THE MICHIGAN DAILY sub tl , T'S AND LETTERS: Wimlble Views Mod( B y MARTHA MacNEAL 3 main problem facing the American playwright is the nt agitation that the Ameri- heatre should become ly', as typified by reaction t Tennessee Williams," Bar- imble, '62, author of "Faces lte," said yesterday. 'Almost more than any other , theatre has to deliver its ssage in a specified amount of ne to a specified audience. Audi- ces want plays to be atypical society-this is a ridiculous de- e since society is characterized emotional sickness, which must .d its way into theatre produc- ns. The honest playwright must press his condition, not indulge moralistic drama," he contin- :. \ , 'American theatre is asking the wywright to be oblivious to the te of society. It is the common nfiict between entertainment d art, between escapism and the empt to say something worth- iile. Theatre must say something al about our times." Definite Philosophy Considering his own ideas and hniques of writing, Wimble said at although a definite philosophy en forms the background of my writers and their work, his )cedure is just, the opposite. "I m the characters first, and then ure out a situation which will ow them to interact. From these eractions comes a philosophy, ich is Iependent upon the char- ers and their situation, so that ,Jh play is a separate experience," explained. Wimble tends to express recog- able, emotional conflicts rather an broader, more abstract sym- Ls. "The characters interact in, emotional way. I have yet to ite a play about social or politi- 1 ideas. I deal in personalities, rather than larger, more ambigu- ous things," he noted. "There are two types of writers, inductive and deductive. The in- ductive imagination is typified by Hemingway, who wrote from his own experience. The deductive writer receives all sorts of stimuli, but they are buried rather than transmitted directly. I am of this latter type," he said. Unconscious Synthesis "The play is an unconscious synthesis of what I have absorbed. There is no distinction as to which of the two'is better. I have never written about a character that I can honestly say I knew from experience," he explained. "Dialogue cannot be wholly real- istic. The primary purpose of dia- logue is to articulate thoughts in physical movement. The action must be as great, if not greater than, the thought behind it. "Lines must be used on stage in a very practical, mechanical way, leading to climax and resolution. The audience must get ideas with a surrounding layer of emotion and color. Dialoguemust fuse idea and movement in order to have an impetus greater than that of the lines themselves," he emphasized. Interpretation "The play changes when it is interpreted by actors and actresses. Misrepresentation by actors and directors can ruin a play, but Osgood To Speak On Foreiga Policy Prof. Charles Osgood of the psychology department at the University of Illinois will hold a discussion on "Graduated Reci- procation in Tension-Reduction, A Key to Initiative in Foreign Policy," at noon tomorrow in Rm. 3065 Frieze Bldg. FOLK MUSIC * * * New Lost City Ramblers * * * Mike Seeger Tom Paley john Cohen ern Playsk the more plays one writes, the closer he comes to being able to reproduce in his writing what will" actually take place on stage,": Wimble declared. "On this campus, some plays' have suffered because the author'sr intentions were misinterpreted- which could be the fault of either' the author or the director. Anyh good play, like great music, should> be capable of great latitude in interpretation and still convey ther author's intentions. It is ridiculousE to suppose that there is only one, way to present a given play. If its is good, it should be capable of} holding up under various interpre- tations," he said. "Understanding thoroughly the mechanical structure of the playF is the main technical problem fac-' ing the playwright. Structure must be absorbed until it becomes intui- tive-the dialogue will not come naturally until then. Many plays fail because the authors do not understand fully what they are trying to do, and 'fake' their way VIOLINIST - The Choral Un out of plot difficulties," he said. featuring Yehudi Menuhin at 2: Philosophical Outcome The program will include selectio "It is the structure of character Debussy, Bartok and Pagani. and plot that must eventually lead to a philosophical outcome. A PROGRAM NOTES: teacher advised me to type out the main object of a play and put CrI it on my desk. This means not toOT E i n m dek is m a s no totbecome so involved in detail as to forget where the play is going," he explained.ToFeature' Considering the value of creative writing courses, Wimble stated that they are "exceedingly helpful Violinist Yehudi Menuhin will only if the teacher is willing toipresent the sixth concert in the help the student express himself. Choral Union Series at 2:30 p.m. today at ]Kill Aud. The program Tel will include: "Sonata in F major, 1Op. 24" by Beethoven; "Fantasy for Solo Violin" by Ross Lee Fin- ney; "Sonata in G minor" by ,PDebussy; "Roumanian Dances" by Bartok, and "La Campanella" by The historic Cutting