TCl 1MCWGAN 'DAILY Theatre Notes By ROBERT JUNKER troit at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the F ol1 o w i-n g the successful Detroit Institute of Arts Audi- 'Masked Ball" earlier this month, torium. This program is one of he speech department will pre- the Institute's Concert Series. ent John M. Synge's "Playboy Her show will consist of several f the Western World" this week. sketches, in which she will dis- The Thursday, Friday and Sat- play her superlative command of irday performances will, begin at pantomime, as well as dancing B p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn and the control of emotion which 'heatre. This play is rich in the mime demands. The 11 sketches humor of spontaneous Irish dia- on the program include "Tango ect, yet the plot encompasses Dancer," "Odalisque," and "Ar- irama and delightful love scenes. tist's Life." Christy Mahon, played by Nor- Miss Enters has designed and nan Hartweg, Grad., comes to a made all the costumes for the onely public house and admits to show, as well as written the he tavern keeper, Michael Fla- sketches and music. Her versatili- herty, portrayed by Howard ty extends to many other' fields. Green, Grad., that he has killed She is a mime, painter, sculptor, his overbearing father. illustrator, writer of books, plays Convincing Story and film scenarios, and composer He presents this story so con- and arranger of music. vincingly, however, that Michael Acts, Paints, Dances and his daughter Pegeen, played For the show, in addition, she by Nancy Winston, '59, come to designed the sets, and serves as think of him as a hero. Christy musician, dancer, actor, director, gains new self-confidence and and manager. "The Theatre of nakes love to Pegeen, but a turn- Angna Enters" opened its 10th about conclusion provides a dra- season in London last May, and natic climax fdr the story, toured Europe and the Americas. Brooks Atkinson of the New OvrftyAeiaan u- York Times has called "Playboy Over fifty American and Euro- >f the Western World" ". . a pean museums have exhibited wrork of art, a vibrant dramatic Miss Enters' paintings and sculp- poem edged with laughter at the tures in one-woman shows over tips of the wings." Prof. Jack the last 15 years. Her exhibits Bender of the speech department have included terra cotta figures, wil diect an Jeett Faerportraits, and French, Spanish wld.i iserve as udentFaber and American scenes. More than ciate director. 1200 of her art items have been Other roles will be handled by displayed in museums. Albert Phillips, Spec., Gary Fil- At Wayne State singer, '58, Richard Schiller, '59, The motion pictures,. "Lost An- and Katherine Brock, Grad. The gel" and "Tenth Avenue Angel," remainder of the cast includes were based on stories by Miss En- Sandra Mara, '58, Dianne Stolo- ters. "Silly Girl," one of her books, row, '60, Carol Seidel, '58, Letitia has, been adapted for the screen 'ushmore, '58, and James Young, by an American. film studio. As Grad. choreographer -she created the Versatile Performer mime s e q u e n c e in the film, "The Theatre of Angna Enters," "Scaramouche." a one-woman show starring the Wayne State University Theatre versatile British Jane-of-all-arts, will present "She Stoops to Con- Angna Enters, will appear in De- quer" Thursday through Saturday at their playhouse in Detroit. Oli- ver Goldsmith wrote the "laugh- ing comedy" in the 18th century, and it ranks as one of the most popular comedies between Shakes- peare and Shaw. "She Stoops to Conquer" al- ents: most reaches slapstick comedy, and is aknown . for its mistaken & identities and disguises. 21 efd vWdes LCattda lUaed in~ --dranee S- -___xi I Brussels Fair To Show 'Atomic World' in Miniature By FRED CHEVAL Associated Press Feature Writer BRUSSELS-On either side of a street in the outskirts of Brus- sels, the United States and Russia are preparing for a battle of pres- tige. Comparison Unavoidable The Brussels World Fair is the battleground. The question to be answered: Which nation will make the biggest impression on the mil- lions who will visit the fair? The answer won't be long awaited. King Baudouin will inaugurate the 1958 World Fair- the world of the atomic age in miniature-on April 17 for a six- month run. It will be the first international exposition since New York's fair in pre-nuclear 1939. Men are working extra shifts, toiling at night under flood-lights, 4 Cinema quik/ TONIGHT at 8 "STATE FAIR" with WILL ROGERS and JANET GAYNOR (ORIGINAL VERSION) N ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents to get the 494-acre fairgrounds. completed in time for the opening. Whether one likes it or not, the comparison between the United States and USSR can hardly be avoided. The United States' big circular exhibit building stands on a six and one-half acre tri- angle. Across Parc Gate Avenue is the large, rectangular Soviet building, resembling a giant chunk of ice from some northern Soviet' territory. Soviets Have Advantage In the competition for the at- tention of the 35 million people expected to visit the fair, the United States is starting out with two obvious handicaps: 1) U.S. fair officials have to obtain their funds from Congress. Soviet officials can spend as much as they wish without having to account to their people. 