FAGN T-R-- MICHIGAN UATT V j&ilrvlkpWk, . IPW -- . - - - - - - -- ia- wrav a r, nc.ars aaj a 4l.JCnAINI TLI CA W I'. I --. li SUND)AY, M~ARCH 20, 1955 ''I %JI IL.d'VYI J ,N 1-11 j YYL..L.IX Wilder P1ay Satirizes Man By HARRY STIdUSS A satirical view of mankind's history will be unraveled as "The Skin of Our Teeth" is presented Wednesday through Saturday. The Pulitzer Prize winning com- edy by Thornton Wilder will be presented at 8 p.m. at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. A 5,000 Year Marriage Centering about Mr. and Mrs. Antrobus, an average couple of Excelsior, New Jersey, the play carries them through their 5,000 years of marriage, mixing times and places together. Wilder uses lantern slides to depict the advance of the ice age and has the hero report by tele- graph that he has just invented the wheel, and is getting along well with the alphabet. But in spite of fire, flood, pesti- lence, the seven-year locusts, the ice age, the black pox and the double feature, wars and depres- sions, the Antrobuses have sur- vived. Among those surviving with them is Sabina, their maid of sorts. They have survived: by the skin of their teeth. (A production of this play will be in France this summer as part of a Salute to France. It will star Helen Hayes and Mary Martin.) Departmental Personnel In the speech department pro- duction, the direction is by Prof. William P. Halstead. Variable, col- lapsible scenery is by Prof. Jack E. Bender and the obviousy out- -Daily-John Hirtzel UNCONCERNED--Earl Sayer (Announcer) reads the scene while Henrietta Hermelin (Sabina) and Paul Rebillot (Mr. Antrobush). act it out. andish costumes were designed by Phyllis Pletcher. Paul Rebillot, Grad., and Valerie Schor, Grad., are the long-living couple; wily Sabina Is Henrietta Hermelin, '55. The Antrobus child- ren are Mary Davey, '57 and Norm Hartweg, '56. The Lydia Mendelssohn box of- fice will be open beginning tomor- row for the sale of tickets. Prices for the comedy are $1.50, $1.20 and 90 cents. A special student price of 75 cents will hold for Wednes- day and Thursday perfohnances. Braque's Prints, Contemporary Art Exhibited in Alumni Memorial Hall Arts and Letters in New York, and circulated by the Smithsonian In- stitute. These American drawings stand up well against the Braque exhib- it. The work fluctuates from soc- ial commentary to atmosphere, but maintains a generally high level of quality. One of the surprising aspects of this exhibit is the lack of pure ab- straction. There is such pains- takingly detailed work as the "Ho- sanna" woodscape, but in general a freedom in the realistic frame prevails. One of the outstanding draw- ings of the collection is Eugene Berman's "Ischia," a dark, woody glimpse of Venice in ink and wash. The clean use of line is shown in Robert Gwathway's "The Stan- dard Bearer," in which a politician type figure holds a standard top- ped by a cross between the Ameri- can eagle and a peace-dove. 'U' Organist To Present Last Recital Robert Noehren, University or- ganist, will present the final pro- gram in a series of three public recitals at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Johan Sebastian Bach's "Passa- caglia and Fugue in C minor" will open the program to be followed by Johannes Brahms' Chorale Pre- ludes, "Mein Jesu, der du mich," "Herzlich thut mich verlangen," and "O Welt, ich muss dich las- sen." Closing the first half of the program will be Paul Hindemith's "Sonata I," including "Massig schnell, lebhaft," "Sehr Langsam," "Phantasic, frei," and "Ruhig be- wegt." After the intermission, Noehren will play "Air with Variations" by Leo Sowerby, "Jardin suspendu," by Jehan Alain and a Symphonic Meditation for Ascension, "Trans- ports de joie d'une ame devant la gloire du Christ qui est la sienne." Art Lecture Musicologist Prof. Louise Cuyer wil lecture on European art at 3:15 p~m. today in Aud- torium A, Angell Hall. Concentrating on the Low Countries, Prof. Cuyler will dis- cuss their music and painting. She spent last summer in Brus- sels on a Fulbright grant. Supplementing her