THE MICHIGAN DAILY >ods Seizure in Tennessee )t To Affect Local Action ARTS AND LETTERS: Jennings Designs Original Fountains v- Y BEATRICE TEODORO By JUDITH BLEIER V the attachment of supplies for groes in Haywood and Fayette tnties, Tenn., will not immedi- ly affect the local Tennessee mpaign, Chairman Carol Cohen, , said yesterday. ['he campaign will continue col- ting food and clothing because attachment notices do not af- t Haywood county, she said. The ites were placed on supplies d by John McFerren in a le- quarrel between leaders of a ro, civil rights group. The split shifts emphasis from at the issue should be, the vot- rights of the' Tennessee Ne- [ame Lea.der or MUSKET Stephen VanderVoort '62, has m appointed new general airman of MUSKET. Petitions for the Central Com- ttee will be -available on March ,nd will be due March 20, retir- MUSKET Chairman John J. .ed, '81, said,. groes, and makes it an internal po- litical issue. It is unfortunate that this should happen when harmony and cooperation are imperative if anything is to be accomplished," Miss Cohen said. McFerren is chairman of the Fayette County Civic and Welfare League which organized a drive to register Negro voters. It claims that Negroes'/ are suffering eco- nomic reprisal because of the reg- istration campaign. One of the major points of the split concerns the distribution, David Giltrow, '61Ed, said. "Mc- Ferren believes that aid should go only to registered Negroes, while Franklin feels that distri- bution shouldn't be limited," he said. "We delivered to Haywood be- cause we didn't want to interfere with the local politics in Fayette County. Also, we knew that Fay- ette already had a stockpile. ,-"We will cooperate with the Memphis NAACP, thecoordinating group for distribution of supplies from other communities," Giltrow added, speaking as chairmah of Voice political party, which spon- sors the Tennessee Campaign. The do-it-yourself cult, mani- fest in mosaic ashtrays and num- ber paintings, has the same spirit in which Prof. Richard P. Jen- nings of the architecture college has been experimenting with fountains. He has been experimenting with high cones, low cones, and pud- dings, various mushroom-shaped water sprays, for the past two years. In the high cone, the water reaches a greater height than, the diameter of the unit. The low cone is wider than it is high, and the pudding is a giant bubble of water. Debut at Fair Six of Prof. Jennings' low cones will make their debut at the In- ternational Agricultural and Pro- duct Fair in Cairo, Egypt, begin- ning March 15. They will be used in a pool outside of the United States pavilion. "In the past fountains were very' complicated," explained Prof. Jen- nings. Consequently, he noted, pro- jects such as the one outside of the Michigan League "are for- ever doing the same thing." His aim Is to have -a fountain that can be continually modified to provide a relief and contrast to the in- trusiveness and static quality of the building. Prof. Jennings' invention for this purpose consists of a small submersible motor to which a pro- peller has' been attached. This electrical unit "is essentially a portable fountain," he said. Show Seashore Energy In his fountains Prof. Jennings is "seeking an event to obtain more of the dynamics of the sea- shore" that are derived from a spray of water. "A spray is expressing speed," he explained. "I am trying to get water into the air in a solid sheet which would denote, instead, en- ergy." Prof. Jennings sees great pos- sibilities for the use of his foun- tains at state and world fairs as well as for smaller ones in private homes. These latter units would be "exceedingly inexpensive," he said, "but I would emphasize that the big ones are not. First Interest Prof. Jennings first became in- terested in fountains when the University asked for his help. A kidney-shaped lake had been de- signed for the Dearborn campus before any thought was given to placing a conventional fountain in it. The three units installed at Deaborn are much cruder than his recent developments, Prof. Jen- nings explained, but they gave him a chance to test the function of the motor and the propeller in relationship to the laws of physics. He plans to rebuild his first attempts for the University this spring. Most of his work on campus has been done in the naval tank of the West Engineering Bldg. After hav- ing designed a small scale foun- tain he applied for a Rackham Grant to continue his experimen- tation. . One of the early attempts, which he dubbed "The African Queen," can still be seen outside of the Architecture Bldg. FOUNTAIN DESIGNER-Prof. Richard Jennings of the art de- partment sits at the side of a tank in which a simple experimental fountain splashes and sprays. Prof. Jennings is the creator of a fountain type which will make its debut at an Egyptian interna- tional fair in March. Six of his "low cones" will be outside the United States pavilion. TQGRAM NOTES: Choreographer, Writer Tops Billing. 4 .7 DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER 1 AGNES DE MILLE , , in Platform Attractions Choreographer and writer Agnes le Mille will be featured in a program "On Your Toes" at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Aud. Miss de Mille, the author of new trends in ballet, and her -own experiences in staging,, directing and participating in many musical and dance productions.' She is famous for her choreo- graphy, in such Broadway hits as Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Ok- lahoma" and "Carousel," Lerner and Loewe's "Brigadoon" and Anita Loos' "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes." Miss de mille, the author of many magazine articles, and two books, "Dance ',o the Piper" and 'Promenade Home," will be pre- sented by the University Platform Attractions. Tickets will be on sale at the Hill Aud. box office from 10 a.m. o 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. Opera.. . The music school and speech :epartment will present Claude Debussy's opera "Pelleas and Mel- sande," at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday nights, and March 7, 8, 10 and 11 at the Lydia Mendels- Sohn Theatre. The production will be directed by Prof. Jack E. Bender of the speech department- and Prof. Josef Blatt of the music school. The audiences -are asked to be prompt, because no latecomers will be seated during the first act. Choral Union.. Metropolitan Opera tenor Brian Sullivan will. present the eighth :oncert in the choral union series ON STAGE Mon., March 27, 8:30 P.M. at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Aud. He will open the program with "Where'er You Walk" from Han- del's "Semele," followed by the recitative and -aria, "Sound 'and Alarm" from'. Handel's "Judas Maccabaeus." The program will also feature "Widmung" and "Die Lotusblume" by Schumann; "Heimliche Auf- forderung," "Traum dirch die Dammerung," and "Zueignung" by Richard Strauss; "Lamento di Federico" from Cilea's "L'Arle- siana," and "Vaghissima sembian- za" and "Spirate pur, spirate" by Donaudy. Travelogue... Andre de Ia Varre is set for the second program in the current Burton Holmes Travelogues Series, presenting his recent color motion picture, "The Alps,"' at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Aud." The "four-season" travelogue will include "delights" of spring, summer, autumn, and winter in the Alpine countries of Switzer- land, Germany, Italy, Austria and France. * * * Peace Corps... National Broadcasting Com- pany's television newscaster Chet Huntley will present a preview re- port of the proposed (President' John F.) Kennedy Peace Corps plan and how it would affect to- day's college students at 5:30 p.m. today over NBC-TV stations. Prof. Maurice. H. Albertson of Colorado StateCollege, appointed by the International. Cooperation Administration to head the group, will report on its proposals for establishment of the Corps. * * * ,japan .. . John D. Rockefeller IV will dis- cuss the lives, problems, and hopes of Japanese students at 9 a.m. today over station WXYZ, Detroit, with Prof. Robert Ward of the political science department. A student at Harvard Univer- sity, Rockefeller recently spent three years as a student at In- ternational Christian University in Tokyo, where he witnessed many of the recent political demon- strations that have swept Japan. * * * . Families .. . Prof. Jessie Bernard of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania Sociology department will discuss "Families without Fathers" on the Univer- sity's television series "Family Living" at 12 noon today over station WWJ, Detroit. ' Mrs. Bernard says that children who lose their father through death, divorce or separation suffer from lack of an accurate picture of how grown-ups live together. * * * WU *HM.. Poet Archibald MacLeish will discuss "Poetry and Journalism" at 1 p.m. tomorrow over the Uni- versity's radio station WUOM. The lecture is one of the Gideon Seymour lectures and will be transcribed. Prof. Marshall Stearns of Hun- ter College, New York, will talk about "The Roots of Jazz" in his first in a series of commentaries concerning "Jazz in American Life" at 7 p.m. Friday on WUOM. Detroit... Florence Henderson opens to- morrow in a five-week engagement of the national company produc- tion of R'odger's and Hammer- stein's "The Sound of Music," with Beatrice Krebs, Jack Collins and John Myhers, at the Riviera Theatre in Detroit. And monologue comedian Shel- ley Berman will open Thursday night at the Cass Theatre for a three-day stand with an all-new program. Seats are still available for both presentations. Tickets are now on sale for seven Metropolitan Grand Opera productions which will be brought to Detroit's Masonic Temple from May 22 through 27. They may be ordered by mail from the Detroit Grand Opera Association, 417 Ford Building, until May 1. * * *. Quartet .. . The quartet-in-residence from the University of Alabama will present a concert of string music by Hayden, Persichetti, and Beet- hoven tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Members of the group are Mar- garet Christy, cello; Henry Bar- rett, viola; and violinists Roland Johnson and Emil Raab, who for- merly belonged to the University's Stanley Quartet. Their program here will consist of "Quartet in D major" by Haydn; "Third'- String Quartet (in one movement)" by Vincent Persichet- ti, commissioned by the University of Alabama for its quartet, and "Quartet in E minor" by Beet- hoven.. ** * Composers... The music school will hold a Composers Forum this Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Scheduled for performance and discussion are works by Roger Reynolds, '61M, Jerry Bilik, '61M, Donald Matthews, '62M, Kenneth Roberts, '61M,' Bernard Folta, '64M, and Gregory Kosteck, '61M. presents ONCE A Festival of Musical Premieres CHALLENGING NEW COMPOSITIONS by some of the most brilliant creators of our day performed by professional musicians. Fri., March 3 at 8:30 Paul Jacobs, Pianist Sat., March 4 at 8:30 Orchestra, Wayne Dunlap First Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw Tickets: single $1.77, week-end $3, DAC members 10% less, on sale at Marshall's Book Shop TOMOR ROW-8:30 P.M. IN PERSON ! The Famous American Choreographer AGNES DeMmILLE Creator of Modern Ballets I I I In a Discussion of the Modern Dance "ON YOUR TOES" Tickets: $2.50 - $2.00 - $1.50 STUDENTS: $1.75 - $1.40 - $1.05 Phone NO 3-1511, ext. 479 Box office opens tomorrow 10 A.M. PLATFORM ATTRACTIONS Hill Auditorium L .1 I .-Leading Tenor, Metropolitan Opera Company I I in recital TUES., FEB. 28 8:30 in Hill Auditorium s PROGRAM: Songs by Schumann, Richard Strauss, Dor audy, Lehmann, Bridge, Quilter and Malotte; and operatic arias from Handel's "Semele" and "Judas Maccabaeus;" Cilea's "L'Arlesiana," Lalo's "Le Roi d' Ys;" and Bizet's "Carmen." TICKETS: $3.50, $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, $1.50 University Musical Society, Burton Tower Don't Say It with Flowers In, S.G.C. Caepna ujwd TONIGHT at 7 and 9 JAMES CRUZE'S THE COVERED WAGON with LOIS WILSON, J.WARREN KERRIGAN, ERNEST TORRENCE, ALAN HALE Will be shown at silent speed. / I cc t4je the Verional.-co avnn ti eal "' JOSE 'RECO I I I