THE MICHIGAN DAILY Demonstrators Demand D4=4 650 Radio in A.As Vengeance for Lumumba Everybody's Listenin' to THE "NOON SHOW" Ti World News Roundup' 12-1 . . . Monday-Friday 11 I PAID ADVERTISEMENT il GENEVA P)-The International Commission of Jurists asked Pres- ident Moise Tshombe of Katanga yesterday to be allowed to conduct an impartial inquiry into Patrice Lumumba's death. The commission, representing 39,000 judges, lawyers and law professors in 62 countries, cabled Tshombe it was deeply concerned by the circumstances of Lumum- ba's death and considers essential a thorough investigation of a legal nature by a highly qualified in- ternational committee. ACCRA (IP) - Ghana yesterday recognized the Lumumbist Congo government of Antoine Gizenga at Stanleyville and ordered all Bel- gians to leave this country by Fri- day afternoon. It is estimated there are fewer than 20 Belgians left in Ghana. Ghana's president Kwame Nkru- mah already had recognized the regime of the slain ex-premier Patrice Lumumba and now don- tends that Gizenga, Lumumba's former vice premier, is the sole authority in the Congo. CHALLENGE * Mass Meeting 9*Fri., Feb. 17, Thursday and Friday: UMBERTO D Saturday and Sunday: THE LAVENDER HILL MOB C/h i a ~jjI4 presents -AP Wirephoto EGYPTIAN RIOT -- A Cairo mob attacks the Belgian Embassy. Katanga Leader Tshombe Appears To Favor Alliance I :a By ADRIAN PORTER Associated Press Feature Writer ELISABETHVILLE - Moscow wants him arrested as a puppet of1 Belgium, and tried for murder in the death of former Congo Premier Patrice Lumumba ... He heads the Congo's richest province, but part of his territory has slipped away ... . He scoffs at United Nations moves and says his foes want a Communist Congo . . . He works cooperatively with1 Belgians, remnants of colonial day.. This is Moise Tshombe, presi- dent of Katanga and a storm cen- ter in the international contro- versy sparked by Lumumba's death. Not Easy Going What is called the "independent state" of Katanga may seem at times to be smugly indifferent to what is going on elsewhere, but under the surface all is not smooth here., What happens west of here must affect Katanga, even though it has unilaterally seceded.-Tshombe' fought for a long time to keep United Nations troops from com- ing into Katanga. Now they are here and they serve as a reminder that the Congo's problems are also Katanga's. Today Tshombe appears to be trying to weld an anti-Communist alliance in the southern Congo that eventually might control the chaotic nation. Isolate Provinces His moves suggest an aim to iso- late Kivu and Oriental provinces, held by Lumumba followers, with the eventual hope that they would disintegrate in economic chaos. Political, military and economic links have been formed in recent weeks with President Joseph Kasa- vubu's regime in Leopoldville, with Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu's forces and with Tshombe's old ally Al- bert Kalondji in southern Kasai. There is little doubt Tshombe wants to be top man in these al- liances. He keeps aloof from any arrangements that might leave him in an inferior position. Ts- hombe has held the idea since in- dependence that he would emerge as top Congo leader. But today Tshombe is busy try- ing to hold what he has in Katan- ga. His army has been fighting Baluba rebels for more than five months and Lumumbist troops are camped in Manono, 400 miles from Elisabethville. Politically Tshombe is reason- ably strong, militarily he is hold- ing his own. Economic experts in Elisabeth- ville say Katanga, with a popula- tion of about 1,200,000, has a na- tional income of around $980 mil- lion. . 4:15 * 3-C, Vittorio de Sica, one of the foremost directors of our time, came to prominence after World War II as one of the Italian neo-realists. There were many who felt that Sciuscia, the story of two waifs committed to re- form school as victims of the Black Market, had more real humanity than the then more touted films of Rossellini, with their obvious political commit- ments. De Sica's position, as the artist concerned with suf- fering in society, was brilliant- ly reaffirmed by Bicycle Thief, an arraignment of existing con- ditions more, telling than Ros- sellini's skillful punching of the political bag. Without due straining it might be said that De Sica was the Camus, Ros- sellini the Sartre of the Italian cinema. Umberto D, de Sica's best film since Bicycle Thief, makes no claim to solving problems; it is an unabashed study of loneliness, loneliness of a unique kind, the tragedy of old age, when the world has somehow greatly shrunk; one is no long- er welcome, and achievement is impossible. Under these cir- cumstances, maintaining dig- nity is hard enough; but to try to realize love is to court dis- aster. Few actors are more deserv- ing of critical investigation than Alec Guinness. Unfortu- nately, many consider him a "sacred cow" that is to be re- vered, but not analyzed. This is a most puzzling attitude to anyone