THEMICHIGANDAIL____ ;ents Accept Gifts, Grants at Meeting Program Notes FOR FRESH AIR CAMP: Housing Units To Hold Bucket Drive gents accepted gifts and their meeting Friday.. lInternational Nickel Company, ship in engineering will IC . ......$..« .,...a«. .... . ,, . . rided with $1,400 given by Research by Dr. James Conway of the Medical School will be un- dertaken with $1,250 given by ne New .f Man Merck and Co., Inc. From Scott Paper Company ster J. Malanoski, of Elmira, York, has replaced Edwin H. ish as supervisor of Univer- partment assignments. huish is now East Quad- business manager. 950 graduate of New Jersey's. a College in East Orange, Loski was with the Personnel tment of the Westinghouse ration in Elmira from 1953- dcid his graduate studies from 1959 at the University of lo, while acting director'of ng for that institution. Foundation the Regents .accepted $1,500 for a scholarship: There were two grants totalling $1,050 which were accepted from Socony Mobil Oil Company, Inc. One of $650 is for a scholarship in geology and one of $400 is for the geology department's use. A" grant of $1,000 for allergy re-, search under the direction of Dr. John M. Sheldon was accepted from Knoll Pharmaceutical Com- pany. Fr'om the Harrison Jules Louis Frank and Leon Harrison Frank IMemorial Corporation, the Regents accepted $1,000 for two scholar- ships in engineering; Prof. Emeritus Elizabeth C. Crosby of the anatomy department has given $1,000 which she re- ceived from the Upjohn Company as payment for a series of lectures. The money will be used to support an Upjohn Neurological Research Fellowship next summer for Dr. Gilbert Hamilton of the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. American Mathematical Society, has given $1,000 to support the Michigan Mathematical Journal for 1959. Give Report On ,Budgets Reported to the Regents Friday were budgets totalling $2,343,068.17 which had been initiated since Sept. 25. Research grants and contracts,, as is customary, accounted for most of the total, with $2,102,220.36 in that category. In the area of student aid was $211,481.81, $26,- 016 in iistructional programs and $3,350 in. administrative and serv- ice activities. Source of funds for the budgets were: federal government, $2,-, 115,538,4§; industry and individ- uals, $113,037; foundations, $83,- 242.71; service charges, $30,950; and endowment income, $300. LEl _ 1Y1! ' C .. TONIGHT at 8:00 JA'NE EYRE with JOAN FONTAINE ORSON WELLES SHORT: ONE A.M. Charlie Chaplin.' ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50cents By MILDA GINGELL The Boston Symphony Orchestra will give an Extra Concert Series performance at 2:30 p.m. today in Hill Aud. This afternoon's program will include Symphony No. 38 in D major (Praque)rby Mozart; Cope- land's Suite from "The Tender Land;" and Symphony No. 5 by Beethoven. This week's attraction for the Choral Union Series is Irmgard Seefried, Vienna State Opera so- prano. Miss Seefried will give a "Goethe recital" at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Aud., Ann Arbor's cultural arena. During the coming season, she will appear as guest artist with the Lucerne Festival Strings on the group's first American tour. * , "Horse Eats Hat," originally titled "The Italian Straw Hat," is the first.major production on this season's Playbill. The modern French farce will be given at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday at Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. The play, directed by Prof. Wil- liam P. Halstead of the speech de- partment, will feature the song lyrics of W. S. Gilbert (of Gilbert and Sullivan) with music by Uni- versity alumnus, Paul Miller. Tickets for this production or season tickets for the entire play are now on' sale at Lydia Men- delssohn box office. . . . This afternoon at 1:30, the Uni- versity FM radio station, WUOM, will broadcast the last in the series of Shakespear plays, "Twelfth Night." At 