Page 3 Zorina Terms KU Production'Exciting' Miss Vera Zorina said yesterday that she thinks KU's stage production of "Joan of Arc at the Stake" will be more exciting than concert hall versions. Miss Zorina, who has starred in the oratorio by Claudel and Honegger many times in concert settings, said this will be the first time she has played Joan in a stage production. "I think it's meant to be staged," she told students in an informal discussion. The Norwegian-born actress said that the role of Joan calls upon all her talents as a dancer, singer and actress. HER KU PERFORMANCE will be given at 8 p.m. Jan. 15-17 in University Theatre. Asked if she becomes deeply involved in the character of Joan, Miss Zorina said, "Because of the music involved, I have to keep very alert as to the cues... I can't afford to lose myself at all." Miss Zorina played Joan in the first American performance of the oratorio with the New York Philharmonic orchestra. SHE SAID SHE ONCE lost herself momentarily at a point where she was to sing, speak a few lines, and begin singing again, relying only on memory for pitch. "I do feel it very strongly...I respond very strongly to the music," she said of the role. Miss Zorina said in practicing a part, she likes to get away from the confusion of a rehearsal hall. "I work best of all on long walks," she said. "I'm often taken for a mad woman," she commented. Her acting career began, Miss Zorina said, when she was offered a part in a musical comedy. She previously had been in ballet and had joined the company of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo when she was 16. SHE HAS WORKED in movies, musical comedies, Shakespearian productions and dance-narration roles. Of her motion picture work, Miss Zorina said, "I personally disliked the movies I made intensely." University Daily Kansan Although she said her great love is the theatre, she said, "I do not look down on any form of entertainment." Performances are either bad or good, she said, regardless of where they are done. Miss Zorina said that the great opportunity for training in acting in America was in the universities. She indicated that European actors have an advantage in the training offered by repertory companies. In talking of the training needed to help the actor move properly on the stage, Miss Zorina encouraged practice in ballet, fencing, gymnastics, or similar disciplines. Thirteen volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica were given an impromptu airing last Sunday. The whys and wherefores are still a matter of speculation at the campus security office and Carruth-O'Leary Hall. Your Books Musty? Then Air Them! The volumes, taken from the dormitory lounge, were found stacked in the snow in front of the men's hall shortly after 2 a.m. Sunday by campus police. This leaves the possibility that someone thought the volumes musty and in need of fresh air. "It could be that someone was trying to steal them," said Maurice Anders, dormitory director, "but that's a lot of trouble to go to and not follow through." One man's word is no man's word; we should quietly hear both sides. —Goethe He was also skeptical over a prank theov. Elections of International Club officers for the spring semester will be held tonight in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. The elections will be held after the 7:30 showing of "Kiru," a Japanese film with English sub-titles, in Hoch auditorium. Only card-carrying members of the club will be allowed to enter the meeting. Candidates must be International club members of six weeks standing. Refreshments will be served. International Club Elects Chemist to Speak Paul Story, organic chemist with the Bell Telephone Laboratory, Murray Hill, N. J., will speak at a chemistry colloquium, 4 p.m. today in 233 Malott, on "Chemistry of Nonclassical Reactive Intermediates." Earnest resolution has often seemed to have about it almost a savor of omnipotence. — Samuel Smiles Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 KU Christian Fellowship REV. ZIMMERMAN From Finland speaking on "THE HOPE OF A CHRISTIAN" For years Shirley Jones was typed as "the girl next door." Yet she won an Academy Award in the role of a rough, tough trollop. In this week's Post, you'll learn how Shirley plays harlots and homebodies with equal conviction. And why many of her friends didn't want her to win an Oscar. TONIGHT, 7:30 P.M. in Cottonwood Room of Kansas Union Shirley Jones: sexpot or sweet young thing? JANUARY 13 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Kansan Want Ads Get Results Krhart Flying Service Learn How to Fly in the Easy to Fly... INCORPORATED INVESTIGATE OUR SPECIAL FLIGHT COURSE NOW! ... 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