PAGE TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1966 PAGE TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 11. 1966 Ii~ ,I a a 0 aria Corvin Maria Corvin, a well-known English actress, has chosen to perpetuate the story-telling ability of Karen Blixen, the famous Danish author of "Out of Africt." The story is the dramatic story of a woman who, through no fault of her own, loses everything she has loved and worked for-and survives. MARIA COYIN RECITES OUT OF AFRICA FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 8:30-P.M. VANDENBURG ROOM, MICHIGAN LEAGUE 'p Wi Geer Will Geer, a theater veteran of real distinction, began his career in boat shows, tents, and repertory in the 20's with Sothern and Marlowe, and made his New York debut in "The Merry Wives of Windsor." He has since appeared in hundreds of plays including "Of Mice and Men," "The Cradle Will Rock" and "Knickerbocker Holiday. MARIA CORVIN WILL GEER IN A PROGRAM OF FROST, WHITMAN AND TWAIN MONDAY, MARCH 21, 8:00 P.M.-UNION BALLROOM WILL GEER 4, 0 * Louis Simpson Louis Simpson, associated with the Department of English of the University of California at Berkeley, received a Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1964 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1962. A prolific writer, his publications in- clude the following books: "The Arrivistes," Poems, 1959; "Good News of Death and Other Poems," 1955; and "A Dream of Governors," 1959. LOUIS SIMPSON, POET WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 8:00 P.M.-UGLI MULTIPURPOSE ROOM Archile Sep Shepp, in contrast with most "New Music" Negro artists who are as deeply critical of the American social scene as he, has been an outspoken advo- cate of black militancy, and has been in close association with LeRoi Jones' Black Arts Repetory Theater School. ARCHIE SHEPP; JAM SESSION SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 10:30 P.M.-VFW HALL, 314 E. LIBERTY CONCERT-8:30 P.M. SATURDAY at TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM. THE NEW JAZZ, THE NEGRO, AND AMERICA SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 3:00 P.M.-UGLI MULTIPURPOSE ROOM The panel discussion Saturday afternoon, March 19, is primarily devoted to examining the extent to which the "New Music" is the result of a social phenomenon and what this portends for American society. 4 LOUIS SIMPSON Tony Montenaro A rare and precious theater art, mime communicates easily and directly to both the innocent and the sophisticate through the performer's ability to reveal essences of character, feeling, thought, human activity and exper- ience, life itself A scholarship winner at the Camden Hills Theater of the University of Main, Montenaro was discovered by Marcel Marceau who offered him a scholarship to his Paris Ecol. WORKSHOP IN THE ART OF MIME SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 2:00 P.M.-TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM A MIME'S EYE VIEW;. TONY MONTANARO SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 8:30 P.M.-TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM ADMISSION $1.50-TICKETS AT DOOR W. D. Snodgrass W. D Snodgress' first volume of opetry was "Heart's Needle" which well- illustrated why his poems won him a Pulitzer Prize. Some of the comment from reviewers about the book includes: "Snodgrass seems to me by far the best poet to have appeared so far in this decade and probably one of the best of any age now practicing in America."-Hayden Carruth in "Poetry." W. D. SNODGRASS, POET SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 8:00 P.M.-UGLI MULTIPURPOSE ROOM Ubu Cornutatus Alfred Jarry has stated that "the work of art is a stuffed crocodile." As a part of this season's Creative Arts Festival, John Barton Wolgamot has the honor of presenting the P.A.P. (Packard Avenue Playreaders) repetory company in just such a work: the world premiere of Jarry's "Ubu Cor- nutatus (Ubu Cocu) " in an exciting new translation. UBA CORNUTATUS THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 8:00 P.M.-MARCH 25 AND 26, 8:30 P.M. LITTLE THEATER (ROOM 2065) FRIEZE BUILDING SYMPOSIUM ON UBA CORNUTATUS FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 10:00 P.M. LITTLE THEATER (ROOM 2065) FRIEZE BUILDING Ralph Shapey Ralph Shapey brings the University of Chicago Contemporary Chamber DI. -- . d-,.t4 w K a G, sr..C ^~e a a - . -h - -narvk Christopher M*iddleton Chrisinher Middleton' nnems have anneared in a wide variety of maaa- I T