THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~ATTJRDAV. FERRITARY 14 Math, Anthropology Honors Expanded (Continued from Page 1) 'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' Kidd Asks Daring For Original Poetri0 "We do not believe in giving the students projiects to do," he add- ed. The students are not advanced enough in mathematics to do re- search on a profesisonal level' The projects they are able to do are either trivial or have been done by others before them," he con- As seniors the honors students take graduate courses on a begin- ner's level. Juniors take senior courses, Prof. McLaughlin said. rt is possible for students to attend graduate seminars but it would be pointless to attend them for cred- it because then they would have more than the required 40 hours in mathematics. Expands Program The anthropology departiment plans on expanding its program. This is the first semester that juniors may enter the program," Prof. Titiev said. It is a three semester course because the department must first meet the juniors as concentrates. Thus they will not know a stu- dexit's capacity until the end of the first semester of the junior year. In the second semester of the jior yeoar th honorsdestudents people of different cultures. In the first semester of the senior year they read original works in dif- ferent branches of anthropology. In this semester the students go String Music To Be Played The Societa Corelli will appear in the second concert of the Uni- versity's Chamber Music Festival at 8:30 p.m. today in Rackham Auditorium. to the basic field reports instead of the normal summary," tProf. Titiev said. The students meet three times a week for an hour in the junior year and first semester of the senior year, he added. Write Research Papers In the second semester of the senior year each student writes a research paper. The students meet in a group and review their find- ings so that each one can get a better knowledge of the different f ids of anthropology, Prof. I'tev said. Aside from seigethe students student at least once every two weeks to Inquire about his progress on the paper. "We continue to guide them but most of the work is done on an Individual basis rather than the group basis that was done during the 'first two se- mesters of the program," he con- tinued. "If the mathematics depart- ment gets more money, we initend to extend our program and give courses in both the junior and senior year," Prof. McLaughlin ,said. -Daily-David Arnold "NO-NECK MONSTERS"-Big Daddy, played by Prof. Henry Owens, of Eastern Michigan College, winces as he is confronted by Sister Women, her husband and their children, whom Big Daddy calls no-neck monsters, while Maggie the Cat, played by Estelle Ginn, looks on with resignation, The action takes place during the play, "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," currently being pre-- sented by the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre. U' Platform Attractions To Present Travelogues University Platform Attractions wil presnt isannual series of Burton Holmes Travelogues on five successive Thursday nights, beginning next week. Ted Phillis and narrated by Rob- ert Mallett will be shown Thurs- day. The travelogue shows a jour-:. ney through the country, covering the busy river traffic, quaint vil- EAGUE SNACK BARet e Food - Dancing - Entertainment Atmosphere -- Free Admission 9-12 Saturday Night MAKE *25! START TALKING OUR LANGUAGE! les and famous castles oth Rhine and visits to festivals and fairs. The invenltiveness and technical skill of the German people will be illustrated, by picture visits to farm and factory, while Ger- miany's contribution to the world of music, literature and educa- tion will be conveyed through tours of its museums and univer- sities. On March 5, a travelogue will cover "The Golden West," nar- rated and produced, by Thayer Soule. Through the Black Hills of Dakota to the state of Wyoming, the film will cover such scenic wonders as Yellowstone National Park. The Grand Tetons, the Big Horn Country, Glacier-Park, Sun Valley and a stop in Cheyenne to view the famous "Frontier Days"' festival will be shown. A high- light of the film is a hike along the Great Divide to Granite Park Chalet on the roof of the Rockies. Holland, land of windmills, ca- nals and a profusion of flowers, will be presented' March 12 by Mallett. The film visits Rotter- dam, the second largest harbor center; Delft, famous for its blue- patterned dishes and pottery and Akmaar, the "City of the Cheese Market."6416 ENDING TODAY Continuous Today from I P.M - -* * UNDAY ~ Another Greet Suspense Film "A MAN ESCA PE D" IN DE TR OIT: Duble .Bill Of Plays Set For Wayne Wayne State University Theatre will continue its current drama season at 8:30 p.m. today, pre- senting Arthur Miller's "A View from1 the Bridge." Additional performances of the production, which consists of two one-act plays, "A Memory of Two Mondays" and "A View from the Bridge," will be given today and on Feb. 19 and 20. There will be a special perform- ance Feb. 17, sponsored by the League of Women Votprs. "A Memory of Two Mondays," is considered a realistic allegory. In it Miller demonstrates the paths which people take in this world, their search for meaning. and the frustrations arising from their mortal deeds and disappointing achievements through a group of people working In a warehouse. "A View from the Bridge," remni- niscent of a Greek tragedy in its sense of fate and the direct march to catastrophe, is the story of the way man in the modern world naively dhooses a course of action which destroys him. The two plays, first produced in New York in 1955, were created leg roawa'ssupiio f" th one-act play and to demonstrate his own faith in the power of the short drama. By FAITH WEINSTEIN "The poet should dare, wisely, in order to gain a greater degree of originality," Walter