PAGE RIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 9. 1'966 PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHIGAN DAiLY SATURDAY. APRIL W 1!~ vaa a. a, a a . i i ... t aa aroaad iT} li7UU O Acclaim By MARCIA WICK Theatre history is in the making right here in Ann Arbor with "An Evening's Frost," an original pro- duction created by Professional Theatre Program Director Mar- cella Cisney and University poet and faculty member, Donald Hall. Although one is not usually in- clined to think of Robert Frost in terms of show business success, this delicate combination of the late Frost's thoughts and poems has met with consistent nation- wide success. Following its Ann Arbor premiere in the spring of 1965, the production ran as an off- Broadway hit for five months, terminating in late February. Highlighting the program's east- ern run were two performances in February at the Library of Con- Greets 'Evening Frost" Sspension o Stanford estival Tour of countries ranging I mative program based on the gim Clhi Chapter Ends Across Campus gress in Washington, D.C., on the third anniversary of Frost's death. While alive, not only had Frost given several readings there, but he also served as literary consul- tant at the library. "An Evening's Frost" has been in great demand ever since its conception. Negotiations are pres- ently underway for a Near and Far Eastern tour in the fall of 1966 under State Department sponsor- ship. The show will then return for a limited engagement in New York, followed by a heavily-book- ed college tour during the winter and spring months of 1967. In March the production will again return to Ann Arbor, for the benefit of those who missed its original presentation. Final plans at this point are for a European Fe from Scandinavia to the Iron Cur- works of one of America's poetic tain and terminating in London in geniuses and designed specifically the fall of 1967. Plans for "An Evening's Frost" first took shape in 1962, when Miss Cisney attended a Frost read- ing held at the University. During the same year Miss Cisney also heard actor Will Geer reading se lections from Walt Whitman and Mark Twain. Putting two and two together, she. realized that "it was natural chemistry to combine Frost and Geer into one program." Miss Cisney stated that "while there is little physical resemblance between the two, Geer's relation- ship to the natural world seemed very akin to that of Frost." En- listing the aid of poet Hall, she then created a moving and infor- for one of America's actors. "An Evening's Frost' simply of four actors-t and one woman-who br 43 of Frost's poems, tied by a running commenta poet's own thoughts as in his personal letters. The presentation begin early life as a farmer a to support a wife and dren on a meager incom his move to England in his subsequent recogn contemporaries such as Ezra Pound, and ends eventual return to the major literary figure. foremost " consists three men ing to life d together ary of the expressed Collegiate Press Service members of the Stanford chapter STANFORD, Calif.-This is the insist this was the reason for the week Sigma Chi's at Stanford Uni- disciplinary action, saying they versity have been waiting for, be- had followed the ritual just as cause it marks the end of their they had always done. one-year suspension. A committee of national Sigma The chapter was suspended by Chi officers, Stanford chapter un- the executive committee of the dergraduates, and alumni has beenII National Sigma Chi fraternity last reviewing the suspension, but April for failing to keep the rit- Stanford University officials have ual and for failing to keep the been kept in the dark about the chapter house clean. committee's action. SATURDAY, APRIL 9 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will present "The Bandits of Orgoloso" in the Architecture Aud. 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Two pre- sents Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" in Aud. A. 7:30 p.m. - There will be a SNCC Freedom Benefit at the Ark, 1421 Hill St. Poetry and music by various artists will be featured. All proceeds are for Lowndes County, Alabama. 8 p.m.-The University Players will preseit Henrik Ibsen's "Peer Gynt" in Trueblood Aud. SUNDAY, APRIL 10 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will present "The Bandits of Orgoloso" in the Architecture Aud. 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Two pre- sents Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" in Aud. A. 101 Rend '0i is with his The suspension came just be- "There has been no contact with attempting fore the chapter members were our office," said John Hansen, as- four chil- .to pledge the first Negro in the sistant dean of men at Stanford ne, follows fraternity's 110-year history. The and Interfraternity Council ad- 1912 and national office had been inform- viser. nition by ed the Negro would be pledged. Hansen predicted'that when the Yeats and National officers of Sigma Chi decision of the Sigma Chi inves- with his have denied that the Stanford tigating committee is announced U.S. as a chapter was suspended because of it will be watched- with great' the move to pledge a Negro, but interest by a number of other campuses where Sigma Chi chap- *. ters.. are being investigated to see if they have autonomy in chosiltg members. "SigmaChi could lose 40 chap- F IN ters overnight if they make no ..............blaantmistake," Hansen said. :;:z:;:::>: .............................z...::.:":::;::managed toofa t eyve ma acloudlo d Daily Classi fieds DALI 171.CFFICIAL BULLEI ':"LY"W..: . . . .L.. ..