THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, roesbeck Announces Averages Alumni Hall Exhibition Displays TheatreIdeas - . PIONEER UNWANTED FIELD: Selzer Praises Alcoholics Anonymous ,ampus averages last semester all slightly higher than last r, Edward G. Groesbeck, direc- of the Office of Registration I Records, announced recently. Women averaged 2.7' and men the freshman class average was ;htly lower than the total aver- with freshman women 2.51 and n 2.44. au Beta Pi ists Pledges or Sprig ['he University chapter of Tau ba Pi engineering honorary fra- nity has announced its spring dge class. Students named are: avid Almerigi, '64; Kenneth Back- '63; Robert Bassett, '65; Elton Bel- ;er, '84; -Theodore Bensinger, '64; k Benson, '63; Thomas Bierma, '64; iiel Brors, '64; Carl Bryer, '64; Thom- Carpenter, '63; Thomas Craig, '64; hard Cheng, '64; William Darnton, Wendel Davis, °'63; Bernard Der- n, '64; Edward Duiven, '63; Norman wards, '64; John Eklund, '63; Alvin era, '63; Kurt Fauser, '64; Lee Feld- np, '64; Alan Frenkel, '64; Andre Fur- o, '63; David Gannon, '63;" Robert ry, '63; John Gesink, '64; Orlando also, '83; Richard granger, '64; Val- Grants, '64; Douglas Greenwold, and Frederick Harris, '64. ames Haselwood, '65; James Hegel,' Arun Hejmadi, '64; David Hood, Richard Jackson, '64; Thomas Kack- ster, '83;Herbert Kettler '64;.Don- Kleinhans, '85;. Donald Kraska, '63; mis Kross, '63; Howard Lewis, '63; nan'do Londono, '63; William Wel-yo , '63; Luis Martinez, '63; James Mc- d, '63; Michael McMillan, '64, and an Moore, '64. iroshi Morihara, '64; Richard Hunt, James Murray, '64; Kenneth My- a, '63; Anthony Nievyk, '63; Ronald ley, '64; William Parker, '65; Ste- n Porter, '65; William Potter, '63;, rid Randall, '63; Robert Ried, '63; nes Rice, '64; Robert Robbins, '65; Jo- ih Rogers, Grad; H. Rome, Grad; rk Rossow,, 65;1 John Schenk, '63; rk Scherba, '64; Davir Sheridan, '64; phen Smelser, '64; Clark Smith, '63; lip Turnock, '64; David Vanden ek, '83 Paul Van Hull, '65; Peter van LI, '65; Allen Vartabedian, '64; Albert reing, '63; Robert Weissman, '64; omas Wood, '64, and Thomas Wnuck,, arbour To Hold pen House, Tour Betsy Barbour House, will hold o open houses for all Women in- 'ested in living in the dorm next ar. Residents of Barbour will nduct tours through the build- g and answer questions from 3-5 d 7-9 p.m. Tuesday. Any junior senior womai may live in Bar- In the social fraternities, Phi Epsilon Pi won top honors with 2.92 with Phi Kappa Tau in sec- ond place with 2.88. Phi Sigma Sigma on Top Phi Sigma Sigma sorority led the social sororities with a 3.06, while siga Delta Tau was sec- ond with a 3.04. Martha Cook again led the in- dependent women's housing with 3.09; Betsy Barbour was second with 2.93.' Michigan House's 2.60 led the men's residence halls with Adams House close behind with a 2.59. Women's Averages The total average of women's residence halls was 2.66; men's residence halls, 2.51. Sororities averaged 2.80; fraternities 2.54, and women's and men's coopera- tive housing both showed a 2.73 average., Married women in apartments achieved a 2.94 as opposed to the, single women in apartments to- tal of 2.80. These figures do not include the school of dentistry, graduate school, Law School, Medical 01 : *Z EDWARD G. GROESBECK .. averages School, school of social work and those graduate students in the schools of business administration, music, natural resources, and pub- lic health. College Roundup By DEBORAH BEATTIE "The Ideal Theatre: Eight Con- cepts," an exhibition of designs and models for new theatres, is currently on display in Alumni Memorial Hall. The exhibition, which is a re- sult of the Ford Foundation pro- gram for theatre design, begins with a theatre that combines film- projection and live stage action. This theatre utilizes a motion picture screen which extends on three sides of the stage. Actors can move in or out, coming forward on stage as live beings and then go- ing back into the film. A character created on stage can be more fully developed on the screen. Festival Atmosphere A 2000 seat open air theatre was designed to create a festival at- mosphere. A circular arena