2) The Soviets can-and will- stuff their building with trucks, tractors, railroad engines, elec- tronic and automatic machineries,. To Sell Books. Used books will go on sale from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and Tuesday in the .former base-, ment study hall of the General Library, according to Robert Mul- ler, assistant director of Univer- sity libraries. The 7,000 books to be sold will be priced from 15 cents, with most under a dollar. Inceme from the. books, which are duplicate copies,. will be used for the purchase of new volumes for the University libraries. SYLVIA STUDIO - ---of DANCE Class and Private Lessoins in ... Academic Ballet-Kinder- ballet - Tap - Acrobatic - Kinderance - Ballroom Spanish * SYLVIA HAMER, C.C.A. Phone NO 8-8066-NO 8-7227 525 East Liberty Michigan Theatre Building and one planes. But as one U.S. official said, "We can't display bulldozers which have been building most roads leading to the fair and many elsewhere in the world. We can't exhibit our cars;. they roam roads everywhere. "We can't show machines that workers use daily in factories over the world. We can't display our latest planes which will land most of the thousands of visitors flying to the fair. U.S. Permanent Exhibit ."We are on a permanent, almost worldwide live exhibit with those things which, on the Soviet side, will look like achievements and novelties."' There's no question that Russia is outaspending the Americans. Howard S. Cullman, United States commissioner general to the fair, estimated the Soviets are spending 50 to 60 million dollars. The Russians won't reveal how much they're spending. "It is not a question of the money spent, but of the development of the country which is exhibiting," said a Soviet official. "If you give a country like Spain or Greece a billion dollars to present an exhibit, it would not necessarily be a success" Resources Limited Congress has provided $12,345,000' for the American exhibit. More may be forthcoming. Cullman has warned that the United States pavilion might not be able to remain open at ,night because of limited resources. "I do not want to do a second rate show in competition with our next door neighbors," he said. "In' order to do a top-flight Job we will need 15 million dollars." Architecturally, the United States pavilion will top the Rus- sians. Edward D. Stone of New York designed the world's largest circular building, with a free span room 340 feet in diameter, 95 feet high, covering 200,000 square feet of floor area. The building will en- close trees which were on the site. American Life Shown The building is a combination of transparent plastic and a golden thin plastic lattice. Its plastic roof hangs on cables stretched from the outside walls to a central cylinder. of their big Tupolev Jetj The exhibits will cover all as- pacts of American life. There will be an art and folklore section, a display of United 'States technol- ogy, exhibits of science and city planning, a typical United States Main Street and model homes. There will be an Americn res- taurant, a small closed-circuit color television studio and a small bathing beach. American scenes and landscapes will be shown in a movie prepared by the Walt Disney studios. Display "Problems" An unprecedented part of the United States display will be a section devoted to "unfinished business." This will explain the nation's problems which have not been completely solved-drought, traffic, slums and racial disputes. Across Parc Gate Avenue, the Russians are erecting amassive glass,, steel and aluminum 'struc- ture covering five and one-half of the six and one-half acres alloted them. It has a total capacity of 327,000 cubic yards. A large statue of Lenin will overlook the display. The Soviets have announced they will fill their building with working machines and graphic dis- plays "illustrating all aspects of Russian life. °A large number of performing art companies and individuals are scheduled to give shows in thie 1,000-seat auditorium adjacent to the main Soviet building. It is in this field that the Rus- sians appear .to dominate by far the Amercans, both in number p; performances and performers.Sut private funds are coming In which might allow the United States o, enlarge its cultural presentations. Art Museumi Sows Work Of Professor Drawings and paintings by Prof. Jack A. Garbutt, of the architec- ture college, are now on display in the Museum of Art in the Alumni Memorial Hall. The exhibition, which, will be in the South Gallery until April 6, consists of works done by Prof. Garbutt under a Rackham facul- ty research grant last summer. In the Uintah Mountains of northeastern Utah he made over 100 drawings of rock and wood in their states of growth and decay, "to develop linear imagery In painting that will contain pat' terns of line derived from unusual wood and rock formations in na- ture, and to suggest the vast hid- den forces that have created these patterns." He said he became interested in line through a series of paintings done during the summer of 1956 at Lake Superior. There agnate and driftwood were his main sources of concentration, and "there followed a fascination with all kinds of line." Prof. Garbutt joined the Uni- versity faculty in 1952. He has participated in group shows and competitive exhibitions through- out the country, and in 1955 held a one-man show in Detroit. AIR CONDITIONED NOW DIAL 3 DAYS ONLY NO 2-3136 THE STORY OF starring CLIFTON WEBB- DOROTHY McGUIRE JEAN PETERS-ROSSANO BRAZZI-MAGGIE McNAMARA Shown at 2:45 - 6:25 - 10 P.M. CO-FEATURE all the beauty and rapture of Han Suyin's personal story as she told it in her unforgettable best-seller! BROWN m WILLIM l f 5!''w *Ul 2 T'.T 7. A RF.TH TAYl I-"-_ .2 .... fl