THE MICHIGAN DAILY Glee Club' DIALNO 8-6416 ENDING TONIGHT CORINNE -DANIELLE CALVET - DARRIEUX MICELAUCLAIR SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT STARTING WEDNESDAY: Takes European Tour HARLES P F Speech Departrme t To Give 8 The speech department playbill for this year offers a total of eight edy, will appear April 6-9. The The Playbill's productions, including five majoi production, directed by Prof. Hal- duction will be tl works and three bonus presenta- stead, will feature sliding scenery. formance, on Ma tions. The Playbill's next offering will Those holding A stage adaptation of "I Knock, be "Look Homeward, Angel," Ketti the five major at the Door," Sean O'Casey's auto- Frings' adaptation of the Thomas receive, as a bon biography, will open the season on Wolfe novel on April 27-30. Prof. admission to the c Oct. 16 and 17, featuring an all- Baird will direct. ings. faculty cast. Directed by Prof. Claribel Baird of the .speech de- partment, it will be presented in reader's theatre style. "Horse Eats Hat," by Eugene Labiche and Marc-Michel will be given Oct. 28-31. Originally titled "The Italian Stiraw Hat," it is aH 0P French comedy. "Horse Eats Hat" will be directed by Prof.?William P. Halstead of the speech depart- Sept. 26 Tickets at L ment. Opera NextSe i-F rm Donizetti's opera, "Don Pas- and L quale," will be presented in con- junction with the music school on Nov. 19-21. Prof. Jack E. Bender of the speech department and Prof. Josef Blatt of the music school, who have collaborated on N otic o M usic operatic productions in the past, u . . will co-direct the performance. "Epitaph for George Dillon,"' by,' a eac m t t A to Ce h noa JhnObWe have a complete st Anthony Creighton and John Os- borne, creator of the angry youngo man label and author of "Look" o textbooks for MusiC + Back in Anger," will be presented Dec. 9-12. Prof. Hugh Z. Norton of the speech department will-W A HR'S direct.,36 WAhRMS The fifth production, an opera, 316 South State as yet unannounced, will be given in cooperation with the music - school March 1-5, and will be directed byProf. Bender and Prof. Blatt. Present Comedy "The Way of the World," Wil- liam Congreve's restoration corn- _A, aoH TIVUWuom )uted by tonar m mll! GATEWAY TO THE EAST-Members of the Mens' Glee 'Club, accompanied by Prof. Philip Duey, director, stand at the Brandenburg Gate, which marks the division between the-two Berlins. The Glee Club's summer tour of Europe was highlighted by a performance at the Free University in West Berlin, as well as a prize-winning appe arance at the International Musical Eisteddfod, a competitive Welsh festival of Choral Music. The Glee Club completed its tour by travel ing and performing throughout Western Europe for five weeks. v' By CAROL LEVENTEN Look For ONE OF THE MOST ACCLAIMED DRAMAS OF THE DECADE to open the 1969-60 theatre season in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre NEXT WEEK! DIAL NO2-313 6, INTACT! UNCUT! Prouced byDirected by BUDY ADLER JOSUAI LUGAN Week Day Matinees at :o00 and 3:56 Adults 90c screenpla b PALR OSBOR -" A MAGNA Production anx.aw , Monday Thru Thursday One Evening Show at 8 P.M. Adults $1.25,. "During the tour, I think the Glee Club achieved a blending, and feeling of unity through music, which will give our work aimore mature quality," publicity director Gary Pence, '61, said in evaluating the Glee Club's summer tour of Europe. The Glee Club, numbering 44, traveled to London, Paris, West Berlin,.Amsterdam, Copenhagen and Llanglollen, Wales. Combin- ing sightseeing with business, the travelers gave extensive concerts, competing in-and winning-the International Musical Eisteddfod in Llanglollen. "This was the high point," Pence said. The only college group in the adult male choir division, the Glee Club sang-two required num- bers, Palestrina's "Confitemini Domino" and "El Grillo" by Joas- quin de Pres. Then, for the selec- tion by a native composer, they chose "Stomp Your Foot, from Aaron Copland's "The Tender Land," winning a trophy and 100 pounds. The, Glee Club was pro- nounced "a thoroughly competent choir-Young and adventurous." Deep in 'Tradition The Eisteddfod belongs to the rich Welsh heritage of choral sing- ing, reaching far back into tradi- tion, but the International Musical Eisteddfod, in which 15,000 singers competed, was organized only ten years ago, Pence explained. Continuing to Stratford-on- Avon, the Glee Club performed on the grounds of the theatre there, "for a large bunch of basking sun-' bathers." Paris was devoted to the Latin Quarter and sightseeing. In West Berlin, they gave a con- cert at the Free University and