PME b'n[ THE MICHIGAN DAILY WrnNIESDAY, ?1TA4 S, 1954 VX~ 'ST~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 19~4 INTER-ARTS FESTIVAL: . One-Act Fantasies To Be Presented1 A gold and red bangled dress that was bought in the Paris flea market for $1.50 will be only one of the unusual items on display Saturday. Drama and ballet will be fea- tured as part of the four-day In- ter-Arts Union Festival. "A Cock- tail Quadrille," by Gayle Greene, '56, and "Higher and Higher Down," by Renee Kluger, Grad., will be the two one-act plays to be presented in addition to the ballet "The Legend of John Hen- ry," with music by Don Harris, Grad., and choreography by Robin Squier, '54. THF FLEA market dress will be the costume of the Lady Poet, Cocktail Quadrille." The Lady played by Lou Stinson, '54, in "A Poet also strums a psaltery, an ancient stringed instrument of the zither type. Playwright Greene had originally a scheduled a dul- cimer for the part, but a psaltery was the closest thing available. With a hint of "Alice in Won- derland," "A Cocktail Quadrille explores Alice's progression from another world to the real world. Masks and a turn-about dress will accompany this change. Alice, played by Diane Halbrook, '54, and David, played by Ross Finney, '54, are the central figures of the play. The rest of the cast, includes a Dilettante, played by Andrew Duncan, an unbearded ar- cheologist, in the person of Nor- man Hartweg, '56, and various mistresses, played by Sue Gold- berg, '57, and Ellyne Cosden, '57. Carl, the host, played by Larry Hulack, Grad., opens the play, and introduces a cast of characters that range from an Attractive Young Man, played by John Kaz- mierowski, to a Wild-eyed Wom- an, played by Marian Mercer, '57SM. SL Agenda Student Legislature will dis- cuss, the following motions and reports when it meets at 7:30 p.m. today in the Strauss-An- derson dining room of East Quadrangle: NSA report Appointments Lecture Committee Report Academic Freedom Report League House Discrimination A motion that: a short time after the Lansing Hearings of the Clardy Committee are held, the Academic Freedom Sub- committee hold a public meet- ing at which any students or faculty member who has testi- fied before the Committee may state and explain the position that he took before it. Youngsters To Perform At Festival AMENDMENT FEARED: Seaway Debate Starts Today i 4 t] V F F 0 p Si a e G E QUADRILLE-The Lady Poet gazes into her psaltery, while another personality of sits by. THE rAALE CHORUS, in grey fantasyk flannels, of Jim Tucker, '55, Lar- concerns ry Schwartz, '56, and Earl Sayer, love with '57 alternate between a "tragic statue, p Greek chorus and an even more '57A&D tragic contemporary chorus," in will be the words of its author. Julia, pla Sequined props have been '56, falls made for the play by Mary Jane then iec' Forsythe, vice-president of the erage co Potter's Guild. One of her special by Josep items is the sequined pen and be- jewelled notebook of the Gossip Columnist, played by Louis Tal- Co ayco. V "Higher and Higher Down," a -Daily-Chuck Kelsey space, idly strumming "A Cocktail Quadrille" by Renee Kuger, Grad, a young girl who falls in a statue of Romeo. The played by Tom Welton, will be tan, and his hair curled with brilliantine. ayed by Ann Albert Young, sin love with him, and. ,nsiders in favor of "av- llege-boy "Peter," played h Silver, '57. Mbine a 'CATION in Communism, Socialism Two Sides of Same Coin -Clardy (Continued from Page 1) opinion. He thinks anti-McCarthy- only groups in the country that ism will blow over; but it is part are able to do anything effective of his job to. convince the public about Communism. that his committee and others like it are necessary, by continuing e c The Lansing Republican neverI did get around to admitting that there might be some loyal Amer- icans among those who attack his committee. "We all make mistakes," he concedes, "Joe and I are as willing as the next guy to admit we may make a mistake once in a while." But, he addes, "not as many as the 'muddleheads' claim." Despite the attacks, public opin- ion is still behind the investigat- ing committees in Rep. Clardy's Fourth Play Bill To Open Three one-act plays will be in- cluded in the fourth laboratory bill presented by the speech de- partment at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Friday in the Women's Athletic Building. Anatole France's "The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife" directed by Conrad Stolzenbach, Grad., will be the first of the one-act presenta- tions. Directed by Arnold Stein, '54, "The Dragon" is a Chinese play adapted from an Asiatic opera. The speech department presenta- .tion will be based not on the au- thentic but on an Americanized version of the Oriental theater piece. Robert Armstrong, Grad., is directing Eva LeGallienne's dram- atization of Louis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland." There is a DEMAND For young Americans care- fully trained for successful careers in Foreign Trade or Foreign Service Leading American business firms have come to depend on the American Institute for Foreign Trade as a major source of trained personnel for their international opera- tions. A hard-hitting, intensive one- year course at the graduate level will give you the back- ground you need in languag- es, area studies and business to expose Communists and the danger they represent. And "the Communists are ev- erywhere," he claims. "There is no group that doesn't have some. The percentage may differ, but both big and small schools have been in- filtrated," The University, which he calls "his" school, has no ex- ceptional number of Communists, he says assuringly, but is a typi- cal case. with work toward your BA or MA degree at CSl'aq4 Coll~ege June 21 to August 13, 1954 * A marvelous place to spend your vacation * Undergraduate study * Small classes * A complete schedule of academic subjects For further information, write DIRECTOR OF SUMMER SESSION COLORADO COLLEGE, DEPT. 1 COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO Events oday "Characteristics of an Industrial Relations System for Atomic Ener- gy Development" will be discussed by OscAr Smith, Director of Or- ganizafion and Personnel, Atomic Energy Commission, at 4 p.m. in R. 130, business administration school.