PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1951 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1951 U _______________________________________ 'IMPETUOUS ROYALTY': Richard II To Open Tonight q - Impetuous royalty will fight for the throne today through .Satur- day at Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre when the speech department presents Shakespeare's historical play, Richard IL The saga of a king who prizes his crown above all else, the play shows how King Richard (Nafe Katter, Grad) loses his kingship through his childishness and folly. * * * SCOURGE OF HIS regal blood is Bolingbroke (Richard Burgwin, Grad., who dispossesses Richard to become King Henry IV. A cast of more than thirty will appear in the production as noblemen and citizens in rugged fourteenth century Eng- land, taking sides in the clash for executive supremacy. Backing the lead royalty will be Kenneth Rosen, as John of Gaunt and Conrad Stolzenbach, Grad, as the Duke of York, both uncles to Richard, and Gwen Amer and Marilyn McWood, '53, as the Queen and the Duchess of York. THE PLAYERS will form a fancy pattern garbed in colorful costumes mostly hand-made by speech department costumers. The biggest mass project was creating armor for the rival armies. Used for this purpose was muslin and fish netting. The production is under the di- rection of Prof. Claribel Baird of the speech department. Tickets for all performances are on sale at the Mendelssohn box office from 10 a.m. to theatre time, 8 p.m. Regularly priced at $1.20, 90 cents and 60 cents, students may purchase tickets at a special fifty cent rate for today's and tomorrow's performances. Santa To Visit Here Monday Santa Claus, Mrs. Claus, eight regular reindeer including red- nosed Rudolph and an elf help- mate will arrive in Ann Arbor Monday for a special visit spon- gored by the Ann Arbor Retail Merchants Association. Santa will tour the country in his sleigh starting at 2:30 p.m. University students will have a chance to see him pass on N. Uni- versity and State Street. Read Daily Classifieds Moody Asks For Unified U.S. Poliey By VIRGINIA VOSS "It's about time the United States stopped playing politics with foreign policy," Sen. Blair' Moody declared last night in the first address of the Michigan Con- ference on Higher Education in Kellogg Auditorium. "We go into the international struggle for men's minds severely handicapped when we have people in the United States Senate who claim our international policy is a blind giveaway," Sen. Moody ex- plained. Lashing out at politicians who would turn the United States into an isolationist country, the former Detroit News Washington corres- pondent cited a confused foreign policy as the greatest danger to America today. Sparks,f alters To Talk To Journalists Today _________- - - BASSO BUFFO HERE: Baccaloni To Perform In Concert Tomorrow Fred Sparks, noted foreign cor- respondent for the Chicago Daily News, will be co-speaker with Basil L. Walters in the second of the University Lectures in Journalism series at 3 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Sparks, who has just returned from Korea, is the guest of Wal- ters, director of the American So- ciety of Newspaper Editors, who is the scheduled speaker. He will ap- pear at the lecture and at the cof- fee hour which will follow at 4 p.m. in the journalism department news room. Both the lecture and the coffee hour are open to the public. THE TWO newspapermen will also speak tonight at an initiation banquet of Sigma Delta Chi, jour- nalism fraternity. A former editor of Parade, national Sunday supplement, and former professor of journal- . w In a Choral Union concert at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Audi- torium, Salvatore Baccaloni, basso buffo will feature such program specialties as Gounod's "Le veau d'or" from "Faust" and Mozart's "Ha, wie will ich triumphieren" from "Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail." The program will also include selections from Pergolesi, Verdi, Schubert, Beethoven, Ravel, Mo- zart and Moussorgsky. ,, , * SINCE HIS first American tour in 1938 Baccaloni has entertained audiences throughout the country in operas, concerts, operettas and over major networks. The Metro- politan, San Francisco and Chi- cago Opera Companies are among the companies which have en- gaged him. Now boasting a voice range of two and a half octaves, from low E flat to high A, the virtuoso began his musical training at CORRECTION: 115 E. Liberty will be open on MONDAY EVENINGS instead of what was incorrectly stated in Tuesday's paper. his home in Rome when six years old as a boy soprani in choristers school attached to the Sistine Choir. After a brief time spent as an architect Baccaloni returned to music under the tutelege of Giu- seppe Kaschmann, baritone. FOLLOWING his debut in Rome when twenty-two years old the basso buffo met Arturo Toscanini, who was instrumental in bringing him to La Scala in Milan. During the years that Bacca- loni sang with La Scala he also performed for audiences in Eng- land, on the Continent and in North and South America. In 1930 he sailed for the United States to sing with the Chicago Opera Company and in December, 1940, he opened at the Metropoli- tan Opera House in New York with a portrayal of "Don Pas- quale." BASIL L. WALTERS -Daily-Larry Bestmann REGAL RANCOR-Iing Richard II (Nafe Katter, Grad) defends his crown from Bolingbroke (Richard Burgwin, kneeling) in the speech department presentation of Shakespeare's Richard II. The play will open at 8 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Students for Eisenhower Club To Be Formed Here Dec. 6 NEW IDEAS IN COMFORT %%> S x LORD JEFF's SWEATER Now, two new exclusive features by Lord Jeff bring you a new lease on ease! The slope seam at the shoulder and the bi-angle cons!ruction at the armhole means better fit, added freedom. Ad this is a truly luxurious sweater-a superb Fur-Kasha blend of 60% fine imported wool, 30% fur, 10% pure cashmere. Campus political activity quick- ened last night with an announce- ment by Dave Cargo, Grad., that a "Students for Eisenhower" club will form here December 6. The group will seek immediate recognition then by the Office of Student Affairs, Cargo reported. The organizers have already made tentative plans to invite Milton Eisenhower, brother of