THE MICHIGAN DAILY ALL-CAMPUS ..... -4 I BOOK DRIVE April 27-May 1st JIF v;; ' I # <, : r -:$ '" . :# / . [ Why I "Mon ame par toi gueri, Par toi, lumiere et couleur Explosion de chaleur Dans ma noire Siberie," thi poem says. A seated woman looks on. Taken from a book of poems by the Frenchman, Charlse Baude laire, illustrated by Despiau, thi- BOOK ILLUSTRATIO Work of M By PHILIP SHERMAN SGC JrPH Tonight at 7:00 and 9:00 Merimee's "CA-RMEN" (Bizet musical background) with VIVIANE ROMANCE JEAN MARAIS' SHORT: The Count (Chaplin) Saturday 7:00 and 9:00 Sunday at 8:00 Schoedsack and Cooper's with FAY WRAY BRUCE CABOT Cartoon ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents See PERSONALS in Classified Ad Section 'SAVAGE PARADE' ... inmodern idiom DIAL NO 2-3136 "Call it the most hilarious entertain- ment of this or any year and you come close to describing 'Some Lik It Hot' . . . Go and have yoursel a wonderful time." -N.Y. Journal-American MARILYN AONROE and her bosom companions TONY CUR S ,SACK LEMMlON in a BILLY WILDER production 'SOME LIE T I NS EXHIBITED: onks, Moderns on Display page is part of an exhibition of book illustrations currently on display in the lobby of the Under- graduate Library. e The exhibition covers both;-. monkish vellum manuscripts and - > the latest cubist and surrealist Y art. Included are illustrations - ranging from botany books to1 s Mother Goose. Shows Plants The oldest of the pages, part ofr the collection of the Museum of Art is from an eighth-century r Moslem manuscript showing medi- , cinal plants together with a trans- lation of "Materia Medica." Another flowery piece is an old Chmese illustration showing chry- . santhemums. A The Work of the European monks, who preserved in writing what knowledge the Europe of the BOKILSRTN MiddleAgeslhda is also shownA BOOK ILLUSTRATION calendar from a B e n e d i ct i n e' *"" exhibited at library "Book of the Hours," a prayer Thomas Rowandson shows a pic- manual, demonstrating the con- cern of te clerical copyists with ture of dinner at a contemporary matters of faith, has typically university with students, some in- beautiful and complex decorations ebriated, and waiters, hardly able surorunding the ornate lettering. to walk, dropping food on the Illuistrates Trinity floor. An illustrated page from an in- An interesting comparison be- cunabula, a book printed before tween traditional Victorian and 1500 portraying the Day of Judge- more modern artis afforded by ment is also on view. Its composi- comparison of two illustrations of tion is typical, with God the Fath- Virgil's "Ecologues." The older one er and the second and third per- by Palmer is a realistic Romantic sons of the trinity passing judge- landscape, while the more mod- ment on the mob of sinners at ern one, by Malliol shows a nude their feet. Great holes in the Daphnis smoking a pipe, the earth belch forth fire, as prophe- whole picture being In outlines. sied in Revelation. 'Savage Parade' A Victorian era illustration by Th modern idiom, pictures by u -Malliol and Pablo Picasso are e shown. Among Malliol's work is a f r surrealist painting with several disconnected heads and feet, bear- ing the inscription, "I alone am DIAL NO 8-6416 the chief of the savage parade." ENDING TONICHT Several of Picasso's abstract DEDNGTOIGHTE!D! compositions for Balzac's "Le Chef Sd'Oeuvre Inconnu" are included in CECILRDEMILLE'S the exhibit. They are simply col- lections of lines and dots, re- E Esembling somewhat schematic drawings of organic chemical compounds. " nm Another Picass ois a series of HARLON ut ANNEt . ^DWARG a marginal illustrations for the .5TON' BRYNNER BAXT[R' ROBIN5ON Sonnets of Gongora, a Spanish WONNE DEBRA JON poet, which were published in 1948. DE CARLO -PAGET DEREK IIARWIG FOCH.i S5COTT-ANDR5ON.P MBOYA TO SPEAK HI A PARAMOUNT PICTURE -TECHNICOLOR Negro Leader ONE SHOW DAILY AT 7A30Asks'Undilt Adults $1.00 Tmo Mboya, chairman of thej All-African People's Conference, will deliver a "Report on Africa," at 4:10 p.m. Friday in Rackham Auditorium. The young African leader, head of Negro interests in Kenya, is secretary of the Kenya Federation of Labor and a member of the col- ony's Legislative Council. He says he favors "undiluted democracy" for the Kenya colony, which has a population of six mil- avor lion Negroes, 150,000 Asians and 55,000 Europeans. Mboya, first achieved interna- iste! tional reputation as a leader in the Mombassa dock strike of 1955. He led the fight for a raise in wages for the Negro dock workers and won a thirty-three per cent boost. In 1957, Mboya ran for the Kenya legislature and became the first Negro in that body. He de- feated an opponent who used the slogan "Africa for Africans," by arguing for complete democratic equality for both white and Negro. Mboya was originally educated in the ,Kenya Negro schools and became a public health worker in the colony. He later studied in- dustrial relations and political in- stitutions at Oxford. Mboya is touring the United States under the auspices of the American Committee of Africa. O"t.: Pt ( You cans ight f r> either endt Lois Marshall ACCO TASTES BEST , t ~ ...,7 Engineering School Sets Open House By BARTON HUTHWAITE Plans for Engineer's Weekend M.ay 7-9 are nearing completion, public relations director