THE MICHIGAN DAILY vement Seeks Practical Experience r All Foreign Engineering Students FASCINATED BY OBSCURITY: Prof. Arrowsmith Tells of Interest In Criticism, Translation of Classics -CAMPUS-. 211 S. State NO 8-9013 --DOWNTOWN-- 205 E. Liberty NO 2-0675 - By BARTON HUTHWAITE Foreign engineering students may soon benefit from a movement designed to help them gain prac- tical experience in the United States. Security restrictions, immigra- tion regulations,regional preju- dices and English language short- comings are now blocking foreign students from practical training jobs. "Some foreign students consider this experience even more valuable than formal education here in the 'United States," assistant to the, dean of engineering school Prof. John G. Young said yesterday. Work Desirable. Practical work is desirable in order to apply formal education in the underdeveloped countries, he said. A proposal to study the problem] is now pending before the execu- tive board of the Anerican Society of Engineering Education. If ap- proved, the ASEE study would evaluate the worth of practical experience for foreign students here and also create an awareness of the problem, Prof. Young, also chairman of the ASEE Interna- tional Relations Committee said. "Many students have gone home feeling deprived," he continued. Instead of reaping international good will . . . they return to their native land disappointed," Prof. Young commented. "This has a big bearing on our status in critical countries," he' added. Allowed To Work Technical students are allowed to work in this country for 18 months after graduation according to present immigration laws, Prof. Young said. The ASEE proposed study would require one year's time at a cost of approximately $24,000. The foreign student's principal handicap is that of being a tem- porary employee, the study nropo- sal noted. "Most industrial employ-1 ers consider technical students or graduates only when there is rea- sonable expectation of several) years, or preferably career, em- ployment," the proposal continued. Has To Be Wanted "The foreign student has to be badly wanted and pretty well ad- vanced to be accepted for tem- porary employment by most indus- trial firms," Prof. Young said. Fac- ulty members sometimes step in and assist the student wanting em- ployment through ttheir contacts in industry. "But this is the exception," Prof. Young said. Folks inger Plans Show Here Today1,1 The walls of the Armory will echo with nonsense songs, songs of bad men and of heroes, of court- ship and of drinking when Oscar Brand, folksinger and humorist, steps onto the stage at 8:30 p.m. today to entertain his audience. The balladeer carries with him a repertoire of songs from folk to By CAROL LEVENTEN "I was fascinated by the ob- scurity of it all," Prof. William Arrowsmith said, explaining his early interest in classics. "I first took Greek at prep school, and was the only one in the only class." The smiling, distinguished pro- fessor, now a memberhof the classics department at the Uni- versity of Texas, has several pro- fessions which he can rightfully call his own. A well-known classi- cal scholar, he is also a critic and translator. Classics is not a degree field for everyone, he explained, adding that "the 'caviar curriculum' should attract the very best stu- dents in the university. Visits Ann Arbor Prof. Arrowsmith, who is in Ann Arbor this week to give two lec- tures for the classical studies and English departments, was here during the war in a Japanese area studies program. He attended Princeton and Oxford, and was a Guggenheim Fellow, A Woodrow Wilson Fellow, a Rhodes scholar and a Prix de Rome Fellow. A translator of a great number of Greek and Roman tragedies, he is at his best when discussing work in this area. His work includes the plays of Aristophanes and Euripides, "Pe- tronius the Satyricon," which= he described as "a Roman Lolita, only much better," and which will be published by the University Press. "I try to make a play produce-t able," he said. "The thing you've got to create is the illusion of con- temporaneity. It's impossible to put Aristophanes in the" exact modern idiom, and if you stretch the modernity of the idiom too far, the illusion necessarily breaks." The translation of ancient drama presents a problem in that a balance between modern idiom and classical stylization must be achieved. Formerly, translators tried to create a sense of how tragic dic- tion must have sounded to Athen- ian ears, with its austerity, ele- vation and archaism. The actor employing these translations found it difficult to make his lines live, he added. Speeches were further compli- cated by fixed meter and internal rhyme. Relates Drama rently, he is continuing his trans- lations and reviewing poetry and novels, in addition to completing for the Finest in Recorded Music a novel begun in Europe. COMING NEXT IVEEK! O Wednesday thru Saturday, February 25-28 to The Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ' Rossini's Comic Opera * ri."H BRBROF- SEVILLE" a Presented by the DEPARTMENT of SPEECH and the SCHOOL of MUSIC Tickets available for Wednesday and Thursday performances 1.75, 1.50, 1.00 OM BOX OFFICE OPENS MoN\DAY AT to A.M.p t> C0<'="3t)C"C>{'."