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November 22, 1953 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1953-11-22

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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1955

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

MAGAZINE PAGE-PAGE THREE

_______________________________________ S I

- - -,.

Choir Concert Will Be Heard Today

More than 250 University music- Ginastera They will conclude the
ians will be heard in a joint con- first portion of. the program with
cert by the Bach Choir and Michi- "Benedictus" and "Agnus Dei"
gan Singers at 8:30 p.m. today from "Mass in E minor" by Anton
in Hill Auditorium. Bruckner.
Seventy-five voices constitute After the intermission, the
the Michigan Singers group under 187-voice Bach Choir, will pre-
the direction of Prof. Maynard
Klein of the School of Music. They
will open the program with 15th
century Josquin de Pres "Ave Ve-
rum Corpus".. Progressing to the
16th century they will continue
with "Kyrie" from "Missa Papae<
Marcelli" by Palestrina. "Sing to
the Lord a New Song" by Schutz
will also be heard.
* * * ' .

THE MICHIGAN Singers will
continue their part of the concert
with "Sing Me the Men" by Gus-
tave Holst and "0 vos omnes .dui
transitis per viam" from "Lamen-
tations of Jeremiah" by Albert
Pre-Christmas
Organ Concert
August Maekelberghe, organist,
and Otto Koch, Bass, will be heard
at 4:30 today at St. John's Epis-
copal Church in downown Detroit.
This will be the third of seven
pre-Christmas concerts, given each
Sunday through December 20.
These concerts are open to the
public..

PROF. MAYNARD KLEIN
... Choir Director
sent "Sleepers, Wake" which is
"Sacred Cantata No. 140" by
J. S.Bach. Prof. Klein also
directs this group.
Faculty members who will be :

William Droppmann, '54SM ,
tenor.
Faculty members who will be
featured in today's program are:
Prof. Emil Raab, violin; Lare
Wardrop, oboe instructor: and!
Miss Marilyn Mason Brown, in-
structor in organ.
STUDENT soloists in the con-
cert will be: William Droppmann,
'54SM, piano; Miss Catherine
Hutchins, '55SM, piano; Mrs. Joan
Marie Dudd, '54SM, soprano; Ro-
bert Kerns, '54SM, baritone; and
Charles Wingert, '55SM, tenor.
The concert is open to the public
free of charge.
WOLVERINE:
Band Calls
For Tryouts
The University's winter-time
"PepBand", formall known as the
Wolverine Band, will hold its first
rehearsal at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow
in Ann Arbor High School.
Students interested in joining
the group, which plays at Univer-
sity basketball games and pre-
sents one formal concert each year,
as well as two outdoor concerts,
may attend the first rehearsal for
tryouts, according to conductor
George Canvender.
Weekly Monday and Thursday
practice sessions are held for the
Wolverine Band. A special in-
vitation is extended to all stud-
ents who play instruments but
do not wish to expend the time
other University bands demand in
rehearsal hours.
Architecture
Exhibit Ends
Students will have their last op-
portunity to see "Recent Architec-
ture in Western Germany," a pho-
tographic survey revealing Ger-
many's approach to the problem
of rebuilding tomorrow.
Sponsored by the West German
government, the photographs have
been on display in the first floor
corridor of the Architecture build-
ing since November 2.
The display, consisting of more
than 70 enlarged photographs of!
German architecture, was as-
sembled by Charlotte Weidler,
German representative of the
Carnegie Institute.

Exhibits
The following eight exhibi-
tions are now showing on the
campus :
ARCHITECTURE BUILDING
-Recent architecture in West-
ern Germany.
CLEMENTS LIBRARY -
Maps of the American Revolu-
GENERALLIBRARY-Ger-
man bookbinding.
MUSEUM OF ARCHAEOL-
OGY-Fisher papyrus of the
Book of the Dead.
LAW LIBRARY-The Con-
stitution.
MICHIGAN HISTORICAL
COLLECTIONS-Early days in'
the Medical School.
MUSEUM OF ART-Fleisch-
man Collection of American
Paintings.
MUSEUMS BUILDING-For-
est conservation.
Civic Theater
Tryouts Start
Tororrow
As their second major produc-
tion of the semester, the Ann Ar-
bor Civic Theater will perform Ar-
thur Laurents' "Home of the
Brave" Jan. 21, 22 and 23 in Lydia
Mendelssohn Theater.
Director William Mehegan set
the time for tryouts at 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow and Tuesday, Nov. 23
and 24 in Rm. B-6 of Ann Arbor
High School.
A DRAMA in three acts, "Home
of the Brave" was written for an
all-male cast. All six roles offer
clear-cut dynamic characterization
and a wide range of emotional im-
pact, according to Mehegan.
Its story presents a psycho-
logical problem of a young sol-
dier who develops a complex
that he has failed in his duty to
a dying buddy. Under pressure
and tense situations he becomes
paralyzed to such an extent he
cannot walk.
But through medical care and
the help of his friends, he is
brought to realize that his prob-
lem is shared by many soldiers in
similar military situations.
* * *
MEHEGAN pointed out that ac-
tual age of men try-outs is "no
factor," although the stage ages
range from 21 to 40.
The Civic Theater is composed
of townspeople and University stu-
dents interested in working on
amateur productions.

