______________________________THE M ICHIGAN DAILY WUOM Calls for Students With Script-Writing Talent BACH CONCERT AT HILL: Prof. Klein Combines Music, Travel 'U' Professors Praise ICC At Banquet NSA Offers Summer Study A call for new script writing alent has been sent out by WU- )M's script director, William Ben- ler, Jr. Dave Cory, '50, one of the three tudents now employed by the Uni- ersity radio station, has been put t the helm of a new department et up to handle the new scripts. * * * CALLED THE "Student Script ervice", this department is mo- .eled after commercial script ser- ices. listory Dramas American history, based on ori- inal documents in the Clements Library, will be dramatized in a eries of 13 broadcasts over WU- >M, called "Treasures Off the helf." The series has already been us- d by 30 radio stations in Michi- an. Writers will submit scripts to this department, Cory said, where they will be read, cata- logued and listed oii a special card for possible future produc- tion. Names of the script writers will be utilized for allocation of fu- ture assignments, he explained. "AS WUOM expands, the need for competent writers also grows," Script Director Bender said. "We would like to use students for this service whenever possible." Experienced writers and stu- dents who have had courses in radio or creative writing are es- pecially urged by Cory to submit either scripts or short stories to the new Student Script Service. Students may contact Cory from 1 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays and Thurs- days at WUOM's offices on the fifth floor of the Administration Building. 'I. TONIGHT I TAKE HER to the UNION DANCE 9 till 12 Music By FRANK TINKER $1.25 per Couple By PETER HOTTON Musical barnstorming around the country and conducting some four different choral groups and several extra choruses is all in a week's work for Prof. Maynard Klein, conductor of the University choirs. And all this week's work in whipping hundreds of voices into shape will be climaxed when the 222-voice University Choir pre- sents a.Bach anniversary concert at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Hill Audi- torium, marking the 200th anni- versary of the composer's death. * * * THE UNIVERSITY CHOIRS, as distinguished from the Choral Union "festival" chorus, is a group of choirs who warble, not mainly for performance, but for the sake of singing everything from Bach to DeBussy. Prof. Klein came to the Uni- versity last year, and . has built up four outstanding choruses out of what was a small choir rehearsing only a few hours each week. First of the choirs is the Uni- versity Choir itself, 240 voices re- hearsing five hours a week for college credit. The Arts Chorale, organized last year as a literary college group, has grown to 160 members representing 10 schools. A THIRD CHORUS, the Tudor Singers, is a group of students specializing in the music of the Tudor period, including pieces rom Italian and Dutch reper- toires. And the Michigan Singers is' the fourth choir, made up strict- ly of music school students. Most of the pieces sung by the group are heard for the first time where they are performed, Prof. Klein explained. They perform for such organizations as Religion-In- Life week and Inter-Arts Festival. IN ADDITION to his tight sche- luleon campus, Prof. Klein drives to Detroit every Tuesday to con- duct the Detroit Rackham Choir, a 175-voice chorus sponsored by the University Extension Service. It is made up of alumni, teachers, housewives and busi- ness men, or anyone who wants to sing. Its work this year will be cli- naxed by a performance of Men- lelssohn's "Elijah," in May. WHILE the Choral Union is a festival choir and rehearses each semester for a Christmas concert and another at the May Festival, the University choirs study every- thing from early motets to 16th :entury opera, delving into the m-ost modern music too, Prof. Klein said. They will have a total of 17 con- -erts under their belts at the end of the semester and by June, Prof. Klein will have conducted in the past year 15,000 different indi- vidualti in more than 50 concerts all the way from Michigan to Ark- ansas. I; * * University faculty members hailed the growing success of the Inter-Cooperative Council at its annual membership dinner last night at Lane Hall. The guest speakers were Prof. A. K. Stevens of the English depart- ment; DeWitt C.'Baldwin, direc- or of the Student Religious Asso- ciation and Prof. John F. Shep- ard of the psychology department. "Cooperatives have more educa- tional value than any other type of campus organization," Prof. Shepard pointed out. And Baldwin added that "cooperatives are one of the finest ways of supplemept- ing a formal education." Prof. Stevens commended co- operatives for their political awareness. He said that in these times when free discussion is re- stricted, cooperatives still retain political leadership. for I I GIVE IT ALL YOU'VE GOT!-Prof. Maynard Klein, director of the University choirs, whips his singers into shape for their Bach anniversary concert Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Prof. Klein's conducting is on a 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week basis, ranging from Michigan to Arkansas. _ _ __* better golfing. 7/fal'1 v. An opportunity to exchange ideas with U.S. industrial workers and businessmen is offered Uni- versity students-via five NSA scho- larships to the Summer Institute for Social Progress at Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass. The scholarships, a v ai 1a b 1e through the NSA offices at Madi- son, Wis., include all tuition and room and board expenses for the annual Summer Institute, to be held from July 1 to 15 oan the Wellesley campus. University students interested in applying for the scholarships should submit petitions to the Stu- dent Legislature office before 4 p.m. Monday, according to Dorri- anne Zipperstein, chairman of the local NSA committee. PROF. KLEIN usually travels by plane, and an average day might find him conducting choir rehearsals in Ann Arbor in the morning and directing a 1,200- voice choir in a music festival in the East that afternoon. And may- be after supper he'll be back in Detroit or Ann Arbor working with students again. Cainpus Calendlar EVENTS TODAY FIRESIDE CHAT: Dr. Moses Frohlich will speak on "Contri- butions of Psychoanalysis," 8:30 p.m., Hillel Foundation. EXHIBIT: Examples of Indianl workmanship on display from 7 to 9 p.m., Museums Building. Movies, "Pottery Making" and "Seminonles of the Everglades," 7:30 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. LECTURE: Jose Lopez-Rey will give an illustrated lecture, "The Works of Goya." In Spanish, 8 p.m., Rackham amphitlheatre. y LUNCHE'ON: Earl J. McGrath! will discuss "General Education in High School and College," 12:15 p.m., League Ballroom. 1 I _ ___ HELP NEEDED .. to establish Beta Mu as a non-sectarian, inter- racial fraternity next fall. Must be attracted by the challenge of a new idea and interested in mature, democratic living. Information available at Beta Mu's Smoker on Friday, March 31, at 8:00 P.M. in the Union. Smart, rugged golf footwear with Bass' famous true-moccasin comfort FOR MEN AND WOMEN all over Brown ... Brown and White ( VAN BOVEN SHOES k 17 Nickels Arcade ft. o ____________________''al f :: : : 4 t 7 ;.;:;: ;; :;; ... .***.....*~ *.**.* *+"J 'I Superior Reproduction on RCA VICTOR RECORDS 331/3, 45 or 78 R.P.M. 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