Kidd, visit- inglecturer in English, said yes- tray. hWaltr Kidd, himself isape with words. He calls himself an organic symbolist,"? that is, one whose symbolism is "drawn from the very substance of life."' His symbolism Is presented al- ways, In the most effective lan- guage which he can find, or cre- ate. He has turned literary ref er- ences into npuns and verbs for ar- tistic purposes. "When a poet considers that he can give a more intense and color- ful concreteness to his, expression he has the artistic right to frac- ture words into new meanings," Kidd said. lie has "fractured" such names. as Ophelia, and Is- cariot, into common nouns and verbs which he thinks carry great- er connotative power than an or- dinary word could convey. Uses Visual Patterns Besides the use of connotation, for greater power, Kidd has also employed the technique of what he calls "typographical eccentri- cities," the use of deliberate place- ment of words across a page so as to form a visual pattern signifi- cant to the meaning of the poem. He said poetry today has lost the appeal to the ear whiqh char- acterized it during the 17th and 18th centuries. Consequently, he explained, the poet must supple- ment the audible quality of a poem with a visual image, which he provides by the use of the tech- niqu of typgrph'ica imagry Thus the yword image ofg hi "closecrumblingwater" Is height- ened by the fusion of the words Into a single pattern. Much of1 this idea of visual im- agery has come frpm e. e. cum4 mings, who, Kidd said,. has jus'ed great artistry with this form, but who, upon occasion, goes so far into the connotative as to lose the denotative significance of the words. Poetry Published As Conrad Pendleton, Kidd has published one volume of poetry, "Slow Fire of Time" which is a collection of poems which he has written over a number of years. As with individual poems the title of the collection serves as a "thematic symbol" for the whole, according to the poet, who said his title symbbl is usually carried throughout the entire poem. Kidd described the "slow fire of time" symbol as meaning that power inherent in life, which slowly destroys everything which Ann Arbor firemen rescued tour children from their blazing homie at~ 1252 S. State St. on Feb. 5. The children were~ identified as Terry, Gary, Pamela and Pris- cilla Hurst. Robert 0. Hurst, the father, is superintendent of grounds at Ferry Field. Fireman Eugene Zulz, wearing no smoke mask, found Gary, 0, and Terry, 3, unconscIous in a smoke-filled upstairs bedroom. Pamela, 10, and PriscIlla, 7, jumped ifrom a bedroom in the opjosite' end of the house and were caught by Fire Capt. Emer- son F. Ehnis and Fireman Rich- ard K. Hartman. man has built up. However, he does not 'consider this a pessimis- tic theory. Influened~ by Frost Robert. Frost has been a great influence on his writing, KIdd said, both directly and indirectly. The Influence of the New England way of life, which Frost represents, was transportedunby the pioner Oregon where he was born, Kidd said. Throuh hi reerh onFrost, including his Master of rts the- sis on ''The H{umanlsm and Classi- cism of Frost" KIdd has been in- fluenced by the New England poet very directly. One of the things whlch -Kidd appreciates most about the Uni- versity ls the library with its over two million volumes, which will allow him to continue his research on Frost. Tauht~ ' Collee Kidd has taught at many unb- versities and colleges in the mid- west and far west, Before Coming to the University as a visiting lec- turer In English, he was 111 charge of the writing program at Presno State College, C~alifornia. Born Into a family of trn'lhers an d cattlemen, Kidd wus dls- cour aged from writing during his childhood. "I was doing the un- forgivable," he said. He continued towiehowever took hi- bache- lor's and master's degrees at the University of Oregon at Portland, and his doctorate at the Univer- sity of Iowa.. Along with his family history, on the ranch in the blue moun-. tains, he also has famous rela- tives, among them George Eliot, Midhael KIdd and the choreog- rapher. Four Saved From Fire DON'T MISS the ALL CAMPUS VALENTINE DANCE Organization Noties8 I TONIGHT . . . 9-12 P.M. UNION BALLROOM BLASER JOHNSON ORCHESTRA I Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, New York. Enclose your name, address, college or university, and class. English MAL SELSEnglish: WOOING TECHNIQU ThI~4&~ ~4~YT~ ~inJ~h HART*T LYN~r D eOQ.U FN.CRLJ RUCE 4TZAK. CASE INSTITUTE OF TECH, English: WATERFOWL FORMATION 2 A . RO6ER JENNINGS. U. OF CAL. Englsh: MAN WHO CONDUCTS POPULARITY SURVEYS Thkeklish translation: This fellow knows more about 'polls than a telephone lineman. When someone starts, "Hail, hail, the gang's all here!"- he counts noses to make sure. If he canvassed women, he'd be a galculator. If he unte n pr'mg nf niwsonhd ha a ot.n~rltn, A phi llu ha phopozr nn English: TALKING INSECT rjmlhsh ELLMN NCHT SYRACUSe Englsh MIDNIGHT SNACKER ARRrET DOYL MARYLAND (Use of this column for an- nouncements is available to offi- cially recognized and registered or- ganizations only. Organizations planning to be active for this semester must register by February 28. FormsB aalable, 2011 Student Mich. Christian Fellowship, Feb. 15, 4 p.m., Lane Hall. Speakter: Dr. Edwin Palmer, "Who Is This Christ? Ue. of M. Jud Club, practice session, Uni. Christian Fderation, "Life an Fe b 1 4 1 2 noon , n ne a ll Young Frien d meetingFe 15 7:3 Newman Club, Communion Breakfast, Speaker: Rev Fr onM netrreicher, "The Encouragement of Understanding Between Christians and Jews. £ .... 'U DOOR PRIZES -FLOOR SHOW only $1.50 per couple TONIGH 1T PM ALL iTS SWEEP! Maverick' ian amazin role as a "human torpedo" E DM OND Ton igh t at ~7 and 9 P.M. Sunday 8 P.M. with OLIVIA deHAVILLAND MARK STEVENS CELESTE HOLM SHORT: Keeping in Shape, with Robert Benchie ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents U