THE MICHIGAN DAILY F!ALF-WAY MARK: Office Enrolls 4,250 Students 'Virginia Woolf' Arrives By RICHARD KELLER SIMON The Office of Registration and Records has pre-classified 4,250 students, including 3,050 in the literary college, at the half-way point in its drive to process 12,000 students by the last day of classes. All-students, whether pre-classi- fled or not, will have to go through1 registration next semester in Wat- erman Gymnasium, Ronald Keller' and Douglass Woolley, adminis- trative assistants in the registra- tion office, stressed. The University will not be able to pre-register students as well as pre-classify them for the next few semesters because of the necessary conversions in facilities and oper- ation, they said. Registration will continue to serve as, an official enrollment poll, as it is still the only way the University can tell how many students have shown upj for classes; Eligibility Rule All undergraduates are eligible to pre-classify, although some de- partments with inadequate coun- selIng facilities are keeping the number from reaching the maxi- mum. Pre-classification is enabling the various departments to keep a con- stant watch on enrollment in courses and sections through bi- weekly reports from the registra- tion office. With this information they are able to add more sections Bible nd A 1000 year-old Hebrew Bible manuscript has been discovered in the General Library, Eleazar Blrnbaum, Near Eastern bibli- ographer at the University, said recently. The manuscript contains the first five books of the Bible, and was bought originally for $14. Birnbaum said he made the discovery about three months ago while making a census .of the oriental manuscripts in the library's rare book room. After careful study of the manuscript Birnbaum has de- tided It was written between 950 and 1000 A.D., probably in Palestine or Egypt. Birnbaum announced his discovery in a speech before specialists in Bib- lical and oriental studies last week. College Roundup I t T .. .. .. r By CARL COHEN PRINCETON-For the first time in 127 years of operation Prince- ton University is accepting women as undergraduates on a very lim- ited basis. NEW YORK-Columbia Univer- sity has established a chair of history in honor of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. * * * NEW YORK - Rosmary Park. was inaugurated as president of Barnard College last week. She called for a return to a "decent level- of sophistication in liberal arts education." COLLEGE STATION - Texas Agricultural and Mechanical Col- lege announced plans to build the largest campus atomic reactor in the nation recently. * * * LINCOLN-University of Ne- braska fallout shelters werestock- ed last week with survival rations to sustain 9000 students, faculty and employes for 14 days. * * * URBANA - CHAMPAIGN -- -A candidate for the University of. Illinois Student Senate, Kenneth Hirsch, admitted being part of a fraudulent election plot last week. He acknowledged that the anony- mous letter that was sent to cam- pus fraternities and sororities was the work of his campaign organi- zation. .The note advocated the election, of his opponent because he was a "Greek Candidate," even if "only to preserve the Greek bloc in the Senate." Hargis. The police called the group orderly and well-conducted. NEW HAVEN - Anna Freud, daughter of the "father of psy- coanalysis," is temporarily con- ducting a seminar at Yale Univer- sity on "Law and the Family." * * * ITHACA-The fraternity presi- dents of-Cornell University are be- ing asked to sign a pledge of non- discrimination in their houses. * * * LOS ANGELES-Students at the University. of California at Los Angeles voted to lift their Commu- nist speaker ban Wednesday. The special referendum was passed by a majority of more than 2-1, 2,103 to 937. The ban had been in effect since 1951. * * CAMBRIDGE - The Harvard Crimson reports that the faculty of Brandeis University are seeking to put an end to the "discretionary powers" of President Abram L. Sachar. The faculty is reportedly negotiating with the administra- tion to appoint a dean of the fac- ulty and it has asked a guarantee of " consultation in the appoint- ment of committee chairmen. The report, however, was not confirm- ed by Clarence Berger, dean of Brandeis university planning. * * * EUGENE, Ore.-The University of Oregon recently voted to join the United States National Stu- dent Association. However, last Wednesday a group of law stu- dents objected to the move on the legal grounds that it was a viola- tion of free speech rights. IBroderick To View Diplomatic Career William Broderick of the United States State Department will speak to all students interested in for- eign service careers at 4 p.m. to- day in Aud. A. Foreign service candidates should be from 21 to 31 years old and a United States citizen for at least nine years. when necessary, Keller said. At this point there are 24 closed courses, most of which may be opened at any point if a depart- ment decides there are enough students being turned down to fill new sections. Time Permits The office has solved one prob- lem that arose last semester by issuing time permits to students in extra-curricular activities who must have certain times open. No student will be placed in a class that meets in the time he has indicated must be open, although