managed a visit to the Russian zone. "I walked around for several hours and wasn't bothered by any- body,"' Pence recalled, but con- trasted the archaic, outmoded at- mosphere with that of West Ber- lin which he described as a "bust- ling, American-type city." Gave Concert In Denmark the Glee Club stayed at a youth hostel, and gave a charity concert for the re- habilitation of crippled children. The concert, a surprise to the group, was performed between the magician and polar bear acts of a circus! Before leaving the continent for the Scandinavian countries, the Glee Club traveled extensively and sang in Holland, Belgium, Ger- '' WORKERS THEORIZE: Lunik 11 Raises Much Debate many and Denmark, staying in hotels, private homes and student accommodations. On the way to Sweden, they stopped at Vispy, on the island of Gotland, the only remaining walled town in North- ern Europe. ,There, they sang in' the Dom Kyrke, the main cathed- ral "where the people expressed their appreciation by waving hand- kerchiefs and music books. "The greatest value for us was meeting people on a personal level, augmentedby the joy of singing swap for groups which were always so responsive and enthusiastic. And, at Llanglollen, even if we hadn't won the prize, it would have been worthwhile to meet choir mem- bers from all over the world," Pence summarized. The trip was paid for with Glee Club funds collected over several years (with nominal personal con- tributions) and organized through the Institute for European Studies, which handled the publicity, itin- erary, and other arrangements. I ENDS THURSI>AY M aII , "lift. I h DIAL NO 2-2513 LS ~~"" ""''""I~f ( I This is your story as Paddy Chayefskyf listened to it with sympathy and se it down with boldness. Here are your lyrie nights, your morning fears, youx' ,moments of pain. Mere are your parents' shock, your friends' warnings, your own agony and ecstasy, Here is the motion picture that says it all- with all the"Stos!" out! coMBA Cnm Uw sen" Kim FREDRIC NOVAK *"MARCH The Soviet .moon rocket, Lunik II, has raised much debate among scientists regarding the validity of Russia's latest space claim.' "One easy way exists to find if the 'Russians really hit the moon," William E; Fensler, re- search engineer and Prof. Keeve M. Siegel of the- engineering college said recently. If the Lunik radio. transmis- sions were pulse transmissions, the pulse coming from the rocket could be compared with those re- flected from the moon's surface and then returned to earth. Then the time span between these two pulses should have decreased as the rocket approached the lunar surface, finally becoming indis- cernible when it actually hit the moon, they explained. It would be rather difficult to fake this, they added, because the return pulse would have a differ- ent shape than the transmitter pulse. Such a difference could not be concealed because "it seems clear from scientific literature that the United States and Brit- ain lead the Russians in the scat- tering of electro-magnetic energy off the moon, and, as a result, it would be very hard for them to deceive us in such an analysis." Speculating further,, they said if the rocket were observed from a long enough radio line, and the moon's radar echo checked from the same base line, Lunik II's angular position could be clearly a s e e r t a i n e d. Ultimately, this would have allowed us to a defl- nitive statement as to whether the rocket did hit the moon, since our knowledge of the moon co- ordinates at the prescribed im- pact time would lead to an accu- rate location of Lunik II just be- fore impact. Prof. Siegel heads the Univer- sity Radiation Laboratory, and is a memberdof'the Scientific Advi- sory Board of. the United States Air Force and a consultant for the A d van c e d Research Projects. HIT OR MISS?-Russian authorities, before the- Soviet Union's announcement that it had landed a rocket on the moon, had approximated the landing area. Composite pictures of the moon are useful in formulating scientific hypotheses. 1 ,O~lNCOA PARRUtt.,A&SET DOEKR.MAnTN .UAM tEE RA «b LEE PHILIPS Bpeneily w PADDY CHAYEF8KY Ba pn his pa, -as presentedton Boadway 6v Joshua Logan RED'S RITE SPOT 517 East William "LESS WORK FOR MOTHER" LOW, LOW PRICES 3% sales tax ATTENTION-WOMEN of the HILL Mon.-Fri. 7 A.M.-1 A.M. 0 Sat. 7 Sun. 8:45 A.M.-1 AM. 1 ! ID LOVE TO 60 TO TN BUT NM ALL DATED TERM REPORTS. M1\1 7i7 G fI NE FALL. BALL-, PAUL TYPWNG ON MY NEW UP (UGH) WITH SMITH-CORONA PORTABLE MAKES WRITING SO EASY! WHY, I'LLi CAPER THROUGH DASHTS. PAPER DOT. YOU NEED A SMITH- CORONAr PORTABLE DOT GM AN.. 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