# Two chemistry lectures will be} delivered by J. L. Franklin, TexasN chemist, under the sponsorship of t the chemistry department. "Ionization Energies by Electronr Impact" will be the title of the ad- P dress before a chemical-physic se- I minar at 4:10 p.m. Rm. 2308, Chemistry Building. At 8 p.m., Franklin will speak on "Electrons Impact Measurements of Ehergiess of Ions" in Rm. 1300, Chemistrye Building.l How the F sta rs t ,a got started. Red Barber says: "I was a student working my way through the University of Florida when I was asked to be substitute announcer on a farm program. That got me a job. In two years, I be- came chief announcer. My break in sports came in '34 when I broadcast Cincinnati Reds games. Been doing Major League play-by-play ever since!" Aw/F*o Over 3.000 school children from the first through the eighth grades will participate in the fifth annual' Festival of Song at 2 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. The Festival, under the auspices of WUOM. will bring together pu- pils from 104 Washtenaw County schools, two Ann Arbor schools and classes from Genesee and oth- er surrounding counties. Today's program of 20 songs is part of the year-long Festi- val of Song broadcast over WUOM for children throughout rural areas. The children come together from a 20 to 25 mile radius without any rehearsal other than in their own class- rooms, to sing the songs that they have heard on WUOM's Festival. The Festival Youth Chorus, under the direction of Marguerite Hood, will also per- form. The event will be carried over WUOM and WUOM-Flint directly from Hill Auditorium. Orien Dalley, music director of! WUOM, and Janice Cobb, who teaches the singing classes on WUOM, will be in charge of the program. They will be assisted by1 Nancy Bartholomew '55SM, and Ida Nyberg '55SM. This is one of 13 such communi- ty gatherings to be held in the state with the help of county school superintendents for pupils enrolled in the Festival of Song Radio Classroom. (continued from page 1) mer opposition in favor of the SEAWAY proponents also think project. the waterway is vital to main- Seaway Co. Sen. Wiley got his Foreign Re-. taMining the Midwest's present pros- lations Committee to approveha perity. The Lake Superior ore de- Supporters of the Brownsen $3,000,000 survey for long the amendment maintain that the, dormant Passamaquoddy Tidal posits at their present rate of con- $105,000,000 seaway expenditure!ojtnthPasne-NewBruns sumption are not expected to last wick border. Shortly afterward 20 more years. will be an unnecessary burden on Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R- Without low cost transportation our national debt. They claim that Me.) and Sen. Frederick Payne (R- of the high grade Labrador and mid-west steel operators and other Me.) changed their sentiments South American deposits, the pros- groups favored by the bill could and voted in favor of the Seaway. perity of the Mid-West may de- buy the bonds. And according to Secretary McKay came out in cline. the courts the Seaway would still favor of the Colorado River Stor- be owned and operated by the gov- g rjc al nJaySn- Economically the Seaway will be onedandopeatedby he ov-age Project early in January. Sen. aid the Midwest in several ways. ernment. Eugene Millikin (R-Colo.) and five anstaionexpesesrom Rep. Louis Rabaut,( D-Mich.) other Colorado Basin senators soon the Midwest to the East Coast summarized the views of the became Seaway backers. will be sliced extensively. amendment opposition yesterday * * * 1 * * when he said, "Such a move is un- THE SEAWAY'S Republican op- precedented, unwise, and unwork- position also received some direct THE LOWER transportation able. It would place the project on pressure from the administration. costs will also result in a cost of an unrealistic, unsound business Admiral Arthur M. Radford, Chair- living decrease in the Middle- basis. It would embarrass us in the man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Western area, and a rise in pro- eyes of our neighbors and fellow warned senators that the Russians duction because it will be more nations." have six times as many submar- convenient to 'import greater * * * ines as the Germans did during quantities of raw materials. IN 1952 the Senate disappoint- World War II. The railroad and coal inter- ed Seaway supporters by defeat- This means that much added ests, the main opponents of the ing the measure 43-40. The Atlan- danger to United States shipping Seaway, both fear mass unem- tic and Gulf Coast states, sensi- tive to railroad and coal interests united to delay opening up St. Lawrence navigation through to the Great Lakes. However early this year pres- sure was applied and by some astute political maneuvering the Upper House gave the Seaway its blessing. Sen. .Alexander Wiley (R-Wis.) and Secretary of In- terior Douglas McKay worked behind the scenes to swing for- in the Atlantic in case of an- other world conflict. If the St. Lawrence was navigable all the way to the Great Lakes, United States ships could leave ports in the Great Lakes region, sail up the St. Lawrence and across the Atlantic to Europe. The distance in the open ocean from the mouth of the St. Law- rence to England is much shorter than that from the United States Eastern seaboard to English ports ployment in their industries. The railroads think that the ships will monopolize the trade thus putting their men out of work. The coal leaders, including United Mine Workers President John L. Lewis, are violently op- posed to the Seaway because of their-fear that Midwest industries will start importing the majority of their coal from the cheaper European markets. >, I ,III lead in histo *Published In I 2A FIIS AGREE WITh MORE PEOIPLE THA~JANYV OTH EPR C rGA R.ETTE -'Il 'ER wshall's Book hop at 211 South State Across from Lane Hall Open Six evenings of every week tilt 10 P.M. ' II i