schedules may be sent back to the counsellin goffice for changes in courses. "We have no insurmountable problems. Most important now is that students are not familiar with the operating procedures and are not filling out the new forms cor- rectly," Woolley said. Woolley also warned that stu- dents pre-classifying late cannot expect to get all of their classes as originally planned. Most bene- fits will become apparent in the future, Keller added. Students who have pre-classi- fied and then change their minds about particular courses will be allowed to change for academical- ly valid reasons, they explained. Otherwise such students will have to wait for the normal drop and add procedure at the beginning of the semester. Students who fail courses after pre-classifying and have to take them over will probably have spe- cial privileges at registration for changing classes then, Keller ex- plained. The change to pre-classifica- tion and the ultimate change to pre-registration are inevitable be- cause the University is continually growing and the Waterman pro- cedure was becoming more and more impractical, Keller and Woolley said. Wallace Lists Requirements Of Curricula Teachers of rhetoric should have a curriculum, including both Eng- lish and speech, Prof. Karl R. Wallace of the University of Illi- nois said at the Michigan School- master's Club recently. Prof. Wallace, chairman of the department of speech and theatre at Illinois, spoke at the speech conference section. of the club' 76th annual meeting. "The purpose should be to pro- duce teachers of practical dis- course who in turn are equipped to educate the 'ready man,' one who summons ideas in the public interest as well as in his own," Prof. Wallace said. Such a teacher "could make the difference between the youth who as a matter of course talks readily and habitually of the af- fairs of the day, the community, the nation, the world and the youth whose talk is limited to the requirements of his trade and pro- fession." "The substance and materials of communication must take first place over form and style. We have left the 'ready man' woefully un- prepared for the affairs of prac- tical life. We have left most of our abler students without habits of effective utterance," he assert- ed. 'VIRGINIA WOOLF'-Kate Reid and Shepperd Strudwick will star in tonight's production of Edward Albee's drama, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" The play, performed by the.New York company, will be presented at 8 p.m. today in the Michigan Theatre. A&D OPEN HOUSE: Tler Calls Films Form Of Ideal Art Synthesis (. Group Lists Ordinance's Deiciencies (Continued from Page 1) onerous to the lending institutions to extend coverage to the financ- ing of properties other than mul- tiples and federally assisted hous- ing." Not Separate Entity The advisory council notes that it must be recognized "that the University is not an entity separ- ate from the community in which it is located, and that because be- tween 1400 and 1500 University students and employees are likely subjects of discrimination, it is necessary to examine and com- ment on the terms of the proposed fair-housing.ordinance." The Human Relations Commis- sion has suggested that the num- ber of dwelling units comprising a .multiple-family dwelling be re- duced from five to four. This, they claim, would "tend to reduce the amount of discrimina- tory instances." Remove Clauses The HRC also recommended that the ajoining lots or houses clause be removed from the ordi- nance, thus "protecting this pro- vision of the ordinance from pos- sible evasion, as in the case of the landlord who could escape the anti-bias ruling by offering lots or houses in blocks of four or under." Because the ordinance will be little use to an individual wishing to purchase a used house, the Council recommends the regula- tion of brokers, in the hope that this will "offer some promise of assistance to the prospective buyer without interfering with the home owner's power of disposition. A bill similar to the Council's recommendation to regulate brok- ers failed to pass the Michigan Legislature recently. Several other cities, notably Pittsburgh and Toledo, have fair housing ordinances. The report often cites the experiences of these cities in its study of Ann Arbor's proposed legislation. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Congregational Disciples E & R Stu- dent Guild,, Cost Luncheon with Dean wilson of Consumer's Union, April 30, Noon, 802 Monroe, By KAREN MARGOLIS The new Oxford housing proj- ect will be open for inspection from 3:30-5 p.m. Wednesday, Assembly House Council President Charlene Hager, '65, announced at yester- day's AHC meeting. The open-open house will offer future Oxford residents the last opportunity to inspect the build- ings before the room drawing, which will be held at 7 p.m. Wed- nesday at the Women's League. Women will be notified today in CHARLENE HAGER ...Oxford project which of the buildings they will live next year. In addition there will be a mass meeting for all future residents of the co-op, suite and apartment sections of the project on May 11. All women interested in holding official positions in the Oxford units should petition to Assembly, Miss Hager reported. In other business, Edwin Sasaki, Grad, SGC executive vice-presi- dent, and