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, WUOM will also broadcast the concert presented by the University's Regents Adopt- S'' emoir A memoir expressing the sorrow of the Regents over the death of Prof, Walter:C. Sadler, of the en-. gineering college, on Oct. 13 was adopted Friday. The memoir said his sudden death "is mourned by the Univer- sity community and by the entire Ann Arbor area," and it concluded with these words: "His students and his fellows on the engineering faculty are sad- dened by the passing, of a devoted teacher and able colleague. His city will long remember him as a civic leader." The Regents "join in the sorrow which Prof. Sadler's death has brought to his many colleagues and friends, and express to his family their heartfelt sympathy." Stanley Quartet from Rackham Lecture Hall. The quartet is composed of Profs. Gilbert Ross and Gustave Rosseels, violins, Robert Courte, viola, and Oliver Edel, cello, all of the music school. The Ann Arbor Civic Symphony will give its first public concert on Nov. 1 at the Ann Arbor high school. Prof. Charles Fisher of the mu- sic school will be the featured piano soloist. He will play Mozart's Concerto for Piano No. 24. * ' * * Sneak preview from the Ann Ar- bor Folk and Jazz Society:'satirist Tom Lehrer comes to town on Nov. 14. ToDI Civil Service' Gustav A. Butterbach, of the Detroit Field Office of the Seventh United States Civil Service Re- gion, will discuss Civil Service pro- ceedings at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Rm. 130 of the Business Administra- tion Bldg. U ' TV Show To Discuss Four Alaskas The campus organized housing units will hold the annual Fresh Air Camp Bucket Drive on Nov. 11 and 12, to help finance this camp for emotionally disturbed children. Bucket drive stations will be manned from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and from 7 to 11 p.m. by volunteers from the housing units. A boy and a girl will be stationed at each post for an hour, which will be, either located on campusor in the downtown area. Sign up sheets have been dis- tributed to the presidents of the individual housing units and are to be returned by Oct. 30, Stuart Dow, Junior Interfraternity Coun- cil president, said. Members, of the bucket drive central committee " are Delene Domes, '60, from Assembly, Lynn Cockerill, '62, Junior Panhellenic, Chuck Scheffer, '61, Inter-House Council, and Dow. Generous donations in the past from citizens, University faculty and alumni and the active cam- paigns of students make up roughly one-third of the camp's operational budget. The University and the Institute of Human Adjustment. provide the academic and administrative costs. And the food costs are al- most met by the fees r charged agencies sending boys. The camp is situated 24 miles northwest of Anx Arbor on Pat-= terson Lake, which is one of a chain of seven small lakes near Pinckney, Michigan. At present there are some 26 permanent buildings including wo- men's dormitories, c I a s s r o o m,: workshop and modern health unit. nternatonal. Week Phanned International Week, scheduled for Nov. 7-14 will begin with the Monte Carlo Ball at 9 p.m. Nov. 7. To be held in the Union Ball- room the dance is sponsored by the International Students Asso- ciation and will feature the music of Dick Tilkin and his orchestra. Tickets will go on sale tomorrow on the Diag, under the Engine Arch and at the International Center. Ask Final Fair Plans As final plans for the Nov. 13 and 14 World's Fair near comple-. tion, all nationality organizations are urged to submit their plans for, room displays to the international affairs committee of the Union, sponsor of the affair. James F. Burns) '61E, committee chairman, requests that any na- tionality club which has not been contacted by the committee but wishes to participate in the fair should see him at the student of- fices of the Union. FRESH AIR CAMP-Pledges of fraternities and sororities