"If We Hurry, We'll Finish Just In Time For The New Tenant T+ Redecorate" AT 'TE V-1 Army Changes El -For the Worse ELVIS IS BACK from the army' with his first picture in two years called appropriately enough, "GI Blues": Filmed in technicolor and featuring ten (you count 'em) ballads and blues numbers belted out by the rock 'n roll king, the picture relies almost entirely on Presley's name to attract audiences. And this it will surely do. But the picture lacks a decent plot and merely provides the semblance of continuity between songs and the terpsichore of redhead Juliet Prowse. Miss Prowse's num- bersb certainly add to the credit of the production. Since Elvis has cut: some of the bumps and grinds from his routine, Miss Prowse's .-.-. xprovocative d a n c i n g partially makes up for 'the loss. Presley's acting has been panned in his previous pictures and he t seems to be maintaining his repu- tation in that area. * #* ALTHOUGH PRESLEY'S singing has turned from rock 'n roll to the ballsd since Uncle Sam re- leased him, the transition is not evident in this film. The tunes are. (1- for the fost part standard rhythm and blues tunes with new words,.as witness the title song, GI Blues. Two of his better efforts, Pocket- ful of Rainbow, and a song se- quence in a puppet show, demon- strate Presley's ability to exercise - his vocal cords. However, as usual, he is better heard than seen, espe- cially with his typical sneer and twitchy leg. "GI Blues" will not produce any big-selling tune on its own merits as Presley's past films have done; there just . is no outstanding or - even catchy song. The acting and plot definitely fall below Mr. Rock 'n Roll's past cinema endeavors, - but the Presley voice and long black hair is still there for those p a s Elvis aficionados. --.r- -Michael Burns 'U' OF DETROIT: Bard Scores THE SCIENTIFIC ORIENTATION: Lab Courses For Humanists N HERE IS at least one play frankly dealing with debauch- ery and sex that is not likely to be be banned in Boston..And certain- ly not at the University of Detroit .Repertory Theater, where Shake- speare's "Measure for Measure" is on the repertory schedule. Often called one of the Bard's "unpleasant" plays, it dramatizes the theme that one may not judge others without being judged in like manner. Angelo, deputy to the Duke of Vienna, sets out relent- lessly to enforce the law prescrib- ing decapitation as the penalty for incontinence. A condemned offender, Claudio, sends for his virtuous and attrac- tive sister Isabella to plead with Angelo on his behalf. Angelo finds her so attractive indeed that after much torment he proposes to spare Claudio at the price of Isabella's honor. This upsets Isabella no end. , , , AFTER a temporary resigna- tion, brother Claudio loses his head at the prospect of being de- prived of it and importunes his sister to bargain on Angelo's terns. In a fit of. pique Isabella tells Claudio to go hang. This dilemma is resolved in 'a series of schemes proposed by the disguised Duke of Vienna himself, one of which is a sort of bed- room Blind Man's, Buff whereby Angelo is deceived by switching an old flame of his in place of Isa- bella.. Not morally satisfying, but quite a trick. To add insult to injury, Angelo reneges on his promise- and or- ders Claudio's execution, appar- ently to assuage his remorse at having fallen. * * * DIRECTOR Richard Burgwin took advantage of the intimacy of the theater by occasionally bring- ing the actors down into the audi- ence Elizabethan-style, with some of the entrances coming from the- rear of the auditorium. An excit- ing touch was the use of tympani in slow crescendoto provide a dramatic rhythmic background at critical moments. especially effec- tive in Angelo's temptation scene, Thomas Stumpo's penetrating. interpretation of the complex An- gelo was blemished by overagon- ized facial expressions that were not needed to supplant an other- wise thoughtful portrayal of the character. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two articles on Univer- sity science requirements.s To.or- row's article will discuss non- laboratory science courses.) By FAITH WEINSTEIN Daily Staff Writer "The classics were necessary to the cultivation of gentle- men and the manufacture of clerics, but science was essen- tial only to a few vulgar, util- itarian professions." William Irvine, "Apes, An- gels & Victorians" IN THE CENTURY since Darwin, the relative position of science and the humanities has seesawed wildly, but the prime importance of science in the modern educa- tion has established itself for- ever. It was possible to be a gentle- man and a scholar in the early 1800's without knowing the dif- ference between chemistry and al- chemy. It is not possible today to be a student and not know vague- ly about the theory of relativity, or evolution. The pre-Victorian contempt the humanities student once had for science has been replaced by a half-humiliated awe. The mod- ern non-science major tends to have a defensive fear of science and especially of beginning sci- ence courses. He fears a set of facts which will be outside his own realm, he fears a scientific jar- gon which sometimes sounds like English but isn't. Most of all he fears the teacher who, he is sure, has a mental set totally alien to his own. NONE OF THESE fears are to- tally valid, but