THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1960 TIlE MICIHGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 3,1960 S S Today 4:10 Department of Speech MAETERLI NCK'S "THE INTRUDER" Arena Theatre No admission charge S.G.C. TONIGHT and tomorrow at 7:00 and 9:00 ACADEMY AWARD WINNING 1"Mutin on the Bounty" with CLARK GABLE CHARLES LAUGHTON FRANCHOT TONE The story of history's most famous mutiny provides the occasion for Laughton's renowned performance as the sadistic Captain Bligh. SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 7:00 and 9:00 Anita loos' sophisticated classic Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" with" MARILYN MONROE JANE RUSSELL in color ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results To Discuss Soviet Visit John Scott, special assistant to the publisher of Time magazine. will speak on "Russia Revisited" today at 3 p.m. in Rackham Am- phitheatre. The talk is sponsored by the journalism department and the committee on the Russian studies program. Scott has recently returned from a four-month trip to Russia and the satellite countries. TISK SAYS. \ MECRIAN BLLOGEN Don't end up like Bellbogei ! Get your tickets now. LOUIS ARMSTRONG and HIS ALL STARS March 5 Hill Aud. 1:15 and 9:30 P.M. Tickets on sale at Hill Box Office 1-5 P.M. weekdays (Plenty of good seats available) $1 25-$175-$2.00 Feature One-Act Play Today by Maeterlinck By MAME JACKSON "The Intruder," a one-act play by Maurice Maeterlinck, will begin this semester's Laboratory Playbill 6cro'44 CampoA LABORATORY PLAYBILL: I Prof. Stephen S. Fox of the psy- chology department will speak at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Aud. B, Angell Hall, on "Sensory Depriva- tion and Maintained Sensory In- put in the Monkey" The talk is one of a series of psychology colloquia. Travelogue The picture story of "Israel, Land of the Bible" will be the third in the Burton Holmes travel- ogue series presented tonight at 8:30 pm. in Hill Aud. Israel is at the cross-roads of three continents; it is sacred to three of the world's great religions and the cradle of the Western world. It contains the relics of ten civilizations. The last few years has been great industrial development and reclamation of land from the desert and the provision of a new life for countless immigrants. The movie, narrated by Robert Mallett, will tell both stories. * * * Movie Today Cinema Guild will present the film "Mutiny on the Bounty" at 7 and 9:15 tonight in the Archi- tecture Auditorium. The academy award-winning picture stars Clark Gable, Charles Laugton and Fran- chot Tone. Students Laud Exchange Plan From "Student World" ITALY - As a part of an ex- change program between the Uni- versities of Edinborough (Scot- land), Gottingen (Germany), Skoplje (Yugoslavia) and Turin (Italy), three students from Edin- burgh visited the University of Turin in January. Three Turin students had al- ready visited Edinburgh, Gottin- gen and Skoplje in November, and had spoken in very positive terms of their experiences and of the possibilities for getting adquainted with students of the host univer- sities. * C * JAPAN - The employment out- look for Japanese students of leading universities who are ex- pected to graduate in March is the brightest in years. Indications are that all gradu- ates of such schools will find em- ployment-unprecedented in post- war Japan. ODETTA FOLK MUSIC March 18 at 8:30 Detroit institute of Arts Auditorium Tickets at THE DISC SHOP 1210 S. University NO 3-6922 Series at 4:10 p.m. today in the1 Arena Theatre at the Frieze Bldg. "Maeterlinck, the Belgian poet- dramatist of the late nineteenth century, deals with the intangible, not the obvious in his plays," Joyce Moffat, play director said. "His drama is static rather than dynamic theatre. His ideal is to create mood, not action." "Our biggest problem was in creating Maeterlinck's appropriate mood in an arena situation." A mood of apprehension is created in this production through sound and scenery effects. A "lyric quality" is produced by using cheesecloth and transparent materials in the aisles of the theatre. Tension builds up through the sound effects of a scyth being sharpened, a clock ticking and a child screaming. Passive Acceptance "The Intruder" was Maeter- linck's first play. Its thesis is that man accepts passively the dealings of fate." Maeterlinck expresses his concepts of death, blindness and immortality through the character of a blind grandfather in this play. Peter Goldfarb, '63, will portray the grandfather. Other players ae Ann Hagemann as the daughter. Dave Harris, '62 as the fathe, James Knowlton, '61, as the uncle and Cecile Weinstein, '61, playing the maidservant. "When the play begins the fam- for news of the wife's condtion, ily is sitting downstairs waiting for six weeks previous to the open- ing time of the play, the wife had given birtheto a child, and she had not yet recovered. 'Intruder' Is Death The grandfather, apprehensive that all is not well, is the only one to comprehend the approach of the Intruder, Death. In this production the personified death .will take the form of a shaft of light. "The maidservant enters to an- nounce the death of the mother, and at the moment of her death her baby utters his first sounds- piercing screams of terror." Resigned to the mother's death, everyone leaves except the Grand- father who remains on stage to struggle with his soul. Thomas Seeks Spending Shift "The proportion of money spent on Cadillacs compared with the proportion of money spent on decent housing or schools is not pleasant to contemplate; and I have no feelings against General Motors," Norman Thomas, six- time national presidential candi- date on the Socialist Party ticket said recently. Thomas will appear today on "Background," over WUOM at 8 p.m. The discussion will center around the role of labor in our society, the history of the Socialist Party and a review of the Socialist aims which have become incor- porated into American life. Disarmament and civil rights are listed as the major issues of the 1960 Presidential campaign by Thomas. He said that the solving of these problems is a matter of dedication, mostly on the part of today's young people. ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE: Hsu Contrasts U.S.-Chinese Cultures By HENRY LEE "Cultural differences between China and the United States are important in determining human behavior," Prof. Francis L. K. Hsu said yesterday. Hsu, chairman of the Anthro- pology department at Northwest- ern University, said that the Chi- nese culture is based on mutual. dependence while the American culture is based on self reliance. In China a son's first 30 years of life are judged by his father's status, and the next 30 years, the father's status is judged by his son's. "If a father is unsuccessful while young, and his son attains great success later, the father will be quite proud and tell everybody about it." Touchy About Situation Americans who are individual- ly-centered, would be very touchy in this situation, he continued, and would try to hide the fact that their children are support- ing them. Hsu noted that differences In art and literature show how cul- ture operates in American and Chinese societies. These differ- ences distinguish the East from the West. "Chinese art minimizes the hu- man form and does not convey any deep emotional significance. In America, even the pictures of apples, bananas, and grapes pos- sess emotion because the artist Guy Carawan To Perform With guitar, banjo, and flute, Guy Carawan carries on his fam- ily tradition of folk-singing. The first performer ever to be sponsored by the University Folk- lore Society,'he just started re- cording and appearing on the stage in just the last few years. Carawan will perform at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Trueblood Audi- torium in the Frieze Building. Ad- mission is $1.25 or $1.00 for mem- bers of the Folklore Society. Carawan heard his first folk singing at college parties in Los Angeles, and he got his first guitar while still in college. Folk-singing, which started out as a hobby, linked the interests of the sociology major to the talents of the music-lover in him. Using his MA in sociology as a pretext, he toured the mountains of Tennessee and North Carolina in the summer of 1952 with two friends. He sings love songs, children's songs, ballads, and spirituals from the traditions of country farmers, mountaineers, and city-dwelling singers. I. 'A '' has endowed these forms with his 'soul'." The professor said that Chinese literature does not deal with the sex life of the individual. The plots must always end with the correct solution. The.. American or Western literature deals with sex, romance and emotion. Culture Affects Religion "Culture also affects other be- liefs such as religion," Hsu stat- ed. If religion does a Chinaman no good ,why should he join it. To Americans, religion always re- mains something real. TH E JOHN BARTON WOLGAMOT PLAYERS in Jarry's savage burlesque UBU ROI (Gopotty Rex) "The Surrealists invented nothing better." -Andri Gide SAT. & SUN., MARCH 5 & 6 8:30 P.M. Admission 95c Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg. Buy tickets at Bob Marshall's Hsu mentioned that there are exceptions in every society to these cultural patterns. "But we must assume the basic ideas in each culture are internally con- sistent before any other assump- tions can be made." DIAL NO 5-6290 NOMINATED FOR TWO "BEST ACTRESSES" ACADEMY AWA RDS EUZASEI KAThRNE MWUOMT TAYLWR HEPBURN CUFT Satioflq yb Tifte by PO&dua4 TENNESSEE JOSEPH L ,SAM WIAMS " MAMKIEWIUC- SPIECKL Our Next Attraction will be "The Mouse That Roared" I 1 .t ANNOUNCEMENT You may now purchase your Of ficial University of Michigan Ring at DOUGLAS H. HARRIS 1311 South University - Ann Arbor it E ENDING DIAL TODAY NO 2-626 C. S. Forester's great human drama and true adventure ! 14 BURTONTRAELOGUE HOLMES ISRAEL / and 4(the &61e Color Motion Pictures of the Holy Land Narrated by ROBERT MALLETT TONIGHT at 8:30 Tickets: $1.00 (Main Floor, Reserved) 50c (Balcony, Unreserved) On Sale Today 10 A.M.-8:30 P.M. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 11 1 I PLATFORM ATTRACTIONS HILL AUDITORIUM J The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p~m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1960 VOL. LXX, NO. 113 General Notices Tonight: Richard Wagner's opera, "Das Rheingold," presented by the De- partment of Speech and the School of Music. Box office open 10 a.m. Perform- ance 8:00 p.m. Students who expect to receive Edu- cation and Training Allowances un- der Public Law 550 (Korean G.I. Bill) or Public Law 634 (Orphan's Bill) must sign MONTHLY CERTIFICATION, VA Form VB7-6553, in the Offices of veter- ans Affairs, 142 Administration Bldg., before 3:30 p.m., Fri., Mar. 4. Office hours are: 8:30-11:15 a.m. and 1:15-3:30 p.m. Sigma Xi Initiation Dinner. Wed., March 9 at 6:15 p.m. in the Ballroom, Mich. League. Spouses invited. Checks should be mailed in by Sat., March 5 to Sigma Xi, Rackham Bldg. Burton Holmes Travelogue "Israel" tonight at 8:30 in Hlil Aud. Robert Mallett will narrate the color motion pictures which cover the Biblical spots of the Holy Land as well as the mod- ern developments of the new nation of Israel. Tickets are on sale today 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. in the Aud. box office. (Continued on Page 4) m - lmmm lmmft IPMMMM CwASc DoKNLTHMOREDANA WYNER Stringy "DOG OF FLANDERS" ......w "Makes a bid for honors as the best foreign film of the year!" - Cook, World-Telegram IRANCOIS IRUfFAUT'S 1 I Salem's amazing new HIGH POROSITY paper, An important break-through in Salem's fresh air in through the paper to make the £ntaevn softer. fresiher, more I E ,p