?t0<"""">>t?"?C1<""t>t< rt> <}" ;"<">">Cl<"" >f<} ">"tt} () f' Um I )PENS TODAY AT 'U': AdvoCacy Institute To Talk On Argument Priesentation The argument, its presentation and its relation to proof and pro- cedurql rules will be the principal topic of the Institute of Advocacy's 1959 meeting which opens today in the Rackham Building. Prof. Charles W. Joiner of the law school and chairman of the Institute committee, said the pur- pose of the Institute was to "help the profession to better represent its clients and society." ' Prof. Joiner explained that each year's meeting, which is sponsored annually by the law school, ex- amines different parts of the trial. News Analyst To Gi ve Talk On Reporing Samuel Lubell, election analyst and author, will speak on "The Human Side of Interpretative Re- porting" at 3 p.m. today in Aud. A, Angell Hall, as a University Lee- turer in Journalism. Lubell, a Columbia University graduate, began his newspaper career with the Long Island Daily Press. He then worked for the Washington Post, the Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch and the Washington Times-Herald. He has also done considerable magazine' writing. His articles have appeared in the Saturday Evening Post, Colliers, and Look., Lubell spent the first years of World War II working for the Office of Facts and Figures and then was with the Office of War Information. He was also an as- sistant to the Director of Eco- nomic Stabilization and aided Ber- nard Baruch on his wartime studies. Toward the end of the war, he was correspondent for the Satur- day Evening Post in the China- Burma-India Theatre. In previous years, rules of evi- dence, the art of pleading, and presentation of proof were among the subjects discussed. The four lawyers who will be participants in this year's Institute include two from Chicago, Albert E. Jenner, Jr., and Peter Fitz- patrick, and two from New York, Harry Gair and Emile Zola Ber- man. Prof. N.; Edd Miller of the speech department and Prof. James V. McConnell of the psy-I chology department will also par- ticipate. The Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court, John R. Dethmers, will take part in a discussion and demonstration of appellate advo- cacy. The agenda for today's program, thhe first of the two-day Institute, will include the points which make an argument effective, a demon-, stration of an argument to the jury by Jenner and Fitzpatrick, and a critique of the two lawyers' argument by Professors Miller and McConnell. Prof. Joiner expects 400 mem- bers of the Bar to attend. 'To Lecture 'On Religionl John Crowe Ransom, professor emeritus of English at Kenyon College will speak on "Religion and Poetry" at 4:10 p.m. Monday in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Sponsored by the English de- partment and the Committee on Studies in Religion, Prof. Ransom is the author of several books and poetry. He received degrees from Van- derbilt University and Oxford Uni- versity in addition to a Guggen- heim fellowship for creative writ- ing and a Nollingen award in poetry. I I OSCAR BRAND ...to sing ballads backroom ballads, from love songs to inane songs. Brand has received many awards for both his children's-records and his record series for adults. His own composition of "A Guy Is a Guy" sold more than a million records. Brand, a graduate psychologist, has taken what he has learned about the human personality and has woven it into the' pattern of his folk song presentations. He has been able to develop a song-and-story presentation which has proved successful in such places as New York's Carnegie Hall and McMillen Auditorium, as well as on his weekly television show from New York. "xi " A 11 The Kingston Trio Hill Auditorium -- 8:00 P.M.-- Sat., Mar. 14 RESERVE TICKETS with this coupon. Mail to the League Undergrad office with payment by March 4. Tickets may be picked up at Hill Aud., March 9 through 13. NAME Phone main floor, front 1st balcony tickets at $1.50. (number) other tickets at $1.25. (number) Total amount of order $ I L Make all checks payable to the IHC-Assembly Show. \ \ STARTING TODAY Continuous From 1 o'clock Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 P.M. Nights and Sundays 90c Week Day Matinees 65c IL- i I f A TODAY Through Saturdayr I r ~lv ow w TWO GREAT ALL TIME SHOWS IN AN ENCORE TRIUMPH! DIAL NO 2-3 136 I "MY FAIR LADY" OF FILMDOM I -N.Y. TIMES -S ~Idh* '.4 4- I They called her"Maggie the Cat"! PAUL EA I : in METROCOLOR AN AVON PRODUCTION Tonight at 7:00 and 9:00 ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S "SUSPICION" with. CARY GRANT JOAN FONTAINE Cartoon * Saturday at 7:00 and 9:00 Sunday at 8:00 "LA, S-TRADA with GUILETTA MASINA A KIITLJ n IV rf ) 11 ICIII I I ENDING SATURDAY i . ; 1 llli a li mml 4i 1 1 DIAL NO 8-6416 and strangers! BOLD IN ITS CASTINGi...OBOLDER IN THE TELLIJNG! HERE ARE THE MANY FACES OF LOVE --THE TENDER...THE SAVAGE... THE STRANGE... REVEALED WITH A RARE AND STUNNING FORCE} H ECHT-H1ILL-LANCASTER present --M'-DEBORAH ANDBUTA E KtwNk ER "Should win the Academy Award!" -NEWS (Maonager's Note: it didn't - it ran second to "River Kwai" - but it scared the devil out of Guinness) 4,., :t HENRY FONDA - I "i - .,f " I i I