help ready the University Fresh Air Camp for emotionally disturbed boys. In addition they cooperate with Assembly and the Inter- House Council in a bucket drive to obtain funds for the camp. TV SERIES: U'Program To ShowXA Hglgtof Centurie F, A *Volsh Llfe To Be Topic of Seminar "Polish Student Life" will the,, topic of the first seminar be of' "Four Alaskas" are discussed in a. weekly series of the program on national and international affairs, sponsored by the Student Govern- ment Council. It Will beheld in the Kalama- zoo Room of the Michigan League at 2:00 ppn. today: The speaker will be Zbigniew Bzymeh, Grad., who is the first Polish exchange student spon- sored by the United States Na- tional Students Association to come to this country. A graduate of the Polytechnic Institute of Warsaw, he attended the University of Illinois this sum- mer and enrolled in the Univer- sity's engineering college in the fall to study' bridge design.' Members of the political science department will attend and every- one is welcome. "We hope that these programs will be more interesting and stim- ulating than last year," said Casey King, chairman of the national and international committee of SGC. STARTING TODAY- A CORNED BEEF PASTRAMI Many other goodies Un$r :I a University television program at 9 a.m. today. Prof. William Benninghoff of the botany department discusses Alaska by dividing this new state into four great regions on WXYZ- TV, Channel 7, Detroit. "Just as Caesar had to divide Gaul .intothree parts in order to explain it fully,. we need to divide Alaska into parts or sections to unders'tand it," he explains. "Looking at it this way, there are four Alaskas, each very differ- ent in geography, resources and way of life." Using films, photographs and maps, Prof. Benninghoff takes viewers on a trip through the bustling cities of Southeastern Alaska and the foggy, barren is- lands of the Aleutian area. He points out the vast natural wealth and spectacular' beauty of Central Alaska and the frigid but valuable region of the Arctic and Bering Sea coast. Host of the program ,is Prof. Karl Lagler, of the natural re- sources school. [ Notices Alpha Phi Omega (service frater- nity), pledge meeting, Oct. 26, 7 p.m., 2528 SAB. Congregational, Disciples, & & Stu- dent Guild, graduate group, Oct. 26, 8 p.m., 524 Thompson. Congregational, Disciples, E & R Stu- dent Guild, "Guild Worship," Oct. 25. 7 p.m., Congregational Church, Douglas Chapel, State and William. Gamma Delta, (Lutheran Student. Icub), supper at 6 p.m., program at 6:45 p.m., "History of Christianity Before Martin Luther," Prof. R. Wittke (East- ern Mich. Univ. Hist. Dept.), Oct..25, 1511 Washtenaw. Graduate Outing Club, hiking, Oct. 25, 2 p.m., meet in back of Rackham (N.W. entrance), Hillel, supper at 6 p.m., Martha Schlamme.(Folk Songs) Concert at 8 p.m., Oct. 25, 1429 Hill. s* ! La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, Oct. 26; 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Coffee and conversation. * * * Mich. Christian Fellowship, Oct. 25, 4 p.m., Lane Hal. Speaker: Dr. Evan Welsh, "The Man Christ Jesus." Newman Club, general meeting, Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m., Fr. Gabriel Richard Cen- ter. Unitarian Stud. Group, meeting, Oct. 25, 7 p.m., 1917 Washtenaw. Speaker: Mr. Fleetwood, "Existentionalism" with special attention to Paul Tillich. * * * Ukrainian Students Club, special meeting, Oct. 26, 9 p.m., Madelon Pound Hse., corner" Hill and E. Univ. s * * Am. Chem. Soc., Stud. Affiliate, week- ly luncheon meeting, Oct. 28, 12 noon, 3003 Chem. Am. Field Service, organizational meeting, 'Oct. 28, 4:30 p.m., SAB. All students who have been participants (during the summers) in American Field Service are welcome. Stud. Zionist organization, organiza- tional meeting, Oct. 25, 7 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill. All interested welcome. By NORMA SUE WOLFE "Legacy," a 10-part WWJ-TV program