RAMATIC DANCERS: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hoist Away! Trio To Highlight Festival By ROSEMARY OWEN he Dudley-Maslow-Bales Trio present many of the danc'e ines which have gained them onal fame in their first Ann ar appearance at 8:30 p.m. Sa- ay in Pattengill Auditorium. ne Trio, which is from the Dance Group in New York, be presented as part of the se Festival sponsored this by the Inter-Arts-Union and women's physical education rtment. THE FIRST NUMBER will be a Bach Suite, which is referred to as a courteous dance of greeting. Following will be the "Song for a Child"- a solo by Jane Dudley to music by Brahms. Sophie Maslow will take the stage next in her own "Dust Bowl Ballads:" "I Ain't Got No Home In This World Anymore," and "Dusty Old Dust." * * * WILLIAM BALES will occupy the next spot on the program with two numbers from his "Peon Por- i The Cream of a A . the, Comedy FROM THE GARGOYLE and 100 other colleges... pE P S cG O 0 traits:" "Field Hands" and its sequel, "Adios." The final piece for the first half of the program will be "In a Conquered Land," Consisting of two parts: the first, "Cante Flamenco," - "in this our grief," -- danced by Miss Dud- ley, the second, a trio number called "Llanto," - "the renewal of our courage." After intermission, Miss Dudley will present "Vagary" to music by Bartok. The dance is a study of a girl who finds her dream world so absorbing that the real one becomes something of an intru- sion. * * * EXCERPTS FROM "Folksay" featuring Miss Maslow and Bales will follow. They are danced to "On Top of Old Smoky" and "Sweet Betsy from Pike," two folksongs recently brought to great popularity by balladeer Burl Ives. To the sound effects of a washboard and a harmonica, Miss Dudley will present the "Harmonica Breakdown." Sub- titled "Gotta keep goin' or I'll cry," The final piece will be "The Lonely Ones." Each trio member takes a different part in this com- bined effect - Miss Maslow as the woman (revenge is sweet), Bales as the man (I've recreated myself) and Miss Dudley as the familiar other woman (conven- tion be damned). Tickets for Saturday's perform- ance and the Friday night spring recital by the Modern Dance and Ballet Clubs are on sale at the Administration Bldg. Friday prices are 60 and 75 cents; Saturday 90 cents, $1.20 and $1.90. NSA Travel CenterClosing National Student Association's Travel Bureau will close for the year today, director Lee Winneg, '52, announced. More than 300 students have been aided by the Bureau and some 100 plan to go abroad in work, study and travel programs, either in groups or individually, she said. Anyone wishing for information may call Miss Winneg at 257 Jor- dan.{ Next Week at Hill, Auditorium ' YD, YR Will Debate Today The pros and cons of compul- sory health insurance will be voiced at 8:15 p.m. today, when the Young Democrats debate their Republican counterparts in Rm. 3B, Union. The debate topic will be: "Re- solved, That There Be Established a System of Compulsory Health Insurance, Administered by the Federal Government." Taking the affirmative for the Democrats will be Fran Wagman, Grad., YD chairman, and Robert P. Hills, '51E. On the negative side for the Republicans will be Harold L. Ward, '52, and Gilbert Spieldoch, Grad. Prof. George Katona, of the psychology and economics depart- ment, will act as moderator. Prof. Katona is director of the Survey Research Center. Refreshments will be served by the Young Democrats, who will be hosts. Curtis Mann i program chairman for YD, and Bill Halby, '53, is YR program chairman. The debate is open to the pub- lic. Discrimination ChargeMade Dan Sekaros, proprietor of a Huron Street tavern, has been charged with "discrimination" under the State of Michigan Civil Rights Laws. The Ann Arbor Municipal Court will select a jury for the trial at 9 a.m. today. Mrs. Laura Thompson, the complainant, charges that Se- karos refused to serve her alco- holic beverages because of her race. A camera is idleal - f : .., We have all popular brands Purchase Radio & Camera Shop Phone 8696 Church at South University I L IT'S TIME TO THINK about a present for the Grad! A U I D-aily-Burt sapowitch REPAIRS-A workman on the Business Administration Build- ing is shown preparing to hoist a new pilaster up to the library window where it will replace a defective one. Several of the pilasters scattered over the building proved to be too soft and as a result were washing down the sides of the building. They are being replaced by the quarry that originally supplied them, according to Lynn W. Fry, University supervising architect. Tr'aditional Union Opera Group MayBe Revived 11 ; lk A P. =1s . Her.s the best from your favorite college humor magazine - as well as riotous pages from the other top cgmpus humor magazines of the country. Over 250 pages of cartoons, anecdotes, satires, short stories, poems, parodies and limericks from the time of the Gibson Girl down to our own day. The best of the undergraduate work of the now famous writers and artists such as Peter Arno, Robert senchley, Whitney Darrow, Jr., Paul Gallico and scores of others, some still in college. $3.00 Mimes, the traditional producer of the Union Opera, may return to the campus scene this semes- ter. A select club, Mimes was made up of men who had participated in Union Operas and who were interested in preserving the Opera's spirit over a period of years. * * * ITS NAME can be found on the posters and programs which ac- companied the famous Opera productions of the 1920s. If reorganized, Mimes would provide some continuity for the Wan gensteen Will Speak on Cancer Dr. Owen H. Wangensteen, pro- fessor of surgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School, will speak on "The Clinical Aspects of Visceral Cancer" at 2 p.m. today in the second floor amphitheatre of the University Hospital. The annual lecture is given un- der the auspices of the Medical School in honor of Dr. William J. Mayo, a graduate of the Medical School. Tug Week Jobs Interviews for committee chair- men positions for next fall's Tug Week will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday in the Union, Ned Niles, '51E, general chairman announced yesterday. Positions open: tug of war, tick- ets, publicity, rally and Sophomore Satire. Any student is eligible to interview, Miles said. Union Opera organization, ac- cording to Jim Ebersole, '50, general manager of the 1950 Opera. THE NUCLEUS of the student group which is attempting the reorganization is composed of 30 seniors and men with two years experience on the Opera staff or cast. These men decided on the membership requirements and elected an additional 23 prospec- tive members from the staff and cast, according to Ebersole. Ebersole has sent letters to 400 Mimes alumni asking their approval of reactivation plans. These alumni have also been invited to attend a banquet on May 26 at the Union at which final plans for the reactivation will be discussed with the in- terested student group. Official recognition of the group would have to come from the Office of Student Affairs be- fore Mimes can be officially re- vived. Dr. Geistweit To Speak ateRackham Dr. Harold Nash Geistweit, well- known West Coast radio and tele- vision minister, will speak on "Youth, Community-Everybody's Business" at 8:30 p.m. today at Rackham Lecture Hall, in a public meeting sponsored by Lane Hall and the Ann Arbor Council of Churches. Dr. Geistweit is one of the pio- neers in the field of religious ra- dio. Read Daily Classifieds -i vi PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S * PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S * I -J -J -J J ".- U' GC Q~ i ' ' " I ' ' ' Prices Effective Thursday, a Friday, Saturday We Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities. m -I - * j At your local bookstore or write to WM. PENN PUBLISHING CORP., 221 Fourth Avenue, New York - 1 I It's H. Already! ~-T 1 Your New 1950 COLGAT~AM~Y ATIJVST PRICES PALMOLV DENTAL CREA GINDIE 434ORANT' Economy 59 HI 7-I Size'V SEL INE' HALO ...OGT r::;": .c°". SeA(A fll _ ':; >Ka _i A M ~ a : :T 43 -J -J -Q t/ J SAT. 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