' s i N I E D ER 21,_1948 TIIEMGIHGANJj7ATLY. .., ,. 'YEOMEN OF THE GUARD': Tower of London an Cast Crowd Set Science Talk To BeGiven Kaplan Will Discuss Earth's Atmosphere NLRB Attorney To Speak Here on Board Operations Under Labor Laws i ; It's a big order-but the pro- ducers of "Yeomen of the Guard" are going to put the Tower of London and a cast of 75 all on the stage of Pattengill Auditorium. It won't be the real tower, it's true. But when the curtain rises on the Gilbert and Sullivan So- ciety's newest production Dec. 7, local theatre-goers will see a pretty authentic version of the medieval London landmark. * * * CONSTRUCTION workers have planned out just how the auditori- um's small stage will look, down to the last hinge and lock. They have even built a small scale rep- lica of the set and tried out vari- ous lighting effects on it. To find out exactly what buildings looked like back in the olden days in which the opera is set, they leafed through dusty books and library files. That problem conquered, they still had to figure out how to make the Tower look sufficiently mas- sive without crowding the large cast right off the stage. IN PERSON! S1. ................... and his SINGING MARIACHIS THE ROMANTIC MEXICO OF YESTERDAY AND THE GAY MEXICO OF TODAY MASONIC TEMPLE AUDITORIUM WITH THE MODEL of the set to guide them, the stars of the opera were able to figure out their positions on the stage. And the chief electrician could work out his tricky lighting effects ahead of time. The situation is now pretty well under control, thanks to weeks of long, hard work. Before the construction workers even got started on their project, they found themselves facing problems which the producers of the two earlier Gilbert and Sulli- van successes didn't have to worry about. * * * "YEOMEN OF THE Guard" calls for a more difficult set artistically than either "The Mikado" or "H. M.S. Pinafore." The opera isn't all bright and sunny. Tragic and comic themes interlock-so the crew, on a lim- ited budget had to create a set with just theright effect of impending tragedy. The problems associated with the construction and design of the sets have challenged the in- tellectual ability of both the stu- dents and faculty members con- nected with the performance, ac- cording to Dr. Felix A. Reiss, who is supervising design and construc- tion of the sets. Ancient Hero NEW YORK-Farming was once the most important and honorable form of labor long before "trick- sters" as were the traders and merchants called became impor- tant. LOVE AND WAR-Henry V (Sir Laurence Olivier) courts the Princess Katharine of France (Renee Asherson) in the prize- winning film version of Shakespeare's drama. At the Lydia Men- delssohn. Prof. Joseph Kaplan, discoverer of atomic nitrogen in the earth's atmosphere will speak on "The Upper Atmosphere of the Earth" at 8 p.m. tomorrow, in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. His talk hightlights the signifi- cance of the sciences that deal with the atmosphere, the oceans and the earth in the transition to an "Atomic Age." Chairman of the Department of Physics at the University of Cali- fornia at Los Angeles since 1940, Prof. Kaplan has been on the fac- ulty since 1928. He is also physicist of the University's Institute of Geophysics. During World War II he was on leave froim the University to do war work with the Army Air Forces. Prof. Kaplan's talk will be given at a meeting of the Michigan chapter of Sigma Xi, national sci- ence research society, but will be open to the public. Catch This, Will You PIKES PEAK, Colo.-More than 12 million Americans have been baited into taking up fishing, ac- cording to piscatorial experts here. The perfect gift for Men Initialed Hankies Band embroidered "° priced from Harold Cranefield, Regional At- torney of the National Labor Re- ations Board, will discuss the op- eration of the N.L.R.B. under the Wagner Act and the Taft-Hartley Act when he speaks to the Univer- sity Chapter of the Lawyers Guild at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Room 3-R in the Union. Cranefield has had a long ca- reer of public service, which in- cluded work on the LaFollette In- vestigating Committee. Besides r aMM his present position as Detroit Attorney for the Board, he has been prominent in Lawyers Guild activities and is a member of the Executive Board of Control of the Detroit Chapter of the Guild. The lectures are open to the public as well as to law students. The third meeting of the Guild will feature Prof. Hobert Coffey of the Law School in a discussion of uniform divorce legislation. * * * * OLIVIER STARS: Student Demand Calls Forth Return Showing of Henry V 50c, 1.00, 1.25, 2.00 Always Reasonably Priced HE GAGE LINEN SHOP WEDNESDAY, Nov. 24 8:30 P.M. Tickets - $1.20 and $1.50, Tax included 1ir ii dlon't get eaught- without your Chrismnas cards. Help other people to enjoy the merriest Christmas they have ever had by knowing the fact that they were not forgotten. The INDIA ART SHOP has an abundant slection of cards from which to choose. THE INDIA ART SHOP 330 MAYNARD STREET Students will have another chance to see one of the greatest movies of the decade tomorrow when Shakespeare's immortal "Henry V" returns to Ann Arbor under speech department sponsor- ship. Economist To Lecture Here The effects of expanding gov- ernment power upon political free- dom will be discussed by Dr. David McCord Wright, economics profes- sor and lecturer in law at the University of Virginia, at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday, in Rackham Amphithe- atre. This lecture, entitled "Freedom and the Administrative State," is the second in a series of twelve sponsored by the Economics De- partment to bring eminent econ- omists from this country and abroad to Ann Arbor. During his three day stay on the Michigan campus, Dr. Wright will also address the Economics Club on the topic "Toward a Co- herent Anti-Trust Policy" at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow in Kellogg Audito- rium. Both this and the general University lecture on Tuesday are open to the public. The English epic, sole movie ever made by the Theatre Guild, stars Laurence Olivier as the British king whose leadership on the bat- tlefield raised him to the position of a national hero. FILMED in technicolor, the movie adheres closely to the orig- inal Shakespearean text, with the opening scene set in the renowned Globe Theatre of the 1600's. Oliver, who has adapted in several American films, also pro- duced and directed 'Henry V," which covers the English inva- sion of France, the battle of Agincourt and the king's court- ship of Princess Kate. The movie was first shown in Ann Arbor last fall. Popular de- mand for a return engagement moved the speech department to book the film for presentation in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, where accoustical difficulties which arose in the first showing will be eliminated. ATTENDANCE is limited to stu- dents and faculty members and ?heir families. Tickets for the pre- sentations, at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Tuesday, and 3:15 p.m. Tues- day, may be obtained at the Men- delssohn box office. 11 Nickels Arcade I ~1 ,jeier ttVij t I s e to -~ III' liii / ' Right For The Holidays-- ' u) / EDGAB Ribbo# c PAT. PEND. are .< 901,~! 4 c(. 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