sur-. rounded by a pool of water was planned specifically for Shakes- peare productions but also can be used for both classical and con- temporary productions. The theatre for dance opens up new dimensions to the choreogra- pher, with an entire stage floor ar- rangement of raisable, tiltable and interlocking platforms. Although the premanent orches- tra platform is located above the stage, a conventional, position for the orchestra may be obtained by moving one of the platforms. Half-Level Seating A flexible open stage theatre is designed with related half-levels which may be used for seating or acting, for lighting or projection galleries or may be adapted to serve in several of these capacities simultaneously. Almost anything can be created in this theatre, including a theatre in the round, a traditional pros- cenium stage, orchestra pits and galleries and a movie theatre or television studio. A drama school complex is de- signed to accommodate needs for production, rehearsal, instruction and administrative functions. The theatre in this model is mechan- ically convertible between proscen- ium, three-quarter arena and full arena forms. An attempt to establish the best formulas for audio-visual and staging relationships in the thea- tre prompted the form-and-space studies for proscenium and non- proscenium theatres in the exhi- bit. The plan is designed to bring maximum theatre at a minimum cost while retaining the impact of the production on the audience. The theatre exhibit, which is being circulated by the American Federation of Arts, will be at the museum through March 31. (Last in a Series of Three Articles) By BARBARA PASH Alcoholics Anonymous has dem- onstrated that a great deal can be done in the field of alcohol- ism and in a sense, they have pio- neered in an area that not long ago no one wanted to bother with, Prof. Melvin L. Selzer of the Med- ical School noted recently. AA is a voluntary organization sponsored and run by alcoholics themselves. It is based on psych- ological and spiritual concepts with a non-denominational rel- gious orientation. MUSIC SCHOOL PROGRAM: Cooper Classifies Gerhard As Outstanding Composer "In effect, it is like group thera- py with every member being both patient and therapist. Unfortu- nately, the organization keeps no statistics and so we have no idea of their success rate," he com- mented. Small Appeal However, when one considers that there are only 300,000 arrest- ed alcoholic members of AA in 85 countries, there is reason to be- lieve that its appeal is limited to a minority of alcoholics. "AA ap- peals to alcoholics with a strong religious background," Prof. Sel- zer explained. The group's successes have made too many responsible officials re- gard it as a panacea and this has slowed both basic research and the establishment of other treat- ment facilities. Another problem is that AA members, because of their inter- est in this disease, hold important positions on state alcoholism boards throughout the nation. Be- cause the organization helped them, they tend to be a little pro- vincial in their outlook and are not encouraging as they should be toward other facilities. BERKELEY-A petition at theI University of California at Berke- ley to put the honor code back on the ballot is now being circulated in an attempt to override the.AS- US Senate's decision to cancel the referendum last week. The petition states that the stu- dents who sign it are in favor of putting to a vote whether or not the honor code should be contin- ued. First vice-president Bill Stor- ey started the petition because he feels "something as important as the honor code should not be rec- ommended without giving students an opportunity to express their opinions. CLARKSDALE (CPS) -- Three students from Iowa State Univer- sity left Clarksdale recently after local police told them "you might get beaten up." The students were in Mississippi to conduct film and tape inter- views of Negroes who were receiv- ing food and clothing assistance from the Mississippi Council of Federated Organizations. * * * CAMBRIDG-A Harvard Uni- versity official admitted earlier this week that the "racial ques- tion" was part of the reason