THE MICHIGAN DAILY Platform Series to Feature Meredith ARTS AND LETTERS: Cambon Analyses Style Of U.S. Beat Activity Aud. A. With Sutherland Ideler at the piano, Miss Murkle will play Dohnanyi's "Adagio," "Sona- ta in E" by Valentini, Man Burch's "Kol Nidrei," and "Sussex Mum- mers Christmas Carol" arranged by Grainger and others. Miss Mukle, who played on radio and in public in London during World War II, started her concert career at nine years of age and in the years since, she has played all over the world. She has played many times with Pablo Casals in the Schubert "Quintet for Two Cellos." Suzanne Bloch, who has trained lutanists in the East and prin- cipal conert lutanist of this con- tinent, will play the lute, virginals and recorder and sing to the lute in a recital at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in Rackham Amphitheatre. # # ' The University Baroque Trio assisted by Clyde Thompson, double bass, will present a public concert at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Lecture Hall. The trio will play works by Telemann, Hot- teterre, Le Romain, Marais, Rosen- muller, Locatelli and Qyantz. The performance will be broadcast live over WVOM. WUOM will also rebroadcast four programs given earlier this year. At 1:30 today a recording of the joint department of speech- music school production of Mo- zart's Don Giovanni will be played. The Michigan Chorale can be heard at 8 pm. on Friday. A re- cording of celleist Oliver Edel playing Bach's "Suite No. 1 in G Major" and "Suite No. 2 in D Minor" will be on WUOM at 8 p.m. Thursday and Verdi's "Don Carlos" will be heard at 8 p.m. Wednesday on "Opera Night over WUOM. Prof. George Peek of the politi- cal science department will host Robert L. Carter, General Counsel of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to examine Negro rights in the fields of voting, education, em- ployment, housing and adminis- tration of justice on the "Equal Rights" series over WWJ-TV at noon today. * * * Prof. N. Edd Miller of the speech department and Prof. Hugo Hell- man, director of the speech school at Marquette University will dis- cuss parlimentary procedure at 9 a.m. today over WXYZ-TV. By JUDITH SATTLER Disengagement, or "the refusal to take society seriously," is the particular quality of the 'beat' movement in American literature," G. Glauco Cambon, visiting lec- G. GLAUCO CAMBON ... defines beat literature Speakers, Seminars Set For Challenge Weekend The climax of the semester's Challenge activities is slated for this week with a series of Ameri- can civil liberties seminars leading up to a coloquium weekend on' November 18-20. Speakers participating in the colloquim will include Prof. Henry Steele Commager, of Amherst College's history and American studies departments, Michigan Supreme Court Justice Talbot Smith, socialist writer Michael Harrington and former Socialist presidential candidate Norman Thomas. Students may register for the program either tomorrow or Tues- day from 9 to 5 p.m. in the Mason Hall Fishbowl or the Michigan' Union main lobby. nars whose topics willtrange from racial discrimination to academic freedom and separation of church and state. Speeches will begin at 7 p.m. tomorrow with the appearance of the keynoter, Prof. Commager. Smith will speak on "Current Civil Liberties," at 10:30 a.m. Sa- turday. Harrington, writer for the "Reporter" and "Fund for the Republic" will discuss "Racial Dis- crimination" at 2:30 p.m. on the same day. Thomas To Speak Thomas will speak at 2:30 p.m. November 20 on "The Security Program." The two-sided approach -- speeches and seminars - has been typical of the semester's Challenge program. New to the University in September, the group took its' inspiration from a Yale campus effort. Hugh Witemeyer, '61, Challenge spokesman, and four others visited Yale last year to study that school's program. They were en- ouraged by Prof. Robert Angell, honors program chairman, and the response of some 72 professors who agreed to take part in the program. The American civil liberties seminars will continue until the end of the semester, with the "Challenge of the Emergent Na- tions" the topic for second semes- ter. Trickster Suffers Injuries in Fall Delbert J. Pryzby, '62Ed., who fell from a second story fire escape after a prank attempt was re- ported in excellent condition at University Hospital yesterday. Pryzby, of Alpha Sigma Phi fra- ternity, climbed the fire escape to throw a cat through a fraternity member's window, lost his balance, and fell to the ground below. He suffered a contusion and contu- sions of the head and legs. turter in Italian and English, said here recently. The term "beat" means "on the beat-with a pulse of lively ex- pression," as well as meaning defeated and disengaged, Cambon noted. The beat movement started in the early 1950's and became "fashionable" in the late 1950's, especiallly in San Francisco and Greenwich Village, he added.