T8E MICHIGAN DAILY NSITION: aylor Views Development f Modern Art Trends ELIZABETH ROEDIGERv eking yesterday on "From paintings were statements of ex- periences, he explained. to Symbol, Prof. Joshua Not only did they threaten clas- of the University of Chi- sicism, but they ialso rebelled icussed the transition from against romantic fantasy. anal to modern painting in Developing from this philosophy t fifty years of the nine- was a school which felt "how ob- century. Jects are seen is better than sim- Taylor called the end re- ple knowledge that they exist." I modern painting "a dy- They attempted to catch and hold n in which we participate the viewer's attention by "infinite el ourselves a part of that interplay of color," Taylor contin- ued. They expressed their ideas in lit in principles, occurringsimple forms, no longer trying to middle of the last century, fascinate the viewer with details. id from the crisis in subject Their paintings recalled past ex- afrd degree of freedom per- periences rather that stating pres- tanere oedm perent ones. the painter, he noted.IVy 1 /t7 fR f Convenient Means eality became important, serv- as an "antidote to convention" as a convenient means to get= )f authority. This still persists y, he added. he new artists, Taylor said, me a threat to classical rig- r. They brought themselves r to nature by recording what touched rather than what saw. They strove to avoid entional composition a n d sed the "existence more than seeing" of an object. Their wan To Speak i Architecture of. Henry J. Cowan of the ersity of Sydney will speak y under the auspices of the itecture college on "History, Philosophy of Structures" at 4 in the Arch. Aud. New Couor use This new use of color developed into "an accord of tone capable of exalting the soul to the point of productivity," Taylor added. No longer were the paintings of these artists objects, they were vis- ual experiences, Taylor said. Such paintings were "not true to the eye, but rather compelling to the mind," Taylor said. A painting could no longer be compared to a "tree, it was rather the starting point of the "infinite imagina- tion." Critic Adrift "The critic -is set adrift in his own imaginings, and must explain his. own thoughts, rather than those of the artist," he said. Theoforces of modern painting that sweep the viewer up so that he is no longer merely watching. but is part of the paintings, are the result of that freedom in na- ture which the new artist demand- ed in the middle of the last cen- tury, Taylor said. PAID ADVERTI$EMENT I Cinemnaquild PRESENTS THURSDAY and FRIDAY Joseph Mankiewicz's FIVE FINGERS" James Mason, Danielle Diarrieux, Michael Rennie ROAD RUNNER CARTOON' James Broughton's Loony Tom, the Happy Lover SATURDAY and SUNDAY H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds" COLOR Gene Barry, Ann Robson SHORT. Psvc. (Conr) ...} ?ft:r.. .SieY <:i;r; ."Y .. Y conception of their plans for % to the Design Competition coi Review Coii By STEVEN HALLER Th re is yet a possibility tha i ? F { !+. D. Rooevl hih s o be the product of an Ann Arbc firm architect Joseph J. Wehre Out ofterd 547 entries submit ted for the national Frankliii D Roosevelt Memorial Design C0m petition that vas held last yea the entry of Wehrer and his part ner, Harold J Borkin, was amon the six finalists. However, it di not receive top honors. P The main idea of the competi tion, as expressed in the rules, wa that the essential Roosevelt b commemorated'' in an architectur al design. The architects were a] lowed complete freedom in thei interpretation of this criterion. Lanezos ToTalk OnMath Finding Prof. Cornelius ILanczos of thi Dublinschool f Theoretical Py sics wil speak on the "Geometrica scoveries of Gauss" at 4p tod, ariold. SA.kThe lecture nder teaispice of the In titute of Science and Technolg DiAL NO 5-6290 * ENDS TONIGHT POANK Aini SINAIRA MIN *FRIDAY ~ SCREEN SMASH!h AILC AjoRTyo ONE, IN TECHNICOLOR Dial o 1pltli1ti tt~ 2-6264 1 ~ln ~l 111 Doors open 12:45 "THE 4 HORSEMEN ride boldly out of th the greatest love stori This is tb that first m dolph Vale: scribed in S hours of u x: table moti+ ture entertf wo Ann Arbor architects, Joseph rkin, have submitted this artists' the Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial mmittee in Washington. test Plans lt_ Memorial The resulting edifice was to t stand in West Potomac Park be- tween the Lincoln and Jefferson ie Memorials. III Entries Reviewed r The entries were reviewed by a r jury of five architectural experts, and the winner was then an- nounced, along with the other five 3 finalists