that the Harvard Club of Dallas, Texas opposed a debate between the Har- vard debate council and Bishops College, a small Negro school in Dallas. Members of the Dallas club re- portedly felt that a date between Harvard and a Negro college would cause considerable embarrassment for alumni in Dallas, and would weaken the university's standing in the local community. * * * £EIDEN (CPS)-Responding to the concern voiced by many of the member national unions of stu- dents of the International Student Conference, the ISC's administra- tive arm, the coordinating secre- tariat of the national union of students has granted financial as- sistance to nine additional African students who recently left Bul- garia, charging Bulgarian officials with racial discrimination and po- litical harassment. "If anything, however, the or- ganization has moved toward a more eclectic approach. They ap- pear much more willing to work with other groups and in recent years have been more enthusiastic about basic research," he noted. Since many AA members have relapses, the organization "has come to realize that they don't have all the answers." Basic Research "The group's view is that once an alcoholic has recovered, he can never take another drink again." As for the claim that AA believes only alcoholics can aid and under- stand other alcoholics, Prof. Sel- zer commented that he did not believe this. From his own contact with AA in Ann Arbor, he found that they did not seem to regard this as true either. According to AA, the first step for recovery is the admission that one is an alcoholic. The group has rightfully recognized the denial of being an alcoholic as an obstacle to recovering, Only by this meth- od of "surrendering" (admission) can the alcoholic take the road to recovery, he explained. By JEFFREY K. CHASE "The second program of the music school-sponsored contem- porary music festival, featuring stringed instrument literature, contains a work by Roberto Ger- hard, who has excellent chances of emerging as one of the twen- tieth century's most talented com- posers," Prof. Paul Cooper of the music school said yesterday. Gerhard, a resident of England, studied in Vienna and Berlin with ArnoldbSchoenberg. "He took the Schoenbergian twelve-tone princi- ples and forced them to conform to his own individual personality and style. He, like Charles Ives, was not only not appreciated, but also not performed until very late in his career , Commissioned by 'U' Cooper explained that the "String Quartet No. 2," written in 1961, was commissioned by the University and dedicated to the Stanley Quartet. Tonight will mark its world pre- miere, Prof. Coop'er said. In it, pitch. duration, texture, attack and proportion have all been made equal. The work con- tains seven sections with the first four divisions accelerated in multi- ples of two; the remaining parts also involve acceleration, but on a smaller scale, he explained. "Benjamin Britten has become England's most outstanding opera composer. His instrumental com- positions are of fine quality. The 'Sonata in C major for Cello and Piano,' Op. 65, was completed in 1961. Its lyricism is typical of Britten's singing style. The five movements are contrasted by both tempo and mood and the vocabu- lary is tonal and triadic," Prof. Cooper continued. 'Lyric, Somber Work' Cooper described his own "Son- ata for Viola and Piano," written 1961, as a lyric, somber work com- posed of two complementary twelve-tone rows freely associat- ed. The work is dedicated to Rob- ert and Lydia Courte, who pre- miered it in December of 1962 and will perform it tonight. Donald Harris, a resident of Paris since 1955, is an eminent alumnus of the music school. "His 'Fantasy for Violin and Piano,' written in 1957, is a piece contain- ing many contrasts which enable it to be highly energetic and also calmly lyric," Cooper concluded. The program takes place tonight at 8:30 p.m. in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall. The Stanley Quartet, members of the music school fac- ulty and guests will perform. CONTI NUOUS DIAL TODAY bil8 FROM 1PM8-6416 "A RARE ACHIEVEMENT... IT IS A FILM EXPERIENCE OF EXTRAORDINARY TRUTH!" -AREN WINSTON, POST DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN f The Daily Official Bulletin is an chanics-Registration: Lobby, Rackham Management Consultants in Chicago official publication of The Univer- Bldg. -Client firms have the following open- sity of Michigan for which the 9:0Q a.m. to 1:00 p.m.