Hill & Forest. * * * Graduate Outing Club, Hiking or Horseback Riding, Nov. 4, 2 p.m., Rack- ham Bldg., Huron St. Entrance. A1 Tickets: Main floor $3.50-2.50 Balcony $2.50-.75 Now on sale at the Disc Shop and Discount Records REV. J. EDGAR EDWARDS ... the open door series of debates, panels or lec- tures. Guild House is open almost any time of day or night, usually from 8-1 a.m. It is equipped with a grand piano,rhi-fi set, kitchen, library and, rooms for study or discussion. Each year certain cam- pus groups, small enough to be accommodated in the house, are invited to use the Guild as their headquarters. This year the stu- dents from Thailand, the Congress of Racial Equality, and the Ann Arbor Peace Center are meeting there. rSuccessful Motivation The whole philosophy and also the reasons for successful motiva- tion in Guild House are met in Rev. Edward's words: "This campus ministry is an open association of students and faculty where the individual search is respected and encouraged. We acknowledge a Christian orienta- tion, endeavor seriously to exam- ine and question the assumptions of society, and seek to make the Christian message relevant to the campus and the wider community through participation in social action." NOW DIAL 5-6290 "An excellent suspense drama !" -FREE PRESS I, Continuous From 1 P.M. TODAY 4-mm DIAL 8-6416 TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:00 George Orwell's 1984 Edmond O'Brien, Michael Redgrave SHORT: Mack Sennett's HAL F R ACI O FATRF DAAAE BAHA'ULLAH THE LORD of the NEW AGE (The Glory of God) Followers of the Gospel "Behold the gates of heaven are flung open. He who is the LORD of lords is come." HEADLINES TOMORROW by MARZIEH GAIL A columnist once said that the biggest scoop of all time would be the news of the return of Chrism. He was mistaken. The return of Christ would never make the front page. The reasons is this: When a man appears calling himself the Messiah, he does not look as people expect him to look. There is no light around his head-the light is added by pointers, long after he has died. He eats, walks, talks. He comes from a community where he has been known for years. And when he suddenly announces himself as a prophet, as one with a new message from God, his community laughs at him. Everybody knows, people say, that the Messiah will come seated on a throne, or riding on a cloud, and will preach the some religion that the priests are already preaching in the temples. They laugh. The man continues to say that he is the servant of a Spirit that he cannot resist. The laughter grows to anger. Why is he so obstinate in his claim, this man they have known since he was a child. A few listen to him, and bear the hatred of the rest. The laughter stops. The hatred rises. The prophet is shut away- chained-perhaps killed. But his voice goes on. People far away listen to it. Then painters draw the circle of light back of the head that is now earth, and men and women in countries across the world build temples in the name of the man whose own people put him to death. This drama is played all over again, every once in a while in human history. It has been played again, almost in our time. It did not make the headlines. THE GREAT AGE TO COME willHe h s cused hv1 ., .::, .Y. :.::.::_.. :....... I I