-. Kv ... ................. . . .C.. . THREE EASTER SERVICES AT FIRST METHODIST CHURCH State at Huron and Washington SUNDAY, APRIL 10 AND THIS IS LIFE ETERNAL Dr. Hoover Rupert preacihng at each Service EASTER CHORAL MUSIC-THREE CHOIRS Mary McCall Stubbins, Organist i 1:15 A.M. to 12:30 P.M.- Service Broadcast, WOIB-am, WOIA-fm - -r--- - - 10 The Daily Offlctai Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The l Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday 1 for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- , mum of two times on request'; Day t Calendar items appear once only Student organiration notices are not accepted for publication.1 SATURDAY, APRIL 9] *Day Calendar School of Music Guest Recital-George Katz, pianist: Recital Hall, School oft Music, 4:30 p.m. Cinema Guild-"The Bandits of Orgo- loso": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. Dept. of Speech University Playersc Performance-"Peer Gynt" by Henrik] Ibsen: Trueblood Aud., 8 p.m. General Notices Doctoral Examination for Richard Charles Hespen, English Language & Literature; thesis: "Ludwig Lewisohn at Literary Critic," Sat., April 9, 1611 Haven Hall, at 10 a.m. Chairman, Mor- ris Greenhut. Doctoral Examination for George Syl- van Bobinski, Library Science; thesis: "Andrew Carnegie's Role in American Public Library Development," Sat., April 9, 311 General Library, at 9 a.m. Chair- man, R. E. Bidlack.1 Doctoral Examination for Chester Ray- mond Leach, Jr., English Language & Literature; thesis: "A Critical Edition of Tennyson's 'In Memoriam'," Sat., April 9, E. Council Room, Rackham, Bldg., at 1:15 p.m. Chairman, Karl Litzenberg. Doctoral Examination for Anthony Grayum Bing, English Language & Lit- erature; thesis: "French Criticism of Shakespeare, 1930-1960," Sat., April 9, 2601 Haven Hall, at 9:30 a.m'. Chair- man, John Arthos. Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative April graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, for honors or high honors should recommend such students by forwarding a letter to the Director, Honors Council. 1210 Angell Hall, be- fore noon, Thurs., April 28, 1966. Teaching departments in the School of Education should forward letters directly to the Office of Registration and Records, Room 1513 Administration Bldg., by noon, Thurs., April 28, 1966. Attention Faculty Members Of: Col- lege of iLterature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health and School of Business Administration: Stu- dents, expecting degrees April 30, 1966. are advised not to request grades of I or X. When such grades are abso- lutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow you to report the make-up grade not later than noon, Thurs., April 28, 1966. Wanted: 20 graduate students to as- sess tuition at Spring-Summer Registra- tion, May 3 and 4. $1.50 per hour. Re- port to Room 3007 Administration Bldg. as soon as possible. Student Government Council Approval of the following student-sponsored events becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All publicity for these events must be withheld until the approval has become effective. Approval request forms for student sponsored events are available in Room 1011 of the SAB. Phi Sigma Sigma (and Panhellenic Association), cookie sale, Fishbowl and Diag, April 12-13, 9-5 p.m. Summary of Action Taken by Student Government Council at Its Meeting April 7, 1966 Approved: That SGC appoint Jim Ben- ton treasurer. Approved: 1) Routine approval of summer activities be delegated to the Office of Student Organizations. 2) If there is a question raised, appeals and intricate matters shall be handled by the summer interim committee com- posed of Ed Robinson, Cynthia Samp- son, Mark Simons and Ruth Baumann. In September the Council may review the actions of the interim committee. Anything other than activity approval shall be decided by the Council by a post-card ballot with interim commit- tee recommendation included if possible Approved: That SGC accept these rec- ommendations as the SGC recommenda- tions to the Calendaring Committee: Fall Concerts given by: Band, Glee Club, Homecoming, Panhellenic-IFC, Al- pha Phi Omega-Pershing Rifle Club, Sesquicentennial Committee. Z Shows presented by: Soph Show, Gilbert and Sullivan. Winter Concerts: IHA, Development Council Stud. Relations Board. Shows: MUSKET, Gilbert. and Sulli- van. Other events: Creative Arts Festival, World Fair, Winter Weekend, IFC Sing. Approved: That the office equipment in Rm. 1550 be moved to Rm. 1548 which will serve as the SGC library, mimeo room and committee meeting room. Approved: That SGC allocate Rm. 1550 to Joint Judiciary Council for perma- nent office space. Approved: That Rm. 1532 be assigned to the Student Housing Association as an SGC committee. Approved: That Rm. 1528 be retained under the control of SGC as an activi- ties room. Approved: That the Student Sesqui- centennial Committee be given desk and file space in Rm. 1523. Approved: That the Writer-in-Resi- dence Committee be given desk and file space in Rm. 1528. Approved: That the executive vice- president relocate the Folklore Society when possible to enable GSC to make full use of the office they now share. Approved: That the administrative vice-president investigate the cost and practicality of prefabricated offices for the first and second floor open areas. Approved: That SNCC and Voice Po- litical Party combine office space. Approved: That REACH be given a desk and file in Rm. 1528. Approved: That Student Government Council appoint Cynthia Sampson, Ed Robinson, Ruth Baumann and Bob Smith delegates to the NSA Conference and Mark