talk will be slides of famous paintings, photographs she took in Eur- ope, and records. Music School To PerfOrm Bach Passion Cooperate with High Schools in Program The music school, in coopera- tion with the Michigan High Schools' Chorale Choir, will pre- sent Bach's "St. Matthews Pas-. sion" at 8 p.m. Friday in Hill Aud- itorium. Under the direction of Prof. Maynard Klein and Prof. James B. Wallace, the performance will include students and faculty mem- bers of the music school as well as the 1,400-voice choir. Soloists Listed Soloists include Frances Greer, Harold Haugh, Prof. Philip Duey, Arlene Sollenberger, John Moser, Grad., James Berg, '56M, Donald Nelson, Grad., William Merrel, Grad., Joan Marie Dudd, Grad., June Howe, '55SM and Elizabeth Fischer, '55SM. Instrumentalists include Mari- lyn Mason, organist; Phillip Stein-. haus, harpsichordist and Prof. Per- cival Price, carilloneur. Friday's performance will be the third performance presented by the music school. Previous "Passions" were done in 1952 and 1953. Tremendous Undertaking Describing the -."Passion" as a "tremendous undertaking," Prof. Klein said "we are proud to do it. With separate rehearsals for 1,800 performers, including the. Univer- sity Choir and Symphony Orches- tra, bringing them together is some job of coordination."-, The second balcony will be en- tirely filled by the 1400 high school choir, from 25 Michigan schools, which will be conducted by Prof. Wallace. "The Chorale Choir is a dis- tinctive thing," Prof. Klein com- mented. "It is the reflective re- sponses to the scriptures and takes the place of a congregation." Marks Clnintaton The Passion itself "Marks the culmination of a development that began during the first centuries of Christian worship," according to Prof. Hans T. David who wrote program notes for the work. "As early as the fifth century," Prof. David continues, "the nar- rative of the suffering of Christ was presented on Good Friday in 'solemn passion'." "This means that the Passion was chanted in a somewhat rich- er manner than that customarily applied to the Gospels." Few Can Compare "The work is one of Bach's most monumental and inspired crea- tions, and there are few works in the immense music literature that can be 'compared with the St. Matthew Passion in depth and in- tensity of religious expression," Prof. David said. Prof. Klein noted that each year more than 200 people are turned away from the free performance. The full house would warrant a second performance "so that more people could hear the work and 50 schools instead of 25 could per- form." "But," Prof. Klein added, "some- how that is impossible." Huge rocks carved by wind and sea tower into unusual rock forma- tions in the Upper Peninsula. Pop- ularly called "picture rocks" they have become a major tourist at- traction. The University will be host to- morrow to one of the most cele- brated scholars of the present age. Prof. Francis Dvornik, professor of Byzantine history at Harvard's Dumbarton Oaks Research Center in Washington, D. C., will deliver a lecture on Byzantine elements apparent in Russian political theory. Explains Puzzling Features The talk will cover issues im- portant to present day as well as ancient Russian political strategy. Prof. Dvornik has pointed out that many puzzling features of Russian political thinking may be traced directly to Byzantine sources. Prof. Dvornik studied Slavic philology and archaeology in Prague, later being trained in the French school of Byzantine and Slavic scholarship. Travels to England supplement- ed Prof. Dvorak's research and teaching at the University of Pra- gue, and one of his books was largely based on research in the Slavic material contained in the British Museum. In 1939, when the Germans In- -by L. H. Scott BYZANTINE INFLUENCE UNDER THE RUSSIAN HELMET? vorni Talk o Trace Russian Political Ideas SWEATERS Beautifully Cleaned and Pressed Blocked With the Famous Hollywood Block Method Promptly: Returned to You in Reusable:"," Cellophane Bags The Microclean Method We use in cleaning your sweaters and all of your