neither are they as foolish as some science teach- ers may think. The non-science student is faced with scientific writings in every form, from mag- azine articles to television ad- vertising. Scientific subjects have slipped into the most humanistic pursuits. In the face of this, he often comes away with the hope- less feeling that while scientists can read literature, humanists can rarely even begin to figure out science. The basic problem is one of orientation. The scientist and the humanist, the so-called analytic and verbal personalities, are sep- arated young by neat objective tests. The budding scientists learns to think in specifics, deriving all generalities from a great body of facts. "Scientists like to substan- tiate what they say," a zoology teaching fellow said, THE NON-SCIENCE student tends to be trained in intuitive thought-he tends to think in concepts, to be annoyed with what he considers "petty details," to turn away from the concrete facts, or to fit them to the theory he has created in his mind. Coming to science with this orientation, he finds himself scared, He searches madly for a basic science course that will be "easy," or for one that will speak his language, deal in theories rather than arousing his disgust and anger by forcing him to dirty can, and then feeling resentful about the mass of information, which he knows vaguely is im- portant, but which he does not understand, and cannot grasp, be- cause he cannot see the concepts for the detail. * * * ONE ZOOLOGY teaching fel- low, recalling his beginning zoo course, said that "there were peo-' ple on every side of me who thought of the course as a mass of meaningless detail. But for me, it all fit perfectly into a beautiful pattern." This was the result of his orientation, of his pre-con- ceived attitude toward science. It is clearly the job of the basic science courses to give the non- science students a new glimpse into the great pattern and an understanding of a different ori- entation. Sometimes, but only occasional- ly, the third semester of required science, the non-lab course, be- gins to "speak his language," and some of the overall pattern of science and discovery begins to come faintly clear. But by this time it may be too late, or too frustrating to go on. THIS IS A serious problem, and one of which the teachers of the courses are only half aware. Not really recognizing the basic dif- ference in orientation, the teach- ers try to eliminate student re- sistance by frontal attack: "Noth- ing develops the scientific frame of reference better than constant exposure," Prof. Frederick Smith, who teaches Zoology I, said. But while rapid-fire exposure may break a student's will, it will hard- ly change his orientation. Several of the science departments (zool- ogy is a typical example) -have made serious efforts to meet the needs of the non-science 'major in basic science. In general, zoo has done better than any of the other departments which offer basic laboratory science courses in designing a course which does not give up content for popularity. But the complaints and the ser-" ious misunderstandings persist. "Zoo I just has .too much detail," one non-science major said. "A lot of it is interesting, and I really feel I learned a great deal, but I've lost all the detail in the year since I took it, and there weren't enough concepts-it doesn't seem worthwhile having taken it." THE QUESTION of detail is central to the whole problem of the separate orientations. If Prof. Marston Bates,whodesigns his upper-class zoo course on a philo- sophic, generalized basis, says that "purely descriptive courses get bogged down in detail," the men who teach the descriptive courses will justify detail with determina- tion And a good deal of validity. "We're having trouble - we al- ways have trouble-about requir- ing the mastery of detail," Prof. Smith said tiredly. "But since we can't give the students actual re- search experiments to do,' they have to experience them by learn- ing a body of facts." Zoo I isn't Prof. Smith's dream course. But it is regulated by fac- tors beyond his control-vast numbers of students, limited space, severely limited funds. The ideal course, a small, research- oriented group of students work- ing out the important, fascinat- ing problems of zoology, is com- pletely precluded by these limita- tions. And all attempts to pro- duce this course on a large scale (the now defunct Zoo 11, for ex- ample) have failed. * * * PROF. SMITH'S dream course might very well work-it would be ideal for the student with the scientifically oriented mind, and it would benefit the non-science major as well. It could be the kind of course where the intuitive mind could shine. But it is not likely to happen here. And in its place, Prof. Smith will still staunchly defend the requirement, of detail. "Take a clam, for example, and show it to a bunch of students. Tell them to look closely at it. They look at it and look at, it, and they'll swear they know what it looks like, but if you tell them to draw a picture of it, you won't get anything remotely like a clam." "You have to make them mad by insisting that they look at de- tail, so you can be sure they real- ly see what you want them to see." * * * CONSIDERING this problem of judgment, Prof. Smith said "It's very hard to help a student. They don't