Simons, Steve Schwartz, Sher- ry Meyer, Jim Benton and Mike Dean as alternates. Approved: That SGC schedule Home- coming 167 for the Indiana game, Oc- tober 21, 1967. Approved: That SGC grant the Twad- dler temporary recognition. Approved: That SGC grant Sigma Pi temporary recognition as a colony. Approved: That SGC grant the Com- mittee for Improved Education tempor- ary recognition. Approved: That SGOC grant the W.E.B. DuBois Club temporary recognition. Approved: That SGC grant the South- ern Asia Club temporary recognition. Approved: That SGC grant Delta Phi Epsilon (National Professional Foreign Service Fraternity) permanent recogni- tion. Approved: That SGC grant the Amer- ican Institute of Architects temporary recognition. Approved: That SGC grant Universi- ty of Michigan Dames the privileges of a student organization. Approved: That Student Government Council supports the goal of higher salaries, smaller section sizes, and bet- ter office space for teaching fellows. And Student Government Council sup- ports the joint and cooperative effort by teaching fellows to obtain this goal. Appointed: Rick Handel and Jim Ben- ton to the Driving Regulations Board. Appointed: Marg Asman and Rick Handel to the Univelsity Calendaring Committee. Approved: That Student Government Council dissolve the Board of Directors of the Student Book Exchange and transfer all .funds left in its account to the Council's general fund, to be used at the discretion of the Council (unanimously). Approved: That SGC appropriate $175 for a letter to be sent to all incoming freshmen explaining the "Campus Ac- tivities Internship Program." The letter will also contain an application form which will enable them to sign up for the course. Approved: That SGC appropriate $2,- 000 to cover the expenses of our dele- gates to the USNSA Conference of 1966. Approved: That SGC appropriate to Student Housing Association the fol- lowing in order for SHA to carry out its summer program with some flexibil- ity: $600-Publication of the legal booklet (with president's approval of content). $900-Voter registration and planning, (materials, transportation, planning and advertising, etc.). $500-Legal cases pool. $2100-Total. All SHA summer fund expenditures over $25 must be made with prior knowledge and approval of SGC presi- dent. Money not spent by first SGC meeting will be turned over to the gen- eral fund. Placement I POSITION OPENINGS: Mobil Chemical Co., Macedon, N.Y. - Senior Programmer. BA in Bus. Ad ORGAN IZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student orga- nizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Newman Student Association, Sat. April 9, 11 p.m., 331 Thompson, Holy Sat. Easter Vigil, breakfast immediately following. * s University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, Easter Sunrise service, 7 a.m., with Holy Communion. Breakfast immediately following. April 10, Easter Sun. Festival Services: 9:45 & 11:15, April 10, Rev. A. Scheips, speaker. Folk Dancing Club (WAA), Interme- diate folk dancing, every Mon., 8:30- 10:30 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. U. of M. Seventh Day Adventist Stu- dent Assoc., Discussion group, April 9, 3 p.m., UGLI Multipurpose Rm. Dr. Raoul Dederen from Collonges, France, will speak on "Heathen & Christian Rome." or Math desirable, will consider super- ior ability with no degree. 2 yrs. exper. on 1400 series equip. pref. plus knowl. of 360. Mgmt. Consultants, Kansas City, Mo. -Product Dev. Leader and Mgr.. of Tech. Mktg. BS VChem. Exper. in Food or Fine Chem. Prod. Dev., Mkt. Dev. or related. St. Lawrence Hospital, Lansing, Mich. -Head Librarian for Hospital Library. Modern dept. recently expanded to in- clude the School of Nursing Library. North Penn Gas Co., Port Allegany, Pa.-Lawyer to handle various areas of public utility including rates & regulations, oil & gas leases, rights; of way & easements, insurance, labor relations. May lead to gen. mgmt. du- ties. Blodgett Memorial Hospital, Grand Rapids, Mich.-Lab Asst. for Chem. De- partment. Grad with major in Chem. or strong chem bkgd. including, gen., or- ganic quantitative analysis, esp. bio- chem. No exper. required. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Co., St. Paul, Minn.-Various openings in- cluding 1. Actuarial Trainee. Degree in Bath, B plus average. 2. Program- mer Trainee. Degree in math or bus. with strong math bkgd. 3. Asst. Corp. Attorney. Recent grad, Minn. license req. Will consider Sr. Law Student. Also Group Sales Repres., Sales Promotion Agency Supv., etc. Round Lake Area Youth Council, Round Lake, III.-Recreation Director. Administer & implement program in conjunction with O.E.C., War on Pov- erty program in the area. Qualified Recreation grad, no exper. required. * * * the issue-at least here." Hansen said that most fraterni- ties at Stanford are completely in- tegrated and pledge anyone they wish. Two fraternities at Stan-' ford have gone local in the past few years. Sigma Nu dropped out of its national because of the race issue and Alpha Tau Omega be- cause of religious difficulties with For further information, please callt 764-7460, General Div. Bureau of Ap- the national. pointments, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- Mackinac College, Mackinac Island, Mich.-General Labor-$2/hr. Work as nItany hours as you want, no time & a half. Men only. Ford Motor Co., Cleveland, Ohio Assembly type work, start as soon as school is out. Trueman Girl, Detroit-Will interview April 11, 12, 13 & 14 for jobs in the fol- lowing states: Ga., Ohio, Mich. & Calif. 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