Charles Hildebrandt, '59E, said yesterday. Sponsored by the engineering school council, the open house will include departmental exhibits, lectures, tours of North Campus and a host of other activities. "Engineer's Weekend is mainly directed toward the layman," Hildebrandt said. Visitors will be able to tour larger laboratories on North Campus, view the atomic reactor in operation, and inspect the various technical classrooms on the central campus. Free bus service to North Campus will also be made available. Include Model Industrial displays include a scale model of the Jupiter rocket, a model of the breeder reactor be- ing constructed near Monroe, and the processing of natural resources into fabrication products. Engineering school e x h i b i t s showing the various fields open to the technically oriented student will also be on display. Visitors will be able to see a pre-stressed concrete diving board developed by the structure labora- tories and weigh themselves on an electronic scale calibrated by the amount of deflection of a stand- ard steel specimen. May See Storm The may also watch the space physics lab track incoming Willow Run Airport flights on radar and view the formation of a tornado in a storm vortex chamber. Other departmental exhibits in- clude a demonstration of a minia- ture rocket by the aeronautical engineering department, models of highway construction projects by the highway and transporta- tion department, and computa- tions of missile trajectories and moon probes by the instrumenta- tion laboratory. "Approximately 42 exhibits are planned as of now," Hildebrandt said. ERE: from Kenya d Democracy' GET SATISFYING FPLAVOP. O "ien o or a No flat "filtered-out"fl( No dry "smoked-out"tc " a -Daily-Allan Windr CONSULTANT-John Rich, Hollywood television director, views a University television studio while serving as consultant to the television office. Director of TV Gunsmoke' Deplores 'Shoddy' Western By JOHN FISCHER He continued, "For my own John Rich, Hollywood director stimulation and as part of the visiting the University television continuing process of learning, I'd office as a consultant, yesterday much prefer to see a number of deplored the great number of the programs I viewed this week. "shoddy" Westerns, currently be- ing seen on the television screen. Rich, who has directed "Gun- smoke" and other Westerns, in addition to many other pro- grams said that a possible reason for the many Westerns is that DIAL NO 2-2513 sponsors think it is safest to put ENDING TONIGHT on a play in Western form in or- der to avoid offending anyone. W. H. HUDSON'S He called the use of a Westernm EXCITIN similar to an allegory. By using a ROMANCE! Western, the sponsor can allow something "meaty" to be said, rather than bluntly saying what is ,on the writer's mind, which M.- M might offend listeners. 4r' nt Seek Relief He also attributed the popular- AUDREY ANTHONY ity of the "run of the mill" West- HEPBURN - PERKINS ern to the complexity of the mod-IN ern world. In these "horse operas" "GREEN MANSIONS" the audience feels the welcome re-EE J. COBB lief of being in times when there SESSUE NAYAKAWAHENRY SILVA is a hero who makes his own deci- CNEMASCPE sod MOCOLOR sions based on his prowess with a gun. as O ER In these Westerns, Rich ex- plained, decisions of "right and FRIDAY wrong" are made in a context of black and white where the "WARLOCK" 'heavy" is completely in the wrong and the hero completely in the right. Rich mentioned, however, that not all Westerns follow this stereotype, pointing to "Gun- f smoke" where the hero makesmis- takes, and the "villains" often are partly in the right. 'U' Graduate Rich, who graduated from the University in 1948, is presently secretary of the Board of Direc- tors of the Screen Directors' Guild. He is visiting the Univer- sity as a TV consultant under a .. grant of the Eli Lilley Co. Commenting on University pro- grams, Rich overflowed with praise: "In my wildest imagina- tion I never expected to find a production output so varied in its scope and so excellent in presen- tation," he said. -Call A Vet" IC N'S CAB -4477 NO 3-5800 E TO AYNE MAJOR Airports for group rates 24-Hour Service The FORD AUDITORIUM in Detroit Son Sat. May 2 Ilona Kombrink I * TWO SHOWS * 8 P.M. and 11 P.M. "America's Top Jazz Con- cert," now on nationwide tour, brings to Detroit a trio of the foremost jazz artists of our day -Benny Good- man and his orchestra, Ah- .....T - f a4 TOM MBOYA ... to report on Africa "Your RestB et VETElRA NO 3-4545 NO 2m SERVIC WILLOW RUN and Wt Call our officef We Go Anywhere : v 4 >r HERE'S wwV SMOKE NRVELED' THROUGH FINE TOBA MAY FESTIVAL CONCERT Sunday, May 3, 2:30 P.M. with The Philadelphia Orchestra THOR JOHNSON, Guest Conductor UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION Soloists: LOIS MARSHALL, Soprano ILONA KOMBRINK, Soprano HOWARD JARRATT, Tenor AURELIO ESTANISLAO, Baritone SOLOMON, pn oratorio for two sopranos, tenor, baritone, chorus, and orchestra . Handel (Observing the 200th anniversary of the death of the composer) UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION and SOLOISTS MARILYN MASON, Harpsichord MARPY MALL ISTUINSM. rgn See how Pall Mall's famous length of fine tobacco fr.nvr.. . rla . I I WOM ff . RE WWI MA-drMoAa' M. 15-M, Ww"