- Unique to America There is a - certain "unique American quality" to the beats. The figure of the dissenter or rebel runs through American literature, in the works of Twain, Melville, Whitman, Hart Crane, and others, "often making a worthwhile point," Cambon added. Socially, the group has broken off to form its own colonies, with its own lingo and "carefully care- less" dress, the lecturer said. While it is a revolt against the conse- quences of the cold war and our industrial development making for conformism, there are several other reasons for this "communal life." First, people with similar revo- lutionary artistic ideas tend to come together and live together, Cambon noted, pointing to the surrealist, existentialist, and da- daist movements in Europe. Lack Center Also, there is no rallying center in America for literary and artistic conversation and meeting, such as the coffee houses or cafes of Europe. Union To Open 'Kismet' Sales Ticket sales for the forthcoming MUSKET production of "Kismet" will be on sale from 1:15 to 5 p.m. tomorrow through Nov. 23 in the lobby of the Michigan Union. Evening performances of "Kis- met" will be presented, Nov. 30 through Dec. 3 ,with a matinee scheduled for Dec. 3. Production designer, Neil Beir- bower, '62, said that because of the lavishness of the sets, all the furniture and fountains will be on rolling platforms pushed in by the chorus. And the unconventional clothing and, lingo is used "deliberately to shock and mystify the bourgeois public," he said. Although it is difficult to judge the beats' literary work, Cambon pointed out that there are some principles they seem to follow. Pour Out Work These writers do not believe in revision or correction of their work. "The whole work is poured out," Cambon said. They also rely on "strong ex- pression, or four-letter words, as if these words gave strength to their writing. But other writers, such as Dante and Shakespeare have used these words, with per- haps a fuller knowledge of their real purpose. Sometimes there is lyricism in the writings of the beats, such as in Jack Kerouac's "On the Road," Cambon noted, but more often it is a "raw immediacy" not necessarily lyrical. Looking at individual writers gives a clearer picture of the movement. Kerouac Immature Kerouac is "not a mature writer, and sometimes falls into adoles- cent poses, but he has a gift for writing good pages," the Italian said. His poetry, such as "Mexico Blues," is full of "jumbled expres- sion." Allen Ginsberg is a "sloppy wri- ter with a convulsed emotional- ism, but here and there ideas take shape as poetry in part of "Howl." Ferlenghetti has "talent, and is sloppy but good, especially in poems like "The Chinese Dragon." "Brother Antoninus has written some good short poems, although not technically a beat," Cambon commented. O'Hara Not Beat Other writers are often grouped with the beats, but are not really a part of the movement, he said, naming such men as Frank O'Hara, Robert Creely, Dennis Levertov and Robert Duncan. They also manifest this revolt against formal correctness. Other writers, such as Robert Lowell and Donald Hall, have written contemporary criti- ques of society. "To the extent that these writers have something to say, this revolt it all right, because it works for them," Cambon said. "In our time the artist must maintain his in- dependence and posture of criti- cism, because society has some highly questionable aspects. How- ever this independence may be maintained without "noise and ostentation," he maintained. HELD OVER "FIRST RATE THRILLER!S Has audiences holding their b breath in excitement!". fu -N.Y. Daily News fI Starts Wednesday L S LATE SHOW "LET NO MANP TONGHT at 11:00 WRITE MY EPITAPH" T~GTa 10 .., DIAL NO 5-6290 ee it from the egirining to 'fly enjoy this uspense dra- so I ,. ma. MUSKET 19604 presents KISMET, "An Arabian Fantasy4 November 30, December 1, 2, 3 Matinee Dec. 3rd TICKETS at Michigan Union November 14 thru 23 .. . 1:15 to 5:00 Daily 4 4 U. of M. YOUNG REPUBLICANS present a discussion on VOTING BEHAVIOR The how, whey, where and when of the 1960 Presidential Election featuring Dr. Stokes, Study Director, U. of M. Research Center MICHIGAN UNION TUESDAY, November 15, 7:30 P.M. Room 3C Hillel's SUPPER CLUB I I ~7 ( '79~. ~ ~:Ns3UM~FM'7 I I