including the design sub- mitted by Wehrer and Borkin. r, The now-famous winning design - consists of a cluster of eight per- g pendicular tablets inscribed with d famous quotations by Roosevelt. This "instant Stonehenge," as it - has satirically been referred to in s a reference to the somewhat sim- 'e ilar prehistoric monument still - standing in England, was designed by a New York firm. ' In standing by the jury's deci- sion, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial Commission suggested that a statue of Roosevelt be add- ed, to be placed inside the cluster of tablets or in front of one of them. 1e Stalemate Although the Franklin D. Roos- R evelt Memorial Commission ap- n. proved of the winning design, the i Commission of Fine Arts did not. - It is for this reason that matters have become tied in a stalemate. Wehrer remarked that this sit- uation could conceivably remain unchanged for some time, and that in fact "it may now become a poli- tical issue." Congress has the final say as to which of the six final entries will be used; it may even override these and choose one from the other original 541{ entries. Wehrer added that in light of these unforeseen circumstances it is now more conceivable than be- fore that their firm might have the honor of having their design accepted. However, it will probably be some time before the matter is completely straightened out, he said. To Present Lab Playbill ~Two one-act plays will be pro- duced at 4:10 p.m. today in the Arena Theatre of the Frieze Build- ing by the Laboratory Playbill. The first play on the double bill, "Intersection" by John Her- rick, '63, is set on a street corner in a large city. "It combines vio- lent realism with the strange, quiet quality of lamplight," Rich- ard Levy, Grad, the director said. The second play, "The Suicide of Rap and Rop" by C. David Colson, '63, is a "twelve-minute comedy with music." The Lab Playbill provides a training ground for actors, direc- tors, designers, lighting techni- cians and includes all facets of production by students. The plays are the result of a collaboration between the speech and English departments. POLITICAL BEHA VIOR: Converse ( By JEAN TENANDER "Americans have always been morbidly fascinated by France's social and political situation," Prof. Philip Converse of the so- ciology department, said yesterday , in a colloquium on the differences in Franco-American political be- havior. Prof. Converse listed "the rise and fall of flash parties" as one of the major phenomena drawing z attention to France's political in- stability. The flash party is the party which attracts a strong base ' of support overnight and then collapses within six months to a year. It is important to note the level of society at which this pheno- & menonitakes place, Converse re- marked. The portion of the popu- lation that can be induced to re- spond to this type of political PHI appeal is characterized by a low ... Franco political involvement and, there- gans at the fore, is not representative of the whole range of those taking part evidence of in political decisions. voluntary p Optical Illusion tween Fran Prof. Converse rejects as an States, he s "optical illusion" the explanation The appai for this alienation as resulting be wiped ou from a "major social vacuum be- sideration t tween the electorate and the or- portunities a Don't Miss:* PNADECUT RO HNEBSRIfN BOERER SGilbert & Sullivan's PATIENCE or BUNTHORN'S April 3-6 AUDREY A HEPURN Ta W Wv T,"TKW RJDO Ii'r M/e Y TECHINR 0 DIAL NO 8-6416 1 " {v: {f~~>~?., " t :}F 4. "$vL%::'"}r":;? "i{'i '. ".:i ?'', v+<.- ~ E {i:r.'^V':L:in^'i;$ :ii: v. }.}. ..i ;,. :{"{ a:} _::.:g' ": -v{:"",'.}h7i5a;: n'a. ti r~ : ... a. e.... Aai } ' cilities in the two countries he said. "Given the lower education rate, fv,, the French population absorbs less political information than the United States," he said. This is ironic in view of the fact that the French political system is far more complex than ours." French politics are arranged, Converse said, so that the activsts comprise an elite of only a small per cent of the total population. . General levels of political in- volvement in France do not differ widely from those in the United States, he added. The primary dif- ferences between the two popula- tions are in the proportion of the people who readily identify them- selves with a political party, he said. IP CONVERSE Of those politically involved in -American similarities France, less than 45 per cent iden- top." There is little major differences in olitical association be- T on ice and the United aid. rent