who recognizes that there are not many actors who can survive a probing examina- tion of their acting abilities as successfully as Guinness. Union HELP WORK FOR CHALLENGE-... NO LAST CALL on Fall and Winter Women's Shoes Ladies' Dress Shoes Reg. to 14.99 FAMOUS 900 BRANDS pair Sport, Flats, Boots Value to 12.95 the finest comic characters and situations that have appeared in film history. However, when we consider Guinness' more recent expedi- tions into serious film drama, we are disturbed by a feeling that something is lacking In Guinness' art. For some reason, his characterizations never fuil,- ly come alive. They fail to con- vey that warmth and depth of human feeling which makes a good dramatic characterization a great one. In The Prisoner, for instance, Guinness played a Cardinal Mindzenty-type role. On the surface, the Card- nal is meant to be a highly con- trolled and dignified individual, lacking real compassion, hiding, behind facile intellectual de- fenses. This Guinness captured superbly. But when the Cardi- nal is finally broken by the ruthless brain-washing tech- niques of the Communist In- quisitor, when he has been stripped of his defenses and his human frailties have been ex- posed, Guinness is unable to convey the depth of suffering and give a life-likeness to the human misery which arises from this revelation of sin and weakness. The character re- mains an actor, an animated puppet, not a human being. This deficiency Is made even more apparent by Jack Haw- kins' brilliant and living por- trayal of the complex Inquisi- tor who is caught between in- human duty and his own deeply felt compassion for his victim. In The Bridge on the River Kwai, Guinness did a splendid Job as the captured British of- ficer whose defiance andknow- how eventually yoke his cap- tors. But in the final scene, when he is suddenly made con- scious of what his bridge-mania has cost, Guinness' acting does not fully realize the self-rec- ognition and tragic illumina- tion that "Oh God! What have I done?" is meant to convey. If we compare Guinness' char- acterization with Sessue Haya- kawa's portrayal of the Jap- anese Officer whose honor and dreams of being an artist have been destroyed by these men who have taken over the build- ing of his bridge, we automati- calfy sense the warmth and depth of feeling that Guinness fails to convey. Finally, what to this reviewer is Guinness' most significant failure-his portrayal of Gul- ley Jimson in The Horse's Mouth. Jimson, a rebel with a passion for painting, a selfish old man with a beautiful way of looking at life, a grump who underneath is one of the most lovable and humane of persons, becomes merely a colorful, man- nered, queer old painter in Guinness' hands. 2 00 I Pair gn /a.[A 306 S. State 9:00-5:30 Guinness' early roles were primarily caricatures or bit parts. In Oliver Twist, he was the shaggy and hook-nosed Fagan; in Great Expectations, he was Pip's semi-sophisticated and lighthearted roommate; and in Kind Hearts and Coro- nets, a Guinness tour de force, he played a half-dozen differ- ent roles including a balloon- riding suffragette. In each of these roles, Guinness suppressed his own personality in order to become the character. For each new role, he created a new set of features and. mannerisms, while successfully discarding those mannerisms which iden- tified him with earlier roles. Al- ways his aim seemed to be to effect this change from Guin- ness to not-Guinness. This, in itself, is a remarkably difficult task. When faced with the cold and unsympathetic eye of the camera which mechanically re- veals any hocus-pocus and magnifies inconsistency of char-, acter, only a master of these -techniques can escape exposure. Guinness' great technical skill and self-mastery not only avoided these hazards, they achieved for him his goal of self-suppression. Thus, his ear- ly roles, which are more carica- tures than real characteriza- ions, were invariably success- ful. I I £an z CoteJt GIRLS, win a 6 weeks trip to Los Angeles and many other prizes by competing in a Lanz contest. Is this an insurmountable de- fect in Guinness' abilities as an actor? Maybe, but it is still too early for conclusions. One ex- planation for the failure might be the stress Guinness has al- ways given to the principle o: suppressing his own personal- ity. In his recent mo~vies, even though he has broadened thi outlines of his characteriza- tions, he seldom slips outsidi these self-imposed bounds. Is it possible that, this careful planning and tight control have also, suppressed that natura warmth and genuine feeling which is essential for a livini Pick up your entry blank at once. Contest closes on March 31, 1961 SEE OUR LANZ WINDOW In what might be called Gum- ness' middle film period, he broadened his comic carica- tures and gave them a richness his earlier roles had not pos- sessed. Though he moved more and more toward true charac- terization, he never fully aban- doned riatue. -is desire to If i I ,I I I