-Salute to Wom- ings: 1) Jr. Indust. Engnr.-Recent or Michigan Daily assumes no editorial en Who Work Week Symposium on "The June grad. Must be draft exempt. Lo- responsibility. Notices should be HUMAN touch in the Computer Age"- cated in San Francisco. 2) Indust. En- sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Mich. League. Keynote Address, Lee E. gnr.-IE with 1-3 yrs. engrg. exper. Room 3564 Administration Building Danielson, Prof. of Industrial Relations, Far-west location. 3) Director of Fiber before 2 p.m. two days preceding "It's Fun to be Human"; Mrs. Bettie Eng.-MS Che/BS ChE/ME. Require 1g. publication. Thomas, Director, Nancy Taylor Finish- amt. of exper. 4) Quality Control Chem- ing School, "First Impressions Last"; ists--BS plus 4 yrs. lab. exper. in fiber SATURDAY, MARCH 23 Nicholas Prakken, Mich. Bell Telephone testing group. 5) Research Chemist or Co., "It's Not WHAT You Say"; Michael Physicist-Adv. degree plus exper. 6) Radock, Director of Univ. Relations; Prod. Supt.-Grad Engnr. plus 10 yrs. C alendar' Representative of Public Relations, fiber plant exper. : a.m. to 400 p.m.-10th Annu American Airlines; and Miss Loma May, Institute for Motivational Research 8:30aem tor 4:00 s p~-lOth Anual Senior Planner, Jam Handy Corp., "Pub= Inc., Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y. - This is Conference for Teachers of Auto Me- 1.. ir VAR.~~..fin' s n ~ o taTn t tseholoical reseairh rganization. COMING: "YOJIMBO" I FREUD IS "A SUPERB DRAMA, AN ENGROSSING FILM, PENETRATINGLY DIFFERENT... MAKES CINEMA HISTORYI" LIFE MAGAZINE FREUD IS "A BOLD, DRAMATIC, MOMENTOUS TASTEFUL, DARING AND FASCINATING FILM' THAT EVERYONE WILL ENJOYI" CROWTHER, N. Y. TIMES FREUD "-BORN INTO A RESPECTABLE WORLD- TORE AWAY ITS MASK OF SEXUAL INNOCENCE. NEVER AGAIN WOULD THE WORLD PRETEND THAT SEX DID NOT EXIST" N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNE {} S x AA6Z~3 'ii. 1 ORGANIZATION NOTICES Alpha Omega Fellowship, Meeting of Class-"Harmony of the Gospels," every Sunday morning, 10 a.m., Grace Bible Church, 110 N. State. Everyone welcome. Congr. Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, Sem- inar: History of Christian Thought, Rev. J. E. Edwards, 9:30-10:30 a.m. & 7:30-8:30 p.m.; Evening Relaxer-Re- freshments, 8:30 p.m.; March 24, 802 Monroe. * * * Graduate Outing Club, Hike, Sunday, Harch 24, 2 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron St. entrance. s * * Unitarian Student Group, Meeting- Planning & other work for Mich. Area Conference March 30, March 25, 7:30 pam., 1st Unitarian Church. * * * Young Democratics, Panel Discus- sions-Academic Freedom-Prof. S. J. Tonsor, E. Mazey, R. Ross, Regent D. M. D. Thurber, 9:30 a.m., Rm. 3RS; Politics in the South-S. Stockmeyer, Prof. R. S Friedman, T. Hayden, Mod- erator: John B. Swainson, 1 p.m., Rm. 3RS; Latin America-Prof. M. C. Need- ler, Prof. C. Cohen, Prof. C. N. Guice, Moderator: John B. Swainson, 2:30 p.m., Rm. 3RS; Reception in honor of former Gov. John~ B. Swainson, Congressman Lucien Nedzi, Congresswoman Martha Griffiths & others, 4:15 p.m., 3rd Fl.; Today, Union. * * * Voice Political Party, Executive Com- mittee Meeting, March 23, 11 a.m., 2534 SAB. Everyonewelcome. U I; MONTGOMERY OLIFT SUSANNAH YORK-{AHRY PARKS SUSAN KOHNER# EILEEN HERUE FERNAND LEDOUX-DAVID MCCALLUM .~ RSAIE CRUTCHLEY DAVID KOSSOFF JOSEPN FURST-ALEXANDERMANG- LEONARD SACS m " co 5TmRfc ERIC PORTMAN Iuwippby CHARLES KAUFMAN and WOLFCANG RCEINARDT - Slory by CHARLES KAUFMAN bOW by JOHN HUSTON -Produced by WOLFGANG REINHARDT - A UNIVER$AL PICTURE a III, NOW AT REGULAR PRICES 4 l SHOWS AT 1:00-3:50 6:15-8:50 Am DIAL 2-6264 STARTING rt n~AV FEATURE STARTS AT 1:0-2:55 ITODU/-\Y 5:00-7:08 AND 9:20 HOLLYWOOD PRUvieW ENGAGMeNT of a new first-run fun-hit ( I Everybog needs a mother' ...even if Dad haslto marry ''....... :ham :: > ?:rye I U EKLT-A No" ar