Art Collection

The fourth concert in the chor-
al Union Series will feature the
dePaur Infantry Chorus at 8:30
p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium.
Originating in army barracks
and infantry marching brigades,
the all-male choir under the direc-
tion of Leonard dePaur, is the
only GI singing group to turn
professional as a result of its war
time successes entertaining fellow
troops.
* * *
FOLLOWING service concerts
froh Iwo Jima to Berlin, the chor-
us is now on a 175-concert tour
across the country. When on the
road, the 33 singers maintain a
music school to develop voices of
individuals in the group.
Tuesday's program includes.

choir numbers by Brahms, Grieg,
Mozart, Bach, and in a modern
vein French marching songs and
"Rodger Young" by Frank Lees-
ser.
A recent reviewer of a dePaur
Infantry Chorus concert wrote
"Having sung together so many
times, the dePaur Chorus has the
electric precision of attack, the
instinctive blending of voices and
the sure control of dynamics which
can only be developed through
multiplicity of performance."
Concert tickets can be purchased
from the University Musical -So-
ciety, Burton Memorial Tower
from 9 to 11:45 a.m.and 1 to 4:45
p.m. omorrow and Tuesday until
concert time. Ticket prices are $3,
$2.50, $2, and $1.50.

j

U

do

URS

dePaur Infantry Choir
To Give Concert Here

INFANTRY CHORUS

MAJOR EVENT of the autumn
art season at the Museum of
Art is the showing for the first time
in enirety of the collection of 20th
century American oils and water-
colors lent by Lawrence A. Fleisch-
man of Detroit.
Currently on display in the
West Gallery of Alumni Memorial
ROUNDUP:
U' Television
Broadcasts
The University Television Hour
at 1 p.m. today will feature the
world's largest experimental source
of radioactive Cobalt-60 and its
use in research on the preserva-
tion of food.
Prof. Lloyd E. Brownell of the
chemical engineering department,
who is supervisor of the Fission
Products Laboratory, will show
samples of food that have been
preserved by irradiation for over
a year. This is the sixth lesson
of the telecourse: "Engineering:
Building the Modern World."
Dr. Bruce F. Fralick, chairman
of the department of opthalmol-
ogy, and Dr. Harold F. Falls, also
of the department of opthalmology
will discuss eyesight of children
on the second half of the pro-
gram. They will include in their
part of the show a description of
proper lighting to use when watch-
ing television as well as the proper
seating distance from the TV
screen.
* * -
THE TRAINING program for
University athletes will be the sub-
ject of an interview at 6:45 p.m.
tomorrow on "Dateline Ann Ar-
bor," seen over Channel 20,
WPAG-TV.
Sportscaster Gene Bohi, Grad.
will discuss the subject with James
Hunt, Assistant Supervisor in
Physical Education.
A report on local news will com-
plete the show, which is being
written and produced by John
Roach, Grad.
Concert Tour
University organist Robert
Noehren will make a transcontin-
tal concert tour this month.
He will play recitals at Denver,
Boulder, Seattle, Fresno and Waco.
He will also conduct a master class
and give lectures on organ build-
ing in Dallas and San Antonio.

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Hall, the collection favors repre-
sentational rather than non-ob-
jective painting including strong
works by Anshutz, Ryder, Burch-
field, Marsh, Demuth, Davis and
Levine.
Included in the exhibit is "The
Tombstone Cutter" shown above,
by Jack Levine.

Choose your
CHRISTMAS CARDS
NOW
while our stock is complete.
OVERBECK BOOKSTORE
1216 South University Ph. NO 3-4436

WHAT A WONDE
TO BE REMEM
as a
"HOLIDAY D
Beruched
Beruffled..
Beguiling
NYLON NET... Floats
in this bouffant shirt and
stole-a dancing dream
at $39.95.
JUST ONE of many holi.
day dance dresses we
have of all lengths.
PRICED FROM
$17.95 to
$39.95

UMoo

, I

uS.
RFUL WAY /t q'<
MBERED ~-' -
)REAM"
;j t t\ '-
ON FOREST between
South U. and Woshtenaw
PARKiNG IN REAR
(Open Monday Noon tilH 8:30)

r

A PAIR OF PLOYS
MANDRAGOLA
-a comedy by Machiavelli 4
SHOW OF WONDERS
-an interlude by Cervantes
.41
THE ARTS THEATER4
of 209f 2E. Washington NO 8-7301 i

12

Tuesday, Nov. 24-:30
HILL AUDITORIUM
Guard Republican Band-Nov. 30
Tickets: $1.50 - $2.00 --- $2.50 - $3.00 at
UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY
BURTON MEMORIAL TOWER

. j

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~ ~*~7*. . .
~.......... -' 43~
-4 .5. . ttS

Party Charmers
Two fashions.., each two ways
wonderful for your holidays.
Left . . . soft rayon crepe to
wear bare above, or yoke buttoned in.

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cy,. op..,.._ " J
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:.<
E..

w11
~3 eer'
the dresses that light up the town -
whirling from dinner to dancing on
magnificent sweeping skirts - each proving
beautifully that American girls have
the prettiest figures in the world. Sizes 7 to 16.

Right ... velvet bound taffeta
scooped low . .. or covered
demurely with its own little jacket.
Both in misses sizes.
39.95

/rolln

25.00

/ / /lA very wide selection of formal

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