discrepancies can "OUR GREATEST LIVI t by taking into con- -N he fidely unequal op- nd communication fa- DAME JUDITH ANDE r t... j.. :. BRIDE - r."MIA S~a BROAD w New York Times: performance o "LADY M TELEVISION'S 1961 BEST PERFORMANC Hill Auditoriu SEATS [NG ACTRESS" [ew York Herald Tribune 1 RSON fight! ites French, U.S. Affairs tified themselves with a political party, or even with the broader groupings of Left, Right or Center. This is in comparison with a 75 per cent identification on the part of the American voter. This can be partially explained by an unwillingness to indicate partisanship, and partially by the general confusion resulting from the large number of parties, Prof. Converse said. In conclusion, Prof. Converse pointed to the Algerian situation as a classic example of the dis- location between the elite and the masses. Both the elite and the masses desperately wanted termi- nation of the war, but the elites became involved in a mortal struggle over the means of end- ing the war which have not stirred up strong feelings in the popula- tion of metropolitan France. ' , ; I , During WW II, Turkey, hous- ing the embassies of both the allies, and the axis, was an exotic picnic ground for espi- onage. 5 Fingers is the true story of the man who had the most daring and satisfying pic- nic in modern spy history. The Germans, to whom he sold such top-secret Information as the minutes of the Moscow, Cairo and Teheran conferences, bombing schedules, and the plans for the Normandy inva- sion, called him "Cicero" and; gave him a record-breaking £300,000. But who Cicero really was, what he did for a living, or where he got his informa- tion, not even the careful Ger- mans could find out. So as not to diminish the picture's effect, we will say no more except that Cicero (his code name) alias Eliaza Bazna (his real life name) alias Ulysses Diello (his movie name) alias James Ma- son was the British Ambassa- dor's personal valet; a man who was as conscientious with the Ambassador's safe as with his wardrobe. About the movie, the critic, for The Saturday Review says: . . It would have taken some sort of major upheaval to budge me from my seat. I stayed firmly rooted for the rest of the film and came away with the conviction that 5 Fin- gers (taking Hitchcock and Carol Reed into full considera- tion) is the most unusual spy story I've ' seen on the screen and one of the very best. "Throughout the two hour course of 5 Fingers, a time that passes all too swiftly, there are dozens of unlooked for surprises and ironies, one following swift- ly on the other. One knows who the spy is, exactly what he wants, Just who is after him, and just how close they are to ]..tale rvava i /AY CAST "-ff1962 "Truly stupendous f this century." ACBETH" EMMY AWARD FOR E BY AN ACTRESS m-March 29 NOW re-seeing. Science fiction is the dull prose of the world of fan- tasy. A few notions, based on the indisputable premise that the coming decades, or cen- turies, will present scenes un- familiar to 1962, serve science fiction hucksters to launch bal- loons inflated with the gas of ill-digested theories and carry- ing along a pitiful human cargo, whose puerile emotions suggest that preoccupation with the Brave New World have withered at the source every impulse of humor, logical dis- sent, or spontaneous feeling.' Among these jerky spacecraft, do not hope to view a Pegasus. True imagination and the po- etry of the unexpected-,are not nourished by an obsession with gears and fuel loads or an escapist longing for love on the stars. But The War of the Worlds is a film that escapes the lim- itations of its category. The late 19th century novel of H.G. Wells is a classic of its kind, with an idea very adaptable to contemporary conditions. We do not embark on inter-stellar adventures while carefully, watching an Einsteinian for- mula. The invasion of the earth by the inhabitants of Mars is not what gives us night- mares or impels some to build air-raid shelters; but the pos- sibility of sudden horror on Earth is now a reality. Our own confusions and fears make it possible for us to have imme- diate identity with the protag- onists in this striking and very well-made film. Orson Welles first realized the social possibilities of the Wells' book. His notorious broadcast for the Halloween of 1936 terrorized large parts of the American population, who were convinced from his docu- _ .: - '" VIII MiCHIGAN Ui Presen ts 1 4 SHOWS ea\\\\\\\\\\ at 1:00 -3: and 9 OF THE APOCALYPSE" e Bible . . . into one of es ever told! DAILY 30 - 6:30 :10 oel rt ros' I I IMEMIN WW ! . ' / H