garments assures longer clean wear- ability, better shape, new in color and looks. The clear cellophane bag they're packed in is mighty handy too. Send your sweaters now. They'll look like new, when they're back to you. Ct N UNDER THE micRoscoP { vaded Czechoslovakia, he decided to remain in England. His seven years in England saw the produc- tion of numerous articles and two major books, "The P h o t i a n Schism," and "The Making of Central and Eastern Europe." Photian Schism One Byzantine scholar has re- marked that the work Prof. Dvor- nik performed in casting new light on the Photian Schism completely revolutionized historical thinking on that subject. He has decisively demonstrated that the, story sur- rounding the breaking between the churches is no simple "cops and robbers" tale. Prof. Dvornik left England in 1947 on an appointment as visiting scholar at the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. Film Presentation The third program of the Gothic Film Society's second semester bill will feature the silent film "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," with John Barrymore, at 8 p.m., tomorrow in Rackham Amphitheatre. 516 E. Liberty NO 2-3231 NO 2-323 In Rackham Amphitheatre. IL~ --Daily-by John Hirtzel BRAQUE'S 1954 BOOK COVER By DEBRA DURCHLAG I The big name exhibit now on hand in. the galleries of Alumni Memorial Hall is a collection of Braque lithographs, but it in no way dwarfs the simultaneous ex- hibition of contemporary Ameri- ican drawings, both showing through April 3. The Braque exhibit, circulated by the Museum of Modern Art, traces the artist's work in print- making from 1907 to the present. It begins with the cubistic still lifes of his early period and pro- gresses to the more colorful and bolder work of recent years. "Theogony" Illustrations A large part of the exhibit is occupied by illustrations commis- stoned in 1930 by Ambroise Vol- lard for the "Theogony" of Hesiod, and later abandoned to be resum- ed in 1950. In the first illustrations Bra- que's more lyrical form begins to appear, making an interesting departure from drypoint cubistic monotone. Echoes of these grace- ful illustrations occur periodically in his work. After 1920, 73raque begins to use color much more daringly, depart- ing from one-tone prints to more brilliant lithographs. He progres- ses to a simplification of forms, rather than the breakdown of forms as occurs in cubism. The later "Theogony" illustra- tions, by comparison with the earlier work, show Braque's great- ly expanded sense of form. American Drawings In the North and South Gal- leries are displayed 65 contempor- ary drawings first shown in late 1953 at the American Academy of /: / r "' -i " :'1"-, \ 3 Vii' " I' " ,y ~ ~ " " i : : : r" N.l e.V aA ":::;:.:;.. Breath-takingly Beautiful, the SPRING BRIDE in a gown from Goodyear's, the assistance of Goodyear's Bridal Consultant You .. , the bride in a dress that is the symbol of your dreams . . whether it be a lovely formal creation or a pretty waltz-length dress. Period your taste or budget, Goodyear's has an outstanding variety from v hich to choose, so that you'll be truly radiant on the most important day of your life. p FEATURING RECORDINGS OF MUSIC PERFORMED AT THE 1955 MAY FESTIVAL many recorded by The Philadelphia Orchestra BACH: Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor Philadelphia Orchestra, Ormandy BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 5 NBC Symphony, Toscanini BRAHMS: Concerto No. 2 Serkin, Philadelphia Orchestra BEETHOVEN: Missa Solmnis Toscanini, Shaw Chorale, NBC Symphony MOZART: Sinfonia Concertant K 297 Von Karajan, Philharmonic Orchestra SCH.4 IPFDT" . .r, ......KI, Q0 II BRAHMS: Four Serious Songs William Worfield, baritone BARTOK: Concerto for Orchestra Von Karajan, Philharmonia Orchestra CARL ORFF: Carmina Burana Eugen Jochum, Bavarian Orchestra, Chorus PROKOFIEV: Concerto No. 3 Pennario, St. Louis Symphony BLOCH: Concerto Grosso Kubelik, Chicago Symphony the services: on our third floor ... 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