starting today at noon, will touch on the high points of the last 25 centuries. And from a "pedagogical.stand- point," the show should prove "really quite dandy," Prof. Arthur Eastman of the English depart- ment and host of the program, has predicted. Prof. Eastman will make use of research and interviews,. conduct- ed by producer-author Alfred H. Slote, of the University television office, as teh basis for the show's 10 scripts. "We have a theme fo each age,'" he continued, "and then we let, the aspects 'of, the age, such as music, sculpture and painting. speak for themselves." Interviews Chairman For instance, Slote interviewed Prof. Gerald Else, chairman of the classical studies department, to "find what is most significant - what Athens, 5 B.C., has to say to; 20th century America" for the first in the "Legacy"series.' Slote, who published two novels before beginning his four years of television work at the, University, atid has since produced hundreds of programs, said the net result should ' be some "exciting pro- grams."}- gHe attributed much of the show's "artistic success" to Direc- tor Ronald Bernstein of the Uni- versity television office. Adjusts Easily "In addition, Prof. Eastman had no difficulty adjusting to the me- dium of television," Slote report- ed. "He combines scholarly knowl- edge' with the ability of being a wonderful talker, and informality with erudition." Prof. Eastman began his tele- vision career half a year ago with. a series of interviews, including Linus Pauling, A Nobel piewn ner in chemistry, and Sir John Glubb, commander of the Arab Legion. Prof. Eastman believes Athat 'television "heightens the effective- ness' of presentations similar to the "Legacy" series. "When I teach Shakespeare, I'd like to invite in members of the fine arts department and the mu- sic school to help teach the class," Prof. Eastman said. "Right now, unfortunately, there is a practical division of the fields of knowledge," he continued. "But almost anything can be done on television. - Lecturer Limited "A lecturer can only display pic- tures in the classroom and hope that the students inthe last row can see them,", Prof. Eastian said. "Television is a device where we can combine pictures,' art forms, and actors simultaneously. "If we assume integration in the educational process, the teacher's job is to give his student the greatest possible amount of stin- ulus," he said. This goal may be realized through the "Legacy" series, Prof. Eastman believes. SPECIAL on SCHWINN'S I NEW PLA- PAY-AS-YOU-MUNCH 'U STOP MENTAL HEALTH with TOM LEHRER - Halloween, Oct. 3- SCOTTISH RIGHTS AUDITORIUM Masonic Temple -- Detroit Tickets: 3.50, 2.75, 2.20, 1.80 . .. at Box Office MARTHA SCHLAMME, Folksinger, To Follow ':JACK MMMINGS E CURT JURGENS MAY BRITT ""$he The screen's most adult look at the ways of ylove!. II B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill -6-7 P.M. (Every Sunday) DOORS. OPEN DIAL AT , AT ~ R 7~i1~L 5-6290 12:455 .../T$ WHAT GOES ON WHEN THE I./GHTS GO OFF. IRMGARD SEEFRIED LEADING SOPRANO OF THE VIENNA OPERA DIAL NO 8-6416 TWO ENCORE HITS! ne of the most versatile co ed ins alive!" IIAE MagIZn.l Lp I'j wih THEODORE -IKEL in Hill Auditorium THU RS., OCT.29 at 8:30 LIEDER RECITAL-music of Beethoven, Mozart, Schumann, Schubert, and Hugo W '!; with text based on the puvms of Goethe. TICKETS: $3.50 - $3.00.- $2.50 $2.00 - $1.50 at UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY Burton Tower Ud by Screenpay by NIGEL B CINE. COLORIby STEREOPHOI, IDMYTRYK 'ALHIN1 w +ScOPE . NCSOUND ROYA DALL mm " AN A WAN A L - NEAD AN A PRODUCTION NICK ADAMS- MARCEL DALIG 'JULIA MEADE A UNIVERSALINTERNATIONAL RELEASE TON ITE: r Nr+ 44w R F WA - - - - - - MARTHA SCHLAMME I SOL HUROK presents ARNOlD OSS PLUS* "A SALVO OF BELLYLAUGHSI' THE WHOLE SCREEN EXPLODES. -Nrnwe( JACOUES TAIrS .. -Songs of Many Lands SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL PLAYERS :. "TN "TMPEST" I lAll ,. : ;- I