Gen. Eis- enhower, or Sen. Duff (R-Pa.), another Eisenhower backer, to speak here in the spring, Nucleus of the new group in- cludes Cargo, Len Wilcox, '52, Dave Belin, '54L, and Walt Hansen, '53L. Football To Be DebateToi "To be or not to be" in football will again be discussed as the rela- tive merits and criticisms of the intercollegiate gridiron are aired at the Speech Department debate at 4 p.m. today in Rackham Lec- ture Hall. Taking the affirmative side will be varsity football players, Ralph Stribe, '52, tackle, Merritt Green, '53, end, newly appointed captain for next year's team. Phil Van Houten '52, pre-law student Glen Grossman, '52, will on the other hand review the recent arguments and criticisms against football. The debate will be handled more as a discussion on the controver- sial subject, and audience ques- tioning will take place after both sides of the problem have been presented. Acting as general chairman for the debate will be Prof. N. Edd Miller of the speech department. DR. FRANK RYBA OPTOMETRIST ... eye examinations ... glasses 238 Nickels Arcade Phone 2-88 69 MEANWHILE, the Young Re- publicans are planning to bring Gov. Earl Warren to campus. Ac- cording to Cargo, who is president of the group, Warren has had to cut many engagements off of his schedule because of recent illness, but is trying to rework his sched- ule to include an appearance here in March. Aso on the political scene, the lawyers for Taft Club has indi- cated a desire to join forces with the Young Republicans and in- vite Sen. Robert A. Taft to speak here. Cargo ifelt this would be impossible because: "We do not sponsor political candidates as such in the club and we do not definitely merge with any politi- cal committee in order to spon- sor a candidate." "Furthermore," Cargo contin- ued, "the Young Republicans could not get Senator Taft to speak here because he does not have an open date. He doesn't want to come and speak here because it is against his policy to speak more than twice in a state before the Republican convention next July, and he has already spoken here twice. Aso, the Senator thinks he has Michigan pretty well in the bag." This week John Tope, former national president of the Young Republicans, will speak at the Young Republican club meeting Thursday at 7:30 in the League. Neil Staebler, chairman of the state Democratic committee, will be the speaker at the Young Demo- crats meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Union. This week also marks the be- ginning of a new civil liberties group on campus. All students who are interested in dealing with the problems of academic freedom on campus may attend the open or- ganizational meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday in the League. SEN. MOODY spoke last night ism at New York University, on "The Struggle for Men's Minds." Sparks hasecovered eventsin the Stressing the vital importance of Far East, Europe and Africa, winning the intellectual struggle, among them MacArthur's occu- he proceeded to outline the domes- pation of Tokyo. tic and foreign conflicts this na- Walters, a newspaperman for tion must resolve if it is to face more than 26 years, is executive the world with a program of na- editor of the Knight newspaper tional unity. chain, which includes the Detroit Besides keeping politics out of Free Press, Chicago Daily News, foreign poicy, the junior senator Akron Beacon Journal and Miami stressed the following points: Herald. He has been president of 1. "We must not condone poor the Associated Press Managing ethics in Congress."The "mink Editors Association and secretary coat scandals, and "smear cam- of the American Society of News- paigns" must be issues in the paper Editors. 1952 campaign. Walters' lecture, "The Forgotten 2. Ii we are to have military Right," is the second of nine talks strength to resist the spread of designed to interpret the signifi- Russian aggression, we must cance of the daily newspaper in have domestic controls for a society. Other speakers in the ser- temporary period. ies will be Nathaniel R. Howard, 3. "A very important thing in editor of the Cleveland News; Les- winning the minds of Asiatics is ter Markel, Sunday editor of the making our system live up to New York Times; and Raymond what documents say it should L. Crowley, managing editor of be," Moody declared. the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Americans will have to "elevate their posture to the' world." In Ski Club Meeting concluding Moody pointed out that though Americans are the great- Slated for Today est salesmen in the world, they haven't proved it in the interna- tional test of salesmanship. Ullr, the University ski club, will Sen. Moody's address followed a h o 1 d its yearly organizational dinner held last night at the Union meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. for representatives of 40 Michigan 3G of the Union. educational institutions partici- A movie entitled "Focus on pating in the conference. On hand Skis" will be shown and plans to welcome the delegates was Uni- will be discussed for between- versity Vice-President Marvin L. semester and spring vacation ski- Niehuss. ing trips TYPEWR ITING SHORTHAND ACCOUNTING OFFICE MACHINES PLACEMENT SERVICE HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE William at State Phone 7831 Founded 1915 SBig arm Blankets $10and up UBK t i t E s 1 e 9 c 1. MO Indian Artist To TalkToday Angela Trindade, modern artist from India, will speak on "Chris- tian Art in India" at 8:30 p.m. to- day in Lane Hall at the opening of an exhibit of her paintings. Sponsored by the Student Reli- gious Association and Lane Hall, the exhibit will be shown from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. daily until Dec. 6 in the Lane Hall library. Miss Trindade will be available at these times to discuss her work. CHRISTMAS WORK RUSSELL KELLY OFFICE SERVICE, DETROIT is hiring women for Christmas vacation work. Typists, stenos, clerks in Detroit watch D. 0. B. Contact Office of Appointments. . . 11 . . . frOm the most complete and varied selection of the finest in TAILORED TO MEASURE for MEN and WOMEN + 50 Coro Trousers (OTHERS TO $100) TAILORED CLOTHES THAT FIT AND STAY FIT KAHN TAILVRE \'LVTHES f1 :4 ..4 4J 613 EAST WILLIAM STREET READ DAILY CLASSIFIEDS I i L. 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