Apart- Paganini. ments at 705 S. State St., con- structed in 1904, will be demolished Opera . . . this summer to make way for a The New York City Opera, with University parking lot. Julius Rudel, General Director, Approximately 40 people live in conducting, will present Puccini's the building which contains 20 "Madame Butterfly" at the Ma- apartments and one office. They sonic Auditorium in Detroit for have been notified that they must one performance, at 8:20 p.. vacate the building by June 30. Friday. Elisabeth Carron will sing The three-story brick building the title role. was purchased last year by the Orchestra . . University specifically for a park- The Cleveland Orchestra, di- ing lot. "The need for parking rected by George Szell, will pre- facilities in that area of the cam- pus is very urgent," Vice-President sent the second concert in the for Business and Finance Wilbur Extra Series at 8:30 p.m. Thursday K. BieronessandFnW at Hill Aud. K. Pierpont said. The program will include: "Sym- phony No. 92 in G major (Ox- ford)" by Haydn; "Concert Music for String Orchestra and Bras Instruments, Op. 50" uy Hinde- mith, and "Symphony No. 2 in DIAL 5-6290 D major, Op 73" by Brahms. HELD OVER! Concert... Carl Weinrich, guest organis Through Wednesday and director of music at Princeton AUDREYUniversity Chapel, will give apub- lic concert at 8:30 p.m. Tuesda HE B RN at Hill Aud. Included in the program will be: "Fantasy and Fugue in G minor' -o . .e and "Canonic Variations on th extraordinary.. glitteing Christmas Hymn, 'Von Himme GOhch"' by Bach; "Fantasy in F .Servn wonderful fun it minor" by Mozart; "Pavana: Th Earle of Salisbury" and Variation on 'Will you walke in the woode soe wylde' " by Williams Byrd AT N"Fantasy in Echo Style" by Jan Pieters Sweelinck; and "Toccata' AJURWS.ffPHVPROUCDby Hubert Lamb. ON STAGE & IN PERSON Quartet ... The Stanley Quartet, Gilber TUES., DEC. 12th Ross, violin, Gustave Rosseels, vio CURTAIN AT 8:30 lin, Robert Courte, viola, and Jer TYRONE GUTHRIE'S ome Jelink, cello, will present a "PIRATES OF concert at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in PENZANCE" Rackham Lecture Hall. The pro- PE ,alE3.0 gram will include "Quartet in B Orch. 3.50 - 3.00, Bal. flat major' by Mozart; "Quartet in 2.50 - 2.00 F major" by Beethoven and Quar- Mail orders now. Send stamped, tet, No. 1, Op. 7" by Bartok. Self-addressed envelope with remittance. Recitd . . . Peter B., Spring, '62SM, doubl Presentation and Discussion SANE AND NUCLEAR POLICY DR. DONALD KEYS, Program Director SANE Nuclear Policy, Inc. Two Mollusk Collections To Aid Research, Study MUSKET t '~By PATRICIA O'CONNOR v importance, Prof. van der Schalle Two mollusk collections valued said. at $225,000 promise to be a valu- able addition to the research and New York, for example, become study materials of the University.dsed y ek, inr axpeiesof The two collections, recently do- diseased by eating a species of nated" to the University, are ex- salwihcriswrs pected to provide information now A similar public health prob- lacking concerning patterns of lem will confront the emerging mollusk distribution. African nations, Prof. van der Prof. Henry van der Schalie, cur- Schalie said. With the introduc- Sator 'of mollusks at the Museum tion of mass perennial irrigation, of Zoology, is directing research human blood flukes carried by projects including soil and water snails found in African rivers will analysis to determine why mollusks increase. live where they do and digestion Until now, measures for con- n studies to determine what foods trolling snails have proven diffi- mollusks eat. cult and very expensive, he ex- Because some mollusks serve as plained. With the acquisition of intermediate hosts for parasites, the new collections, it is hoped these experiments achieve great that some advance may be made. ion Series will present a concert 30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. w F SOCIETY ns by Beethoven, Ross Lee Finney, Subscribers to the 1961-62 series are requested to contact n W. P. Kennedy by calling 663-6001 en eis between the hours of 5 and 7 P.M. Menuhn bass, assisted by Gail Haver, piano, Bruce Wise, piano, and Constance Cowan, flute, will present a re-S .G .C . cital at 8:30 p.m. Friday in Lane (7 n Aq Hall Aud. HELD O -6TONIGHT at 7 and 9 2nd BIG WEEK SATAJ IT RAY' . "APARAJITO with UMA DAS GUPTA 0LCE1 Short: TRIP TO THE NORTH POLE S(Meies, c. 1910) ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM Continuous from 1 P.M. Sunday 50 cents with shows at 1:00 4:15 - 7:30__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ t C - v.e{rv Y vf( ':! i:: ,.. v J .5 r ."i Ps!F+,~ v'"k}W i, :5ra aU re inVI d''o sk t - a J - -0 -M e* 'I TRADITIONAL CAMPUS ~N WOMEN'S SING G Sponsored by W' h Asc -i I l1i *. * Saturday, N 18 *- " .f 8:30 ARMORY ...223 East Ann Go down State St. one block past Frieze Bldg. Turn left two blocks. Tickets $1.25 Record Center, Union and at the Door DIAL NO 2-6264 sM A t PLEASE NOTE-ONLY 4 COMPLETE SHOWS Starting at 1:00 - 3:30 6:10 and 8:55, Feature starts 20 Minutes later STARTING' TODAY . I CIJUMBIA FlIUR[S prest ~Pm - I