By SANDRA JOHNSON "Architecture is currently in a jumbled, desultry mess," Craig Ellwood, prominent Los Angeles architect, said yesterday. This is partially due, he explain- ed, to the moral climate of our society. "Ours is the era of Madi- son Avenue . . . of mass culture." The architect today is forced toward mediocrity both in his at- tempts to create "sellable" build- ings, and in his personal striving for glory and recognition, Ellwood explained. This urgency to render every- thing a work of genius produces an architecture of novelty, base- less innovations, and personal, idiosyncracies. Architects seek to create a new architectural style with each new building. Rational- ity of structure is neglected. Criticizes Sensualism Ellwood criticized particularly "degenerative sensualism," that is, designing projections or forms merely because of the visual ef- fect they create, not because of any practical function. "We are not sculptors," he as- serted. "We are architects. For us form is only valid when it is shaped by structure, and perhaps characterized by culture, climate and fun':tion." As example of the type of arch- itecture to which he was referring Ellwood showed slides of two buildings that looked like birds. Hunter's Decoy The first appeared to be the sort of decoy duck, hunters would use, except that it was one and one-half stories high. "The owner is a Long Island duck salesman," Ellwood explained. r 11 Great Architecture "Great architecture is art; but great architecture must also re- flect measurement, technique and reason," he added. Many architects began design- ing "sensual" structures, Ellwood said, when lazy, untalented and avaricious men began creating buildings in a degenerate mech- anized architectural style. But new materials and machine techniques have been developed and, when creatively utilized, will express logic as well as beauty, Ellwood pointed out. There is no longer a place for hand workman- ship in our economy, with the per- fection and beauty of mechanized methods, he said. Come One, Come All to the '."y SCHWADEN INN Try one of our SCHWABEN BURGERS 215 South Ashley L r Lab Playbill Sets Shaw Production The speech department will re- sume its laboratory playbill series with "The Dark Lady of the Son- nets," by George Bernard Shaw, at 4:10, p.m. today in Trueblood Aud. The play was first produced in London in 1910. The Union Sponsors CAREERS in, MA COMING TO OUR STAGE JOSE GRECO and phis Company of SPANISH DANCERS IPrson! S~ingers ant Musicianso MICHIGAN THEATRE ORCH. $3.00 2.50 with FLAMENCO at 8:30 P.M. ?BAL $3.00 - 2.00 GondSINGERS Panel Discussion Tues,, March 21 4:10--5:10 P.M: Multipurpose Room, UGLI I Lw F ~~1 S 1 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Cinemna quild presents Thursday and Friday: THE NEW CHINA Saturday and Sunday: THE PICKWICK PAPERS 72 Watts in Kit Form for $149.50 NEW LAYOUT --- SAVES 20 HOURS---, DIAMOND NEEDLES... $5.95 full year guarantee --BRING YOUR CATALOG and SAVE MONEY- ANN ARBOR Hi Fi & TV Center CAMPUS STORE There was not a hint of pd- litical differences between the rulers of Russia and China when The New -China, the mammoth color documentary we are showing Thursday and Friday, was planned and made several years ago. Harmonious- ly the Central Documentary Studios of Moscow and the ChV nese People's- Republic Film Studios of Peiping worked out a five-section film: that culmi- nates in a mass celebration of the birth of the Republic. The theme .of the film is the con- trast between the old and the new China, 'a comparison that is unfailingly to the advantage. of the regime that produced the film. An inexperienced observer would indeed be struck by the emergence of this overnight. Utopia and could only wonder, If, in the passage of years since, the Chinese people were not now on the threshhiold lof per- fection. A serious discussion of the problems facing this coun-_ try, under-developed and over- populated, with the great mass- es of people illiterate, is never attempted. Such an approach would have placed it in the stream of, the true documen- tary, even though the answers would have reflected the Com- munist ideology. But that this is not even attempted indicates a wilful substitution of faith for reason; an inclination to self- congratulation, a tendency to- ward wishful thinking that has always been the bugbears of to- talitarian socialism. But there are many reasons f or seeing this film, apart from its importance as the Image the Chinese government wishes to project. In many ways, it is adroit propaganda. Beautiful and lavish photography, care- ful editing, suave narration make this an attractive film to Western European governments feel that if China were admit- ted to .the U.N., she would be committed to world responsi- bility in a way that would make unilateral decisions on her part much less possible. Be that as it may, every thoughtfulAmeri- can can assess his own reactions to The New China. He will then be in a: better position to ap- praise the course of conduct that our country will take. When The Pickwick Papers, our feature Saturday and Sun- day, appeared in 1954, it was the twenty-seventh film based on a Dickens work. Noel Lang- ley,~ who. wrote , the script, stuffed over 600 pages of com- edy into a movie 109 minutes long. And to give life to the lively band of oddities that fill Dickens' pages, Langley, who also directed the film, enlisted the finest character actors of the English stage.,and screen. Looking as if they stepped out of the famous Phit Illustrations that accompanied the original "Papers".,arek Nigel Patrick as Jingle, the man with the tele- graphic speech habits; Her- mione Gingold as Miss Tomp- kins, the schoolmistress; Joyce Grenfell as Mrs. Leo Hunter whose "llterahry fawncy-dress breakfast" provides some of the film's funniest moments; James Donald (the Doctor in Bridge on the River Inwai); and Donald Wolfit (who recently performed Shakespeare at Hill Auditorium). James Hayter as the pouchy Mr. Pickwick, the titular head of the group of bachelors out to study human nature, moves through his role (as do all the others) as if he were born that way. As for Mr. Pickwick, being trappedin a lady's -chamber and being tried before' the most corrupnt ndAhilariou ur iwn SERVICE NO 5-8607; I S.G.C. Cinema uild TONIGHT and Tomorrow at 7 and 9 SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 7 and 9 DICKENS' THE NEW CHINA THE PICKWICK PAPERS (Color), documentary in English, rmmde in China with James H Donald, "A. mammoth, picturesque, and terrifying import" wit Jaes ayter, JamesDoad -. I