THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBI TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOB: Glee Clubs Pianist To Present Concerts' Joint Group To Prepare Rush Study By PAT GOLDEN Panhellenic and Assembly Asso- ciations will work together this year to improve rush procedures, Panhel President Barbara Green- berg, '61, has announced. Panhel's rush study committee will accept suggestions from As- sembly and from Junior Panhel's rush study committee. This group will submit a final report Dec. 12 on its findings in the areas of academic stress, calendaring problems, contact rules, other rush systems, con- centration of the rush period and rush tensions. The standing rush committee, composed of Miss Greenberg, As- sistant Dean of Women Elizabeth LAslie, Panhel's assistant rush counselor chairman and the social directors of the Women's League, will then consider the report. They will meet with an Assem- bly committee composed of Assis- tant Dean of Women Elsie Fuller, Nancy French, '61, Stockwell Hall house director Majorie McCoy, and Judith Bennett, '61, honor resident in Victor Vaughan House. After agreeing on several ac- ceptable plans, the joint com- mittee will offer its proposals to the rush chairman of each sorority and to the Assembly Executive Board. They will be considered by the sorority houses, then come for final approval before the rush chairmen and Assembly Dormi- tory Council representatives. Panhel will place the resulting proposal before Student Govern- ment Council for calendaring in February or March. Assembly President Myra Goines, '61, commented that "last year's plan was defeated at SGC because Assembly did not have enough time .to consider it before it was brought to the Council. "I think we have prevented a recurrence of that situation by setting up committees to work together throughout the planning stages. ARTS AND LETTERS:C Heath-Stubbs Says Poetry, Culture Fail By JUDITH SATTLER The failure of modern poetry is only a part ofj the greater failure of Western culture, Prof. John Heath-Stubbs, visiting poet in the English department, claimed. Proff Heath-Stubbs discussed various avenues which have failed to provide anything significant in modern culture. Poetry has become a merely personal form in the last ten years, he said, because poets either will not or cannot deal with the human situation in a wider scope. But, "poetry must be difficult," he said, "to write simple poems is" not the function of poetry in the present situation." One reason for this refuge in plexity of modern life, he said. "The departmentalization of, knowledge leaves everyone in his own void." Pervasive specialization makes poetry difficult, because poetry is "the last refuge of a universally comprehensible language!' A belief In the relevance of his- tory to our situation has disap- peared in modern times, he said, because "many people believe that our situation is different from any previous one. Atomic Power People had not-caught up with the industrial revolution - al- though some, like Eliot, were be- ginning to-when the second re- volution came with the invention of atomic power, which Prof. Heath-Stubbs sees as the inevit- able result of the scientific method. "Atomic power is an enormous moral shock, in its potential for destruction in war, or for social change in peace. It is "too big to deal with," he noted. But "the bomb can become an alibi for not thinking about other problems, an easy, emotional way out." And, there are other problems. The popular culture of our time is a "mass pseudo-culture," he said, "a classless, international culture built around the lowest common denominator. the personal is the great com-I Panel To Talk About Castro "The Impact of Fidel Castro on Latin America" will be the topic of an open panel discussion at 8 p.m. today at the Newman Club. Prof. Edward Stasheff of the speech department will moderate the panel of four Latin American students. The forum is part of International Week. Poetry has its own particular sickness in our world. The modern association of poetry with the academic world and with analyti- cal criticism is a disadvantage, he said. "Once bitten by criticism, one can't escape' and "an overly ana- lytical attitude" towards poetry develops. Artificial Symbolism If one knows about symbolism in poetry, which was originally used unself-consciously, one may try to arrange symbols in his own work. Such consciots effort is artificial and tends to stifle any spontaneity, he said, Where is poetry going then? "Some think poetry will be superseded by prose," he said; "I can't prophesy, but there is always a place for poetry, always a use for the poetic form of expression, which prose can't carry out." Regents Form Award Group The Regents Thursday approv- ed a plan for the administration of the Glenn MacDonald Scholar- ships in journalism. The recipients of these awards, established in 1958 in honor of the late editor of the Bay City Times, will be chosen by a com- mittee consisting of Mrs. Glenn MacDonald, George P. McCallum, Ann Arbor News manager; Fran- cis H. Letchfield, Wesley H. Maurer, chairman of the jourial- ism department, and one other journalism department faculty member. DIAL NO 5-6290 TODAY whose Io" were as temptupus as his ~r.uaicht COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Indiana Disciplines Students Over Charges of Gambling I Organization Notices AI you will prevent THE GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY from committing honorable hari-kari if you buy tickets for the November 10th, 11th, and 12th 'a 4 a TICKET PRICES: Thursday, Nov. 10 ... $1.25 Friday, Nov.11 . '. $1.75 