THE MICHIGAN-DAILY Choral Union Series To Feature Galaxy of Musicians l olanthe' Cast Faces Crisis; Issues Urgent Call for Wings ^onductor Rafael Kubelik, will be heard March 4, and violinist Jas- cha Heifitz, March 14. STARTING OFF the fifth An- nual Extra Series will be the famed great Dane Lauritz Melchior, sche- uled for Oct. 10. Serge Jaroff * * * u C a J. n c I {J ppL Ft1 L f t t ( i mra Hess, pianist, in the Extra I LAURITZ MELCHOIR HELEN TRAUBEL will bring the original Don Cossack Chorus Jan. 15. Thor Johnson will again appear in Ann Arbor with he Cincinnati Symphony orches- ra in the last Extra Series con- ~ert Feb. 20. Handel's "Messiah" will be performed by the University Choral Union, soloists and the University Musical Society or- chestra in the Christmas festi- val Dec. 9 and 10. Soloists will be Nancy Carr, Chi- ,ago soprano; Eunice Alberts, New York contralto; David Lloyd, tenor; and Oscar Natzka, bass. Lester McCoy will conduct and Mary McCall Stubbins will be at the organ. * * * THE BUDAPEST Quartet will perform in the Eleventh Annual Chamber Music Festival Feb. 16, 17 and 18, instead of in January. Just a year from now, May 3, 4, 5, and 6, the Philadelphia Or- chestra will be heard in the 58th Annual May Festival, with con- ductors Eugene Ormandy and Alexander Hillsberg- Other performers will include guest conductor of the Choral Union, Thor Johnson, associate conductor Lester McCoy and Mar- guerite Hood conducting the Youth Chorus of Ann Arbor school chil- dren. Rev. Turner To SpeakToday The Rev. Elizabeth Sand Tur- ner, Unity minister, teacher and lecturer, will give an open speech on the theosophy of "Our Divine Heritage" at 8 p.m. today in the Henderson Room of the League. The Rev. Turner is chairman of the committee on education of the Unity Training School and a member of the field lecture staff of the Unity School of Christian- ity, Lee's Summit, Mo. She is appearing under the aus- pices of the Unity School, and the Ann Arbor Unity Center of Prac- tical Christianity at 310 S. State. Unless Ann Arborites come to the rescue, the fairy revels of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society's; spring show, "Iolanthe," won't be authentic, according to Bill Grady,1 '50, publicity manager for the group. "The wings for the cast were damaged in transit," he declared, "and we're calling on students to tell us where we can locate some more.", * * * ANYONE who knows the where- abouts, or the manufacturing tech- nique for wings is asked to call Dale Stevenson, '50, production manager (2-9689), as soon as pos- sible. "We're also looking for a Bri- tish grenadier guard's hat, com- monly known as a shako, to round out this year's costuming," Grady added, "and any drum major or student who knows where we can find one should call Stevenson." Grady blamed the wing mix-up on production troubles in Arcadia. Since this country is the seat. of all the fairy bands, they have ob- tained monopoly on wing produc- tion. Mission Group Offers Student Scholarships Ten scholarships in the fourth annual training program of the United Christian Missionary So- ciety are open to qualified stu- dents, John McCaw, student work leader, has announced. Applicants for the scholarships must have come into student work within the past year and have had the responsibility of ministering to students. The awards are for basic expenses for a two-week study and lecture course on the development and history of stu- dent work, beginning July 6 in the Missions Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. Interested students may apply to the student work office of the United Christian Missionary So- ciety, Missions Bldg., Indianapolis. Student Wins Prizes Worth $900 in 'Third Man' Contest _____-_- ARCADIANS claimed that flying saucers and atomic storms in the stratosphere had delayed their shipments, and expressed concern that the group would be able to find appropriate wings in- such earth-bound regions as Ann Ar- bor. Grady was confident that Uni- versity students would rise to the occasion. -11 The fancy "third man" title came from each question posing a problem of providing a third name prominent in the paper with two known staff writers.A A knatty wardrobe is part of Miller's loot, including a suit, two raincoats, 12 shirts, five hats, twon billfolds and a watch.1 CONFUSING ELEMENTS in the prize are 36 pairs of nylons, sixI lipsticks, two dresses and the three pairs of ladies' pajamas.o Miller solved this problem byt giving them, plus the televisionn set, to his mother. He will splito the men's things with his father.i One of the prizes, a dancer course, Miller is seriously lookingF into, and he's set on reading hist favorite paper, to which he won - a year's subscription. Items completing Miller's hail were two pipes, two lighters and a fancy-sounding "lobby" game. "What that is I still don't know," Miler, quipped, dreaming about his prizes. Only one thing has him worried: "I gotta find out if the stuff's tax free," he said. Georgia Laws Discriminate -- Kallenbach Georgia's voting and registra- tion laws are clearly designed to keep the Negro from voting, but the Federal government is power- less to prevent it, Prof. Joseph Kal- lenback declared yesterday. The political scientist explain- ed that the Supreme Court had to refuse to take action on the laws Monday because the states have exclusive jurisdiction over voting qualifications. THE LAWS, passed in 1949 un- der Gov. Herman Talmadge's di- rection call for a complete re- registration of the state's voters, and require them' to satisfy regis- trars that they can read any sec- tion of the state and Federal con- stitution, or else answer 10 out of 30 questions about government. Prof. Kallenbach termed the political intelligence tests merely a means of keeping white suprem- acy in Georgia to take the place of the white primary and the poll tax* PROF. KALLENBACH noted that the present list of questions is some improvement over the con- troversial original one of 50 quer- ries which he called ridiculous. He warned, however, that great danger remains in the existence of the present procedure. "By leaving the choice of questions and the acceptance of the an- swers to them up to registration officials, there is a great possi- bility that discrimination will re- sult." he said. NEW FULL-SIZED STANDARD PORTABLE The ROYAL COMPANION -J 1 PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S * PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S * 7 41, ORDER NOW! 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