THE MICHIGAN DAILY uses Problems of Gifted Children AT NORTH CAMPUS Engine School Presents Open House 4 r. rANorama-The 1960 Michitish show portrays Peter Pan's Never Never Land, featuring Peter, Captain, Hook, the Lost Boys and Tinkerbel. INADEQUATE TO NEEDS: K uowzenhovenCriticie Teeiso d e e Television Advertising Il sor it." "The viewer is disgusted with girls carressing refriger- ators," he said. Rejects Theory Prof. Kuowenhoven disagreed with the theory that advertising developed because the supply out- stripped the demand and that an institution which influenced and oriented the consumer was nec- essary. Advertising, according to this theory, became a social insti-. tution and adopted specific values. To illustrate his point, Prof. Kuowenhoven described an award winning advertisement. The ad- vertisement had a quotation which was called a "great idea" of west- ern man. Between the two lines of the quotation was a modern art picture entitled, "Primevial Wall." "There is no reason to buy a container because it is associated with art or the ideas of western man. The quotation was 'A teach- er effects eternity He never knows where his influence stops.' The same idea. also applies to a bartender. Re never knows where his influence stops either," Prof. Kuowenhoven quipped. "The great ideas of western man cannot be condensed into capsule form." "There is no relationship be- tween the painting and the quo- tation," he continued. "The use of art helps the artist rather than art itself." Advertising should not appeal to the itandards about which people revolve. Instead the adver- tising industry ought to be free to adopt its own values and allow creativeness to flourish. Speech Dept. Presents Play By 'U' Student A drama by a Michigan play- wright continues its premiere per- formance at 8 p.m. tonight at Trueblood Aud. in the Frieze Bldg. as the final offering in this semes- ter's speech department playbill. Norman Foster's "Journey to a Distant Point" was originally writ- ten for a playwriting course taught by Prof. Kenneth Rowe of the English department. An unusual technique used in this play is that the principal character is the only actor who appears in the entire play. The other characters appear in only one act.k. In three acts, "Journey to a Distant Point" tells of a young man who has the potential to be a great leader of men, but who lacks the necessary confidence. Under the pressure of war, the young man matures; in each act he is presented in a different situ- ation, growing in confidence through experience. The production is offered as a bonus production for season ticket buyers, but tickets will also be available at 7:00 p.m. tonight at the Trueblood box office on per- formance evenings. The play is directed by Prof. Jack E. Bender of the speech department, with costuming by Elizabeth Birbari and scenic de- signs by Ralph W. Duckwall, Jr. "The purpose of Engineering Weekend is to let the campus know about the engineering school's work," Roger Levy, '60E, project chairman said yesterday. There are about 100 displays in the open house, of which most are located on the North Campus. The exhibits are representative of all departments of the school and many outside industries. Transportation will be provided by free busses which will leave the Engineering Arch every fifteen minutes from 9 a.m. until noon and 1-5:30 p.m. today and 2-5 p.m. tomorrow. Types of displays range from a machine asking general questions about scientific knowledge to a mobile laboratory which tests the endurance of automobile engines. The Automotive Laboratory, Atomic Reactor, Fluids Engineer- ing, and Aeronautical Laboratories are the four North Campus build- ings which will house the displays during the above stated hours. One of the most modern dis- plays is a battery used in satel- lites to power transmitters which operate as long as the satellite lasts. Friars Sing As Festival Hits Midpoint By BEATRICE TEODORO and GEORGE LEVIN "At the halfway points every- thing is going well, and we are looking forward to 'a big week- end," Creative Arts Festival Co- Chairman, Dave Pohld, '62, said yesterday. This afternoon, as part of the Union's Creative Arts Festival pro- gram, the School of Music and members of the Men's Glee Club will present "Music on Campus" at 12:45 in Hill Auditorium. Featured soloists will be Jerry Hakes, '60SM, tenor, Walker Wyatt, Grad., baritone, and Wil- liam Osborne, Grad., organist. Robert Hause, Grad., will conduct the orchestra and David Suther- land, Grad., will direct the choir. The orchestra will play Stra- vinsky's "Canticum Sacrum," an Ann Arbor premier. Karen Klipec, '615M, soprano, will present an operatic recital. Songs from Broadway musicals will be sung by Warren Jaworski, '60SM, baritone, Elizabeth Bow- man, '62SM, soprano, and Ellen Gustafson, '61SM, pianist. Also featured in the show will be the Friars, a group composed of eight members of the Men's Glee Club and patterned after the famous Yale Wiffenpoofs. Present members of the Friars are Brook Stanford, '63SM, and Fred Farran, '60E, first tenors; Vic Calcaterra, '61 and Ed Farran, '60, second tenors; Dave Randolph, '62 and Scott Herrick, '61, bari- tones; and Pete Patterson, '60E and Jack Ransom, '63L, bases. A brass ensemble will play "Canzone," a settimente, and the show will be emceed by Joonmin Kim, '61SM, of the Men's Glee Club. At 7:00 Sunday the Interna- tional Students Association will present a variety show in True- blood Auditorium. The show has been presented throughout Mich- igan all spring. Al Young, '60, will sing folk songs from around the world. There will also be acts from Bra- zil, Lebanon, Japan, Indonesia, India and the United States. Eugene Masselink of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation will speak on the "Goals and Work of Frank Lloyd Wright" at 4 p.m. Monday in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Since the fall of 1959, he has been teaching a course at Taliesin West, one of Wright's homes, of- fered under the sponsorship of Arizona State University, in "The Art and Philosophy of Frank Lloyd Wright." Monday's Festival program will be a poetry reading at 3 p.m. in the multipurpose room of the Un- dergraduate Library. Prof. John Heath Stubbs and Prof. Geoffrey Hill, visiting mem- bers of the English department will read their works along with local campus poets. A discussion period and coffee hour will follow the readings. SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5,7, 9 P.M. EXAMINER-One of the many exhibits of Engineering Weekend, this machine questions the viewer about his scientiflc knowledge. If he answers one of the questions correctly, the light on the right by that question goes off. A wrong answer keepe the light shining. "WE WILL GUARANTEE 'OUR MAN IN HAVANA' TO BE A SOURCE OF IMMEASURABLE FUN!" -N.Y. Times '/ "A film-goer's treat! The sort of film that is too rarely served to a public hungry for adult, witty, sophisticated' entertainment!" --N.Y. Daily News swsAlocGims Noel Coward*lalh char souJo lkro Continuous Today From 1 P.M. "CLEAR-EYED, DIAL NO 8-6416 CANDID AND CRUEL - more than I a restlessness and frenzy; it is a deep cynicism, expresse din absolute hedonism- with shocking candor in the most powerful part of this film which represents a veritable orgy .. beautifully played hard to forget." -Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Times DIAL NO 5-6290 saw LAST TIME TONIGHT THE PREMIERE PERFORMANCE OF JOU'RNEY TO:A by Norman S. Foster (student) 75c general admission 8:00 P.M. Trueblood Aud., Frieze Bldg. Box office open 7:00 P.M. -Dept. of Speech d l GLEE CLUB CONCERT TONIGHT! TWO PERFORMANCES: 7:00 and 9:00 P.M. 1111