Saturday, Nov. 12 $1.75 Saturday, Nov.:12 . Adults $1.00 (matinee) .. ..Children .50 On sale Tuesday, Nov. 1 through Thursday, Nov. 3 at the Adminis- tration Building, and Monday, Nov. 7 through Saturday, Nov. 12, at the Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office. ri Mail orders accepted if sent to: Cong. Disc. E & R stud. Guild, Hal- lowe'en Party in costume, Oct. 30, 7 p.m., Memorial Christian Church, Grad. group, G. Bursley, Oct. 31, 8 p.m., 524 Thompson. . . , Gamma Delta, Luth. Stud. Club, Supper, explanation of the history and significance of the Lutheran Confes- atonal Books, Oct. 30, 8 p.m., 1511' Wagshtenaw. .illel Fdn., Hungry people are wel- come to eat at Supper Club, Oct. 30, 6 p.m., 1429 Hill St. La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, Oct. 31, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. Cafe y conver- saclon. r r Wesley Fdn., Reformation Day Serv- ie" at Ist Presby. Church, Oct. 30, 8 p.m., 1432 Washtenaw. Speaker: Dr. H. Bosley, Methodist minister, "Needed: A New Reformation." o . . Young Friends, Supper & discussion of program for the semester, Oct. 30, 8 p.m., Friends Center. . . ., TUllr Ski Club, First General Meeting -Discussion of Skiing Plans, Film and Refreshments, Nov. 1, 7:30 p.m., Union, 3rd Fl. Conf. Rm. Am. Rocket Soc,, Meeting, Nov. 21, 7:30 p.m., 2084 E. Eng, Bldg. Speaker: Dr. W. G. Melbourne, Jet Propulsion Lab., "Advanced Propulsion Systems for Interplanetary Flight." Intern. Folk Dancers, Meeting. Datrc- ing, Nov. 1, 7 p.m., Intern. Center. !Newman Club, Panel on Cuba "The Impact of Fidel Castro on Latin Amer- lea," Oct. 30, 8 p.m., 331 Thompson. By JEROME WEINSTEIN BLOOMINGTON-Four Indiana University students have been placed on disciplinary probation by the dean of students' office as a result of their alleged partici- pation in a football lottery. Bloomington police reported that the football pool cards were printed by a Richmond commer- cial printer and then sent to Bloomington to be sold by the students. The cards offered in- creasing odds to a better who could pick three or more col- legiate football game winners within a specified point spread. This is the second Big Ten school to report football lotteries recently; Ohio State University last week had discovered a betting ring operating on its campus. , * * MADISON-The new voluntary military training (ROTC) pro- gram at the University of Wis- consin seems assured of success according to figures released by the student paper, The Daily Cardinal. A total of 388 freshmen on the Madison campus signed up to continue with the Army ROTC after the completion of the five- week orientation period. This figure is well over the total required by the faculty- regent ruling of last year, which stated that the ROTC program would revert automatically to a compulsory basis if the number of students entering the third year Army ROTC programs didn't meet a minimal requiremen. ROTC at Wisconsin had for- merly been compulsory for all male students; only this year has the new program been put into effect. The Michigan State University Trustees Just last year turned down a proposal to make ROTC voluntary, thus continuing com- pulsory training there. * * * IOWA CITY - A, panel dis- cussion on cheating at the State University of Iowa urged the Interfraternity Council and Pan- hellenic Council, to take a firm stand on the problem and to take action against it. Prof. H. W. Saunders of the sociology department at Iowa State cited a study which said that nearly 40 per cent of the respondents to a study of 11 col- leges admitted. to having cheated at some time and cheating is more prevalent among fraternityT mem- bers than among independents Prof. Saunders wondered how much advantage the fraternity or sorority members, who have ad- vantage to well-stocked files of old tests and papers, have over the non-affiliates. Dewey B. Stuit dean of the liberal arts college suggested that fraternities and sororities should allow the administration to ex- amine their files and throw out any tests which were obtained illegally. Stuit added that for fraternities and sororities to accept the re- sponsibility to change student at- titude toward cheating would be a much better goal than striving to maintain high scholastic stand- ing among their members. t Approve Action On 'U' Patents The Regents Thursday author- ized Vice-President in charge of Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont to enter into a patent agreement with the Michigan Re- search Foundation. The Foundation is a non-profit corporation made up of University alumni and faculty and was founded to "promote, encourage, maintain and aid scientific in- vestigation and research at the University." It has offered to serve by aid- ing in the prosecution and exploi- tation of patents for the Univer- sity. PPlWa MM L WIW&M TZPROCUJW A .WSO6GR IVI*UMilAR1TA ItMTf-LW U *m~arSCAR LL t.verOKAN.S 13CR G *CinEscoPE Eatnmcf11m - EXTRA BUGS BUNNY CARTOON Note Time Schedule Shows at 1:00-3:30-6:10-8:50 Feature at 1:20-3:50-6:30-9:10 .......... Owl 'III DIAL NO2-6264 -Still plenty of choice seats avail- able for both performances today. Hurry! Buy them now." THE UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY presents the SOLISTI DI ZAGREB in RACKHAM AUDITORIUM & NAW A ' MaLIFIE e. u SOURAMI"E IMP I 11 4t w .* a COOP ey SUN. MATINEE & AVE $1.75 MATINEE AT 2:00 P.M.E EE AT 8:00 P.M. STARTING MONDAY * PROGRAM: Sinfonia in C Major........................ .Vivaldi Concerto in E major for violin and strings. ..,.....Vivaldi Soloist: JEKKA STANC ' . ___r - 1_. ._,. 1....11.I ... tt;..c 1//LO~ ยข '.~u -"1'! I mI UI f (o7 M r. r -uuu; * R