PAGE ETORT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1954 rAG1~ ETGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1954 OPENS WITH 'TOSCA': Detroit Opera Completes Festival ProgramPlans Band Day Spotlights State Students By DAVID KAPLAN Programming and casting for the Detroit Grand Opera Festival, which begins on Nov. 15'at the Ma- sonic Temple, has now been com- pleted. .There will be nine productions in the season this year, with Pucci- ni's "Tosca," opening the Festi- val. Metropolitan Opera tenor Fer- ruccio Tagliavini will be heard in the part of Mario and Wilma Spence in the title role. The repertory follows on Tuesday with the first Detroit production of Strauss' "Der Rosenkavalier," to be sung in German. Laurel Hur- ley, recently signed by the Metro- politan Opera Association, will be heard as the Princess. Tagliavini in "La Bohemie" Tagliavini returns to the roster on Wednesday together with Ann Ayars in "La Boheme," in which another newcomer, Betty Bonini, Head of Pres Club Named Brewster P. Campbell, executive city editor of the Detroit Free Press, was elected president of the University Press Club of Michigan yesterday. Fred S. Smith, editor of the Ev- art Review, was named first vice- president, and George * Mather, editor of the Albion Evening Re- corder, was named as second vice- president. Re-elected secretary - treasurer was Cleland B. Wyllie, editor of the University Information and News Service, while Prof. Wesley H. Mauer, chairman of the Uni- versity journalism department was re-named secretary of the Press Club's foreign journalism fellow- ships. will sing the role of Musetta, with Richard Torigi as Marcello. A performance of "La Traviata" has been scheduled for Friday with Eva Likova and Walter Cassel in the leading roles. Saturday's matinee f ea tu r es Humperdinck's "Hansel and Gret- el," with Anna Russell as the witch. The opera will be sung in English and has such interesting new features as a forest that moves. New Tenor in "Aida" "Aida" will be performed Sat- uirday evening with Frances Yeend as Aida, and a new Italian tenor Signor Barbi singing the role of Rhadames. Sunday matinee will see two stars of the Metropolitan Opera Company, Hilde Gueden and Frank Guarrera, as Gilda and Rigoletto in Verdi's "Rigoletto." Blanche Thebom, the Met's mez- zo-soprano, will be starred in "Car- men" on Sunday evening. Robert Rounseville will sing the role of Don Jose opposite Miss Thebom. Concludes With "Showboat" The season will end Wednesday, Thanksgiving eve, Nov. 24, with the New York City Opera Com- pany's new production of Jerome Kern's "Showboat." Starred in the operetta will be Robert Rounse- ville as Ravenal, Laurel Hurley as Magnolia and Lawrence Winters as Joe. Special- prices have been ar- ranged for "Hansel and Gretel" and "Showboat." Prices for "Han- sel" are $3.60 to $.75. "Showboat" prices range from $4.20 to $1.80. Prices for all other operas are $4.80 to $1.20. Anyone interested in ticket in- formation may write to the Detroit Grand Opera Association, 722 Ham- mond Bldg., Detroit. Mark Clark To Lecture On Far East Gen. Mark Clark will open the 1954 University Lecture Course at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Audi- torium. Currently president of The Cita- del, South Carolina military aca- demy, the retired general will speak on the timely topic of "The Struggle in Asia." Commander-in-Chief of the United Nations command in Ko- rea, Gen. Clark directed the truce negotiations at Panmunjom and signed the armistice agreement. He has had first-hand experience in economic and military problems of the Far East. Besides serving during the Kor- ean conflict, General Clark was a captain in World War I and was wounded in action. He also served as commanding general sf the Fifth Army and later of the 15th Army group in Italy during World War II. Following World War II, Gen. Clark served as United States High Commissioner in Austria. In 1947 he acted as deputy to the Secretary of State at both the London and Moscow meetings of the Council of Foreign. Ministers where a treaty for Austria was dis- cussed. General Clark retired from the Army last October. Tickets for all of the attractions offered by the Lecture Course this season may be purchased between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Hill Auditorium box office. r MASSED MUSIC-More than 7,00 bandsmen from 111 State high school bands, gathered on the Michigan Stadium field at half-time yesterday to participate in the sixth Annual Band Day sponsored by the Michigan Marching Band. The noted New York band conductor, Edwin Franko Goldman, di- rected the massed bands in three of his own compositions, "Parade No. 1," "Shenandoah" and "On the Mall." Chinese Independence Day Celebrated Today; 'U' Students Honor .Double-Ten' at Rackham Have any dragons been seen roaming the streets? Chinese students from the Univer- lic with a program of short skits rossn the Pactis, msity and surrounding areas last and music. Across the Pacific this. might be night in the Rackham Building.Al- Sponsored by the Chinese Stu- a likely prospect because today is B dents Club, the event was also at- Independence Day for China, and though firecrackers and dragons tended by Chinese students from the festivities traditionally include weren't in order, the students hon- Detroit, Michigan State College ahe fetinsgtraperiragoynm dored Sun Yat-Sen and the repub- and Michigan State Normal. a fire-breathing paper dragon. Celebrated on the tenth day of the tenth month, the holiday com- memorates the foundation of the first successful Chinese republic by Sun Yat-Sen in 1911. Prior to the republic, China was torn with wars between powerful feudal landlords. Annually Double-10 is celebrated in the oriental tradition with color- ful parades of brightly dressed merry-makers. Featured in the parade is a huge, brilliantly painted paper dragon that is carried on the heads of as many as fifty men. Weaving from side to side through the streets, the monster alternately frightensB IG G E and amuses the onlookers much like the huge paper-mache masks of American parades. In Ann Arbor, however, Double- 10 was celebrated with a party by This camera takes the guesswork out of photography- Brilliant, extra-large viewfinder lets you see the pictme exactly as you'll take it-assures always-in-focus shots Double exposure prevention saves pictures, saves film. Pre. cision-synchronized plug-in flash allows you to take pictures indoors or on dark days. 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