Thomas Smithson, '65, SGC administrative vice-president, reported openings on student gov- ernment committees and boards at the meeting. In miscellaneous business at the meeting, Miss Hager announced that Assembly is sending five rep- resentatives to the Big Ten Hous- ing Conference this weekend and that a House Presidents' Banquet will be held at Mary Markley Hall later this month. LS.A Committee Seeks Members , Students interested in petition- ing for membership on the Liter- ary College Steering Committee may pick up forms from Rm. 1220, Angell Hall. The petitions are due tomorrow, and interviews will be held Thursday. The committee is primarily engaged in discussion of educational policies and practices of theliterary college. j Completed Oxford Project Opens Buildings to Public .4 I By MICHAEL JULIAR The screen was lit up with a still photograph of a scene from Ren6 Clair's "A Nous La Liberte" (Liberty for Us). Rows of long, smooth and sym- metrical benches filled the screen. On one side of each bench, pris- oners were seated far apart from each other, working on some kind of mechanisms while guards were carefully overseeing the work. "This is an example of geometric structures representing constric- tion," Parker Tyler, poetry, art and film critic, said in this talk on "The Architecture of the Film: Word, Sight and Sound." He was featured recently as part of the architecture and design college's sixth annual open house. Concentrating upon the "im- portance of the organic curve in all objects, human and otherwise," Study Course, Hel ps Train..., -New Citizens*, A University correspondence study course has helped more than 700 persons become United States citizens in the last five years, the University Extension Service re- ports. A simplified edition of the Con- stitution, lessons on local, state' and national government, and a workbook are included in the course, requiring a $5 fee. Many of the students are house- wives who married American serv- icemen stationed abroad. Cana- dians comprise another large seg- ment of the group. Some of the older candidates for citizenship are often assisted by their own chil- dren or grandchildren. The correspondence course is not a guarantee of citizenship, but was designed by the United States Department of Justice to prepare students for the naturalization examination. The course is offered by the University in cooperation with the Immigration and Naturalization Service of the Justice Department. Voice To Help In Book Drive The Executive Committee of Voice Political Party announced Sunday that it will co-sponsor a book drive with Alpha Phi Omega in May for the United States Peace Corps project in Ghana. In other action, Voice noted the formation of Action Political Par- ty and expressed hope that "it will help to define campus issues and make a positive contribution to progressive student government." Tyler said that he felt that "man was born to dominate the uni- verse with his mind and not get lost in mathematical abstractions and a numb submission to ma- chines." Stresses Unity He placed a special emphasis on the film -_as an "ideal synthesis medium" of all the arts. "It is difficult even on the stage to use actors, dialogue or mono logue, music, decor and general imagery in a truly unified way," Tyler declared. To illuminate his remarks, he showed seven short films after his talk, demonstrating attempts to achieve such a synthesis. Imaginative Devices Tyler later pointed out that he had shown the audience "some of the happy and more imaginative devices used by some experiment- ing film. makers to give new life to the synthetic medium." "Sensuousness of purpose and originality of means, and above all, poetic intensity are too likely, in any medium, to lapse in favor of mere decoration. Fashionable ab-. straction and dialogue and music may become merely 'apt' instead of being functional elements of the structure," he said. Tyler said that he had hoped to show in his talk and the slides and films that accompanied it, that "it does not require enormous expense or 'pop' ideas to attain interesting and original expres- sion." Weighed Down "In a medium weighed down with a corrosive commercialism, it is healthy to call upon technical ingenuity and unconventional an- gles and means to create some- thing fresh and really creative in film," he stressed. Repeating his thesis that "man was born to dominate the universe with his mind," Tyler said that his discussion pointed to some of the dangers current in art styles: oversimplified, geometric "func- tionalism" and facile dependence on the smooth plane devoid of emotional and moral implication. "The universe is not necessarily man's mirror. He must make it so," he emphasized. The seven films shown were "Pacific 231," an ; award winner at the- Cannes Film Festival in 1949; "Dance Chromatic"; the German "Hallucinations"; "Sub- ject Lesson"; "A Chairy Tale"; "Visible 3: an Illuminated Poem," and "Hand Written." I-M RIUFLE COMPETITION,' PRACTICEand REGISTRATION May 1st, 7:30-9:30 P.M. MATCH SHOOTING May 8th, 7:30 P.M. Rifle range, rear of North University bldg. Rifles and ammo provided. MASTER CRAFT 4 4 '4 44 4 *1 Ii I HONDA 1906 PACKARD fII I COMING THURSDAY 4- DIAL 8-64 16 EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT ! COMING SOON NEXT ATTRACTIC I 11