see why certain details are so important and we can't ex- plain why." Vocabulary is another basic block for the non-science stu- dents. As Prof. Smith pointed out, students who are perfectly will- ing to go through two years of German irregular verbs balk ab- solutely.,at the prospect of learn- ing 100 necessary scientific terms. These terms are as vitally neces- sary to work in science as the ir- regular verbs are to reading in German literature, he says. The point is valid, but the analogy, for the humanities stu- dent, does not quite hold. The humanities student who is moti- vated to take a language knows what literature is like-he is will- ing' to learn the verbs because he has experienced the joys of literature, and wants to learn more. But he only has the vague idea that he ought to learn sci- ence, that it might be interest- ing, none of which amounts to a genuine spur to learning. Science students who have had to struggle through an English lit course without knowing quite why, will - know the feeling of frustration which comes when you can't see any purpose in what you are do-- ing. SO, TEACHER AND student grope blindly towards each other, in the intricate scientific setting -the student either apathetic, or bitterly resentful of the things he is asked to learn, ("who the hell cares about a worm's-insides,") the teacher, fully aware of the resent- ment, but unable to dispel it, hop- ing helplessly that the student will "see the reasons later." Sometimes they do, but all too often they do not. The suggestion of a course con- cerned more with theory than the present basic science course is not popular with the science teachers. Prof. Smith said that "an intellectual experience can be somewhat misleading-manipulat- ing things in a ;lab gives more adequate training." A colleague urgently, denied the "mereness" of facts, and stressed the obvious importance of the details on which every scientific judgment must be based. These statements cannot be denied, but the fact remains that science and the scientific at- titude towards the world are sim- ply not getting through to the average humanities student. IF THE SCIENCE teachers are ever to reach the blk of human- ties students, they must includel some kind of transition between the two orientations' The only apparent way to do this would be to teach a course which does deal more with concepts, with theories -not naked in the snow, but clothed inall the detail they re- quire. This may mean a limita- tion in the amount of material covered in one semester, which is a distinct disadvantage, as a teaching fellow said. "It's hard annn..l. na*inrr +l.'r..n hn -,.r . ALICIA ANNAS provided a gra- cious and appealing Isabella who could whip up a fury at the ap- propriate moment. Alfred Story commendably en- deavored to highlight ' Claudio's desperation, but he overstepped his implorings, becoming almost in- fantile. The performance contained sev- eral well-executed characteriza- tions in lesser roles. Paul McGaffey turned out a laughably sarcastic and insulting Lucio, something of an all-round heel, and newcomer Oliver Glenn connected as a rather rotund and mirthful bawd. A functional, versatile set per- mitted a fluid shift of action from scene to scene. -William Giovan DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Tue Daily Official Bulleti official publication of The sity of Michigan for whi( Michigan Daily assumes noe responsibility. Notices she sent in TYPEWRITTEN fi Room 3519 Administration B before 2 p.m. two days pr publication. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER General Noti Regents' Meeting: Fri., Dec. munications for consideratio meeting must be in the P hands not later than Decemb THIS IS A VALID considera- tion. The typical humanities ma- jor will note the clam's general shape, its color, its clamminess, and little else. He will have really seen the clam, but not from a sci- entific viewpoint. It is both logi- cal and good for the science teacher to require more than this, Univer- but not without some definite, ch The ' conceptual indication of why it editorial is important to notice more. For orm to the student who has not the eye uilding, to see it for himself, the outlines receding of the great pattern have to be drawn clearly. And Zoo I is the 29 place to do it. Most of the troubles non-sci- >c s ence majors have in zoology, as. well as other sciences, can be 16. Com- traced to therbasic difference in n at this oret 'residents' orientation. er 6. The humanities student, not LETERS to the EDITOR Daily Criticism . . To the Editor: CRITICISM seems to flow from the Michigan Daily at quite an even rate. Now, the time.has come to make this an alternating cur- rent. My criticism is waged against those at the Daily who feel they have obtained the status of full- fledged theater critics. On what grounds do these "critics" judge the different productions? Do they watch a production and then judge it on an amateur-pro- fessional continuum? It is true these shows are not done by pro- fessionals. but then how profes- sional are the critics-they seem to be quite amateurish to their readers. PERHAPS I HAVE been a little too harsh; after all, the Daily did have a few "nice" comments about Soph Show. Then again . . . per- haps' I still stand on firm ground. The Daily's review of this vear's i